tv [untitled] December 21, 2013 5:30pm-6:01pm EST
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suspicious. that the guardian you got a paper that's been around nearly two hundred years has completely sold his or hers for from its international trade it's at the forefront of digital innovation with doing something that is almost unique in times and there's no one else that looks like a. very much struck. that's just average that. you're talking to me or a film which is documented. we're going to meet you there's a story don't you know how we roll out. here so this is not just me that would do this is essentially your you don't agee. yeah so there are some big surprise off the gobby.
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reacted. to substantial. u.s. tables why did you go for example. that star shaped. the u.s. dollar able to nations this week carol and the mafia lucky guy there's. one last. critics you think the more walls so why do you know what. i say other members of the got the documents upside down who can speak more jane i don't know i guess i don't know i don't guess. that. the the monocles i have seen the mound of being used extensively by
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people called. in the former soviet rule. to protect her attention. on the slightest trace looks good on them so. some of these people on good rich can send me millions on on five occasions. also when it's on the table bridge sit in on. the telly and if you. are ready he. will record me. souls' you. see i was correct. so this is a case of. now ok sure you will drop in. great britain you know what is the little good ole and good riddance of the company
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can suit. to you and we will see why not help me. with that test just. the two thousand case that. doesn't prove it was not something one. could rightly call to easy easy and. did ten cars trying to do. that so that the norbert missed companies can see we thought. ok area they're extremely interested in. an hour ago here. on the very very very often. i have to. but it was some. big audience we got. to.
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actually. just all of a mocking them and. one name which was the name rough. it was the socket. store. of course and so i flipped over this which meant that this russian. life. was the subject of a. troll memory. we had kind of rubric getting serious when we said we tried to tell. we were trying to claim. why we. remember you said you know it was in coaching or you saw a. monkey in equal consideration. so.
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if your point is that couldn't. be more explicit and explaining. why we do things and. some nature didn't care for you. were you first of all i. got. you actually people are going to try to not. we haven't so it was decided that. the new york times would approach government growing the movement and said why did we have. two sets of communication with the american one is not the embassy in london a little. to see if you will we will do the very much because we need or it. channel through you. and the second channel was a little set up but it's that old agencies. run rate aim
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was to just go. to those who can use. that afternoon you probably have seen either in person or on the t.v. screen that was the. state party thing that we just finished i won't repeat everything i said at the start they are but the. most significant response to what has happened is. exactly what secretary clinton is doing in a stall or kazakhstan as we speak you know she is there working constructively on cooperation and security in a very important part of the world clearly the release of the authorized release of
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these documents you know. represents risk to the united states and to others with whom we collaborate. just this is why we condemned what wiki leaks has done basically from kazakstan. right in through here. mr that you're going to be in between i realize i'm going to be you as much as i can really i think are going to. pull the pound or. from two different countries where the. material has been have been published but they're only looking from the outside without actually having any particular knowledge about it you get the impression that all these various. private u.s. institutions. have acted. from being pressured in
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one way or another by the u.s. government in order to block or flows of money in order that's not true that is you know in the list of three times what it is that is absolutely not true. in my time in government. at no time did government tell any private company what to do. i mean there's been rumors there's been suggestions of that and to be honest there's been no. evidence by those who question this you know it's with companies protect their own reputation it's not for the government to tell a company what it should or shouldn't do you know they've taken actions because. they may see it as as in their interest to do this or that with a one hundred look at their fear the same thing were to happen to for example the new york times if in europe times were all of a sudden. stopped from getting funds and they would out of their offices
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close down i could you hear it because hating a hypothetical that i can't follow being from harvard to go where they are in the exact same position as for example recruiting near a parent decides to publish everything that they get no i mean no but that there is a very sharp distinction here. i mean. you have two actors who are in the business of communicating with a broader public. one actor made clear the new york times and other publications we are going to report on what we have we want to do it responsibly and we want to do it in a way that. is is it's respectful of. the danger that this might cause to specific individuals and the new york times voluntarily withheld certain documents and certain names because they recognized as
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we did that the publication of these documents of publication these days would put real life human beings at risk. we've reported on this ratio before debt to g.d.p. growth going back to the one nine hundred fifty s. it was almost one to one so marital issues some dead and they'd get some some kind of g.d.p. kick as a result of it but it requires more and more dead to. equivalent same g.d.p. dollar of growth and what we now have is clearly a case of zombie banks and zombie corporations that would not survive if they were being transfused with more debt continuously which means that good businesses are being crowded out by zombies and it also means that you've got a. total loss of competitiveness so this is the worst thing really that quantitative easing has done to america.
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your coach sent a very intrepid reporter down there to sleep overnight he spent thursday night in the kind of park i did live to tell about it what was it like. it was a scary place i mean zuccotti park right now is it is it's own country part of your top queens girl right in queens you're not afraid of that stuff you want to down there what what's what is to the most about what was going on it's a party. what surprised me the most about what was going on there is that it's totally lawless you disguise yourself and you try to look like a protester were you going undercover you weren't advertising your posts right one on one i spoke to people i told mom i was a post reporter so was no secret and had to be received. well. some people didn't really like that i was a poster of orders to be honest i'm very disturbed here though you write from your column from your article the threat of rape is very real here for men and women i
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just sleep at night i didn't say. if you were to maybe make a scene had too many characters i play. candace she'll be from your post thank you so much thank you thank you. i you know that. they are so like i said once you start the interview is closed the door isn't. it so it's general assembly at the
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u.n. and we. want to come. and see if the u.n. general assembly opens this week so there's. a lot of presidents and foreign ministers and stuff and some of them trip through here to receive people here is that customer yeah yeah it's pretty typical in there in town with some of them invite themselves and some of them we invite to come over and meet with the. editorial writers and things. and how does it seem to work out. and rest in the pretty predictable that every once in a while one of the makes news but it's you know it's good to just give them a chance to come over and hear their views. kind of makes you into an embassy or. they're the embassy of the new york times right basically right. and i think you know you may have discovered this yourself or a news organizations don't always get the kind of access they would like to officials in washington and if you want to go ask the military or the white house
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to respond to classified information. you know. it can be difficult if you're if you're a representative of a foreign news organization i don't think that's a shame but it's just it's a reality so i think they felt. we would be in a better position to confront the administration with what we had and solicit some kind of reaction from them which which turned out to be the case and your counterpart was that mainly year p.j. crowley or some other people. over it you know this is. the first couple of meetings i think they went over and had them in person and they were representatives of the state department i guess assume the intelligence agencies were there i know the cia was represented. i'm not sure i just don't remember whether the military was there. because at that point it was mostly
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nonmilitary matters. after that after the first couple of conversations they just had a daily phone call basically. they did it all you know there was none of this everybody gathered in a room it was they would say we really think you should hold back on this particular cable and here's why and then we would discuss and decide whether to withhold it or not. and many of the countries where we've been traveling and they're. talking to be the editors or politicians there has been a concern that. these materials can have a destabilizing effect and that in a particular country when you consider. the consequences of not publishing them we considered it yeah we talked about it a lot i mean yemen is a good example of that because the state department's argument was this this these could be destabilizing. but i kind of think it's not our
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job to decide what is destabilizing and or for that matter to preserve this debility of a country. he's elsewhere but do you feel that you would have acted differently had the material been of such character that it would have potentially destabilized your country rather than. you've mentioned it it's hard for me to imagine what that would be i mean if you had to have an example or a few years ago yes see that wireless what weren't let's wire tapping right yes i mean can you explain how you reasoned at that point in time when you didn't to publish the material for helps them or when i did publish the first one when you didn't at first and then i did when i didn't publish them. but the concern with it wasn't whether it would destabilize our government because certainly was whether or not it would be of significant value to people who want to attack us.
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had it been your choice. and if you were the sole on there is of this material that you would not have published them the whole thing that. you know first of all because there are. you know. in the documents that we posted. we redacted many names of people who would have been put in danger. we have not. studied all of the documents to know how many more people might be put in danger to just post the whole thing would be i think irresponsible and let's say with every dime that the names of those who would have been in danger and published it all on your side would that be something which would be indicted will. probably not. but we had up we had cited how we were going to publish how we were going to have the material you know regardless of legal consequences just on journalistic
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grounds. you know we only want to publish we only want to do you need the room. yeah you even hear the phrase. oh well. i was dense and you hear it right then i heard you were in here. i was the whole i'm glad you liked it oh yes it made the drudge report so i'm getting some so i'm getting a lot of traffic to prove it on traffic to supporting my children but if you got a traffic you got the kind of traffic you know sincerely what because of a lot of a lot of people who use the word scumbag. it's a technical term anyway thank you. for talking about our favorite subject wiki leaks oh. this is our theirselves bertha's the publisher you. know and you. were for i'd just go back to the writing
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life of my first. that was published this morning which is. a somewhat. half hearted defense of obama against. distant disenchanted liberals and you know what the drudge report is the drudge report is a website. very conservative website. that has for that basically aggregates headlines from all over the place but with a kind of right wing commentary attached that it's got a huge problem so if matt drudge is the guy runs this web site. find something that you've written puts it on his home page with a snarky comment. it drives traffic amazingly i mean driving traffic it's nights up at the traffic that he drives is mostly you know. you
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scumbag idiot but traffic is. going to. be worse or right just to be muslim or. look at the bricks through clear example that you see. on stuff that's got us because the writer. or the others is this significant a death threat he's going to let them assume that it will simply force. or different in the city for the symbol. of
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a group modest effort indifferent to of all that he for they just need a gun. or she's going to get up and run. the us sitting them down so what we're doing is we're going to hear from a member. of the minute the personally attack to put i felt is that come into it will enable us to cut to possibly. this disapproval good movement to put a good book it is possible. to be another clue who it is music to discuss with. him the sentiment delirium what good things because i'm not some going to take the .
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to construct your own little currency. kuno want to be a bit give don't want to be gangsters you don't want to be drug dealers they don't want that well we know the time that the gig came be we can see. you just made a hundred thousand i hope i live in the hood and what a.k.o. found liable thirty round clip. about i said what about the bay. i don't want to die i just really do not want to die young young age. dramas that can't be ignored. stories others refused to notice. faces changed the world lights never.
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told pictures of today's events. on the land from around the globe. up to. fifty. but look. over my job did you know the price is the only industry specifically mentioned in the constitution and. that's because a free and open process is critical to our democracy albus. role. in fact the single biggest threat facing our nation today is the corporate takeover of our government and across several we've been hijacked why a handful of transnational corporations will profit by destroying what our founding fathers once built up my job market and on this show we reveal the big picture of what's actually going on to the world we go beyond identifying the problem trying
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a long awaited reunion will. meet his family in berlin after president clinton pardons him on humanitarian grounds. the pentagon fails to account for an eight point five trillion dollar black hole in its budget as washington seems unable to rein in defense spending. egypt's ousted president mohamed morsi faces new charges this time over a twenty eleven jailbreak while his supporters of all ages been thrown behind bars . for the first time in my life the child is locked up in the military prison for having a ruling. party follows a story of an egyptian schoolboy who was sent to prison over his shoulder support for the country's deposed leader.
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