tv [untitled] December 11, 2013 7:30am-8:01am EST
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sarah a jihadi group affiliated with al qaeda had mastered the mechanics of creating sarin and was capable of manufacturing it and quantity. listen we may not know exactly what happened syria on that fateful day but we do know this wars have been based on lives before and we can't afford to let that happen again i'll expect to set. the. stage. very hard to take a. look. at how to act with the terror threat there. was.
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it seems like in today's society it's almost impossible to address government conspiracies without being painted as a lunatic but history proves conspiracies do exist and in fact many that have gone down in the store record would shock people to the core if only they knew about them this lack of context regarding events that have shaped this country is a detriment to an open and honest society which is why i was so disappointed to see an article in new york magazine that ridiculed a well documented government conspiracy the iran contra cocaine connection and reference to the scandal the article says quote this episode soon became fuel for perhaps the last great conspiracy of the twentieth century that the cia had spread to crack the america's city inner. the cia's shipping trucks well never
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but before i get ahead of myself let me remind you what the wrong contra was all about between one thousand nine hundred five and one thousand nine hundred six the us sort of weapons of the iranian government despite an existing embargo that specifically for bade them from doing so what happened next was a set of secret operations aimed at swapping american hostages for these weapons and then they vary in those funds to arm a group of anti communist rebels and they called the contras but as president reagan once put it those contras were the moral equivalent of our founding fathers yeah if our founding fathers were also international drug traffickers see according to class to be classified documents the cia had not only allowed the trafficking of cocaine and contras but actually protected the drugs meanwhile of the reagan doctrine the cia was training and assisting their operations see the late journalist gary webb publish an investigative series on cocaine trafficking and the
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contras in the one nine hundred ninety s. his findings were attacked of course by the u.s. government as well as several mainstream publications and eventually cost him his job but not without some glaring evidence coming to light his report led to admissions by top officials on the relationship between the u.s. backed rebels and the and well known drug cartels of wishing to traffic cocaine to the u.s. these allegations are only reinforced when l.a.p.d. detective michael rupert confronted former cia director john boyish about the cia's connection to narco trafficking. i can tell you director deutch is the former los angeles police are going to go throughout the group for a little. yes that was an l.a.p.d. p.d. called testifying about cocaine being filtered through america's inner cities and if you just can't comprehend that the same government which is fighting a multi-billion dollar drug war is partially responsible for spreading the drugs
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want to look no further than the cultivation protection that the us military supplying for opium and afghanistan. the war torn country had nearly eradicated the crop prior to the occupation and now ninety percent of the world's heroin comes from afghanistan so the next time you hear something dismissed as just a conspiracy theory maybe take a second to dig a little deeper than what's presented because you might be surprised at what you find. i. i. i i. all of us already know about the extent of government surveillance and infiltration of activist groups across the country while the decepticons government spying is on the rise there is another aspect of the trying to constantly overlooked corporate espionage think about it in the corporatocracy that we live in governments are merely outsourcing to private entities to collect all of our information and this
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corporations about in really good at it they know operating independently from government when it comes to undermining opposition forces perfecting a laundry list of dirty tricks some of the biggest corporations on the planet have managed to stay one step ahead of the activists who are trying to expose their corruption so they go over the top five craziest corporate tactics used against these groups activists and whistleblowers i'm joined by b.t.s. producer emanuel rob lowe what i get out of the i'm still getting over your lindsey graham. you know him well i've never heard a story like this many let's go over it you know what's really amazing is of course we don't trust the government but at least the government has some sort of constitutional limitations at least we can vote these people out of all. we really want to do people really woke up why should we trust corporations i mean we're talking about private entities who are just trying to protect their bottom line and act pretty much with total them and community here i think that's a totally valid question i have no idea what what is worse is a government spying any worse than corporate spying but what we are learning now
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through this amazing report put forward by the center for corporate policy is all this all these cases of corporate espionage that they've uncovered over the course of decades that are now shows that the same tactics that are implemented by intelligence agencies here in the united states are now being adopted by corporations and then these corporations use them in the same way as the government does except you know they're not doing it for any patriotic reasons they're doing it for reasons like you said to me that corporate bottom line and keep whatever corporate secrets they have to themselves and they were telling me earlier that this is actually not really happening worldwide it's kind of just i mean there's a lot more oversight on this kind of activity worldwide i mean i feel like it's broken your home and eggs and stole your computer actually knew it there would be some sort of legal repercussions exactly no that's one of the things that this that this report highlights in places like england and france i mean these are crimes that some of the tactics that we're talking about here are committed by some really
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big corporations wal-mart monsanto chemical chevron are you surprised with any of those yet right ok with wal-mart right and they're targeting mainly progressive groups and g.m.o. activists animal rights groups. reform groups across your state people who are threatening their profit margin and like you're saying that some of the things that they're doing breaking into offices wiretapping phones these are very illegal but there is no congressional oversight in the united states so when other countries like france or england when this is when this is found out these people are made of mockery of in the media that prosecuted these do jail time for these things but here in the united states this is the way it is it's the doctors that mandate you know. i can information that's not too shocking to me talk a little bit about really briefly on how they collect information generally right well we want to do kind of a top five list of tactics and i think that probably dumpster diving is the most common but it's also the one that isn't illegal i mean there's and there's nothing
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in the books that keeps you from you know going to some activist organization going through their trash and this happens a lot in example paperwork everyone yeah i mean pieces involved in a in a lawsuit right now related to you know people going through the trash dow chemicals involved in a lawsuit regarding the tapping of phone calls kraft was involved in in another series of allegations related to them snooping on on organizers and activists who oppose g m o's so these are these are just a few the tactics and like i said like the dumpster diving it's. seems more innocuous because it's not illegal but it's you know one of those like superficial things that a dirty trick. and i'm sorry but hacking into computers and informing that's one thing they agreed and here's another really crazy one hire cops i mean we're talk about corporations actually outsourcing now back to taxpayer funded police to do what exactly right i mean this is the report actually puts this in
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a really good way just like very clear way and what you can do when you have the law enforcement on your side it kind of adds that extra layer of the community right so there's nothing that keeps a corporation from being able to hire an active duty cop versus just a retired marine or a retired cia agent and you know in the report they even say even active duty cia operatives are allowed to sell their expertise corporations are now able to replicate a miniature service of a private cia employing active duty and retired officers from intelligence and or law enforcement so that kind of gives you that added layer of protection if you're a corporation that wants to hide something it doesn't matter if it's. you know it's an oil spill in ecuador like chevron's you know constantly trying to. kind of a way to get get around ways of people finding out the truth there or or anything else when you have the law you know law enforcement on your side that kind of when you have a private army of the one percent nanny let's talk about impersonating others which is really a common tactic used by government agencies infiltration of groups yet impersonating
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others and saying they are and part of it and we talk about this in terms of whenever the government whenever we hear about police officers that have infiltrated an activist group or when you have the whenever you hear about the n.y.p.d. doing surveillance of muslim communities these are the exact same tactics used by corporations now chevron in two thousand and ten i'm going to use the ecuadorian spill because it's very relevant there's this this case is still going on right now in new york but in two thousand and ten chevron had tried to recruit a journalist to kind of provide information that wasn't really factual it didn't reflect what was actually going on in ecuador and so the constantly looking for new ways to do this whether it's infiltrating an organization through activists or whether or not it's hiring people to do so and we only have about forty seconds left but the most crazy one is blackmailing outright blackmail and using it against these communities right groups or other and blackmail is illegal anywhere you think you can do this but i think that the best case that i can remember again from two
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thousand and ten is when we queue leaks and julian had announced that they were going to. take down this major u.s. bank because they had all this damning information they didn't announce what bank it was going to be but they need only start getting the threats immediately started getting the cyber attacks and then journalists affiliated with wiki leaks many of whom we've had here on our show and glenn greenwald for example the guardian they were receiving threats saying you know we're going to ruin your career if you continue to support in an effort to take them down and this is rampant and this report really shows that so i really encourage anyone to check out that report by the center for corporate policy thank you so much for breaking down these agree just corporate crimes that go complete and radar. i have a bridge you guys i talk to a young man who is well on his way to becoming an agricultural expert and he's not even old enough to drive yet stick around.
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i play this street cleaner who's in love with a waitress i go on stage managing that there's an audience you should take drugs and drink like a fish called the police and told me about the circus but i was such a punk i was like what circus. circus of clinton's gonna. break down stereotypes about who he is from disadvantaged backgrounds. nelson mandela he was almost universally considered one of the greatest individuals of our time he was a prisoner of conscience and a living symbol conquering versity however he was far more complex than most mainstream media are willing to admit mandela's legacy is so much more than merely being a figure of inspiration reconciliation when you talk about working with the society
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of one who do you think should be in charge of determining which we used to be the people shouldn't be the government this is not the. right to lead it's an issue about fundamentally small rights that it makes me. so what we mean these hate speech is. this excessive radicalization that can lead to even to terrorism. they look like bounty islands where the locals can enjoy the sun and the ocean. but what was buried here years ago. means these people are suffering the consequences.
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how much more poison lies on the ground. behind this zone there is what we call the bank on which there is a deposit of plutonium left by security test which caused the dispersion already and you clyde's despite previous cleaning efforts there remains a deposit of a little less than two kilos of plutonium stuck in the rock the coral reef is about ten meters down you can attest a never ending legacy. thirty years ago an eleven year old stunned an audience at a ted talk about national north carolina there was burke and bear and he gave an impassioned speech about why he's against genetically modified foods take a listen. i discovered the dark side of the industrialized food system. first
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there's genetically engineered seeds in organisms that is was seed is manipulated in a laboratory is something not into my nature like taking the d.n.a. of the fish and putting it into the d.n.a. of a tomato yuk don't get me wrong i like fish and tomatoes but this is just creepy. the seeds the seeds of them find and then grow the food they produce improve and cause cancer or other problems and that in people of many food producers space is the mind to mind most folks don't even know they exist burke is now fourteen but he hasn't stopped his crusade against two modes and the fight against big agriculture he joined me earlier to talk more in-depth about the dangers that g.m. owes could pose i started by asking him what trauma tackled the issue at such a young age. i really fell over the years as i learned more and more about this subject that i was especially as a little kid that i've been deceived in tricked by all these come to me as in these
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cartoon characters that i grew up with like you know tony the tiger on t.v. and sam and i just i felt like to myself that i need to let the american public my friends and family in a lot of the people i meet know about what i was learning in that it was such an important thing and to me i think food is one of the most underrated subjects in our culture these days because something so important that we have to eat three times a day or you know we starve and eventually die without it and that nobody really knows what's in their food or where it comes from it's very true talk about what you have learned throughout the years what do you think the biggest danger is of consuming g.m.o. this. well showing from a lot of the studies that i've read in terms of studies from monsanto other g.m.o. producing companies and also i mean articles i've read from the institute for responsible technology. it's said to gene most can lead to many things from kidney and liver disease kidney liver toxicity tumors in cancer in
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a. infertility in those situations in many of these ninety day. forty day rest from all sources scientific. sources even dr sara lee in the report was very interesting reading that if you notice many of the ones that come out from independent studies. you see that there quickly discredited by the people who hire them and that's because they are getting funding from g.m.o. companies themselves. what do you respond to critics who say that g.m. of maximize crop yields conserve resources and. my view on that is that if you read the fine print on most g.m.o. seed packages are contracts that they actually say that you will get better. better yield if you have property irrigation but isn't that true with all crops that if you get proper irrigation you'll have better better yields and without it
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in that if you really look the majority of time you don't see much of a difference in. kneels from both crops and i think that many inorganic. inorganic crops are g.m.o. crops that you'll actually see more of a nutrition density and again accidents than if you take a organic squash the same size as nutrient dense oil versus g.m.o. of crops and you put them on the scales right next to each other again exposing that same size of the g.m.o. will actually weigh more than the more than the notoriety and that's because as more nutrient dense qualities and more has more minerals and more micronutrients in the gmo. cultures what happened. do you think that there's any good to come out of genetic modification and. as of right now from what i've seen of how that how the dmoz are being sold and marketed i don't think i don't think there is because of the way that there's not there's not enough testing done on them
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consciously by the companies who use these g.m. most i'm on the flesh food industry and that just from my observation that our farming does not have we don't have the technology to really make them safe for people's consumption i don't think there's any good that will be able to come out from geno's in a long time burke what about the banning g.m.o. is versus just pushing to label them because i feel like we're pushing to ban them at such a huge endeavor they're almost seventy percent of the food in our grocery stores right now in the us and of course all over the world what's your response to. my response to that is that trying to get g.m.o. stand here in the united states is sort of like trying to go across the country and one day without making any stops you know you're trying to take and they're such such a big undertaking that really we're not prepared for and we don't have the power or the fuel to do it but i think that we can by getting them
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a label it can start. it's the first place. we can start start to actually start the conversation and have hopes of getting g.m.o. is banned in the future and. there's most of the. stages i find in banning team those like i was just in russia earlier this year and. they have they have g m o's in there but they ban them from production but not from importation so we'll see that g.m.o. there's different ways of you can allow them in your food system i think there's so much opposition to labeling them as we know we saw prop thirty seven fail in california and the proposition just failed in washington. i feel like it's not so much fighting against it i think it's more of the money and the power coming from the companies who have been the best interest to keep g.m.o. is not labeled. i was in california a week or two right before proposition thirty seven was voted on and i was in san
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francisco and i was in some of the larger cities there and you know every. yard out of five yards out a label you know some props proposition thirty seven yard sign and i didn't see any any dissent from ation or any you know no no i'm thirty seven campaign ads which the middle of the country and there where most people are not you know not the most educated seem to have a unknown proposition thirty seven commercial every you know every commercial break or least early more than that to live a commercial break and i felt that they were really trying to target the certain audience of people and a certain level. way that people wouldn't want to you know they just so oh there's it's going to it's going to cost us next one hundred dollars on a grocery bill and that we don't want to buy this because going to cost so much and they wouldn't the funny thing i thought about the. the commercials that they would meet and tell you what the food labeling was for another one a good part of the last five years traveling to different organic farms you were
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just saying that you've been traveling all over russia across the u.s. one of the main lessons that you've learned from. travel's i think one of the biggest lessons i've learned from going to different farms each farm everywhere in the united states has something innovative and unique to that farm in that place whether it be the way that it will sell to and moves around this you know chickens and cows or that you know just a little bit some something unique that somebody had done and i that's what i try to find in every farm is something different that is interesting and something with practice that i may want to use in the future and talk about your book in bourke on the farm what was the main message and why did you choose to convey the idea is that a picture book. that book was really started to have a reference for little kids and what farming is because i remember when i was you know a young kid five or six years old asking my parents oh mom dad what's a farm or where does food come from make all comes from
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a farm and you know that's the place out in the country where you know there's big red wine or some cows grazing in the packs you know very conventional idea where food comes from and i didn't really get much more than that other than just you know this very vague idea of what a farm is and where our food comes from what's your message to young people to care about these issues and take an active role in protecting them from supply today. yeah i definitely think that anybody of any age can go out there make a difference and i have in i started out six years ago just talking with friends and family about what i was learning on the internet and after three years of doing that i was given a great opportunity to go out and talk about it but i think that we can all start you know coming the other with just in small groups and having dinners and maybe g.m.o. free friday sort of things and. just you start sharing this with other people and so are these good grassroots efforts that we see like proposition thirty seven in the bill in washington that you know in small little campaigns can turn out to be
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something big. with people like you burke i have hope for the future of this plan. thank you so much for prayer speaker author you food advocate really appreciate your time thank you very much a pleasure talking to you. regardless of how much public support exists for the labeling of genetically modified foods communities across the u.s. are facing an uphill battle against the monsanto's and some of the world this battle is exemplified of far from the shores of the mainland u.s. i'm talking about the whole why an island of. this in a historic vote last october the quiet county council passed a measure to force agricultural companies to disclose their pesticide use and the type of g.m.o. crops they grow on the island in a surprising move the mayor of kwai or not
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a car velo sided with big ag and vetoed the measure cited as concerns of the bill would undermine several state and federal laws and because public outrage at the mayor was so severe he released a legal document from his county attorney to prove his concerns and the problem is that releasing this confidential document gives these agricultural giants the exact legal blueprint they'll need if he has to defend the long court now thankfully in just a few weeks ago the quiet county council overrode american bellows vote veto rather and passed the bill no doubt paving the way for future legal fights but just a few islands away on the big island of hawaii a mayor who has not been brainwashed by corporate interest has stood up to big agricultural just last week hawaii county mayor billy can always signed a first of its kind bill into law that would prohibit biotech companies from operating on the big island and prevents farmers from going any new genetically altered crops now notably the bill does exclude the island's g.m.o.
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papaya industry but this law goes further to promote community based farming and ranching and any other. law in the country can neuer promoted this controversial bill despite strong opposition from the majority of the items farmers. noise is on the right side of history here with the passage of this bill the big island joins countries like mexico which banned all g.m.o. corn last month and italy which prohibited the planting of monsanto g.m.o. corn back in july because despite what these biotech companies would like us to believe there is absolutely no scientific consensus on the safety of g.m.o. foods in fact less than two months ago a group of two hundred thirty scientists from around the world including one of the scientists who helped develop their original g.m. tomato signed a statement criticizing the amount of disinformation about these foods so cudos to connive for having the courage that mayor covello does not and helping further a real dialogue about these frankenstein crops. before i get out of here let me
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tell you i want you to check me out on twitter and abby martin if you like what you see you can follow me there you'll find all my tweets linking to segments from the show including random thoughts i have throughout the day and also please help us get break into such trend mean on twitter rosenhaus tags and we can get trending on the twitter sphere like today i'm trying to my recent interview with tai relevant her about how you plan to unite radical thinkers check it out you guys had a twitter at abby martin that's it for the show today or one check it out tomorrow or break the set all over again. technology innovation all the developments around.
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i was thinking somehow i had to come back because mom was waiting for me. and i just knew that everything would be fine for some reason they were so confident because we were going to get married officially after he came back how could he not come back because the mere thought of it never crossed her mind. when the militants decided to try and break through her new guinea airport screening her in a. go go forward base blow them blow them all run his back to rule. a little and it was all over all. we know that our call on our commander won't leave us no matter how tough it gets we're a team. there who are getting was a senior in his military trio. he knew that if he didn't smother that grenade with
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his body more of just comrades would die he gave his own life to save his friends. right from the scene. first straight to you and i were being butchered. on our reporter's twitter. and instagram. to be in the know. on. nelson mandela he is almost universally considered one of the greatest individuals of our time he was a prisoner of conscience and a living symbol conquering versity however he was far more complex than most
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mainstream media are willing to admit his legacy to so much more than merely being a figure of inspiration a reconciliation. ukrainian opposition leaders call them first test is just stalled government buildings as they were build barricades after an overnight attempt by police to remove the roadblocks paralyzing the qantas will center. on the west stands with the protesters as top diplomats slammed the police move as a crackdown a high level u.s. representative is seen at the protest camps handing out food. also this hour moscow calls on iran and the world powers especially those who adopted trolled sanctions against tehran to play by the rules to make a landmark nuclear deal was as a russian delegation arrives in the islamic state. chaos across honoring tina stalls out ransacked under water.
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