Skip to main content

tv   Breaking the Set  RT  November 2, 2013 7:29am-8:01am EDT

7:29 am
senator nice three sixty on that one looks like the same old diane frankenstein to me happy belated hall when everyone let's go back to set. of the. it was a. very hard to get the trigger. happy ever had sex with her right there looking. to cut cut cut. cut cut. cut. cut. cut. cut cut. cut. so
7:30 am
a lot has changed since the world learned about n.s.a. spying foreign leaders are outraged public protests are growing but there is one thing that hasn't changed at all and has a spine all day every day thankfully activists here in the u.s. are also taking to the streets at a recent rally called stop watching us unique performance done by privacy advocates to head with tar and kristen a rant so i asked him to come on this show and perform for you. and as a break the law every day doesn't matter who you are or what you say they monitor your phone calls and e-mails any way corrupt congress and courts paving the way here's a lesson they want you to learn some day. watch what you say they stop by on your mind record your calls for posterity become a bit of the executive crimes with impunity they're the authorities here to keep us safe until inevitably the up and go. it's the n.s.a.
7:31 am
versus the constitution we the people are the ones are abusing any agency to make a new choice when we build a movement each raising of what was. for private information misuse gagging recipients of the first amendment to the patriot act national first we lose the privacy that enables speech then we let our government expand its reach into your bank account your medical records. your browsing history. we still open the bureau threatens democracy and our rights in the school. for the next generation for the f.b.i. reporting immigrants with. citizens pay an equal price less demand for housing less tax revenue running on the vine what else do we do not take the local cops arrested and give it to take a look at what the f.b.i.
7:32 am
itself that we start with immigrants will give the plan already led well beyond mass deportation instead of bureau has a price on your head. your iris patterns the sound of your voice and national id imposed without choice there is blood on our constitution. but check it out it's still moist. agencies vs the constitution we don't people are the ones our government is abusing force anybody to make a. movement by each raising of. peaceful activists setting in motion predictable plot twists. cation of. shows the nation of countries creation you can say be patient bill of rights for all the pieces before our very eyes to everything you told me. soul
7:33 am
be where the end to any group. is intelligence about legal behavior the price of. informants everything and cover you're being watched by big brother right now every e-mail every call before national security our constitution has probably got informants walking your. versus the constitution we the people are the ones our agencies are abusing we can force any government to make sure the movement. back in the day during world war one it was the f.b.i. versus free speech holding the gun hard fought constitutional rights on the palmer raids the first but not the last one forty years to the real red scare card you did a number with they were everywhere they knew what you were going to bed they prosecuted people for the. tried to drive. no one even knows why brother.
7:34 am
killed in his own house. all the. agencies are just on the director the head honcho the man claims. he didn't understand the agency's versus the constitution the people are the ones. we can force anybody to make. a movement by each raising our voice. your palm agency versus the people how did that manifest out of your political activism it's a creative reflection on the same kind of things i do in my day job and i feel like the audience for a policy is only so big and art and culture has a way of speaking to people spirits right in your heart rather than just your head so for me it's just a way to express with more parts of myself the same convictions that i have a chance to to indicate to my work at the bill of rights defense but i realize that
7:35 am
spoken word actually resonates with a lot of people more so than just you know giving them a speech or why do you think that it's oral history is one of the first kind of ways that people participated in discourse right and the idea of there being a performative element the energy of a performance beyond the content of the lecture i think is greater than the sum of its parts especially when you get an opportunity in a live setting for a poets to have that back and forth the collaboration that kind of energy i think is even more gripping and it lends for an emotional experience that's way beyond merely because i agree you're also the executive director of the bill of rights defense committee were one of the sponsors of the stop watching us rally that amazing historic rally and d.c. last weekend what do you think of the event it was amazing we had thousands of people that came out and as one would expect on civil liberties issues drew from the right and the left and to see those diverse allies standing side by side tea party influenced freshman member of congress alongside dennis kucinich right to see
7:36 am
the art and culture there is a lot of music there are a lot of visuals to see all of that together with the very brainy reflections of c.b. n.s.a. whistleblower swore some of the other people that spoke there was really exciting and i think that especially at this moment with the snowden leaks creating so much mounting controversy around our government's domestic surveillance practices and then coming in the immediate. wake of the rally where these bills coming out of congress the usa freedom act and i'll call it the n.s.a. entrenchment act from senator feinstein you know we're seeing the institutions respond. and that of course makes it all the more compelling and exciting it was so incredible i think years ago you would never see people in the street protesting the patriot act so it's amazing to see people out of their computers into the public sphere demanding to repeal the patriot act stop warranted blanket spying with the n.s.a. it was really really amazing and you mentioned the art music and that was one of the most captivating things i think the incredible unification with the signs just
7:37 am
incredible you know everything that we're looking at here is so beautiful you know i mean all the all that materials and of course the bands you perform there why did choose to incorporate this into the rally to make sure that it resonates beyond the people who understand the value of privacy social movements in our country have always been rooted in culture beyond policy and so that was the idea with the bands was to speak to different folks who might not necessarily care as much about the n.s.a. but like to hear a good beat and the more different kinds of genres the movement can cover and the broader its reach to the american people and ultimately what we're talking about here is the struggle around domestic surveillance and constitutional rights this is a battle for democracy against our nation's intelligence agencies and if we confine ourselves to blogs and newspapers we will lose if it ends up being at dinner tables and on street corners and in classrooms and everywhere that's what we would love to i was also just like you would have fun you can go out and have fun have
7:38 am
a great time here great music amazing art and have a serious political message behind it we know that there are five hundred seventy five thousand but haitians delivered in those huge boxes right to congress has there been any any response from the petitions or the petitions were delivered to congress leahy and sensenbrenner the authors of the patriot act originally introduced a bill that would basically curtail some of the worst abuses under a piece of legislation and granted they were working on that bill well before the petitions went to congress but i do think of the introduction of the usa freedom. very direct response to the mobilization of the petition the lobby day that was part of it and the sustained clamor that's been coming from all sides of the political spectrum from every region of the country and what do you think about dianne feinstein three sixty degree turn here she's been the main lobby is behind by and then she goes out and says no now she's coming out kind of credit card if i call these illegal practices her bill is a red herring you know it's not at all
7:39 am
a solution to any of the abuses it really is a way to entrench them while painting of the reforms on the ice expected to some extent from senator feinstein because she has been so lax in her capacity as chair of the senate intelligence committee essentially abdicating the committee's oversight role to rein in the abuses of the intelligence agencies that's useful to remember where the senate intel committee started it was the church committee in the one nine hundred seventy s. the last time congress bothered to take a hard look at our nation's intelligence agencies they found what the u.s. senate described as a sophisticated vigilante operation aimed squarely at suppressing the legitimate exercise of first amendment rights of speech and association that committee grew out of that investigation only now to have been co-opted by the agencies it's supposed to be overseeing sounds totally legitimate you know you were telling me before how people are fighting back on the state level the bill of rights offends me is actually participating in that facilitating that tell me more about how people can fight this there are a lot of different ways that dragnet surveillance happens it's not just the n.s.a.
7:40 am
and the internet it's also your local sheriff's department flying an aerial drone over your city it's also your local police department working with the t.h.s. funded fusion center to collect intelligence information about people's associations absent any suspicion of crime those are actionable policies that you don't need congress to do anything about you can fix those in your city councils in your state legislatures you know earlier this year we helped get a bill through the state legislature of texas signed by the governor to restrict surveillance we've gotten bills through city councils to restrict the use of fusion centers and intelligence collection these opportunities are available to anyone. anybody anywhere and the work we do at the bill of rights defense committee is about coaching working with those local coalitions to help secure bill of rights protections where you live excellent way we cannot depend on the top down federal level where they go from the grassroots bottom up from our cities and local representatives. executor of the bill of funds bill of rights defense committee activists poet thank you so much for coming on next having me on. still ahead i'll
quote
7:41 am
talk to l. ron hubbard's great grandson about scientology stick around. speak your language. programs and documentaries in arabic it's all here on all t.v. reporting from the world talks about six of the yard p. interviews intriguing stories are you. trying. to find out more visit our big don't all t.v. don't call.
7:42 am
so the bank of england if you open it up the walls you won't see gold you won't see silver you want to even see bitcoin what you'll see and mountains and mountains of garbage and trash and gutter oil and dead bodies and mervyn king's dresses that
7:43 am
he's aware of what he was not seen governing the bank of england before and old guys from the old victorian era stacked up like firewood rotting and that's the collateral that is the doctor's saying the real estate speculation which has only one in the little conclusion and that is. lost but the question of when. the the. according to pew research center eighty four percent of the world's people identify with a religion many of these faiths have stood the test of time and are rooted in centuries old historical tradition however one very prominent religion was created just sixty years ago yes i'm talking about scientology founded by none other than science fiction writer ron hubbard but not every member of the hubbard family is
7:44 am
a member of the church his great grandson jamie dewolf is actually one of the most outspoken critics of what he calls a cult. my family written out of existence and this disciple will never know the legacy of lies that i still carry in my last name the wall the cover story protect us from my great grandfather's true children the army of empty who treat me and train stations within the meter and a personality test and they asked me if i ever heard elder on the home. jamie joined me earlier to talk about all things scientology. almost actually oddly one of my greatest inspirations when i was a kid because he was a writer and he was a science fiction writer and even as a young kid i was given a lot of his books for christmas and stuff like that of his volumes and of mission
7:45 am
earth in particular and as a little kid i was like this guy's a bad ass you know he has all these covers of guys a machine guns and laser guns and you know rocket ships and and it was i grew up that is christian hilariously enough and i actually had to learn who all ron hubbard really was and what else he wrote besides science fiction in a book a pastor gave me about cults specifically and that was what started the larger conversation because in my family he was literally something we didn't talk about so he was my great grandfather his first son was l. ron hubbard jr who was my grandfather and his first child was my mother so i was the oldest child i was the oldest grandchild and. i mean it was just something that nobody ever wanted to discuss and also when i was a kid that l. ron jr was also actively battling against his father should basically is dying days
7:46 am
so it was something that we just didn't bring up in the house because it was constant and current and you know even now some of my family won't talk about it and actually one of the last people that will that's absolutely fascinating you know you're one of the most outspoken critics of scientology according to village voice here listed actually at number twenty two out of twenty five people who are crippling it i'm told here you are you said they are not higher on that list i do not want to be higher on that list that is. it's a little scary to even be on that list i won't lie i magine it you know a little scientology compounds everywhere that inflate dot ca is on every single person they're like all right what are we doing about number twenty four talk about the backlash you've incurred i mean i know that you're joking around right now but really i'm sure that there have been i mean we tried to cover story here and we received you know the call from the from the church telling us not to run the story
7:47 am
i mean what what sort of experiences have you had any threats at all from the church for speaking out they i mean the first the very first time i spoke out about it about him was in one thousand nine hundred nine and i did a performance about in a cafe at a show that i had just started and culture rats without regrets and it was a show that was about just it was like this just kind of long diatribe about scientology and it's like cults in my family and everything is the first time i really publicly said anything about it in particular and it went online and within days that they were my house they tracked me down pretty sure that they tap my phone so i was being followed everywhere i went and so i mean they they basically come after you like some kind of pseudo crazy. mafia i think that they don't want to bring more attention to just like the whole general that side of my family and that story because it's a little embarrassed seem to have the same name sake as your general idea t.
7:48 am
. or great founder and leader actively warring against scientology for his entire life as well i mean the story of l. ron jr is a pretty nasty and embarrassing one because he used to be a member of the cult as well actually helped write a lot of their protocols that dealt with critics and strong arm tactics so he was well aware of how they were going to execute these tax sick and impression because junior also helped write him as well why do you think our religion and invented by a science fiction writer sixty years ago i mean this is recent history has become so wildly popular i mean we know that you need our machines part of the initiation i took one of those tests myself what is it about that has to long with dianetics that's sucks people in the church i think it's actually what what it's scientology is actually a very brilliant form of brainwashing one because it's very it's very process
7:49 am
of the e meter and so for it's really electrified hypnosis you're being guided along this hypnotic state that is causing you to regress into your past lives which also has this sort of overall overarching like kind of paranoia and corporate structure to it where you're trying to unlock your brain in the guidance somebody else who has their own purposes you don't see your results so it's like you're holding this and it's running an electrical current through you while you're born sort of being hypnotized in this process and whatever they're writing down you don't get to see they only are secrets right this is not a client attorney privilege or any kind of psychiatric relationship this is information that they just. oh and they can put in a filing cabinet and they can and will use it against you later and as you progress up this is what they call the bridge which if you just turn it on its side it's
7:50 am
really just clearly a pyramid pyramid scam really where you going towards o.t. level eight. and higher which is basically at the point you're supposed to be a super human trans you know continental interdimensional being at that point and that's where tom cruise is supposed to be that's where john travolta is supposed to be but you're always moving up on this bridge and if you express doubts then they can reverse you on this bridge you have to take these classes over again you have to pay for it again so this is kind of a bizarre like internal structure that has this internal societal pressure upon you and has this paranoia and you start to believe that this machine can read your very thoughts and you can get sect checked which is like this whole brutal sort of interrogation that they'll force you through and so there's this entire climate of fear that surrounds all of it and yet the fact that a side fire writer can suddenly turn around from writing fiction and then say oh
7:51 am
now i'm i made new brain new scientific discoveries that will change the world over and i was very little in the form of that ensor case studies is rather stunning and makes sense in the time and climate that it came about you know in the fifty's in the early sixty's and this is kind of viewed as like an exciting new revolutionary innovative science you know at this point it becomes laughable when you look at a lot of its secrets revealed like o.t. level three and xenu and the evil galactic warlord and the alien souls that possess your body but mind you in the seventy's nobody knew that nobody had the internet this is stuff that was you had to earn your way to you had to pay to brainwash yourself i want to hear all of this talk about. you know people joining and becoming indebted and the financial manipulation i guess. from people who aren't millionaires right well i think one one of the reasons why celebrities become ensnared today is it is certain way the whole sort of belief system is not specific
7:52 am
in nature you're basically on a path to become a god like being you know the whole idea is this is about you that you yourself are a god like being in having this show you know it isn't that l. ron is god l. ron is basically like a buddha or like a wise the wise is scientist that has given us this technology that is unlock this and it was still view that l. ron was you know a wise a god like being inhabiting this flesh shell which happened to be of portly redheaded chain smoking in. middle aged man on a boat but past that is that there's a narcissism of it too it's definitely the secrets the fact that they are in your secrets they can absolutely use those against you they absolutely will three i think that some people have to realize that it's embarrassing to go that far this pyramid. and start to realize how absurd it actually is and i think that that's
7:53 am
personally humiliating because the thing is is that and if there are scientologists listening feel free to tune in or turn up your volume is that i don't have particularly a problem with the low level scientologists because a lot of these are are smart productive people they have to have some sense of a career in order to be able to even pay for these services that specifically the people they target they target people who have money that have careers that have good professional standing is that the problem is that l. ron was literally free styling the whole thing from the k. so as it goes further it becomes more and more innately absurd and more and more explicitly in. saying you know when you get the evil galactic war lords in and the dead alien parasites that are clinging to your very body well that point it becomes
7:54 am
laughable but you don't know about that for a long time which is why the critics and the members who have left start screaming xenu right away because that's ultimately where it's going right is that you know if i hand you a bible you can read the book of revelations in the first five minutes you don't have to earn your way pay your way and unlock each new chapter of the bible it's all given it once and i think that's the point is that why should we trust an organization and present any religion institutionalized religion but especially one that makes me paying to get these secrets of god or whatever you know and their interpretation of god is right i wanted to move on because we're almost out of time jamie but i can't help but ask i mean there have been a number of mysterious deaths associated with the church most notably lisa macpherson who was held for seventeen days by members before he died i mean do you think that the church is also covering up more serious crimes like blackmail and eventually murder there have been many statements that people have said that murder
7:55 am
has has certainly been on the menu in dealing with critics let's say that is what i've heard someone recently who i talked to who is a very high level defector and leave their identity secret for the moment they made a terrifying point to me they said jonestown it was in nome the people's temple right and jim jones wasn't known for suicides and murder before jonestown right that was simply when you pushed against the wall they came back firing and everybody died and he said who say that scientology can and in the same way i mean right now they're getting rocked with all kinds of allegations of all kinds of lawsuits they have high level people who are leaving the church their number two and three people just left recently in the last decade you have tony or. village voice is blasting and every day your show's taken swings out of not even having me on and that's the thing is that how far is it going to go because it this point you
7:56 am
have a cold small cold that started as dwindling membership but in this century like it was part of the largest domestic case espionage on its own government our united states government and that's factual that happen iran's wife went to jail for it operations no way and i mean the fact that most americans aren't even aware of how dangerous scientology has been and their critics the fact that i know i put myself in danger every time i even talk about it and anybody who's dealt with the cult knows how dangerous that they truly are i mean i definitely have a sense that the empire is showing its cracks and it's starting to fall apart because when you don't have any more secrets to sell when all your secrets are online how are you going to sell them anymore and then what are you going to do once the whole temples on fire amazing have you i mean the wall spoken word poet performer artist i need to get on again doesn't talk about your work man really
7:57 am
often ask me to thank so much thanks thanks. guys that's the show tonight thanks for watching have an awesome weekend. and his lover into an amazon. that's been my dream for so long on a. but he couldn't hold on to the race such a thing as i was growing a teacher and now she runs her own amazon factory with a slowdown a trial of just a minute there's no alcohol or smoking and even kelsey is a bit. they worship the sun. will he ever be able to win back. his woman. on november the fifth more than four hundred cities around the globe are hosting mass rallies for
7:58 am
fairness justice and freedom. follow million mask march on r.t.e. and r t dot com press and media freedom worth nothing. when it comes to the interests of multinationals we have a media that is corrupted by power mostly by corporate. corporate ownership from the top of corporate advertising coming in from the side we have a media that is where advertising and money and corporate influence is really the mother's milk a documentary filmmaker is being sued. for the truth is being told the private investigator think something. happens people buy and sell those kind of services all of the world. hundreds of million dollar industry
7:59 am
needs to protect his reputation a few million being spent on a campaign to do just that is probably goods money well spent. so what will be the verdict. big boy is going bananas. mission free couldn't take three. years three. months three. three. free. download free blog video for your media project a free media. we're not psyched to active camps on a motorway where patients are forced to eat in the months after a massive public or strike never turned world's attention to the place that some
8:00 am
gulag of our times. almost a thousand people are killed in iraq in just one month forcing the country's prime minister to ask the u.s. for help to end the violence. america's huge soon to be open new spy complex is the target for outrage with the parties failing to keep the public away from what was supposed to be a secret facility. they put it inside of the middle of an army base so you can be protesting the army to protest the n.s.a. . activists besieged the already notorious data center in utah which will host super computers able to store the piles of files of phone e-mail and search engine data that has been harvested. and peace in ruins.

45 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on