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tv   [untitled]    December 25, 2013 3:30pm-4:01pm EST

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it's a shame that has a website as a web site developer who can discuss. like that and they get free hits in google is very very it is very very profitable to publish cables because you don't have to write cables it's pretty stories. the point as far as i see it is that. there are boundaries to free speech as in same way as the boundaries to our thoughts and to our language and. when you speak when used to speak it is basically words we are dealing with and these boundaries look differently in different countries but they are always exist in one way or another let's call their new sense of conformism or self-censorship or whatever it may be and we have a very unique opportunity to actually just show where these boundaries are doesn't
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necessarily mean that these boundary is better than that boundary everything showing where i would ask your back probably that there is but the thing is that people usually are annoyed with people or if you're unaware of where these boundaries are the easiest we're getting a hold of them is by asking a person and he was he well i cannot write about the king kind of write about sex or whatever they are most often the law will not tell you that there are only about it's most often that we say we have no boundaries whatsoever yes and this is what you will get when you interview any journalist in the united kingdom or in brazil or in sweden or it ever is yes so what we have here is the tools in actually catching these boundaries if you push any organization they will have boundaries and you're going to yes what are right and why all of them including the one on the other side. just you know. oh you know. for me it was just simple. what
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you'll see it's all pretty. suspicious. with the guardian you've got a paper that's been around nearly two hundred years. has completely sold it has for for its international trade it's at the forefront of digital innovation with doing something that is almost anything from some snow and ice that looks towns. very much struck down. that's just that bridge that you're talking to me for a film which is documented. we're going to do there's a story don't you know how we roll out. so this is not just me with will this is essentially your you don't agee you're right.
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yeah there are some big surprise because we're going to. react to. the substantial. u.s. cables that why did you go for example. that star shaped. the u.s. government will say it was nation this week carol and the mafia bucky gotti first. one was. exceeding the more walls so why did you go by what i say many of the got the documents up so i hope you can speak more tonight i guess i don't know i don't guess. that. the the monocles i have seen book no longer being used extensively by
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people from. the former soviet rule. to protect. the subtle secrets looks good on them so. some of these people on board rich can spend millions on on five cases. also when it's on their little table which sit in on. italian energy. ready. for record. me souls in. the sea was correct. so this is a place of. now attention and you will draw in.
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great britain you know what is the little good ole and curtains of the company can suit. to you and we will see enough company. it was a six and tesco just. the two thousand plus case and that. doesn't preclude us not something that. could happen here we go to easy easy and. good ten cost trying to do. that so that yes the norbert missed companies can see we have a partner. area they're extremely interested in. an hour ago here. on the creation of every day. i have to. run. but
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some of them would be god you. got. to. do. all the rage mocking them and it will become. one mind which was in a rush. it was the socket. for. the force and so i fit both is which meant that this rush. of life. was the subject of a. pro memory. we had kind of rubric getting serious when we said we tried. it's level we were trying to play. while we. are married that said there are all these and hope she will use the.
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money in equal consideration. so. if your point is that couldn't. be more explicit in explaining. why we would do things and. some nature didn't care or. were you hurtful i. got. you to believe it was not enough. we heard so it was decided that. the new york times would approach government bryant the miranda separated 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 is.
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a channel through to you. on the second channel was a full set up but is that the only agencies. the primary aim was to just go. into any. good afternoon you probably have seen either in person or on the t.v. screens 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 is happy. and 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
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a very important part of the world clearly the release of the authorized release of these documents you know. represents risk to the united states and to others with whom we collaborate. in this this is why we condemn what wiki leaks has done basically from kazakstan. right in through here. mr did your very in between i realize i'm going to be you as much as i really like the right i thought i. pulled the kind of. from two different countries where the police material has been have been public 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.
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institutions. have acted. from being pressured in one way or another by the u.s. government in order to block or flows of money in order that's not true that that is you know in this there are three that is that 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 they've been removed 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. they've taken actions be. because they they they see it as as in their interest to do this or that really how we're going to get there for the same thing were to happen through for example in europe times if the new york times were all of a sudden. stopped from giving funds and they would out of their offices
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close down i could do it because hating a hypothetical or not i can't follow being from harvard to go where they are in the exact same position as for example recordings 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 you want to do it responsibly and we want to do it in a way that. is is it respectful of. the danger that this might cause to specific individuals and the new york times
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voluntarily withheld certain documents and certain names because they recognized as we did that the publication of these documents of publication these days would put real life human beings at risk. live . cross talk
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rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want. well going into the. reasons he had already been plenty to celebrate this december on this month's show feeling how the future tense so lazy such in stone call to make movies with an instant messenger on their revolutionary exoskeleton makes life work a heavy lifting. here on a. mission trip. the first.
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time your post sent a very intrepid reporter down. they are to sleep over night you spent thursday night in this a crowded 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 it's half queens girl right in queens you're not afraid of that stuff you want to go there what what's up what is to the most about what was going on in zuccotti park 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 worried you weren't advertising your posts right one on one i spoke to people i told mine i was a post reporter there 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 don't very disturbing here though you write from
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your column from your article the threat of rape is very real here for men and women i just sleep at night i did it and thirty nine hundred thirty two media characters who had so many characters i paint canvas g.o.p. from new york post thank you so much thank you thank you. live i think i you know. i'm also like i said once you study into these closed doors and. you know it's general assembly.
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the u.n. and we. really are. well coming up. it's the end of 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 really people here is that customary yeah yeah it's pretty typical i'm 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 now. we kind of makes you into a number zero zero for their the embassy of the new york times or a basically a right. i think you know you may have discovered this yourself or
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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 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 is assume the intelligence agencies were there i know the cia was represented. i'm not sure i just don't remember the
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military was there. because at that point it was mostly 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 have 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. 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 that 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
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could be destabilizing. but i kind of think it's not our job to decide what is destabilizing and or for that matter to preserve the stability of. countries elsewhere and if 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. because you've mentioned it it's hard for me to imagine what that would be i mean would you have to have an example or a few years ago yes see that wireless what weren't less wire tapping right yes i mean can you explain how you reasoned at that point in time when you didn't publish the material for those that were 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 certain was whether or not it
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would be of significant value to people who want to attack us. had it been your choice. and if you were the soul on there is of this material that you would not have published. the whole thing that oh. 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. study 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 to the names of those who would have been in danger and published it on your site would that be something which would be. probably not.
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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 grounds . you know we only wanted to publish we only wanted to do you need the room. yep. you need me or the group. oh well. i was going send you here a gram and then i heard you were in here. i was at the house 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 support those but you know you got to traffic you got the kind of traffic you necessarily what because a lot of a lot of people who use the word scumbag. but it's a technical term yeah they would think you. were talking about our favorite subject wiki leaks oh. this is arthur sulzberger was the publisher you.
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know and. we were just great you know going back to the writing 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 the 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 website. find something that you've written puts it on his home page with a snarky comment. it drives traffic amazingly i mean driving traffic is nice
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but the traffic that he drives is mostly you know. you scumbag idiot but traffic. from google groups like you are surviving just to be a muslim or. look at the bricks through clear example that you see. on stuff that's got us kind of the writer. or the love this is the significant of death for us he didn't let them assume that it was him but it was. your
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store with regard for it in secret the symbol. of a group modest effort indifferent to show of all the need for they did need a gun. or she gets up and. in the us sitting around for the and we're going to hear from a number. of those little pushy wily cock to put i shall come into you haven't been able to cut the possible with. this woman about a good book it is possible. to be another google it is music to discuss with. him the seven delirium walk because that's something to take the.
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their bank account how does that look today a bit more depleted than usual could be that the masters of the universe aligned the n.s.a. change your bank account balance that's what i've been up to. all those jokesters at the n.s.a. just playing around with the financial system for a fall out and buy it as a game i thought the reason they were involved in all that invasive technologies days it was to keep us safe. from. the beginning of the loan the techno mucks in the phase full island life. and now enough temptation. to dogma's last for six months. or more the whole of the people. and it's as easy to hide the rifle as a scooter. because the island is so in
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a special there are no indigenous people but there are all those who do choose this frozen life. this is this could be. if you are. such one of the twenty fourteen olympics what's this place like why is this so special as the russian resort prepares to local the world power the games shaping the city's present and future life sochi will bring you this is the moment they're reporting from a very cold snowy windy mountainous stuff beyond the olympics. starting germany the first on our team.
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coming into the. season's he had already plenty to celebrate. on this month's show how the future tense so lazy section stone how to make movies with an instant messenger under exoskeleton makes life work of every lifting. year on. the country.
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that's what miami or moscow on our team this morning a christmas greeting with a message you'd never expect edward snowden addresses t.v. viewers in britain warning too much spying could damage the way the next generation thinks but adds the still time for a cure. and snake killings mass graves and thousands dead across the country violence in south sudan escalates its question now whether there's more to the unrest than just an internal conflict. the cry against drone warfare being heard across the world our team travels this hour to a region in pakistan where the unmanned strikes have become a deadly every day reality. darlins happy bailout exit leaves people there wondering whether the end.

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