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tv   Headline News  RT  September 10, 2013 5:00pm-5:31pm EDT

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or your media. or t.v. dot com. coming up on r t talks of u.s. military intervention may be shifting the international community is now seeking a deal where the syrian government hands over its chemical weapons that an update from capitol hill just ahead and the public may soon see more of that and it stays in our workings the u.s. government is expected to reveal the secret decisions of the pfizer court while more and more tech companies pressure the court for permission to divulge their requests an update on the n.s.a. secretive surveillance coming up and if you didn't get any sleep last night you're not alone millions of americans are developing new sleep disorders and with them a new dependency on big pharma a full breakdown on how these sleep friendly drugs are ruling the nation later in the show.
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it's tuesday september tenth five pm in washington d.c. i'm near i david and you're watching r t we begin today with syria where the conversation on potential military action may be shifting a diplomatic solution is now on the table with syria formally accepting a russian proposal to place their chemical weapons under the supervision of the international community however today france's foreign minister told reporters his russian counterpart was not enthusiastic about a binding un resolution on syria that would provide a framework to control the country's chemical weapons stockpile russian president vladimir putin said this of the proposal certainly this is all reasonable it will function and will work out only if the u.s. and those who supported on this issue pledged to renounce the use of force because it is difficult to make any country syria or any other country. the world to
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unilaterally disarm if there is no tarry action against it under consideration in another new development the syrian foreign minister said that this afternoon bush charlotte assad's regime would sign international international chemical weapons convention syria was one of five countries that did not sign the treaty in one thousand nine hundred three he told a lebanese television television station that quote we are ready to fulfill our obligations in compliance with this treaty including through the provision of information about our chemical weapons we will open our storage sites and cease production we are ready to open these facilities to russia other countries and the united nations we intend to give up chemical weapons all together with the prospects for a diplomatic resolution senate majority leader harry reid announced yesterday that he would postpone a crucial vote to authorize military action meanwhile today the house of representatives continued to debate the issue the house's armed services committee held a hearing earlier with top administration officials r.t.
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political commentator sam sachs went to the hearings today and brings us more for the third time in a week secretary of state john kerry defense secretary chuck hagel and chairman of the joint chiefs general martin dempsey took to capitol hill today to make the white house's case for military strikes in syria the harm the house armed services committee behind me is hosting the hearing and unlike the previous hearing last week there is an actual nonmilitary solution on the table it's the russian proposal which reports indicate that the syrian government has agreed to to hand over chemical weapons stockpiles to the international community and have them destroyed secretary of state kerry address this latest proposal this cannot be a process of avoidance that has to be real has to be measurable tangible and it is exceedingly difficult i want everybody here to know to fulfill those conditions but we're waiting for that proposal. but we're not waiting for long but at the same
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time kerry didn't back down from the threat of u.s. military action in fact said that a possible peaceful solution was made possible only because of threats to strike the only reason the i said regime as even publicly apparently consented to the russians that they'd be willing to do something having never admitted they had these weapons is because this threat of force is in front of them now there were more concerns from lawmakers about the scope of a potential strike secretary of state kerry reiterated again that this will be a small action it's not iraq it's not around it's not a years war what i was doing was trying to point out to people that we were engaged in a strike which we have again and again and if you want to take my comments in their entirety i have said this will be meaningful it will be serious. the outside regime will feel it because it will degrade their military capacity but compared to iraq kossovo libya it's small it is not any of those things for now though approval
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from congress for military action is on hold the senate was supposed to hold a vote tomorrow it's been delayed senate minority leader mitch mcconnell came out today opposed to strikes and a new resolution is being drafted in the senate that calls for diplomatic solutions first before any military strikes are permitted now that may be able to attract more support in the upper chamber unclear when or if there will be votes in the house this week or next week but this russian proposal may have legs president obama met with french president obama and and agreed to work with china and russia on the u.n. security council to come up with a resolution compelling syria to hand over its chemical weapons and all of this comes just ahead of the president's planned primetime address to the nation tonight to make the case for syria strikes how all of this latest news has changed the
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president's calculation and desire for action remains to be seen but for right now a military strike in syria looks less likely this week than it did last week but things still are moving very quickly here on capitol hill sam sax martin now while sam sachs is on the hell this afternoon he also tried to ask secretary of defense chuck hagel a few pointed questions. so you table if assad says he's going to retaliate doesn't that immediately escalate the conflict moving forward. here i don't know water. but if he says he's going to retaliate and you going to make him sorry doesn't that turn it into a war. looks like secretary hagel was done with questioning for the day. last night president obama offered his most positive comments yet on the syrian crisis and the russian plan for the international community to take custody of syria's chemical weapons but news came out of the multiple interviews that were granted to different network and cable news channels and although there were six
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different anchors doing the questioning r.t. found that each of the interviews were based on the same talking points take a look. do we want to be involved in another war the answer is no people are of or wary about it understandably and they have seen the consequences of this less back aid they think in terms of blood and treasure it has not been worth that it's not what they expected when they signed on to the iraq war back in two thousand and three i understand why a lot of american service system that think the poles are clear i've read them is this is not iraq this is not afghanistan this is not libya i'll explain this is not iraq this is not afghanistan this is not even libya this isn't like iraq it's not like afghanistan is not even like libya right now the american people are not persuaded right now members of congress we're just getting back still have questions so we're going to have time to have a good deliberation in congress we will pursue this diplomatic track my preference
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consistently has been a diplomatic resolution if we can resolve this without military conflict that is my great preference my central goal throughout this process has not been to embroil ourselves in a civil war in syria i think we should explore and exhaust all avenues of diplomatic resolution of this if we can exhaust these diplomatic efforts and come up with a formula that gives the international community a verifiable and forcible mechanism to deal with these chemical weapons in syria that i'm all for it it is important for us to run to ground every diplomatic channel that we can and we are going to run this to ground but we're going to run this to ground and i have instructed john kerry to talk directly to the russians and run this to ground it president obama will address the nation this evening at nine pm eastern time to further clarify his thoughts on intervention in syria and we had our team will have special coverage of the speech here's what you can expect . i will seek authorization for the use of force from the
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american people's representatives in congress as we have. the world is wondering whether or not a bird ours is. what we're really rallying against us there better be very i. think. that. a. lot of people. are going to like this of ministration he's failed to show me the direct threat to the united states of america how to paint obama. as i don't live. there and. know what's at stake here is there a way to resolve this. so that's nine pm eastern
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right here on our team make sure to tune in. well we now know who stands to gain the most from a military strike on syria financially speaking that is its of course the defense industry which has already seen a rise in its stock prices since u.s. officials first started talking about military action in fact boeing general dynamics on lockheed martin all saw huge gains and mediately after august twenty first which is the same day a chemical attack took place in the country but front in line to get the big bucks is raytheon a defense company that began to see a huge surge after the obama administration was quoted as saying that an attack would likely include tomahawk cruise missiles the same missiles that raytheon produces the company's stock additionally climbed on august twenty sixth the day u.n. inspectors arrived in syria to investigate the use of chemical weapons and sacked raytheon saad shared jumped to seventy seven dollars and ninety three so. sense which marked the highest price for its stock in the last fifteen years but it seems
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what comes up must go down because as soon as discussion of congressional opposition to the strike began raytheon stock began to slip back down perhaps making it clear which side the defense industry is on when it comes to the syria debate. and today the justice department is set to release new n.s.a. related documents they were previously secret decisions of the foreign intelligence surveillance court however the information is finally going to be released today after a long running for your request submitted by both the a.c.l.u. and the electronic frontier foundation the civil liberties organizations had been seeking to learn just how the government has been interpreted one controversial provision of the patriot act that's thought to be responsible for justifying the n.s.a. spying of ordinary americans and as more details emerge over the government surveillance of user data technology companies are beginning to ask their efforts to publicly
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disclose information about what the government has coerced them to share yesterday yahoo and facebook each filed a lawsuit in the secret foreign intelligence surveillance court asking for permission to reveal the number and kinds of national security requests the companies have received you may remember that tech companies google and microsoft filed similar lawsuits back in june however this week both of those companies amended their petitions for permission to release even more information regarding the requests to discuss these mounting tech lawsuits and the implications of this upcoming foyer release i was joined earlier by elizabeth team co-director of the liberty and national security program at the brennan center for justice i started by asking her what we can expect to learn from these documents. i think we will finally see the secret files a court's rationale for approving bulk collection of all of americans telephone records i think we've had
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a hint of what that rationale is because the justice department released a white paper back in august setting for us the government's legal justification for the program presumably what the court found is something along the lines of what the government put forward in that paper but at least we'll have the chance to see how the court hopefully weighed some of the competing arguments about whether in fact every american telephone records are relevant to an authorized foreign intelligence investigate a very very important information and ron wyden who's been on top of this you know back in two thousand and eleven he said this quote when the american people find out how their government has secretly interpreted the patriot act he will be stunned and they will be angry what do you think he meant by that when i think he's right i mean i think the americans now know that the government has interpreted this authority which on its face looks fairly narrow the government is allowed to obtain records from third parties like telephone companies if it has grounds to
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believe that those records are relevant to an authorized foreign intelligence or international terrorism investigation and the government and the pfizer court have interpreted this authority to allow a bulk collection of all americans telephone records that really doesn't look on its face consistent with what the statute allows and so i think americans were. shocked to learn that their own telephone records are being treated as relevant for counterterrorism purposes absolutely well the a.c.l.u. filed their way a lawsuit shortly after ron wyden said that and why i wanted to get your take on why you think it's coming out now why two years later we finally having these documents released a combination of reasons part of it is that the disclosures by edward snowden forced the government to try to get ahead of some of the. some of the additional disclosures that it knew were forthcoming it had to try to spin what was coming out in its own way or to put it in
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a nicer way it legitimately wanted to explain maybe some of the already set that had been released and so it had to engage with its own series of disclosures that it otherwise would not have wanted to but there's also the fact that the court in these in these four year cases freedom of information cases was putting pressure on the government and not buying the government's justification that everything had to say classified without any review or do you think this is part of a growing trend to see more sort of transparency within the pfizer courts i think we'll see more transparency where transparency is necessary i think the government's hand was forced in this case by the snowden disclosures and by the courts in these four year cases i think as long as the government's hand continues to be for us we'll see more disclosures and more transparency otherwise i think it's up in the air whether that will happen sure and you know many people defend the secrecy of the five accords by saying if you make a transform parent means that they can't do their job accurately what do you make of that argument well looking at the at the point is that now have been disclosed it's pretty clear that it is possible to tease out some of the operational details
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that need to be kept secret legitimately so from some of the legal analysis that the public has a right to see so i think that that principle should inform what the court does going forward absolutely and of course now we know that four different tech companies facebook microsoft yahoo and in my head and i'm flipping the last one but they're all seeking permission to disclose information about how users are being spied on do you see this as a p.r. move or do you think this could be real you know basically elicit real substantive change both i mean i think the companies have quite an incentive to try to burnish their own image as advocates of their customers privacy i think their image has been tainted by some of the revelations that they cooperated in some of the n.s.a.'s activities but at the same time these disclosure. if they are permitted would be very important in terms of helping the public to understand what kind of surveillance is going on and how their own communications and transactions are
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being do you think they will be that these requests will be granted do you think it's likely i think it's possible they'll be granted at least in part and i say that because the director of national intelligence has on his own agreed to release some of the same information that the companies are seeking to release but even if users did know the extent to which their data was being compromised do you think that that would stop them from really using facebook or google or do you think that we're we're too intertwined with these services with these web sites at this point to really back away and say i won't take part in that anymore i think there are companies that might offer alternatives to consumers in this country but i think really it's the international population that a lot of these companies are focused on because they want to be able to market their services to people in europe who are wary who have different privacy standards frankly and are dismayed by what some of these companies have been doing in cooperation with the n.s.a.
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so i think in a way those are some of the markets that the companies are most concerned with and lastly i want to get your take on something we only have a minute left but apple just unveiled their latest i phone and has this really i don't know if you heard about it has this feature where you can sort of now it scans your your fingerprint and that's how identifies who you are. obviously a little problematic i mean do you think there will be pushback or should be pushback to that future i is considering the relationship i'm sorry considering the relationship between apple and the n.s.a. i assume it's a voluntary feature and i would hope that people are aware of their rights and also aware of some of the risks before they decide to scan their fingerprints. well fed well thank you so much for coming on i really appreciate your time elizabeth teen co-director of the liberty and national program at the brennan center for justice thanks so much experiment. and still ahead here on r.g.p. in the u.s. counting sheep has become counting pills millions of americans are diagnosed with a sleeping disorder depending more and more on drugs for
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a shot i more on that after the break. dramas the chance to be ignored. in the. stories others use in those. places change the world right. to make sure. you know. the roads to. look to dump. at least. if. you think.
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that. i would rather ask questions to people in positions of power instead of speaking on their behalf and that's why you can find my show larry king now right here on r.g.p. question. the power supply. it was a. very hard to take place against. a player you ever had sex with that they care. let's play.
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the first. lists lists live upon. did you know the price is the only industry specifically mentioned in the constitution and. that's because a free and open press is critical to our democracy trek albus. in fact the single biggest threat facing our nation today is because work speaks a lot of our government and across a similar we've been hijacked why handful of transnational corporations that will
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profit by destroying what our founding fathers one school class i'm tom hartman and on this show we reveal the big picture of what's actually going on in the world we go beyond identifying the problem try to fix rational debate in a real discussion critical issues facing america if i ever feel ready to join the movement then walk a good pick. got sleep well apparently many americans do not in fact between fifty and seventy million americans suffer from some kind of sleep disorder and with so many americans not getting the sleep at their body means we're seeing more and more people develop a new dependence on sleep friendly drugs r t correspondent liz wall has the story desperate for some sleep more than nine million americans turn to sleeping pills that they've had many patients call them
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and say that they're not sleeping well may have been dreamed in years in the first study of its kind the centers for disease control found one in twenty five americans pop pills to get some shuteye the c.d.c. found some trends among users prescription pill use increases with age is higher among women increases with education and pills are prescribed to those that doctors diagnose with a sleep disorder. america's sleeping pill of choice ambien or its generic name is old but it's a sedative that typically knocks the user out pretty quick early this year the food and drug administration lowered the recommended dosage for women because it would keep them drowsy the next day and there's reports of people sleepwalking while on the drug doing everything from eating to driving to having sex and they don't remember any of it oh it's not just prescription pills americans are using to fall
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asleep millions more are turning to over the counter sleep aids to get some shuteye some of them are meant to make you sleepy others have drowsiness as a side effect whether or not they're taking drugs an estimated fifty to seventy million americans suffer from a sleep disorder or sleep deprivation why the growing number of insomniacs physicians say there are several factors leading to sleepless nights people are getting heavier and when they're getting heavier they have more difficult. breathing at night it's a condition called sleep apnea and addition to higher rates of obesity stress anxiety and staying up using electronics are also keeping many americans from falling asleep but what folks often do is though they use these medications in lieu of their normal sleep patterns and they can get stuck using them in dispute or sort of become addicted to them medical professionals say not only are more people
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suffering from sleep disorders but doctors tend to prescribe sleep aids more often and one of questions i asked my colleagues psychiatry psychologist that what percentage point do you start to think maybe it's not an individual illness that there is something troubling in our whole society and culture physicians say prescription pills and other medications should be a short term fix but the long term cure for insomnia is practicing sleep hygiene not watching t.v. late at night. trying not to drink caffeine late at night trying to get some weight loss so that your breathing is better at night in washington liz of all our tea. almost everyone in the u.s. has used or at least heard of a website called headless it's a one stop shop to buy and sell pretty much anything you can think of from household items to specialized services to dates but have you ever stopped to notice the slightly stranger items that the website offers such as a peed on pregnancy test yes believe it or not that's the latest hot commodity on
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the market artie's parian boring has a story for you in a hurry to get married what would you do to get your boyfriend to pop the question some desperate people have turned to faking a pregnancy in the past but now there's a modern twist turns out women are selling positive pregnancy test on craigslist and people are actually buying them and a quick search on craigslist in d.c. we found several ads one to play a joke on a spouse ex or family member this is the perfect way to do it i'm seven months pregnant and i'm willing to give you a pov the pregnancy test for a low fee of thirty dollars or the urine itself or twenty you never know if you will go as far as to providing a test himself and this is the ad i responded to when i met the woman selling her p. she provided me with this positive pregnancy test earlier i spoke to comedian alex burnett and asked him if he thinks men could fall for that i think you should never
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underestimate people's stupidity. i think people can often be very very stupid or or looking full of you know. naive detail so i took to the streets to see if we could find anyone who has actually fallen for this scam so as you do if your girlfriend faked her pregnancy. i'd probably break up with her what if you didn't know it was fake if she provided a real positive pregnancy test that with her. i would sure get my money back and i break up with her and then hook up with her sister some speeches. i've actually had to. experience before it's very upsetting that doesn't sound too positive. i don't know about that yeah i think that's kind of messed up. could be a funny prank i mean if you got a good video of it so i don't think they should be doing this i think more in the. this isn't a good joke for the poor taste than
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a joke ever your girlfriend shows you a pregnancy test you think you would fall for the same approach. but there are some people who aren't pleased with this emerging market the woman selling the positive said that she got an email from an angry citizen think she was a horrible person for doing that and hey if people want to sell a pregnancy test or say scores or diplomas from harvard and someone else. you know hey that's the american way right we all will buy and sell anything as long as there's a market for it i think it's fantastic and i don't begrudge her at all new reports show that raising a child can cost more than two hundred forty one thousand dollars so the extra cash could provide new families with the question they need to start saving but here's some advice if you see a positive pregnancy test always get a doctor's opinion and washington d.c. i'm peri and boring r.t. . think before you ink and your body that is that's exactly what washington d.c.
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lawmakers are hoping d.c. residents will do before committing to a new piercing or tattoo on friday the city's department of health proposed a twenty four hour mandatory waiting period for people who want to make that semi-permanent statement if this regulation passes prospective customers would also need to sign a questionnaire to disclose any preconditions that might affect the healing process including pregnancy diabetes and herpes by the artists would also have to provide proof that they have been vaccinated for hepatitis b. and agreed to undergo biohazard training but in addition to minimizing health risks the d.c. lawmakers say this will minimize regrets for those who compulsively decide to go under the needle so i guess drunken nights for some people will just never be the same all that does it for now for more on the stories we've covered today go to youtube dot com slash r t america and check out our website at r t dot com slash
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usa you can follow me at twitter at a mirror david if you write back here at eight. i know c n n the most obviously news lately but the desire of their commitment to cover all sides of the story just in case one of them happens to be. that was funny but it's closer to the truth is the right thing. it's because one small attention in the mainstream media works side by side the joke is actually on.

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