tv Keiser Report RT June 12, 2014 5:29am-6:00am EDT
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i want to turn to headline quickly here from the telegraph ambrose evans pritchard he is kind of like an austrian economics guy but he was one of the first to call for zero percent interest rates and quantitative easing and blah blah blah well the nagging fear that q.e. itself may be causing d. flee well on this show i've been saying this for two years down at least two years that quantitative easing and keeping interest rates they're zero or reserve the stated policy goals of the central bankers is to fight play ssion. i've been saying that a causes deflation i told danny blanchflower this on this show he balks because he's an academic he doesn't understand how markets work evans evans pritchard evans evans richard ambrose had an average evans pritchard explain it to him i think through an email exchange at one point and he didn't get it now people understand what i'm trying to say this zero percent interest rate policy or negative interest rate policy. is causing the deflation doesn't fight deflation
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because it keeps the zombie banks alive and the zombie banks are the biggest impediment to economic growth it's not that there's no demand for loans there's plenty of demand for loans but the banks are making loans because they're keeping all the money that the government gives them to quantitative easing to sustain their huge on balance sheet and off balance sheet bomb portfolios that they say are worth one hundred cents of a dollar but are really worth maybe one cent on the dollar because they're lying about their true position they use mark to fantasy when they tell the government what they owe not mark to market the resale value of h.s.b.c. is zero the resale value of j.p. morgan is zero the resale value of deutsche bank is zero do it your bank is the biggest fraud in the world it's worth nothing well let's look around the world where these dirty like policies of newer have failed miserably headline reads the commie on mouth zero growth in private labor our. since one thousand nine hundred
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ninety eight so david stockman looked at the latest b.l.s. study the bureau of labor statistics and he says he found a smoking gun about these are sort of policies which america has essentially had since the greenspan era and the crash the dot com crash of two thousand workers in the u.s. business sector worked virtually the same number of hours and twenty thirteen as they had in one nine hundred ninety eight approximately one hundred ninety four billion labor hours what this means is that there was also really no growth at all in the number of hours worked over the fifteen year period it is perhaps even more striking that american businesses still managed to produce forty two percent or three point five trillion dollars more output in two thousand and thirteen than they had in one nine hundred ninety eight even after adjusting for inflation so david stockman goes well whoa whoa whoa wait something stinks there because we know in those fifteen years americans have lost wealth producing high paying jobs like in manufacturing and now they're changing bedpans and working at wal-mart so how is
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that possible that there was more produced by the economy that the business sector output is growing and he has a chart here of the goods producing economy and you can see starting on the left is january two thousand and you see declining goods producing jobs through the greenspan bubble to the bernanke yellen bubble so across the world all of these are policies give the free money to the bankers and the elites in the one percent class and they don't need the bottom ninety nine percent and all the jobs are collapsing and therefore demand and income are collapsing but again not on the show it's like saudi arabia when they want more wealth they just pump more oil they don't need the workers they don't make taxes and so human rights are relatively nonexistent in saudi arabia because those people are expendable same thing in the united states of america or in britain because the top one percent the princes literal princes here in the u.k. and the virtual princes in. america whenever they need more wealth they just print
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more money they don't need anyone to pay taxes that three trillion or so they pay they collect in taxes in america's chicken feed and wouldn't even keep lucky alive for a day or two compared to what you can get just by printing printing money the fact is that the banks are huge impediment to economic growth the group reserve and quantitative easing are feeding the problem and so because the market's not flowing what the what the statisticians are doing what the governments are doing is that they're still they're changing the status they're changing the stats like the office of national statistics here in the u.k. they'll redefine c.p.i. don't redefine productivity there redefine labor and g.d.p. to because they are there and here into an orthodoxy the market fundamentalists and they don't let the price signals of the market tell them what to do they jihadi ease for economic stagnation there's suicide bankers as i've been saying for ten years they are suicide bankers they're willing to blow themselves up to support
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their ideology they're not free marketeers ok so let's talk about the dirt. so he's saying as well that they're saying that business growth business output is now thirteen trillion versus eight trillion back in one nine hundred ninety eight and how they arrive at that number is the only hard numbers they have the real numbers they have are from household business and government spending and then they use the deflator of inflation so he's saying this proves the lie of how much they've been under stating inflation because he goes through the charts in this article but he proves that basically business output is actually eight trillion dollars today not thirteen dollars and i just wanted i just said they redefined how they calculate g.d.p. by redefining inflation and and now they're engaging in tricks like to make the top line look better they're going to include prostitution and cocaine again that's another way to make the top line look better like outputs improve. thing because
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we're going to include part of the black economy into the non black economy but the shadow banking system are over feeding all the trolls in the banking system trillions to keep their zombie banks alive we don't count that except that we get paid every quarter or every year we get the bonus and suddenly oh my god how did i make a billion dollars last year but what happened my that's one didn't make any money but somehow it took a billion dollar fifty i'm so lucky how did it happen i better send marconi a christmas card and the other thing is that we've had bubble after bubble as you point out all the zero percent interest rates have caused a stock market bubbles housing bubbles all sorts of bubbles that people have willingly joined in and somehow that the fact that like the cost of education skyrocket the cost of health care skyrocketing cost of food has skyrocketed the only thing that's keeping inflation down is that our incomes are declining rapidly but that makes so so much sense that demand is therefore going to fall because people don't have money to spend if their incomes are going down it looks like it's
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falling apart so it's hard to understand how prices for the average person are moving higher best because g.d.p. is contracting at a rate that's not as quickly as the debt bomb is exploding in size so the debt the debt drag is skyrocketing in size faster than g.d.p. is collapsing so the result of the average person is that their costs are moving up just like it's reflected in the energy why is the fracking industry in the shell fracking industry in the global energy market why is there so little being produced right now because the costs are so are so high it doesn't make any economic sense and yet the same governments who are sponsoring these huge oil energy exploration projects the fail to mention that they're completely an economic because the price of oil is over one hundred and heading two hundred fifty and heading to two hundred dollars a barrel it makes no sense unless you don't include the debt if you give it a zero percent interest rate we don't need it we don't need the. as i just
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explained in the previous show if i borrow million dollars from goldman sachs will charge me a thousand dollars a year for that loan if i'm going to want to borrow ten thousand dollars they're going to charge me two or three thousand dollars two or three times the amount for one of the under of of the size of the loan that's interest rate apartheid well let's talk about the derp observed really seen in japan a bit nomics legacy japan's greatest misery in thirty three years so japan's misery index if you look at the chart is the highest since nineteen eighty one so all of these years of their all these years of crazy economic policy and the misery index is up at the highest why because food price inflation for real fresh food is up ten percent this year it's up five percent for processed food and packaged food salmon which is the main ingredient of the lunch box the average student in japan thirty percent up onions up thirty seven percent so the article here talks of two locals in japan and one woman says the price of everything we eat and my daily basis is going up i'm making do by having the amount of me i serve and adding more
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vegetables so zero head to looking at this article says well ironically this is exactly what americans are doing only here the having of the food is done by the food producers while the consumers rarely if ever notice that they are being jobbed and are paying the same amount for ever lesser amounts of food at least in japan they are honest about food inflation right i mean it's so miserable in japan they've taken to studying after as we've talked about on the show there's an entire cult of people in japan who worship the. hamsters there's a whole websites dedicated to observing hamsters. that's how miserable things are everything else in the economy and life in japan reminds them of suicide that's why there's so many kids committing suicide in japan there's a whole team suicide cult because the misery index is skyrocketing because the bank of japan is fostering suicide cults that they've become like the charles manson of central bankers you know. squeaky fromme is really mark carney is really squeaky
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fromme you know he runs the bank of england but he's part of a suicide call you know the sharon tate we're all sharon tate now going to get our throat slashed by these irresponsible central banking terrorists again they're all focusing on asset prices not on labor not on wages and even j.p. morgan looking at europe if you look at. assets that's what they focus on assets so even j.p. morgan looks at japan and they see that the problem here price hikes without confidence that wages are going to rise well her appetite for spending said a doubt she senior economist at j.p. morgan chase and company in tokyo abbay has to raise people's belief that the economy will improve meaning their own wages but their wages aren't increasing because again we have i don't know what is beyond their plates something so bizarre that we can't raise wages that every every solution to the wrong going to how
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they're going to raise wages if there's no leverage from wage earners it's like saying the prisoners who make twenty cents a day they need higher wages well they're not going to raise or wages they have no leverage just like people in an open air prison you know for example if they were raise their wages a bit no leverage there they're going to call it sure all of the women is netanyahu and so they raise our wages and also i know they live in an open air prison just like every one of the u.k. in the u.s. they have no leverage and we got to go came back five. ready stay tuned for the second half of our. choose your language call if we could know if they still some of. the the consensus get to. choose the opinions that invigorating to. choose the stories that entire life truth be access to often.
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genetics but see jennifer vulgarized darwin science punishment for an uncommitted crying i was never alone for believing in eighty feebleminded still today for the few i don't know why. but i still don't know why genetic improvement through forced sterilization the basis for nazi ideology they don't stop at just sterilizing and now go to the point of death. for years rarely discussed. till now i'd really rather not talk about that right. welcome back to the kaiser report i'm max kaiser time now to turn to documentary
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filmmaker andi to mounir the only two time recipient of sundance is a grand jury prize for documentary documentaries for films dig and we live in public welcome to the kaiser report andi thank you now you are a documentary filmmaker and you've got this two thousand and nine award winning documentary we live in public and it's about hyper social media and living in this kind of post snowden surveillance era so just tell us a little bit about this. well i ended up following josh harris who started the first internet television network in history called pseudo programs ank back in the mid ninety's he could kind of predict where we were heading with treating our privacy and eventually our freedom for the recognition he feels we dearly crave so he predicted that we would all trade our privacy for fame for fifteen minutes of fame when we had broadband when broadband came along so we created
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a bunker manhattan where one hundred fifty people moved in and lived under constant surveillance one hundred ten surveillance camera everybody had their own little network their own channel inside this network let's say and i documented that over the turn of the millennium shutdown by fema and the swat team as a millennial cult come new year's day but what we ended up doing in two thousand and nine was releasing this film as facebook was really starting to take over and people's grandmothers were showing up on facebook to say hey when you're up in your pajamas posting your photos these are actually owned by facebook they're going to be bought and sold this is the end of privacy and you're willingly doing this just like those people in the bunker so it tracks it tracks that whole journey over ten years his own mental breakdown having seen this sort of prophecy and called it he then overexposed his own life with his girlfriend and they lived under constant surveillance with thirty two motion controlled cameras and sixty six microphones it
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was called we live in public dot com i remember this time because it came after the dot com crash and there was very little going on in the dot com stagnating at that point and then just as came along with this pseudo project and it garnered a tremendous amount of attention so now this has become a model for what happens i guess is what you're saying when don't come true when we remember it going back to the sixty's in greenwich village there was the theatrical experimentation of people living on stage and you would go into the i mean this is i studied this you know living in a new york universe. he and being alive during that era of the very young so there is just elements of this idea of complete exposure but this is also leading to some some questions about how much exposure is going to work and then at the same time it seems like the state is coming in with a complete surveillance yet so so what was then his prediction that we would
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willingly do this he actually says the lions and tigers were kings of the jungle and then they ended up in cages the same will happen to us we will willingly hurt ourselves into these virtual boxes which i take now to be the i phone the computer and what have you we have this ability to share but what he didn't necessarily pen point or say or vocalize at the time is what's happening now with surveillance as you know with the vodafone thing you know acknowledging that we are being wired that we're being tracked this is been happening in america for a long time we did a piece through a portal a network i've created called the total disruption which is tracking this great shift in history that the internet has brought the disruption of privacy particularly leveson as he faced. an appeal in the fourth circuit court we filmed him that morning he had created love a bit which snowden used this is e-mail protocol and because snowden and it up in
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the situation the u.s. government insisted that he turn over the private s.s.l. key for four hundred thousand other people who had bought a bit and were using you know were his he's a small businessman in america and next thing you know he has to trade over everybody's or turn over everybody's private e-mail and the encryption code and he refused to do that you know the state is taken to court in history disruptors many times were the artists picasso's guernica for example depicting the horrors of war it made it a change made a statement in some. and become part of the guys if you will but these days it's the code writers programmers who run these lines of code and marc andreessen who was the creator of netscape originally who's now running a v.c. firm out in san francisco area and recent horror with he came out and recently called edward snowden
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a traitor so how do you reconcile this idea because these technologists are not really destructors they seem like they're supporting the status quo and the surveillance state and it edward stone's a traitor then you know who's out there really disrupting the status quo to lead us to a kind of a post surveillance state larry lessig. e.f.-s. his super pac you know breaking down campaign finance which is the root of the corruption of our political system in america i think he's somebody to watch the champion of copyright freedom he also created creative commons along with our shorts now of course was is no one really very talented to death by the m.p.a. well let me talk about the m.p.a. for a second because your documentary filmmaker am making a film about robert mablethorpe a scripted film and you know the iraq issue is definitely an issue. rather mablethorpe imagery shockingly overtly sexual images but
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let's start with the m.p.a. for a second because the m.p.a. . forces dad at the funeral or close thereby indicated that the head of the n.p.a. hounded his son to death essential because the copyright cartel as i call them the people that are being fought by larry lessig lawrence lessig. be you the question is you're in the filmmaking business and you competing for prizes very much inside the film business and the m.p.a. rules that business with it with chris dodd heading up the n.p.a. how do you live in that and still be actively challenging the system well it's interesting max the inside hollywood there's actually different you know hollywood is not just one machine in fact robert redford who's a mentor of mine and sundance labs. is an incredible program that i brought
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mablethorpe through that he's never been invited to this not for the oscar on his last film this year and he's never actually been invited into that into the the academy in that way and and he mentioned that to me actually were you know when we were talking one day about sundance is very much an independent film haven and a nonprofit. it's independent truth telling and i think sometimes people mistake that so you know i don't feel like i am in line with the m.p.a. or that i'm somehow connected to them in fact what i think is going to have to happen is i'm probably going to have to come up against them with this with this maid with a project with robert mablethorpe of course a lot of the images that outsized that image is an outsized. genitalia and i often thought that if he was a white guy he would be celebrated america. in other words if the images that he focused on essentially you get
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a lot of black guys in his imagery with extended genitalia i think if those images were of white guys then the politicians in washington would be celebrating these images of us that inferiority complex of the of the average white male that is really at the root of the attack on mablethorpe doesn't question their yeah that's not thought of that being a man and you know this is a way that with all the whining waving contests you see it on wall street you see the media it's very basic as a gender unfortunately i hate to admit that but let's talk about crowdfunding for a second because this project you know you talk about the mph when we talk about financing these projects and having to go finding new sources crowdfunding is this is this a future of you know i got to say this is why i'm in england right now i'm actually premiering three films as part of a series that i'm making called chief executive artist the idea that we artists have to be somewhat entrepreneurial because we can reach our audience directly as
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you prove here on the show and the crowdfunding is example of our ability to create a community around our work and a family around our work in a way that we never have before so one of the films that we're premiering here in england this week is amanda f. ing palmer on the rocks and she's amanda palmer is a musician she was formally in the dresden dolls she did the biggest crowdfunding campaign in. music history for an album came under a lot of fire for at one point two million dollars she raised for a single record and it's because her fan base is so galvanized and it's almost like this virtual community global community and i don't think we can all be quite as active on social media as she is or be as emotionally driven as she is inaccessible she is but we all could use a little bit of amanda so i focus on her and made this film and it's playing all over the world right now is just a mosque allen sydney and it's making lots of waves and another one that we did is about shepard fairey cultivate the artist and we have a new film about russell brand called russell brand's the bird
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a short film that is also premiered at sheffield this week so in a clip on a total disruption dot com amanda palmer says the era of journeys over the artist's rest of control back via the internet social media and assuming kraut crowdfunding so. is that true i believe that we have this an incredible opportunity right now and i think that if played right and some artists are really doing it correctly there's an opportunity to put incredible freethought out there and to mobilize and to to put projects into play that could never otherwise be funded and so the gate keepers are in a different position now and the rules of engagement have been redefined by some of these artists and i think we're going to continue to see that the millennial are over fifty percent are starting their own companies so a total disruption dot com is really going to be a portal for them to be able to search down to the word through all the raw footage
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that i've been creating to build their own businesses and build a more consciously faster and more efficiently than ever before i think it's the same for artists we can do this it's it's a different team you need to put together and it can't keep can't be your fault time job because you still have to be a creative force but yet we have an incredible opportunity right about around the world right now nigeria for example is the biggest. output of films in the world. and you know the film industry had coined ok but i was going to get into bit going there a second is because. you know because bitcoin allows for a fuzz be sent around the world frictionless lee with almost zero cost so how do you see but quite fitting into this i think for the developing world it's the biggest you know it's the biggest thing that's that's going it's going to be massive it's a mobile based society it's an open source platform anybody can get on it anybody can jump on it it's the first you know non-exclusive form of payment in the world
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and so companies are coming along we just filmed tony the c.e.o. and founder of bit pay for example in the living yes we just filmed an interview with him it's up by southwest and he definitely feels that way that this is the developing world is where it's going to be massive and then it just gives them an opportunity to play ball like they never have before so that now if nigeria and india are pushing films out of greater greater levels now they can actually monetize and in china as well their film market is going to be huge and we're looking at working with them more and more so i just think it's you know this is an incredible time in history where we can connect directly across time and space and i as a filmmaker i can't think of anything more fascinating to to point my camera right on the edge of owner of the actual measuring of a beautiful so much for having me. and that's going to do it for this edition of the kaiser a four with a mascot and stacy everett like i think our guest on the timeout our director of day and we live in public their web site is a total disruption dot com if you'd like to get in touch tweet us
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a kaiser report and select by a. country history of yugoslavia this formation as a prosperous and peaceful country was consider that so be a success story of market socialism and in many regards it was the most developed on. whom was this teacher of democracy and market economy if any republic in yugoslavia wanted for the us a it would have to break away from yugoslavia and declared its independence ok it's not a conspiracy theory it's not my speculation it's not my analysis it's the public. and punish it harshly for every slight do not some unlearnt the serbs started this
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war the serbs are legal riginal clause of the war they are the complete aggressors and wrongdoers. bomb. on that. small. bomb all of tofu kitchens six of them knew its own so. cool assists and the multi-ethnic society to live in harmony and show not. what was forgotten to be told feel about yugoslavia the weight of chains on our teeth. there's a new i'm a grown river and i've got a polygamous family i'm looking for a woman. understands we really worry and i want her to share my goal of saving our people from the extinction of those who. i've had two failed marriage and she's had one. change though i just had to what's been a chemist and have decided to find
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a man to marry as both a machine we want to know women who could play your kids together with us oh. your money just to have let's say thirty to forty kids ok to do that with only one wife so it's impossible to play. the luck right on the seat it first trip to italy and i think the church. on a reformist twitter. and instagram. would be among the. odd.
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couple of places tried to. pull out of the tornado and you know much more efficient preaching every minute and. somehow make the law the weapon. of my own life but i. must say. this case is just one step. sometimes for nothing. just so we have a chance to slip. just you still could still be charged if you did you see the state aid to egypt but he was.
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there on the sands again into a war zone as coddling to extremists we've across the north armed with hardware left behind by american troops. residents in east ukraine claim their city was firebombed overnight by the military is already in ruins as a result of ongoing artillery attacks. and yes or no to g.m.o. e.u. countries could soon decide independently whether to ban the cultivation of genetically altered props despite the u.s. pushing brussels to expand their global trade.
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