tv Going Underground RT June 19, 2017 2:29am-3:01am EDT
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well being across the continent well the cradle of european democracy is arguably in ruins greece is sliding into recession with quarter with g.d.p. gone since the bankruptcy of lehman brothers and unemployment at twenty three percent this politician from europe's most powerful economy saw it coming before trial induce a politike we utterly condemn the austerity policy towards the greek government by the german federal government it's an unjustified intervention and you get the feeling after the brics it is in england after the emergence of a great number of right wing populist parties and groups the european elite and especially the german federal government did not hear the last of the warning shots . and here's france even on french government broadcaster france twenty four globally covered by media as a model of pro technocratic globalist. it might be freezing it might rain it might snow but at least i'm at home if so there are lots of people sleeping
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under bridges he'd be very grateful to be in my position. is one of the twelve million people in france who suffer fuel poverty no wonder some french politicians beg to differ from the mainstream narrative about europe in the e.u. media echo chamber. partly pretty steep european society would break under the austerity policy some on their knees poverty and unemployment are spreading all across europe without any hope of a solution if the current politicians are not challenged to exactly. whether british politicians negotiating bricks that they will be challenged and with an overwhelmingly yoru file corporate media about whether the franco german dream is a nightmare or not we'll have to wait and see meanwhile no party since polls began as a big a surge in votes than the u.k. labor party under jeremy korb. the labor leader won
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a larger share of the vote than tony blair in twenty zero five defying the media the tory party and members of his own body that clung on to blair's new labor mindset joining me now is jeremy corbin's minister for industrial strategy science and innovation in the first m.p. to win a seat in the general election. year when he was in or a new constituency first just before we get all due labor stuff your reaction to it was to raise a new chief of staff of the woman housing minister who was defeated in the general election who failed to deliver on a promise to review for safety related building regulations. when he was housing minister well first can i say that obviously my thoughts are with the victim of the terrible fire and the first responders and the image of the services and the firefighters who did such fantastic work the news that paul did not over a number of years did not review the building of grayson's after what was
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a devastating fire thinkers in two thousand and nine also in london is a huge i think concern and a real question for him that he needs to answer an address obviously the conservatives and i sat opposite the many times in the chamber when they're saying that regulations are you know stopping people from going about their business and government interferes too much except her and they never were really responsive in a number of areas in terms of reviewing existing regulations to prove them such a clearly such a clearly life or death issue you need to understand the conservative party needs to answer why they sat around for four years and and to what extent this terrible terrible tragedy could have been avoided but from the moment the news came from kansas and in london of. gun industry to be had to be saying schools is all over
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the media saying almost and politicized trudged i think so i do think that is one of the most politically charged things to say if people are asking questions and at democratic country if people are asking questions and of those in power and particularly in the tower block like that where your safety is dependent on these regulations if people are asking questions i was not politicizing it that is part of our political democracy and i really think it is they who undermine our democracy by saying that asking questions and holding people to account is somehow politicizing tragedy did you when the biggest. it was not just simply that's when really important but i mean it's that first jeremy called in and his team under labor movement and i run a fantastic campaign whilst the tories the conservatives ran a very very bad campaign but what was very noticeable for me in newcastle from
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quite early on the manifesto launch is really emphasize that but even before that is that i have to you know suppose it's surprising number of first time voters and not only young people though you know visiting universities and doing registration drives on campus it was clear that young people would vote but also i had thirty forty year old so often women in very paid job or with childcare responsibilities who were voting for the first time who you know that they hadn't been inspired or they hadn't been angry enough to vote before and in jeremy and the message that we were putting forward they found something both they found something inspiring to vote for i think that's really important no ironically that some critics might say thanks to all your work goldman's work britain is in a worse state no. because we have
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a sort of coalition of chaos and the d u p is about to get some power of the whole united kingdom we're not in a worse situation. that's very just as if we are in a better situation because we have the hope of not having a conservative government for five years and those who haven't had a pay rise first you know just for seven years which is just about everybody those whose public services have been cut and a mind those dependent on child care which is an affordable those unable to live in a decent house those who securities depending on the piece and everyone who wants a good job as opposed to minimum wage is even a contract job they have hope now that that might happen before and the other five year term but at the same time you're absolutely right that the situation that to raise a me and to team in trying to hang on to power the situation they for our country
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is unbelievable. and is it was it's not just the labor party saying that we have. previous prime ministers most of her previous prime ministers also emphasizing that going into this sort of some sort of we don't you know group we deal with a t p the in certainty but also the threat. for for rights and i bore sharon and now to p.t. q there's a storm there's a northwest instrumental but oh you will brazil will be good for keynesian expansionism we are you agree with. that on i think there's a real there's a real question there because we as a ne m.p. i will be really interested to see to what the d. p. what that price is and whether the rest of the can she will sharing it and so for example if part of that price is reductions on passenger airport passenger tax which is a. relation the northeast as well as in northern ireland and unless we're sharing
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in that we're going to be disadvantaged and there's a whole raft of other areas investment and chance for success if i stay rich he ends for northern ireland but continues for the rest of the country because they haven't got the the will all the votes to get it through parliament against their own tories against their own party then not only will i be holding scalp but the people of the north east of the people of every region in this country or want to know something so i don't this is not simply a matter for northern ireland this is a matter for the whole country and abortion rights you know when one for women's portion right so i practice and this talk of a vote across the country on on on the terms of abortion and i think it's a real challenge it's a it is a coalition of details here for the british to address race with the. i mean what about importance to the. bill for us which appears to be
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a condition for the user and so that raises the most of the ghoulish to really sort of the one of the equally important point if not more important which is the peace process overall so how can the government how can the british government be impartial in northern ireland which is one of the requirements of the peace process if it is formed by members of the u.p.a. and so if if if protestant marching or you know what it's whatever how can they be seen as being impartial if they are made up of members of the u.p.a. as well if they're dependent on the votes of members of the free and i obviously we have a new absolute commitment in this what labor will be will be working for the absolute need not to go backwards on the peace process as well as all the other issues which are in play right now you know that we can't go back when so not so so i hope the prime minister in fact i hope she will consider. we. we will be making sure she
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considers and also that her position on the group a deal she's doing as a light shone upon it you already were responsible for the outsourcing of so much british industry. what do you think about. at the moment it's merging the capital routes was going to be a british airways one thousand four hundred drugs in midstream you go through. in my constituency actually a new class. because we in firstly i. agree that the that our party was responding to was one thing under twenty blair and gordon brown there was i don't listen to yes there was a movement which i think was an industry which which was a mistake in a way to take out everything that didn't we didn't respond to what they considered to be their main profit drivers i was a mistake i think british airways and especially after what happened you know
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a few weeks ago to be outsourcing all its i.t. which is fundamental to any company's success is what is wrong i think there's i mean by labor to renationalise it's like emirates or singapore airlines or qatar no there's no commitment from germany corbin's labor to remain. no no i mean a lot of you know the cameras are in singapore airlines are good they're all part of the government in their balance sheets but i think it's more question of what the kind of competition there is in the market not monopolies what what failed particular was the rail service was trying to have competition in infrastructure that industries like british rail we saw that wasn't competition we see that in energy again because you can't have more than one energy network and so you've got private sector monopolies which exploit consumers i am i'm not sure that you could describe. an industry as that. even though i took the great fun of finding.
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out i thought it was that now that i know i'm a shadow minister thank you after the break as we approach the seventy sixth anniversary of the creation of a nazi ukraine before liberation by soviet troops we speak to a holocaust survivor and the makers of the new film destination unknown about the debt to mosco plus from tourism a duping crowning country to private schools and big oil companies profiteering from the u.k. government all in this week's news all is a ball going up about two of going underground. in other posts the center of. the law i. told.
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let's talk about blackness and the blues of being black. and always well in a big house down at least that's what i've been told but it was simply that we and remains as such because we simply forgot i don't. eat scene we've allowed them to rearrange paint you've told us the sickness of trusting our enemy we came to faith . that's what i call the lack of blackness or understanding the blues of being black. sheep the blues of being black should mandate that we attack knowing how when and what to do to come this simple in his national has been beck is simply tat the feeling is black and blue.
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left of their lives after a fire that even mainstream media haven't been able to conceal is political but this is clear what stories have been obscured in the post british election fallout ahead of today's negotiations is going underground senior producer reporting on some of the week's news. in a week packed full of political porkies we sift through the mainstream media trough stories discarded quicker than to raise a maze close's eight some may say tricky terry duped crowd and country with over a million pounds and it's who we call first and. you think that a few quid spare or at least a free school mail for one in three children now living in multi-dimensional poverty especially in private schools like david cameron in college are set to save the billion pounds thanks to their charitable status maybe they talk big oil
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companies a trick or two as the u.k. government pays shell over one hundred million pounds in rebates despite making billions in profits and possibly destroying the planet well there has to be said shade of reply to say that transparency is an essential tool in building trust well from spills to leaks is another eat an alumnus boris johnson attempts to clean up his party's mess by what's happening in peace to calm down and get behind the prime minister a prime minister who's overseen s.a.'s streets disguised as beggars and road sweepers on a street amid fears of more terror attacks which may or may not be connected to u.k. foreign policy and eight hundred days is the beginning of the u.k. backed bomb making government protesters in london have projected pictures of starving children on the walls of the saudi arabian embassy in mayfair and yet despite human rights concerns the u.s. senate still voted to continue arming the saudis all googly prolonging the horrific war meanwhile the pensacola's drone program intends. with the u.s.
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only acknowledging a fifth of its lethal strikes despite the bureau of investigative journalism documenting up to eleven attacks in yemen alone this year recording to the un less than thirty percent of international aid is even seen as civilians you so desperately need it will at least president trump was in good spirits as he celebrated his seventy fifth day a day he shares with fellow gemini that u.s. army the two hundred forty two years since their inception have over one hundred bases worldwide one point five million soldiers and civilian employees which if tallied up with amount to the fourth largest city in the land of the free so is the home of the brave switches allegiances securing a multi-billion dollar deal with tar despite the saudi blockade and trumps accusations of funding terrorism a local businessman plan to airlift four thousand cows to help the country might just have been out shown by a high flying all american fast food stunt so as the absurdity of a chicken burger in the stratosphere finally settles in in actuality
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a food bank from the ground has hit record new heights that's one point two million a murdered sea food parcels handed out each year around fifty percent going to children just as harsh austerity measures since two thousand and eight have forced more and more people to survive below the breadline with an angry marginalized population looking for answers we asked the questions the mainstream media hasn't and we go underground. with some of this week's buried news nearly two years ago today a neo nazi opened fire in a us church killing nine people in a racially motivated attack known as the charleston shootings from far right in the u.s. . those carried out by groups motivated by. ideology with eighteen attacks killing forty eight people compared to forty five people in million attacks this however is nothing compared to the millions killed displaced or wounded by nature wars. around
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the world but how can a rising popularity in far right parties such as france's national front and the party for freedom in the netherlands be looked at in the shadow of fascist atrocities in the second world war deputy editor sebastian back i met with. the director and producer of the new film destination unknown as well as a holocaust survivor. meaning seventy three years ago today the world took the horrifying details of mass killing and. concentration camp the auschwitz report was written by. alfred went. back to escape from his largest killing factory in april one thousand nine hundred forty four. the inner workings of the death count or a closely guarded secret document revealed to joe griffey scale of mass murder being carried out. now the story of those who suffered and for to get them has been
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documented in the film destination on film over fourteen years the features interviews with holocaust survivors including partisan fighters battling the nazis with russian forces i spoke to the film's director. and producer. as well as holocaust survivor at. the death marches. of three of hitler's death camps i wanted a technical light for the business news gathering of the time. i couldn't get hold of the company it's been a couple of weeks and they were celebrating the new year. obviously i knew when i eventually got hold of the company but we were close close for jewish holidays. and within minutes talking about the. and then again my father was in book eleven he said this was marcus lee who told me
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which the owner of hasty communications and. long island and. he put me in conversation so now a minute i'm talking about a technical past but i'm now talking to his father who is in the death book in oceans book eleven. and the conversation went on concluded with if you want to fly over and he literally said i would align the morphia so i booked into the un was a opposite the united nations. and settle down there for about we can half and there were about three a day maximum amount to a given day they were averaging two as three day coming in and i missed the most because the third would be interviewed and over the last thirteen years we've been back to different camps throughout europe and and really that's how we came about. the question directed claire ferguson wanted to answer with the film is how you can
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make a life after such pain. what i think the film does do is he asked the question in a very powerful way and i think what the film does this is a film that i mean it's about empathy and i think if you have empathy. it's about feeling so i'm not saying we can never answer that question but i think it's something that the film addresses in a very very powerful way through the memories of the survivors and through the living memories of the survivors because this is the last chance we'll ever be able to do that. to have a life living memory before it goes into history books and i also added mossberg how important films like these are in preserving the stories of the holocaust. who me. this in my life. i
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don't forget for one day about the whole the cost. benighted nation make the whole look us this general point seven. whole zero cost is a is a monday and on tuesday and on a wednesday and on terrorist day and every day over my life or two sevens. i never been this. high in the us my whole family. you know i could sit here and talk to you for hours sir robert no. my memory so far is pretty good issue and they were liquidated the kharkov ghetto nineteen march thirteenth one thousand nine hundred thirty you heard about them that who are the. commanded of plush of
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i remember him or only it with a whip in one hand and a gun in the other ones and another one was. forgot his name in the second. and when the woman was holding a child they were ripped out their child from the mother's arm or smart the head against the wall to kill and tried or somebody's head child in a nazi they should do it. i was there and i met with mr pierce i thought process. and they brought in to this square where people were assembled that day old people from the hospital there were crowds and with kids they said to them. take away the scriptures in case who will cross the square to goddess i will be allowed to live those poor people who are corroding on their
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hands and knees and where they got rid of a side they were shocked ok they were like a game from that i saw it i would destroy dustin. is she the one good one day he hung gunmen on the wall by his hand and fight with start something from him and i was dead and i saw where he was beating him and beating god man never said anything. in the morning i came in the office with some other people cut off his hand with that i give him a glass of water and high i didn't know what happened put him. his name was hugo friend close years later i was in vienna. with some friends in a restaurant and the men walked into the place i walk over to him and i said to him
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my name is had my spare though you're a member the glass of water he looked at me he started crying i tried to call him he live in east one day i call and there who went there and said . who who i am i said my name is ed muskie he said oh my god and the time your name came in he was crying i was a witness to this day so i never knew what is mean beating till i was beaten so i knew what is it. when they give you. you don't feel that. there was. a time when there were. deputy editor sebastian packer there with the director and producer of destination
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unknown and all of course survivor the film is in selected cinemas around the u.k. and that's it for the show in the meantime keep in touch by social media we'll see you on wednesday sixty one years of the day for you right off the miller refused to betray left wing associates to the house committee on american activities a week before he married marilyn monroe. looks like much more willing to risk a three. attention to something on t.v. please. please for the final time to. replace.
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don't you don't. think and talking to them just like you do in the posting on the bus in that are equal to two inches in some means only those distance me thought. this would all be done soon and will move to those wooden unisys on the sassoon times out of their ass at all. i don't see clear how to craft strategies and anyway i only see tactical fit in all things good for today or tomorrow. you have jima so look forward brief period of time and then you know divorce immediately i think that's. bad historical moment in the middle east and it is very difficult to predict how things will be called.
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this is on its international headlining this morning breaking news overnight a band was driven into a crowd of pedestrians outside a mosque in north london it's left one person dead and several more injured the british prime minister to reason may says the instance being treated as a potential terrorist attack as london's counter-terror police opened an investigation will bring you all the latest coming up to russia's foreign minister calls on for. foreign powers to respect the sovereignty of syria following the downing of a syrian fighter jet by the u.s. military near the isolette held city of raka. launches missiles targeting militants in eastern syria in retaliation.
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