tv Headline News RT June 9, 2013 4:00am-4:47am EDT
4:00 am
it was. violence on turkish streets and shows no sign of abating bride police again used tear gas and water cannon the games and government protesters. for a nine tonight's while prime minister at a wondrous uses for the deaths of the demonstrators demands. and other stories that are this week private bradley manning. his military documents faces a possible life sentence as a heat days before an army corps do we look at all of the washington's destroys all the time soon unveiled in secret. trial columns as a fresh bombshell dropped repeating the massive scale of u.s. surveillance with documents proving the government has been secretly collecting people's phone records and spying on their own one activity for us. and
4:01 am
just think before you tweet the police and bridges not being accused of crossing the line with an increasing number of arrests for comments on social media. it's just gone now because i'm a day in and the russian capital you're watching artie's the weekly with me. we start in turkey where security forces again use force against the protests that have been raging for over a week across the country gas and water cannon were deployed as thousands marched in turkey as two major cities defying the prime minister's call for an immediate stop to the un dressed as stumble remains the most restive city the protests started there as an environmental campaign and has spiraled into the biggest anti-government drive in decades violence erupted in several areas of the city
4:02 am
overnight with crowds numbers surging to the highest so far in the capital ankara where clashes when you have the u.s. embassy to get a return to the central square thousands of demonstrators gathered to demand an end to the ones from whom i g.'s are really going to school has been following the week of turmoil and report from istanbul. then. i felt that i was hit so i put my hand up to get away there was blood gushing down my hands everywhere i saw my friend and asked them to get me out of that so he put me in a taxi i don't remember what happened next because i passed out i woke up in hospital where i stayed for the next day. photo journalist ahmed sheikh was there when the peaceful protests spiraled into knoll out standoff between the police and protesters in taksim square more than forty seven hundred people are said to have been injured during clashes with police over the past week with amnesty
4:03 am
international calling for an investigation into how the turkish police handled the protest rallies spread to squares and parks all over the country by then the message was no longer just about the trees. i will go on to they change their plans about the park and give us our freedoms. earlier there was it's out there. but the prime minister knew exactly who he wanted to blame for the ever growing protest movement there is a problem called twitter right now and you can find every kind of lived there the thing that is called social media is the biggest trouble for society right now according to everyone the thousands and give the park are leaders of alcoholics being spurred on by foreign spies who infiltrated crowds of demonstrators to spread dissent among the turks reportedly fifteen foreigners were arrested for their alleged role in the protests. i know what he's thinking when he says what he does he wants to show that he's still got power to those who support him but he doesn't
4:04 am
know what to do with the protest as large as they were for the first couple of days the demonstrations went ignored by the turkish media. from c.n.n. international protectors you get the police the people and then you shake. it's. actually it's the pressure of the prime minister that is reflected on the media and we think it's unfair other channels international channels sharing this information and we have to find out about it on the international agenda also it's unfair to the people at this point the protests are so huge they're impossible to ignore pretty much just like the barricades that people continue to build a lot over the city to keep the police out and gets everyone insists that the destruction of the park will continue to go on as planned and that leads one to wonder what exactly is in the future for the turkish prime minister with his
4:05 am
seeming disregard to the opinion of hundreds of thousands of people in istanbul. r.t. . despite the violent protests that turkey is reeling ponty has rejected all calls for a snap election prime minister anyone who has taken a combative stunts dismissing the demonstrations as the opposition's attempt to topple the government appears in the protesters of looting and then foreign policy expert barbara slave in the a senior fellow at the atlantic council says at one's position is damaging turkey's image as a model of islamic democracy. so far i don't think he's doing a very good job and this is a huge blow to him personally to his image and also to the turkish model which he has been touting around the middle east as something that arab countries should emulate he wants to change the constitution to create a sort of imperial presidency and then run for two terms as president this kind of behavior is alienating people who are religious as well as those who are secular so
4:06 am
i think he's taking a big a big risk by deepening divide among turks and he really should i think quit while he's ahead because obviously the longer he is there the more people even people who are predisposed to like him at the beginning begin to tire of his manner of governing he's somebody who lectures who sermonize is he doesn't listen very well in my experience and i think this is really not a good model for a country that purports to be a modern islamic democracy. we're keeping an eye on events unfolding in turkey gathering eyewitness accounts and expert opinion for you on our website go to our to deal column for live updates a timeline of the protests and the most dramatic footage.
4:07 am
the stakes are high at the court martial of bradley manning accused of leaking sensitive military data to the whistle blowing web site we keep leaks the soldiers charged with aiding the enemy and if phone guilty faces life in jail artie's learn about my explores now the u.s. government's attempts to silence those who feel they have to speak out. the military court martial against private first class bradley manning begins at a complicated time for the obama administration u.s. journalists have been spied on an unprecedented number of whistleblowers have been imprisoned and access to the truth many say grows increasingly harder by the day we have a severe problem with transparency and secrecy in this country that's for sure our problem is a cult of secrecy extreme levels of dystopian secrecy washington classified ninety two million documents in the year two thousand and eleven that's the last count we have to put things in perspective what bradley manning leaked is less than one
4:08 am
percent of that manning pleaded guilty to ten of the twenty two charges he faces the twenty five year old said he wanted the public to know how the u.s. military campaigns in iraq and afghanistan had little regard for human life it should be clear do anybody paying attention to bradley manning. thought of himself at the times in whistleblower that he did what he did because he thought he was making the world a better place he's in no way entire american has never expressed anti american sentiments in any way in fact he's always said that he is and was driven by a sort of sense of patriotism and prosecutors however are pursuing a court martial on the remaining charges including the espionage act and aiding the enemy which carries a life sentence in prison in an interview with democracy now julia songe addressed washington's allegations that manning aided the enemy by going to wiki leaks if that president is allowed to be erected it will be interesting things for
4:09 am
a slightly. it means it's a potential death penalty for any person you know attributes pretty. sensitive but secondly it's also the orioles' of the journalist and the publication shereen of communication that they would say to the enemy and therefore making it very susceptible as well to be a spin knowledge act which also has a couple of incidents that is it was the. u.s. but latter part is part of the u.s. attack. including ourselves broadly we hope this letter finds you healthy and strong daniel ellsberg known as the original whistleblower leaked seven thousand government documents to the press in one thousand nine hundred seventy one revealing the truth about the vietnam war more than four decades later he says the
4:10 am
u.s. government is going to even greater lengths to keep the public in the dark color to war and truth telling truth telling specifically. truth that the government doesn't want. truth about government crimes or that the public needs to know. if military prosecutors successfully prove that whistle blowing is aiding the enemy then bradley manning could spend the rest of his life in prison a verdict handed down under a president who promised to usher in an era of transparency when he stepped into the white house according to new york maureen up or not martin. when i tickle activist michael prysner says the mannings league was not as harmful as washington's games. the only people that put me and my friends in danger was members of the bush administration who lied to us about why we had to go to iraq lied to us about why we had to fight in iraq lied to us about why we had to stay in
4:11 am
iraq for ten years costing the life of about five thousand american service members and of course hundreds of thousands more made and. crippled and psychologically traumatized for the rest of their lives there are people who put american lives at great risk those people are those politicians who are now on million dollar book tours when they know that they have lied about the things that they sent us to war for people like bradley manning who did not lie but simply told the truth about what was happening is now facing life in prison bradley manning has said why he released this documents bradley manning is someone like me like many thousands of other young servicemembers who went into the military very idealistic very trusting of this government but weaving in what we are doing is was right only to witness the horrors of war the complete fallacy of why we were there the lives we were told by this government and decided to stand up and say something about it and the ranks of prosecuted whistle blowers in the u.s.
4:12 am
may be about to grow even the national security agency is pushing for a criminal probe into the leak of that revealed the scale of its top secret surveillance program earlier this week the british and u.s. papers published a court order that authorized the collection of all phone records from one of america's phone companies for the disclosure of some couple of the existence of a program code named prism and gone to delist agency e-mails videos documents and other materials from of these nine internet giants the massive scale of the spying calls outrage at home and abroad but president obama defended the methods security needs. is a fellow at the independent institute and says that such policies are the founding principles of the united states. i think this is a real by a lesion of the u.s. constitution even the democrats are saying well this is legal it's been checked out by congress. but that's doesn't wash when it violates the direct prison provisions
4:13 am
of the u.s. constitution which state that any warrant can't be a general warrant in other words they can't go mining for things which is what they're doing and also there has to be probable cause that there's been a crime committed well every citizen in america can't be. suspected of being a criminal now they're say they're not listening into the conversations via the phone conversations but the constitution doesn't say anything about that it just says if it's a search and this is a search and it's clearly unconstitutional even though the patriot act which is unconstitutional portions of it. ok's it so i think it's a very bad thing and also the other program that goes that actually does capture the content of e-mails photos that sort of thing on people overseas also captures
4:14 am
americans as well well rosenberg of the author of the free mensa perspective nice lead to things that despite the bombshells of agents revelations most americans are still in denial of the state of things. the problem with the people in the u.s. right now is that they're not emotionally prepared to deal with the possibility of an electronic police state it's just something that they've never that that's something that happened in east germany it's something that happened in china but they never think such a thing is possible in america and it's a good question over how many people will just find a reason to pass it off there was terrorism one hundred years ago there was terrorism thirty years ago these organizations spent billions before nine eleven they spent billions before the seven seventh's bombings they spent additional billions before the boss boston bombings and they occurred just the same there's going to be terrorism a hundred years from now too so it's
4:15 am
a fallacious trade the sale give us all give us all of your privacy and we'll give you security they haven't done it and they can't coming up later in the program they call it that in the sky. there believe last month of actual hellfire missiles retrieved from a war zone most americans never get to see we witness evidence of the us straying strikes in pakistan and speaking exclusively to the victims of the attack. and then you as the measures china and suspects of cyber attacks but opinions are divided the news really playing an offensive game with washington accused of aggressive new some beijing and not just the virtual world. arguably america's influence is much larger than that of iran so a with power comes responsibility greater responsibility would you agree with that
4:16 am
in every negotiation on a round table the parties are equal they may be different in the degree of that but on this issue each side is negotiating with the other i'm trying to reach an agreement. you know sometimes you see a story and it seems so poorly you think you understand it and then you glimpse something else you hear or see some other part of it and realize everything you thought you knew you don't know i'm sorry was a big issue. welcome
4:17 am
back for more news now the latest u.s. drone strike has killed at these seven people in pakistan's tribal region of us there is don no information has been released about the victims almost nine hundred buck is done is civilians estimated to have died in such a texas so while washington maintains as such a warfare is adjusts and only targets terrorists are to his music ethanol. who exactly is getting caught in the crossfire of the drone war. the locals call it death in the skies in pakistan's northwest tribal region an american drone as seen from the ground it's become the weapon of choice in the u.s. war on terror and this is the damage it can wreak under president obama more than three hundred such strikes on pakistani soil against alleged al qaeda and taliban
4:18 am
suspects. but ordinary civilians also pay a price this man is one of them i mean was on his way to work at a mine near his village when a drone struck the area he lost his leg in the attack three other miners who were with them lost their lives we live in constant fear of another strike we are simple villagers who are stuck in a war that we didn't ask for it's a hopeless feeling to be death is above our heads all the time. although the attack took place three years ago i mean new laws says the pain is still severe the sight of his injuries upsets his four children meanwhile depression anxiety and lingering fear have pushed him to take up tranquilizer pills and modify it in the same arrogance should be able to tell an ordinary person from a taliban leader they should know who they're killing what did we do to deserve this. this isn't my. drone arctic it's a question echoed by now darren who lost part of his hearing his short term memory
4:19 am
and nearly his foot on. the drone shockwave was so intense that it threw us outside far from the place where we were sleeping after several minutes there was another strike and it killed many more people attorneys out of bar has sued both the u.s. and pakistan on behalf of the civilian victims he says they're the voiceless people of the zeerust on isolated by geography and politics simply call it a concentration camp that you have built a wall of. military and militants and behind that wall you keeping more than eight hundred thousand people who are not allowed to come out and no one from the rest of the country is allowed to go in and that's a kind of tree which u.s. is using to use and test its drone program in many ways the epicenter of the cia's highly classified drone program is a black hole on the map a region of pakistan off limits to outsiders especially westerners no evidence of the drone strikes is almost impossible to get but these were smuggled to islamize
4:20 am
bought from the tribal areas there are believed to be fragments of actual hellfire missiles retrieved from a war zone most americans never get to see the fragments collected by norbu a local journalist who spent years documenting the civilian toll of drones especially on children disturbing images of the living and the dead for nor its personal. enemies. whenever my three year old daughter hears a plane she runs inside and won't sleep that night the children here have been traumatized by the drones the sound of a door banging shut is enough to terrify them. and that fear can turn to anger a new generation radicalized by the war by carrying no drone strikes killing innocent people who are not part of the conflict you just why didn't in the conflict you're giving a reason to people who were not part of the conflict to become part of the complete . of course this is made me hate the americans we're angry and want revenge they've
4:21 am
destroyed our lives my parents my wife my children we all see america as our worst enemy now while promising to rein in their use the white house says drones are both legal and effective that's the point of all this on. us. when translated by defense that's cold comfort for the victims you see caffein of pakistan the latest turn strike comes just days after pakistan's newly inaugurated prime minister called for an immediate end to the on man flight and continued attacks completely undermine the authority of flight this time the government's a retired three star general tell a masood. pakistan has been protesting and politically it has a very negative fallout in august on and it fuels militancy what exactly is
4:22 am
happening is that although it may have certain tactical advantage in the sense that you know if pakistan does not have control then the drones at least some to some extent may contain the militants but on the political side it lowers the image of their state in the eyes of its people it makes them feel helpless and then it also ruins the relationship between the u.s. and pakistan when it comes to the use of drones the americans have given the responsibility of using the drones to the cia as far as pakistan is concerned where is the rest of the countries apart from you your men have been given to the pentagon and they have also said that they would use that very discreetly but in the state of pakistan and afghanistan i think they don't even want to own it want
4:23 am
to talk of using it you know discreetly later this hour we talk to activists and philosophy professor named chomsky believes americans taking a fight with fire policy a bit. drone strike terror weapon we don't talk about it but it is just imagine if you're walking down the street and you don't know whether in five minute. there's going to be an explosion across the street. from some place where up in the sky. somebody will be killed and whoever else is around will be killed and. maybe you'll maybe you'll be injured if you're. just a terror weapon terrorizes. region this is a huge areas of the most massive terror going. along.
4:24 am
the brutal murder of a soldier in a willage inflamed millions of conversations in the social media but some of the online chats a resulted in legal hurdles abusive comments have led to wrestle brit's and then many worry the law is becoming overzealous in hunting down into that uses artists are first investigates. we trust our officers with a baton we trust some of the c.i. sprit and yet for some reason we can't trust them a twitter account in the wake of the recent well it's murder a number of arrests were made across the country after police responded to tweets it was the latest clear sign that police are in placing social media in a way they never have before twitter might be new police territory but their actions tread a fine line already some unfamiliar with the legal ramifications of their tweets
4:25 am
felt the full force of the law was one notable example came after a tweet to footballer james mcclean joining in online anger at the footballers decision not to wear a remembrance day poppy katie aiden look he tweeted he deserves to be shot dead alongside a picture of bullets two weeks later and he was arrested by manchester police do you feel like you crossed the line looking back on their. time i think i ought. to consequences they katie's cases since being dropped it's easy to see the cyber threats can cause real fear and often is deserving of punishment but other cases have ranged from the confusing to the downright ludicrous and figures obtained by r.t. show a steadily rising number of prosecutions in person under the communications act two
4:26 am
thousand and three including phone calls emails and social media posts within the police service and with another public sectors but it really is more about leadership than technology you know the technology needs to change absolutely fundamentally one needs to change is the attitude that leaders have towards social media many see as a huge risk what they feel to recognise is the fantastic opportunities are to really display the great skills great problem solving skill. new guidelines set to be made final by the criminal prosecution service in the coming weeks but with the explosion of social media leaving british law fighting to catch up many in the legal profession a warning that social media users no need to tread very carefully sarah firth r.t. london. still to come washington has a tate's to shutdown the natori one time will be a detention center as congress votes down obama's plan to close the camp when we
4:27 am
look at how the current detainee limbo affects their families back home. and president putin is set to become officially single after he announces his thirteen years of marriage that that's another story coming up. new york magistrate judge gary brown has ruled that it's ok to track people's location via their cell phone the judge supports his decision by saying that there's no legitimate expectation of privacy in the perspective of a cellular telephone where the individual has failed to protect his privacy but kicking the simple expedient of powering it off the statement seems to hint that cell phones are some sort of fun luxury and that people are just too lazy to turn
4:28 am
off their phones when they want privacy this ignores the fact that there are many people who have to be on call twenty four seven like surgeons and server technicians these people can't just turn off their phones so does that mean that certain professions can't have privacy also this presumption that people have no expectation of privacy what about people who send images of text messages of a sexual nature to each other joy i think that all these people just assume it's all public goods i don't think so the fourth amendment says that people have the right to be secure in their persons houses papers and effects and i'm pretty sure that's cover cell phones too but that's just my opinion. she.
4:29 am
is still with us today thank you for staying with us the u.s. president has won the chinese leader against continued loskiel theft of american intellectual property and to hack attacks the pair wrapped up a two day summit in california but the smiles and handshakes i fail to smooth the route over a cyber espionage. analyst to william f. and also as washington lectures beijing while being the aggressor in the first place the us is probably the number one cyber warfare force on the planet right now and china is probably playing a defensive game but i don't i don't think the so i think that's a red herring issue right now it's signed by a washington by the obama administration to put pressure on china at a time when the u.s. is doing just that with the so-called asia pivot which is really
4:30 am
a china pivot that obama announced in australia back in two thousand and eleven to redirect the american military force posture toward japan with the missile defense which is greatly against china toward disappointing japan on the the new island dispute in the south china sea which is very critical for china's access to potential mineral dust minerals sources. there's also another issue stirring western concerns in washington china is about to complete a deal which could become its biggest takeover of a u.s. company beijing's expansion has drawn a lot of anxiety from some quarters in america i'm just co-founder of the international city ticket alliance and says criticism towards china is in many causes and cases simply unjustified there is always going to be a segment of the american politicians and pundits that are always looking for something to criticize when it is in china and sometimes the criticism
4:31 am
comes from left field with no basis whatsoever certainly in this case that this there's an opportunity to. to blacken this deal by pointing out that chinese court is not safe for their dead pigs floating down a river in shanghai it's also for the intention is not to supply the americans which a nice pork but really is to supply american pork in china to the growing market there for for high meat products so again it's a win for for the american industry and it's a boost for the american economy the u.s. congress or this week once again voted to keep guantanamo bay prison open define president obama's recent promises to speed up its closure lawmakers prevented the use of public money to move detainees more than one hundred of them have been
4:32 am
refusing food for months in protest at their indefinite detention that colonel barry windham who represents one inmate argues however that obama has a poet to close the war on terror facility immediately if he generally wanted to. under the national security guard he can do that with the secretary of defense the content of that power it's time for the straight into you to report up or to at least tell us what's really going to happen the president does have the authority to release from guantanamo bay concluded shocker aamer back to london i think now i have the united states congress trying there's no sign that there's any time going to keep going on this sort of hunger strike i mean my client reports that all of these personal possessions are still confiscated his toothbrush is so good letters from home his attorney client mail reader if it was privileged to have lots of communicating between each other and all been taken and not returned he
4:33 am
asked me he said hey. people vote to find president it's ninety five percent full of men who happen to charge you with a crime after eleven and a half years to tell you and you can answer for the mystery to me what kind of person you don't care if you've done your study to guantanamo bay or just on the ground here in one town i'm ok there's. no change whatsoever and everybody is sort of waiting for washington to kill some leadership. you know the number of hunger strike england tumbling inmates is being force fed has we would see one now making up a quarter of a kansan tie billion population the backhoes has been condemned as torsional by various ill international organizations including the u.n. and it's not just the detainees who are suffering the prison remains open argues arabs this is not all went to yemen he made a family of one of the inmates. yeah some might argue there's not all that much
4:34 am
difference between the physical torture that many prisoners undergo in one town of mode and the emotional toll meant their relatives are forced to deal with at home like the family of abdurahman ash batty a yemeni terrorist suspects held at the controversial detention center since two thousand and two after his arrest the whole family was accused of links to terrorists only man now we have them america's support for human rights is merely a show it only cares about its own people well it destroys the rights of all others who have been suffering for thirteen years now and yemen president obama's recent promise to lift restrictions off get made detainees specifically from the country was greeted with nothing but sneers. weird start of these nonstop lies a bomb remembers about guantanamo only during election campaigns and on holidays he promised to shut it down several times and so for their cases to their home
4:35 am
countries these are all lies. meanwhile back in one town self as the thirty yemeni prisoners wait for the u.s. president's promises to come true the full month long hunger strike against their indefinite detention continues prisoners have been demanding for nonmilitary doctors to be allowed to treat them more than forty hours of more than one hundred protesters reportedly being force fed something they claim is torture in itself they are close enough to death that the military sees a need to force feed them none of them enjoy being forced but i can tell you that and they have described being forced sped in such terms of having a knife run down their throat. back in yemen the relatives all say they are going to believe another word from president obama until they see their sons brothers and husbands finally return home. wildly in a war that this family's case is merely one of several dozen where people can only
4:36 am
suffer and cry helplessly inside their homes but hope dies last. abilities al hey jim a son in yemen some other world news in brief at this hour a suicide car bombing has left seven people dead and wounded eighteen others in baghdad police say two civilians were among those killed when the vehicle detonated at an army checkpoint in the north of the iraqi capital the latest wave of sectarian violence has become one of the bloodiest since two thousand and seven and it's feared by many it will turn into a full scale civil war. at least twenty eight people have been killed and dozens wounded in clashes with the local militia operating in the libyan city of benghazi witnesses say crowds conversion of the group's headquarters demanding it be disbanded heated exchange gunmen began firing at the protesters
4:37 am
libya's new rulers are struggling to impose their thorgeir on numerous militias who often take the law into their own hands. president vladimir putin has a reveal that his marriage is over and in months of speculation about his private life now the. use of the sort of. richness to my job and my activities mean i'm an absolutely public figure some people enjoy this and some don't some people simply incompatible with such a lifestyle my wife luke miller has done a nine year shift by my side basically the decision was mutual. the announcement came in a joint interview with his wife and russian state television where. i added that pressure of work had taken its toll on their relationship the two have been married
4:38 am
for thirty years and have two daughters a confession to the public by surprise as valued put in the has usually been secretive about his private life. there's more on that story on our website here's what else you can find at our t.v. dot com of teens send it creeps in public trying to get fees triggered fear is friday night protests in brazil with police having to resort to tear gas and rubber bullets see more of the unrest in a photo gallery. and some booze booze for the spanish parliament a public protest put a stop to discounted strong legal for lawmakers leaving them with only why coffee is i got to do is take on the story. and i have been colonel was arrested this week over the alleged kidnappings in the country's province is thought he handed over locals to a death squad working for us special forces who then tortured and killed the
4:39 am
victims eleven people were found dates and seven others remain unaccounted for a senior u.s. army official says the alleged torture was a did work with the americans meanwhile a british court martial has delivered sentences on to u.k. soldiers who admitted abusing afghan civilians one of them was fined and the had his rank reduce both have been granted anonymity to keep the family save archly contributor actually read tons of believes that this case will have a long lasting effect. it's kind of but it will resign around around the world for in any country in amongst any groups of people that think that britain shouldn't be involved in afghanistan at all quoting to some parts of the case and reports of the case some of this abuse because amongst lots of soldiers so they're abusing children in front of groups of soldiers these cases they've
4:40 am
obviously and withheld the name soldier ex soldier why not just the reprisals against the families of these soldiers people will no doubt be trying to figure out who the soldiers were your sentiments towards the british military will be locked in stone and generations of afghans who despise not only the british military but everything britain is. coming up shortly america's a war on terror and the collateral damage it's causing discuss with activists and philosopher professor named chomsky i'll be back in a. few. the civilized world produces more food than it needs. well people die of hunger in other countries. millions of victims every. where a meal is the most strange.
4:41 am
was a. flood or droughts to blame. it was a bad year without trains that we couldn't find anything with that. we were dead of there was great hunger. was a good help comes too late and with good intentions. charity diplomacy and business want to take. a. i'm going to use your very own issue miniseries it was only three. years old it is true that it was a few years you that. you mean i think that
4:42 am
you disagree with what was a few years ago over here was a head and was needed to be able to do what i didn't believe it. actually was the way that is was. technology innovation all these developments from around russia we. are born to right on the ice fields of the white sea. throughout the twentieth century the poles were hunted for their snow white furs. russia imposed
4:43 am
a ban on this trade and hunters have since been replaced by tourists but stay safe for ever. saving seals on r.t.e. . dr thank you so much for taking the time to meet with me it's a great honor to be sitting here and were in boston cambridge actually but you know as someone who was a living in the aftermath of the boston bombing the chaos what did you think of the police and media response to them. i hate to second guess police tactics but my impression was it was. so that they didn't have to be that degree of militarization of the area maybe there maybe it's kind of striking that the
4:44 am
suspect they were looking for was found by a civilian after they lifted the curfew just noticed some street but. two days after the. boston bombing there was a drone strike in yemen. one of many but this one we have to know because the man from the village that was hit testified before the senate a couple of days later inscribed in the right at the same time and that what he said is. interesting and relevant he's he said that his village was in iceland that were they were trying to kill somebody and his village they said the man was perfectly well known they could have that brand they want it he was a drone strike his terror weapon we don't talk about it but it is just imagine
4:45 am
if you're walking down the street and you don't know whether in five minutes. there's going to be a explosion across the street from some place in the sky that you can't see and. somebody will be killed and whoever else is around will be killed and maybe you'll maybe you'll be injured if you're there that's just as terror weapon terrorizes. alleges regions huge areas affects them that most massive terror campaign going on longer and what happened in the village is that according to the testimony senate testimony that he said that the jihadi had been trying for years to turn the villagers against the americans and had not succeeded because the only thing they knew about america that was what he told them was. you're looked at here we're back but it was like he
4:46 am
said in one drone strike they turned the entire village against the americans that's it maybe a couple hundred new people who will call terrorists if they take revenge it's a turd generating machine it's a terror it's a terrorist operation and a terrorist generating machine so it goes on and on and it's not just the drone strikes also the special forces and so on well that was right at the time of the boston marathon and it's just one of in there were able cases but why are people so easy to accept conventional wisdom government narratives with virtually no questioning and here the drumbeat of conventional. propaganda in my view and i think some research project to find other things that there are other cases where which come to mind right away or should and where a person is murder who could easily be apprehended with some.
42 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
