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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  June 21, 2017 12:29pm-1:01pm EDT

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all due to an unexpected side effect from a settings change and that the information was only exposed in the cloud for like you know it's two weeks that's all just two weeks now no big deal look the other way keep moving forward however vicary told the washington post that in the wrong hands this info could easily be abused saying quote with this data you can target neighborhoods individuals people of all sorts of persuasions i could give you the home address of every person the r. and z. believes voted for trump. remember remember it's the russians that we need to be really afraid of not not that our political parties are hiring private contractors to data mine sensitive private details of almost every registered voter in the united states to use for god knows what new new it's the evil russians who are the threat to our security yeah that's the ticket and let's start watching wall.
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street it looks like. it's really. at the bottom. like you that i got. a while the watching the hawks i am i robot and have the wallace. all right while voter registration information just out for a world to see up on the cloud never once is going to get oh it's not a big bills only two weeks it's ok it's ok but everybody really could see it if they so chose to pound it if they were if they were looking for it and a lot of hackers do kind of scam the met looking for a secure information so i ask you guys you know feel free to jump if i ask you guys
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what is as i posed in the in the open what is the bigger threat to the us citizen right now the democrat or republican parties or a foreign entity like pigs at all and we always the anyone as sensible as any instinct and clinician of understand the world understands the greater threat always close it's always close at all right and we know this obviously from not only surveillance and what not that it's been going on the conspiracy conspiracy analyst inside of me saying wait a minute we there's already an interesting relationship between facebook and the intelligence agencies because it's a. way of data mining people's personal information and here you are with you know obviously now realizing that the g.o.p. is i'm sure the d.n.c. is doing the same thing is that of mining is as much information about people as possible to understand you as a voter to understand your likes and dislikes and then part of the conspiracy and so you say well are we sure this was just an accidental leak or is it maybe being put out there because it was given to some other third party and that can be that utilize for even more information whether it be for merchandising marketing some
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kind of financial purposes because it's wonderful to have as much information about you as possible to have a treasure trove of voter information. i mean that's all that's the only thing nobody cares about coal or mining for gold or actual resources i mean more the future is in dying mining of our personal data and then trying to figure out how we're going to react to it what we're going to do what kind of person we are and how then can i sell something to you whether champloo or a political party or a candidate and of course there's money in it because you want to get that money back so you can put it into advertising and when you're looking at the data for this thing it was kind of interesting because. some of the files actually assigned voters a score based on their views of forty six different issues ranging from immigration to trade so the data includes which routers are suspicious of wall street or pharmaceutical firms who who reluctantly voted for hillary clinton or who supports
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the affordable care act they go down all this one hundred seventy get go by it's consisted of social media posts that were scraped from wait for it read it so this high class fabulous you know words like counter-strike they seem to be the republican version of counterstrike so with this high best of the best in the whole world and what they were doing was scraping the bottom of reddit for information with those i could save. money right. voters there are actually using red to there was a man in the next. one i'm not a robot is it doing is trying to equate humanity and create your decisions by what you click on and that the problem is facebook only has a like button so if you want to keep an eye on something you're saying you like it the algorithms are still still there making guesses on what we actually believe based on what is actually making guesses but then the day we're looking at the most i would say this is the most divided divisive election we've seen in our his and
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only in america if you go back to eight hundred sixty with abraham lincoln because literally in a place where people are are unfriending people because of voting for family i mean families are. about what people just cutting entire family members out because they didn't know if i was there because you voted for just so you know we're not going to i want to cut to the heart of lloyd why i believe political parties are a bigger threat to this country than a foreign country and they came in this quote a veteran g.o.p. political data strategist matt. told the washington post a quote what is alarming about this now is that i believe it's the first time the r n c i.d.'s and model data have been exposed this is not just a list of people this is a unique this is unique proprietary information which gives away republican strategy forms of targeting and methodology digital notice that he kind of just didn't care at all about the fact that you know almost three hundred million innocent people's vote you know information was put on the world and he was more
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concerned about how it affected and how it leaked the strategy of the republican party well that's the problem with the two parties they came more about the party than the actual people that they're trying to get votes for and doesn't sound like you know what you go what you get i don't know all about i care about what people like to call the day that seems say no you can't know the truth we have to hide it because otherwise i don't know how we got it right you know how when why are you don't don't worry about going to target you and decide that you're not going to political watch list right. is that i've heard for years if you don't want people to think you're doing something nefarious do nefarious. really sunday morning on june eighteenth seventeen year old son in virginia was reported missing when she disappeared after attending a late night ramadan prayer session at a local mosque where that sunday afternoon her body was discovered in the set in motion a media frenzy of speculation on why she was killed was it a crime a rape victim or an act of terrorism now with twenty two year old darwin martinez
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torres arrested and charged with her death differently might be some answers to all the speculation parties actually banks has more early sunday morning neighbor haas and then a muslim teenager was assaulted and killed while walking home from prayers out a mosque in northern virginia seventeen year old hoss and then was attending the all dulles area muslim society mosque which is considered to be the biggest mosque here in northern virginia during the last ten days of ramadan the mosque holds very late night prayers and then in four other teens were returning home from one of such prayers early sunday morning when a tragic encounter took place fairfax county police put out a statement saying quote an investigation determined she was walking outside with a group of friends when they got into a dispute with a man in a car according to police twenty two year old darwin a martinez torres got out of his car in assaulted hossam and after the altercation her friends couldn't find her and called police for help at this point our detectives are going to put the case
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together as continue to build their case for court try to put pieces together get information from the medical examiner's report on what happened to her. if additional charges you know. are appropriate from that then we will pursue that and we're just here to help with the family so mother told the washington post i think it had to do with the way she was dressed and the fact that she's muslim why would you kill a kid what did my daughter do to deserve this a study done by the council on american islamic relations down the anti muslim he. crime and sedans rose in two thousand and fifteen and increase greatly in twenty sixteen by forty four percent the muslim community is expecting action to come from the white house in order to prevent incidences like what happened in the case of possum not in fairfax county ashley banks r t. but what's really interesting about this is that you're also getting reports that this might not have been a crime with all this might not have to do with her religion that it might have
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ended up having to do with just you know bad place wrong guy chased everybody down and up attacking her you know i mean it could also be that so what i want to ask you guys is how dangerous is this kind of rampant media speculation you see around stories like this today you know when you're talking about some sort of crime we're not all the facts all right but everyone is kind of spewing what they believe could be happening and what kind of world bizarre career it's a narrative that then either has to be debunked or proven and people will just if you speculate on my gosh it might have been message might have been the most and the metric of the crime sort of always gets put to the side why did a raging man after being angry a supposedly had a group of teens decide to grab the you know a girl put her in his car and take her he obviously had a reason and you know we then forget that here is a woman who is in you know wearing a huge job who for whatever reason seemed to be a target was it because she was
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a woman because it she was wearing hijab and she thought that she would be more compliant or is that just a literally a moment of change right right i mean it's obviously there's always the speculation is human nature obviously you know you see a crime you want to speculate on the motivation that you know the girl you know that he raped me that a lot of there's a there's a reason there's no more reasons to speculate and there's no reason to say that you know it's a wrong to speculate it could have been a crime because certainly as you know she's dressed as a muslim it's certainly rocketed for certain people but either way the. it can't undermine the fact that it's a terrible tragedy this girl was walking home in the middle of the day in the morning but it's not like she was out late you know on the streets pretty scary actually the fact a group of friends are. very scary and so that you know you can feel that it's as you said it's a man murdered a woman maybe raping her in the process which is just a horrible crime well let me ask you this though let me let me pose this question to all of us is do you agree with the concept of hate groups because it is you know
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i mean murder is murder right we all murders murders. should we attach more punishment based on you know the reasons in the person's brain as to why they murder beyond just the fact that they're cold blooded killed somebody. i think that our that our laws are ready for rape alone and murders connected to rapes and sexual assaults is not nearly it's not nearly long enough and there's no reason that someone who has raped and killed or raped and left for a dad should should be looking ever getting out of prison and my opinion for any ever really quite frankly that's my personal opinion but i don't think the hate crime thing sort of really deals the situation i think it'll actually it's something we have to deal with it's not something a law or more time and president says for any reason we're just making more of the i mean it's not really they're going to be like a hate crime oh well i why would murder this person because i really don't like
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their skin color or their religious beliefs but i just because there's a hate crime was not i mean i don't know of too many people who reach the point of hatred and dysfunction are going to hold back just because there's an added layer of law to it and i tend to agree with you on that. well as we go to break card watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered on facebook and twitter see our full shows at r t v dot com coming up wallace brings us an in-depth and fascinating look at the world refugee day a member lou. it has a new option the raising a few eyebrows to watching the office. thank . you.
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thank . you let's talk about blackness and the blues of being black. and always well in a big house down the at least that's what i've been told but it was simply that way and remains as such because we simply forgot i don't believe it's. being seen we've allowed them to rearrange their payment you've told us the sickness of trusting our enemy we became defacements. that's what i call a lack of blackness or understand in the blues a being black. sheep the blues of being black you can mandate that we attack knowing how when and what to do to come the simple in his national has been begging to simply tat the feelin blue it's black and blue.
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believe. me. i. you know let's go get a. social environment. right. chemical discoveries over the last century made every day life easier. this is serialize except.
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industrial. chemical. in. the toxic environment continues to poison. my staff think maybe. in the united states almost thirty years this very serious problem had not actually been addressed. investigation into the chemical industry secrets revealed. this respect.
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the first world refugee day took place on june twentieth two thousand and one the same year the war on terror began in the seventeen years since a lot of has been made at the expense of those whose lives tenuously hang in the balance between diplomacy and politics refugees those people forced from their homes by persecution war and violence according to data collected by the united nations high commission on refugees and twenty sixteen there were over sixty five million people that were forcibly displaced around the world twenty two million were in refugee status ten million were totally stateless having no nation no citizenship anywhere and of all those people struggling to survive in a war torn world only one hundred eighty nine thousand three hundred people were
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resettled in two thousand and sixteen where were they recited well if you watch the mainstream media you'd swear they were all going to europe in the united states but that isn't actually the case see europe takes in just seventeen percent of the world's displaced people with the americas that's north and south america taking in even less at sixteen percent the middle east takes in twenty six percent with africa leading by taking in thirty percent of just placed people in the world but what happens when countries decide the best that is to close their doors to refugees the european commission is now launching legal action against the countries of poland hungary and the czech republic forward fusing to abide by the twenty fifteen legally binding agreement between all you countries to help in the relocation of refugees according to the c. of the one hundred sixty thousand refugees to be relocated the czech republic has only taken in twelve that's not twelve thousand that's twelve while poland and hungary have accepted zero refugees through the program which is what is most
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disturbing is. these countries have discovered that paying the fine for not taking in refugees as they agreed to is cheaper than letting in refugees despite the fact they get assistance for each refugee taken in this world where a few g. day as politicians around the world argue that they are keeping their people safe by letting other people die at some point your ancestors were refugees displaced or strangers in a strange land you are here today because many in your family have run from oppression so you don't have to see that point towards that point i was in standing rock a couple weekends back you know with that with the native tribe there and it's amazing you know a lot of anger still exists you know you will feel the pain and anger of the natives there and the conversation that we had and just sort of this very. clear notion of the americas a time when all of the americas south america to north america it's all refugees
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because the native population in america it's like one percent i mean kind of maybe it's a fifteen or twenty in mexico the war but the point is that you know we're all refugees here and we constantly ignore this fact and it's just it's mind boggling it is it is there and you wonder you know with the displaced people that you see to bury one of the numbers it really struck me was ten million people without any country nothing they want to go home to and that's not a place to go to and that's that study that ten million people is almost the size of the you know that's bigger than most american cities you know you're talking about entire city worth of people maybe two cities where the people just interstates or at the time starts with we have nowhere to put you don't want to take you or we won't take you there is always a problem even in the united states the idea of taking in refugees has never sat well at least according to polls you know where to go back and you know they don't want to take in jewish refugees. and the irish and the italians they have puerto
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ricans i mean you know it's really all they do is fit and they've never it's always been over fifty percent and i mean history is no no no despite the. we were if you if your family. probably around. this country has people who are trying to get away from oppression trying to starting a new home trying to be part of a different nation and. to come here because they were. located. here our support paid refuge you know. i mean fifty five percent of refugees coming from syria and. places the united states is actively perform. actions and that's a staggering number one you see. turning our back on. the framing that we're trying to you know. where we draw.
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that humanitarian efforts i'm really excited about. and this is an odd sort of. understand and dropping bombs. everywhere and it's not about humanitarian reasons it's not just that it's a bald faced lie and that's what the the interesting thing of the stories is that. people. while you're looking at places like libya that were destroyed. and then we're we've heard the reports about the state department issuing passports expedites certain people to go to europe or america but they are working these people there be expedited they are working for intelligence and you basically have the networks that are protecting because it's too difficult if your process of getting it. or if they're going to come in at a magical they don't see it's not it's not an easy.
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g.'s our. accounts for fifty percent of the. gross domestic product. of. their so. there you. heard. of the. resources for. a lot of these. but none are going to really. understand that it's going to make people want to compare good point i don't get
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better or amazing it's so great here if you remember america is the best place to be weak becoming. a child that's ok and you know just a short of the twenty six to highest number of refugees from any nation you would think syria splattered all across them is actually was the democratic republic of congo congo crowd of sixteen thousand three hundred seventy refugees. and over the largest number of refugees actually come from. one hundred fifty almost sixty iraq one hundred thirty five of those had a civil war for years millions have died and no one talks about it because guess what it's not right next to the center of the middle east so it's not as exciting for our newscasters to focus on and the military industrial complex can't make that much money off of it parenting has not as much to get out there yet and i just mean
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that they're not planning a business plan around this and that they go it's going to say one quick quote by former secretary general of the u.n. a nobel peace prize. in our kofi anon he wrote a piece called why are only poor countries taking refugees. and time magazine and he says around the world the plight of the operated is also driving thousands of acts of solidarity from the ugandan farmer sharing their land with the refugees fleeing famine and violence in south sudan to the canadian communities offering a lifeline for sponsored resettlement programs to the teachers employers athletes faith groups and volunteers working to foster the inclusion of refugees in the social economic and cultural lives of their communities it is their voices the voices of compassion and humanity that often struggle to make themselves heard that should guide our call for action this world refugee day great great great sort of. silicon valley has made its bones finding solutions to some of the world's biggest
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problems and lift has just blown the doors off of a major transportation issue one apparently no one has ever tried to address before see its new service is called live shuttle and it started trial runs in san francisco so what is that well it's a fixed route shuttle service much like ride sharing but with lower fixed prices and operates only taking place during high traffic commuter times and there's that sense of knowing your to you that's that's because what i'm describing is known as a bus service buses and they were first introduced not by a lift but by blaise pascal and paris around those sixteen sixty two of course well if this really offering is a bus service minus the inconvenience of having to sit next to poor people have to use public transport should i do i know this well i know those because we used to live shuttles only operate between wealthy neighborhoods. tack make borders remember. those with
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a little more shouldn't have to be or much of it is crazy to you the bus service and i'm bored. taking people from this location burning them they all mean we're going to bring them to this location over here they're all going to get out of our one br out but it's a bus service only going to wealthy neighborhood wealthy neighborhood is that just for the people like servants and aides and helpers and so what sort of iraq is going to take people from there with their rich working neighborhoods where there's a nice galvanized check out easily but there's. just no justice you know to them to take a regular i think it's not cheap enough to just jump on the bus and everybody by the time wasters knew what was the bottom even about a rat like that like five bucks there were about you know sometimes a moment we're. like over thinking the idea you want everybody wants to reinvent the wheel and build a better mousetrap and forgetting what we already have a mousetrap with already have a whole year look i mean i i would give credit to any innovative that's coming
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along saying look the efficiency of bus services is not to say that efficient there's certain routes that don't it's a problem i need some sort of. more power to him. because privileged people need more things and this is the problem though if you can afford a little better than you don't bother which is why our public transportation system stops because we're in new york where more people i think it evolved so much better because everyone used to it whether you lived on fifth avenue or you lived in the bronx that new york city subway system everybody uses it or everybody use it's the sort of. you know commonality between people in new york and certain places and and in europe here we're like well ultimately you have a car that means you're good if you're on the boss you're just poor it smells bad supposed to just go out if we want to roll it out you know what really they were saying it would be are they worried about those are very strict about what is a very straight route so yes this potentially more diverse workers are entering britain and. exactly very very diverse just leave it to you all right you are
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a chauffeur you get there remember everyone remembers world we're now told would love to have so i tell you all i love you i am tire over the target and out of the wall as a child so i keep on watching girls all over great body. yet . you. can't. sleep. a little to none in humans only.
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those she don't consume don't eat and doesn't do or don't enjoy doing the same down on the person in that other equal voltages also means only those. this tells me that the managing don't those who don't. know him the old movie back to those old wooden minnows is only a small town so dowsett all took the sitting on. the u.k. in crisis after a series of deadly terrorist attacks a hung parliament and the horrific human tragedy of the grenfell towers as well as the burning issue of brakes and many are asking if the ruling elite. who she is old enough to post this is an adult friends. how
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does the law is it possible that call me. a look at the both of those posts if it gives. you a laugh just. to leave the last that you somebody who took a barbecue at the bar. was i don't know that my father before the cell phone was a cell phone so. buddy investigate the police officers behavior as well. i'll take drugs in the west and up a presence here. calling people as you close. the
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british prime minister has apologized for the government's response to the grenfell tower disaster off to hundreds of protesters gathered in central london to resume my step down. russia's foreign ministry demands an explanation from the u.s. over the recent shooting down of a syrian fighter jet as concerns grow over whether washington has its own agenda in syria. legendary filmmaker all of a stone who's just released the putin interviews documentary says his film gives a unique view of the west's russia and its leader. the west is very divided as you know they would hate me i'm just a messenger i don't i don't.

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