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tv   Breaking the Set  RT  August 8, 2014 7:29am-8:01am EDT

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and. after his death the medical examiner's office ruled that garners death was a homicide caused by the choke hold except the evidence of the video combined with the medical examiner's analysis seemed to have no impact on the largest union representing n.y.p.d. officers take a listen at the president of the patrolmen's benevolent association had to say earlier this week he was not a chokehold he was a big man that had to be brought to the ground to be placed on their rest by shorter police officers well there you have it folks it wasn't a chokehold at all i guess it was a strangle grab meanwhile both the man who filmed the incident ramsey order and his wife had been arrested on gun and assault charges respectively and while the charges may be legitimate considering that the has had a record of at least twenty four previous arrest the timing of them definitely raises some eyebrows but no matter the criminal history of order that doesn't change the disturbing and undeniable images we all saw on that video and as the
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n.y.p.d. takes full responsibility for this reprehensible act there will continue to be no justice for eric garner now let's break this. the. he was a. very hard to take at least. he ever had sex with that hurt right there in the in. the lead.
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for the last three days a temporary ceasefire between israel and hamas has held up for four weeks bombing campaign against the gaza strip by israeli defense forces called operation protective adage the campaign has taken the lives of one thousand eight hundred sixty seven palestinians three israeli civilians and sixty four i.d.f. soldiers according to gaza and israeli officials at the time of this broadcast but beyond the devastating human toll much of the already weak infrastructure of gaza has been left in ruins but the u.n. sources as to made in that the destruction could be as much as five billion dollars and will take decades to rebuild so i get a sense of what it's like on the ground i wanted to talk to someone in gaza so earlier i spoke with dr below or a physician at gaza city is all she the hospital i started by asking him to describe the destruction. of the city and i mean does this give the sort of you to be. jewish was going to oh oh we had one of those a bit if i was a guy was
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a good mistake you know of to do good sure that i would. the stink is. caused by some. two thousand homes that are destroyed but the hospital now an addition to other thousands that the body destroyed but didn't have to build but would not be able to build one of your former university which was on blood aerated and the other before and after an edge of l. was a hospital talk about the amount of civilian targets that have been bombed just in the last month. if you want to talk at a number of conventions for major hospitals that are. out of service now as a result of the damages we can talk to teen health centers. more than seven you
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know us schools to a city a community college ten thousand homes seventeen major fuckwit is each one of them used to employ. workers we're talking about three. connecting cities together that are. not working. through to the bulldozers of the israeli army. of course it's much forgive the politics and the deuce of life for the simple because they need. the definition of a human shield and the number of placement of noncombatants in or around combat targets to deter the enemy from attacking as well literally failed in combat and during attacks we've seen rockets being shot near civilian areas as well as plenty of and some graphics from the i.d.f. showing a literal shielding of missiles with civilians but how long have you seen any evidence backing up that claim. not to see in my eyes but the same
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thing. i'd call the choice that i'm let's just say that it was for about six months . one can draw them i've seen some videos showing video. this is a problem with those videos talking about two armies fighting even the militants that tried to the other regular men. those five things to do if they found a need we are now people underneath your patience and. to to protect ourselves from out of prison or even resistance because a lot of the cording to us because they still want to be like a nation so only when we are that well. luckily the problem with media is that we are to blame for both because there is a list size and for our own that we are names for our two thousand and twelve israeli significant casualties most of them soldier this is not right so we are
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examining our right to protect ourselves. we are all civilians. so we should not be blamed for. the videos that the press showed first of all the stuff of the situation this. isolated accidents number two we are not allowed to go on the opposite side of the border here in gaza but it was their desire to go to the other side of the border there's a gag order and so that's been against any photos from being. shown being show the internet on t.v. but the few photos that will leave the show is late it shows in the show time is coming to the is late it bases around gaza and just to show the. army government buildings schools and hospitals without. i've never really heard anything quite like it along. two million people are
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committing self genocide and not being called out for such outrageous statement terry you've been working of course i'm shifa hospital in gaza city i know that the hospitals very limited only eleven beds and it's emergency room what's the status there right now how hard has it been to care for the influx of patients in fact on the second market that could have hit the market this one hundred and fifty injuries to the hospital in just fifteen minute or so patients with literally it on lying on think a. lot of the hostages your as it corridos with some of them with their limbs lying down. beside them some of them bleeding on the floor to doctors and nurses could not manage all of the injuries. in any one occasion when one guy was arrested his hardest working because we are short on stuff we have wanted to be all we have
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to live and die has not stopped working here to see the toll we had to the to. think spaceship to a lighthouse. just sort of i think so also that it was dedicated to serving five hundred thousand people it's just a deceiving one of the. example you can deal with one or two injuries due to fifteen minutes but we cannot be able with. fifty injuries in fifteen minutes and. especially the locals lives with a lot. that's especially with this opportunity i think. with a lot of. dr i can imagine the choices that had to be made with who you needed to help the most and seen so much death around you is extremely tragic and i mean we're just talking about the people who have been lost and dramatically injured let's talk about post-traumatic stress disorder p.t.s.d.
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according to un relief and works agency after the two thousand and twelve war which pales in comparison to the recent operation the rate of p.t.s.d. in children more than double and talk about the lasting effects that will be on children growing up in the wake of this devastation the only a few if you ask a few of the survey and you ask people all of them have even heard an explosion be exposed so i think suppose you see in some of the rather good engine will try and that one hundred will be operational god subjected to such massive massive elitist drifting experiences not just once they are the. have been defeated a going to such experience every day for thirty days and you can imagine them all the psychological and physical stress that the whole nation had to go through i myself was not the distance and what was the one. the love
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the longest that i have slipped it just for being interrupted is a massive nearby in my street not being interrupted by the faraway is. accustomed to it that's just my so imagine about the children imagine the children who was who had to witness that their parents living in a child smallville exists father told his mother i see your father or your mother. unable to protect themselves let alone the children organ that has brought us that it has to have a lasting effect on the little children seeing as i'm able to protect all of them so. just this must have a lot of impact that's what i was going to show they. started to go and just see the effects later generation the children with the a.b.a.
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where they get a lot. and of course like you just mentioned temporary fire there's only a couple hours left at the time of the broadcast israel and hamas have not agreed to an extension what do you think we can expect to see if they don't agree to an extension and what would dana bolton fire look like. well it's so full of. those conditions such as lifting the siege have to be of negotiation and those should be considered the humanitarian conditions not political or i would understandably because conditions up to negotiation lifting this. idea being subject to the siege. on this topic not being brought to. us to. be started. before with is it still supporting so. to the. people who believe that they have nothing to lose for the condition.
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thought the good life here was. so. the idea of going back to the same life only minus two thousand people of mine that was an injury that thousand holes or a hospital inside of thirty's and blindness more that sort of folklore to be. flowing and the idea is unbearable to the people that. that was the one time in gaza but not accept this idea. needs to and thank you so much your hero please take care of yourself on the front line there dr malden bor palestinian doctor in gaza city really appreciate what you're doing. thanks so much dr please stay safe. thank you a lot so thanks for having me thank you. stick around to hear about the sixty ninth
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anniversary of vampire bombs dropped over hiroshima nagasaki. america the financial world. talked. to generally take no demand to try to get any economic life. live. live. live live live.
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stop rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want. they just want to keep building the allowing saudi arabia qatar and iran to fund millions and millions of pounds worth of building of mosques in this country where they have the addresses where current we have a hundred thousand four to sixteen year old children who have been schooled in these mature assets which is encouraging complete non integration within the society. your friend posts a photo from a vacation you can't afford college different. the boss repeats the same old joke of course you like. your ex-girlfriend still pins tear jerking poetry keep. your it. we
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post only what really matters i don't see your facebook you street. although enough nuclear warheads exist to destroy humanity many times over very few people today are living under the threat of nuclear war it wasn't too long ago when that threat was a daily worry for millions of individuals this week marks the sixty ninth anniversary of the atomic bomb that decimated the japanese city of her roshumba a bomb was dropped for an american twenty nine war plane then the enola gray gave scuse me and mark the first time in the history of the world that a nuclear weapon had ever been used against a civilian population the destruction from the blast was catastrophic between the shock waves and a wall of tremendous heat event claimed an estimated eighty thousand lives
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instantly leaving another seventy thousand to suffer from severe radiation and other injuries many of whom died in the months and years ahead you know only three days later a second atomic bomb was dropped on the city of nagasaki killing as many as eighty thousand. apennines men women and children but as horrific as it is to think of this mass slaughter somehow being justified the truman administration regarded the bombs as a necessary evil and valuable to the allied forces an end in the second world war that debate sadly still goes on but the day after the nuclear dust settled a new era of warfare had begun and immediately sparked a movement to do away with nuclear weapons the regret was perhaps most evident among the many physicists that either worked on creating the bomb or helped facilitate its use shortly before his death in one nine hundred fifty four albert einstein the man who split the atom and formally advocated for nuclear weaponry was
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famously quoted as saying i made one great mistake in my life when i signed the letter to president roosevelt recommending that the atom bomb be made even following the very first successful detonation of a nuclear bomb on july sixteen thousand nine hundred forty five there was fear and doubt among the many americans who are on what in may become the minds before the very first true weapon of mass destruction. during the one nine hundred sixty five interview dr j. robert oppenheimer the man regarded as the father of the atomic bomb remarked on the very first moments after the blast. i just remembered the line from the group true. trying to persuade the prince what. you should do is to say. to impress him take her on. for. service
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you know what i mean but. just worlds. where at number. three in the words especially since humanity has similarly learned nothing from the event of its devastating consequences amazingly during the height of the cold war when the u.s. and russia were threatening each other and the stability and health of the planet and the threat of mutually assured destruction plagued everyone's minds the opportunity to ban ballistic missiles and do away with the nukes was well within reach but it was ultimately squandered by president ronald reagan who rejected gorbachev offer because he was dead set on building a nuclear missile defense system in outer space the reagan star wars fantasy was just that and the results of that decision remain a dark cloud still today right now russia still has an estimated eight thousand
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nuclear warheads in the u.s. over seventy three hundred according the federation of american scientists and as the world moves from one chord war to resurrect another nuclear nonproliferation treaties have been drafted yet not ratified there are now nine nuclear armed nations in the world. so while the uys government continues to delegate its foreign policy based on containing other states ability to develop nuclear power this week on the anniversary of her roshumba nagasaki we're reminded of the very obvious truth that america's the only country that's ever actually use them. the u.s. provides aid to dozens of countries around the world often in the form of communitarian
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assistance or weapons and other times whatever twisted form of democracy it sees fit to suit. it's agenda case in point recent revelations by the a.p. about the u.s. this fake twitter app and cuba called zoom zoom you know which was created to stir dissent among cuban air not users on the gambrel a company called creative associates international and just this week the a.p. exposed yet another subversive program in the guise of humanitarian aid this time usa i do you work within the same umbrella company to recruit foreign nationals to send through the prevention programs on college campuses tell me break down the story i'm joined by eugene puryear organizer with the answer coalition thank you so much for coming on your genes both of you so much for having me i'm sure to have you on this is insane breakdown first what exactly what this program consisted of and how widespread it was so what this program consisted of and again run by creative associates was they were recruiting these young college age people from around latin america and finding any number of you know very worthy endeavors
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whether it's hiv aids prevention and i just other forms of n.g.o.s style work and saying go to cuba and use this as your cover here's a thirty minute orientation about what you should do if they try to catch you essential to use it as a cover to get people to overthrow the government so another in a very long line of you know really drag it back to nine hundred sixty of efforts by the u.s. government to overthrow the cuban regime but it was you know relatively widespread it wasn't huge it didn't have a significant. number of people but it certainly had a very significant reach across a wide range of different types of activities and when confronted about the program the state department official you know they acknowledge its existence of course you can't really deny it but they said no you know we acknowledge it but it had a dual purpose to quote enable support for cuban society while educating cubans on hiv prevention but a quarter of the a.p. report that was acquired from one of the members back to creative associates they only mention hiv one within
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a six page report it was only to say that it was the perfect excuse for the treatment of the underlying theme to. generate a network of volunteers for social transformation eugene read through the lines here yeah well i mean first of all it's an absolutely absurd premise i mean cuba has one of the most world renowned medical systems in the entire on the entire planet so we're now they have twenty thousand doctors all around the world who go to countries that have no medical systems and serve and solve all sorts of problems they have one of the most advanced bio pharma sectors of any country in the entire world to develop all sorts of very interesting and very groundbreaking and pathbreaking drugs so it of itself it's sort of a ridiculous thing that usa idea needs to come in there and teach them how to deal with hiv aids right and considering the failure of the cia vaccination polio program and pakistan i mean we're talking about a program that caused actually a rise in the perfect disease and also there's there's polio vaccination workers getting gunned down because they found out that they were working with the cia total devastation there why do you think this administration hasn't learned about
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kind of using serious health issues as a front for covert intelligence actually is detrimental well i think it's not that they haven't learned that they don't care i mean obviously it has a detrimental effect all n.g.o.s who are doing this sort of thing have said over and over again that it has a detrimental effect but when you key point when the key goal of your government which is of the u.s. government is not to solve problems heal the sick and perform other assorted miracles but to use all of your power possible to ensure that the united states is the most dominant country in the world over and above all countries you will use any and all methods and in cuba they've used any and all methods from invasions to assassinations they have a whole terrorist mafia right out of miami and so now they're using n.g.o.s as they have also in the past in other countries so i think it's less a case of them not learning and more a case of just callous disregard right and i remember when i learned about the zuni ok so i was really shocked that usa today was able to do this and operate kind of on a humanitarian front but then i realize that they've been doing this for quite a while your genome back in two thousand and thirteen even were alice actually
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kicked us out of the country and we're talking about i mean there are reports of everything from usa to helping us why. palestinian elections just funny mass torture i mean it might surprise us to learn this agency is doing this now would it be fair to say that it's always acted as another arm of u.s. intelligence so i would say certainly i mean usa id the national endowment for democracy all of these programs and departments that are allegedly doing these positive things have over the years over almost their entire existence had very clear and very consistent links to intelligence programs whether they're run independently or whether they're run secretly through the backdoor by the cia however it actually breaks down behind the scenes this is something that's not new and in fact in all regions of the world we see this over and over and over again that these so-called civil society so-called human rights organizations are really being used as a many different ways from the media to you know health prevention essentially is intelligence gathering and regime change institutions i mean this is not just intelligence gathering this is actually an attempt at regime change inside of cuba
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and in a way that even over time has proved completely ineffective for the u.s. government no matter what they've tried they're still you know bound how determined to overthrow the cuban regime and they'll do whatever they can they certainly are i want to play a clip of senator patrick leahy questioning usa idea administrator dr rajiv shah about the program. if we could. working. with the cuban government in child survival programs so it could be done. my understanding of the. amendment is that we would not be precluded from engaging in those kinds of. amendment would make sure that. we are we wouldn't we wouldn't. i like this claim right there i mean do you think that's really what's preventing actual cooperation at this point well i certainly think that the helms burton act is part of the larger the larger embargo the larger blockade is absolutely critical
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to understanding this reality certainly the u.s. embargo the u.s. blockade of cuba which has cost them over hundreds of billions of dollars in the years it's been in place has done quite a bit quite a bit to impact the humanitarian situation as well as the economy of cuba and the fact that they will covertly do things that they won't openly do shows how unbelievably byzantine this situation is eugene why why does a small island nation pose such a threat to the u.s. government are continuing to expel resources into the country to try to overthrow the government yes well i think that it poses the ultimate threat because what happened in cuba nine hundred fifty nine is they overthrew a brutal us back to her and they established a government that established universal health care the right to housing the right to a job all sorts of other very positive social and economic indicators inside of the country and that they weren't afraid to do what they wanted to do and for the united states to say to have sitting ninety miles away from florida oh here's this little tiny country with very few resources that's been able to do so many things for its people so people in the united states might start to we can't have that
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exactly like if they can have it why can't we when we can barely get any sort of health care i mean you see what kind of boondoggle we have going on right now there's people living out on the streets affordable housing is a crisis in every single major city in the country and small cities too and so obviously cuba has committed the ultimate transgression which is to show there's a different way to live there's a different way to organize yourself and you can meet human needs over a private profit and the united states government that's a crime i mean it really is true that there is something going on and they don't want to know your view and i wish that i can go there and find myself unfortunately . from doing so thank you so much for jane prayer always amazing insight i'll be on answer coalition organizer in d.c. city council green party candidate everyone check it out your campaign is rock and thank you so much man for coming on thank you i really appreciate it thanks so much thanks for watching you guys are follow me on twitter at abby martin grandma want to break the set all over again.
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clean more zero casualties war this is the great fantasy of war mongering politicians. capturing people is messy what do you do if the innocent killing them easy we were serve the right to kill any person anywhere any time. they can do not listen to him but they come to tremendous amounts of money makes these things are very dangerous and politicians get a new kind of power via this technology sad is very tempting. in fish farms waters. the pond to me because. i saw it spread all
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over and over is the most cultured food you have in the whole will. drown zones in the fischel inquiry furthermore tells restrictions. really knows what's inside the feeling. i asked ray. in december two thousand and ten. more likely to be raped in college and in the real world. i don't think people did that to each other when they knew each other i thought rape was a stranger in the bushes. girl complaining about the son of an alumni who gives
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millions of dollars to the school why listen to somebody who's going to lose money at the school if schools that make money based decisions are much more common than they would ever admit publicly. right from the scene. of the. first trip. and i were being put. on a reporter's twitter. and instagram. to be in the.
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the army begins to surround the eastern ukraine largest cities with shells hitting residential areas hospitals and churches moscow is already providing aid to children injured in the conflict so. a number of eager nations demand compensation from brussels fearing moscow's sanctions on food imports could cost them billions. also all the missile strikes to resume in gaza after a cease fire expires with reports suggesting israel's offensive is spurring enter symmetric sentiments across the globe and. directed our military to take targeted strikes against terrorist carboys.

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