tv Watching the Hawks RT August 1, 2017 2:29am-3:01am EDT
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i have a right to call collect my food be a part of my family on both sides of the border. play started an organization called the arizona border recon we are a standalone entity. that is doing. what these to be done in the five years it's getting worse the violence is escalating because it's no man's land. bridges really get our break when somebody calls you know basically they believe that their ranch is there a ranch and they don't believe the federal govt is taking responsibility for their security which we would for anywhere else.
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ratings and sell you take. located just under forty miles from the nation's capital the historic african-american community of carver road in haymarket virginia sits at the center of a fight you may have and never ever hear about in the mainstream news media because it involves the internet sales giant amazon and the newly crowned richest man in
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the world jeff bezos you see amazon through one of its going to lackey corporations is trying to muscle power lines through the historic community to power and amazon data center expansion in the area now one would think that any story involving amazon the stork minority community fighting for fighting for their neighborhoods that includes properties acquired under eight hundred sixty six law that allowed freed slaves to own land would make for great anger to your average journalist but sadly apart from a few local papers and alternative news sites this story has been largely ignored but why would this be well journalist adam johnson of fairness and accuracy in reporting has found a very interesting pattern of coverage concerning mr bay's those amazon and tech reporting in general by a least three of the biggest newspapers in the united states the new york times the wall street journal and the washington post johnson writes a review of one hundred ninety articles from the new york times wall street journal and bezos own washington post over the past year paints
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a picture of almost uniformly uncritical. times boosterism coverage in fact the last time there was any kind of investigative journalism found in any of the big three was a new york times critique of amazon's labor practices almost two years ago in august of two thousand and fifteen so in a world where freedom of the press has preached a lot more than its practice just how much free rein does the mainstream press give to the world's super rich and powerful let's find out and start watching the hawks . that's. it. at the bottom. you know that i got. to.
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leave the. world for the watch of the dark so i am tired robot and i'm to have a lot. of those so let me ask you do you think that the media goes soft on the super wealthy or super powerful yes because super wealthy and the super powerful own media that's not a metaphor they literally own the media that critiques them in the area of fairness and accuracy in reporting review of those hundred ninety are under ninety articles actually pretty interesting over the past year revealed that none of the articles were investigative exposé is only six point six percent the negative fifty four percent were straight reporting or neutral in town and forty percent more positive and even press like press release like in town while so you're looking at. nobody's criticizing and why would they when he's their boss especially the wash post but what's even more interesting is that is the the wash post coverage
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actually kind of fell right in between of the other two well you know in terms of actual like positive coverage and things like that. you know the praise for amazon because of the bottom middle and ninety five percent of post article coverage kind of range from that like neutral forty three percent to a positive following of about forty eight percent told words like ninety ninety three percent of the new york times coverage of amazon was and ninety four percent of wall street journal's coverage ranged from like straight news to kind of the press release style you're talking about fifty seven percent of the new york times its coverage thirty one percent of the wall street journal's coverage could be characterized as somewhat to extremely flattering scissors as you kind of can see there even the post got a bell in between and that's really fascinated me and the other thing that's really fascinating about all this is. when you when you look at it it seems like they're quick to criticize the super rich or the super powerful when it comes to their
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political leaders and usually you see articles about the koch brothers about soros and they're going all the time where you very rarely you know they're jacksons into politics where they make those inroads you very rarely actually see their business practices criticized it's like we would go up to the politics of someone but if their business practices are probably just as vicious as their politics we still believe the business practice is generally a low. and it sort of ignores reality when they do that because they'll take any issue and tech reporting the tech industry in general really likes to pretend like oh silicon valley is so no it's incredibly. cool. it is not it's not as a silicon valley is this the first place with men and women equal and we're running around it's all good for that oh it's no different than fifth avenue it's no different than wall street it's no different from going to five really has you have a bunch of people who made money off of using people and figuring out how to socially engineer people but it's something that tech reporting kind of always does
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fairness and accuracy in reporting out of johnson pointed out that a lot of the problem today law is in the journalism surrounding tech companies in general and what he said was tech company x. reveals it's doing why or will do that is by the by the beads definition newsworthy and the press releases written and some added commentary from friendly talking heads and marketing analysts because it's attack the political or labor implications come in a distant second to the shiny object quality of the beat so it seems that media only cares about the political leanings not the business practices and the problem is that i don't think your tech writers actually know anything about business or attack and you know there's this whole idea that you know it's all about ethics and games journalism becomes the as. and the foul issues of an entire and of course we all use amazon so we're all horrible people for asking them to do
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a better job at taking care of their employees are not doing things like that right at amazon itself was a reason why you know maybe if it's a great company it just doesn't need to have any critical looks at it it's like yeah but there are always should be a critical word like if you don't know something that you know because they're good well how would you know they're good unless you take a closer look i've heard exactly i mean amazon is the fourth most valuable company in the world jeff. bezos doesn't own the amazon he's a very large shareholder over you're right it started the fun with it you know but it is a publicly traded company makes it even more the public's business it's a for the most valuable company in the world with forty three percent and growing share of all u.s. online commerce that's monstrous and because those person interesting no two that people often forget to was that you know bales purchased the washington post in two thousand and thirteen for two hundred fifty million that same year he purchased the post amazon has landed a six hundred million dollars deal with the cia. to develop big coordinated
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computing cloud for all seventeen defense intelligence agency intelligence agencies in that community you know it's it's incredible how many fingers the as it applies to yes i would hope that there would be some you know reporting looking at him saying what's going on. we get free shipping so why bother. right if you're right that is the kind of thing if you have dollars in the humanity that's worth for a ship back for shipping. this sunday russian president vladimir putin formally announced that the u.s. would be required to cut its diplomatic staff in the country to four hundred fifty five the same that russia has allowed to happen in the united states of course the facts are relevant the whole thing was painted by outlets like c.n.n. politics as quote moscow's most aggressive move against washington since the final years the cold war the. b.c. had done a reality check on the u.s. imposed sanctions against russia stating that germany is said to be pushing for
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a use saying stance against russia to be stepped up according to diplomatic sources quoted then brussels yet just days later writers reports that german minister of economic affairs and energy. is urging you countries to retaliate against the u.s. for the sanctions stating quote we consider this as being against international law plain and simple why because it means the united states is dictating who country is can buy gas from yeah russia provides about one third of europe's gas prices lower than competitors which is why many countries have been doing business with them for decades and while many like to call gazprom to have it of lowering prices to be competitive as evil would manipulative most of us would simply call it smart business so if congress who has been pushing through deregulation and tax incentives for fracking throughout the obama administration is now pulling countries under the trumpet ministration into limiting their access to affordable energy sources who's really using policy as
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a weapon but they're well because seriously complaining about another country using policy as well. as were yours that's ridiculous and moves were because we throw sanctions everywhere anyone who disagrees with us over anything yeah i mean you're both sides of this bill the people you want to her oh of course the people who have to live the working class people before you know it hurts everybody below the person that you don't really watch it in cuba or exactly watch it everywhere sanctions also are supposed to be part of diplomacy it's part of diplomacy the idea is that you do this to get people to sit at the table and if all we're going to keep doing is running around going nowhere that we're not talking because you don't know big words that must be why this administration doesn't talk to anybody because they're too confused by multi-syllabic words and hyphenated. francis but i want to point out this one thing which is while the sanctions which will most likely be signed by the president despite everyone's liking if they're
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ready to rest. which he will do is that specifically it addresses energy railways metals and mining sectors those are the places that are the most affected by these sanctions surprise surprise and yet the president had said this during a press and press or in warsaw earlier this month let's take a look let me be very clear about one crucial point the united states will never use energy to course your nations and we cannot allow others to do so you don't want to have a monopoly or a monopolistic situation. i got i i give the ford c.e.o. am i am i crazy let's not answer that part but am i crazy to think that we exactly what we're doing now that he's going to sign off and he's going to push all this gas and he has got him in power robertson have been saying all we're giving all the you know we're going to be the next big export or is this not policy using policy as a weapon courses or balls as a weapon and what will want to do it what it does to of what you see very clearly in the media today is it's like we're going to we're going to we're going to tell
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you every bad thing that's going on and why we need these sanctions all those patriotic mumbo jumbo but really it's all about business of money you know we want you to start buying from us we want to come players in that market or you're in a larger portion of the market to begin with or a private companies and all about so you drum up the sanctions you say oh look at all you will they are throw some sanctions on them that really have nothing to do with what you're saying for now and this is this is not just for russia this is you see this happen all over a globe with the right as an insider's. look forbes noted last month that. exports are crucial to the domestic and global security benefits of lowering russia's influence around the world clearly explaining why this part of support oh that's why or in the fact that oil and gas industries have had the democrats and the republicans. by the things i can't say on how i started and their bag kid.
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in the back behind it who are for the truth and also i think it's really important to point out that that's what the criminal acts like. when they're just half way i case you're wondering when in actual what the actual crime one looks like that would be at the wall to me i have no one there it's not the one the you know about it but it is even like all these others yeah the one that they always just in case you're confused as if you've never seen what that is. sure. so we have to ask that you know we have to ask why our state department this is the other question i want to just sort of throw it out there to people and maybe get in touch with us on their facebook and twitter pages but i have to ask why the u.s. state department is employing over a thousand russian foreign nationals to take care of all of their you know to be support staff within their building i mean that is very rare and it i mean they have rules the state department has rules that if you're a state department employee you can even have russian nationals in your house there are rules about these things and yet we had over
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a thousand we were outnumbered our diplomats were outnumbered by russian nationals working in our embassies and. that's pretty ridiculous sort of injecting an example mounts there saying that russian citizens cannot work within their which i have to wonder why that doesn't seem like a very smart move on the state department's point and that point it's been going on for over a decade so this is well and also when you look at most of those too it's like you know when trouble like this seven hundred fifty five or whatever you know when you when you were going to do is like when you look at like the russian embassy here in the u.s. they only employ russians in that embers and you don't hire like americans to come in the u.s. so this is what we were going to do that you know all sins are so scary so everyone who works in the state department and in moscow do they have to explain whether or not they've spoken to a russian vessel so bizarre about it really when you're going to drop it. i mean when you know how we used to people over time our. people over time we're going to
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it's not i mean if someone were to suddenly come up with proof and say like oh a bunch of these people that were working there were russian were also like you know double agents for both sides yes. we were using them so there really isn't them rather when they were going. i wouldn't be surprised if we discovered that of anybody believe they were the only ones manipulating anybody. but the debate executive director of the task force for the homeless discussed the war that's currently being waged in atlanta and across the united states to. do something to. put themselves on the line to get accepted or rejected.
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so when you want to be president and she. want. to go right to the press that's what before reasonable people. interested always in the water. there should be more. done not ones i. don't want the definitions and i'm back in the. south. trying to be equal to the. going to bring. my. voice. did you know one of the we. sat.
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in this just doing this one means or let's just say you know let me show this them don't go find it. you're going. to let you know. this is what it was because did it because you didn't see global cultural review you pulled the grammys. i. ever since society began to industrialise around big cities concentrated poverty
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and homelessness have been tragically reliable by products of urban life for a variety of reasons nearly two million people across the u.s. live without a permanent roof over their heads and a bed to sleep at but a swarms of the bees and have stars moved to downtown areas and look for pricey condos to call home places such as the famous peach wood pine shelter in downtown atlanta georgia have bright red bull's eyes painted on them by developers and politicians stone sat down recently with a neat baby executive director of metro atlanta task force for the homeless to learn more about the history of this particular battle. after the olympics we got the building and that's when the serious serious campaign to demonize and to get us out of the building that we had gotten then to to design and build a state of the art facility housing permanent housing jobs street retail. under full facility and. because homeless people are not supposed to be home peachtree
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street because they're ninety percent african-american males in our facility we have undergone the battle of the century at think two centuries now almost. for twenty years so this is the culmination of their efforts the power structure of the elites in atlanta to displace all the homeless people who are visible on peachtree street and do that by means of getting hold of that property which they have done. so no start of it by talking about this because in two thousand and fifteen the mayor outright said that he wanted to shut down and that was his intention he vowed to shut down the shelter which again i mean i think for a lot of people with their words they have an outcry and say well how can you shut down of a service that's facilitating people who are always so what is the logic in the justification of this offer. well it's not to city's doing the city it's been
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carrying the water for the development and the powerful downtown business community all along so the city is not actually doing the dirty deed and the mayor we believe the mayor's threat was was just that a threat that if we didn't if our lawyers didn't hurry up and cave in and agree to a settlement and the board of directors then he could do that we've researched that had legal opinions that would say it would have taken him years to get that done if he could have done it then because there was no outcry from the community that we needed a police station or fire station or i think the latest thing was a hell of a pad for. security so i don't think that was we think that was a cover threat to push all of the folks on our side of the issue into caving in in san in the settlement agreement which they eventually did do. but ultimately so then how does this work in terms of the legal basis for sherry in the homeless
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shelter what is that what is the law that's forcing this disclosure. well the the law doesn't force the closure the lawyers on the defendant side and the defendants in the lawsuit which is been going for seven years now since there was foreclosure on the building which was illegal we had lawyers who brought the case pro bono to challenge the foreclosure in court and to charge the city and the downtown business community in the in the organization central atlanta progress and one businessman who's a developer who was sort of their stock in horse to do the deal and what happened was we litigated that issue in motion hearings and all sorts of hearings to the point of appealing to the georgia supreme court who reiterated all of our charges everything from rico to tortious interference to bribery i mean you have to
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read that forty page order and realize we had everything we needed to go to court and we need the residents a lot of people who supported us. not so much our remaining board of directors and then the lawyers were not so excited about it began in about a year ago and we don't know what kind of pressure might have been exerted to give get them to to cave and sell out the way they did it led to the board of directors have in three members left because people were absolutely horrified that we would ever put the buildings so to speak on the table in any kind of negotiation because that's the only building that is legally zoned to do what we did and we had the architectural pay plans for the renovation everything. so it was a big sell out and not the fault of the people who sold out so much is the fault of the power structure namely emory university in emory healthcare who really been
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have been behind this whole scheme to first of all and we have it in documents to to stop all of our funding which they did do to go after board members and make sure they knew that if they wanted to do business in atlanta they need not continue this effort to go to court because they all knew what documents we had and they are absolutely startling they would curl your hair if you don't have any i guess they would grow some but. the documents are incredible enough that we got a forty page order from the georgia supreme court affirming our right to go to court and renaming all the charges is incredible and that was about two years ago so we were going forward with a court date win lose or draw to me we stood a better chance of holding on to the building to go to court and to lay it all out there and at least to have justice prevail in in showing how the power structure in
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atlanta does business. but i have been to this the shelter it's obviously a massive building and so the idea is you're saying that even though they're obviously other other groups that are doing work with the homeless in atlanta the real design against against this particular shelter was to get access to basically make sure make sure that the building could be bought and ultimately utilized for other purposes development purposes and for occasion perhaps yes definitely for that but. the base of all of that impetus was we don't want those men read african-american men who are homeless on peachtree street and we you know i've been on the board of the national coalition for the homeless for twenty eight years and we've always done criminalization reports cities that we rank meanest who have passed ordinances that all they do is criminalize the normal
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behavior of people who are homeless or poor and atlanta always right was in the top five top one or three i think for the last couple of years is that the report was done and we've watched and monitored all of those ordinances be passed so that we had a vagrant free zone proposed in the late eighty's a safe guard zone which excluded homeless people and poor people from that area in the city now with a settlement there's a task force for. so the task force for the homeless cannot relocate within that zone and there are other preclusion and that are hope based on racism classism gender bias the whole thing so we know all that and now that there's been this settlement to this so out as they say to avoid going to court i'm not sure all of those documents will see the public light in as complete
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a way as i would wish. know. and he will be how many resume whole most people would you say that the shelter houses and takes facilitates all of it on the annual basis on an average about fifteen thousand different homeless people on an average night we we do the averages all the time because we do an intake on everybody and provide deep support services in case work and whatever they need. on a daily basis an average of five of that five hundred seventy five people including women and children in fact two nights ago there were sixty seven women and children flipping on that on the floor because there's nowhere else home to go. right as i said so. the question then becomes well when this center gets shut down the shelters being shut down next month the question then becomes how do these homeless find somewhere else to stay temporary housing shelters communities places where
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they are feel safe and able to at least find a bed and perhaps a meal for the night where else can they go. well if there were places now they would be being sent or referred there are staff and by the way the proud i'm proudest of the fact that the people who come in to peace to be served often stay to serve and get trained to be volunteer caseworkers and run programs and that's the most exciting part of what we've done it is a sense of community that that we've what be born in that facility around all sorts of things we have an organic roof garden an art studio which you've seen and a gallery and we have all sorts of programs that people get involved in. when they're there but as soon as they can found a place and we can help them do that which we did we sort of package people and say this is what you need to get to the next step so if you need to be screening or
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health care or identification all those things that people lose when they're homeless we do that and then we we work with them to get to the next step that they cheese the problem now is no place that will be in atlanta operating to do what we did to the tune of a thousand people a night which without legal capacity and in really terrible wet weather we exceeded that and and most of the legal people understood that that's what we did but we saved we with faith in labs as well as helping people get really rude it so there will be a place like that and the city and united way and all those folks our promise in the public don't worry we will take care of everybody everybody get a place to go we know that is not true. remember everyone in this world.
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