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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  September 12, 2017 9:29pm-10:01pm EDT

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the media. the media over the voters elected the businessman to run this country business equals power you must it's not business as usual it's business like it's never been done before. here's what people have been saying about rejected in the us is it just. the only show i go out of my way to the times you know what it is that really packs a punch in the yampa is the john oliver of r t america is doing the same. apparently better than. i see people you've never heard of love back to the night. president of the world bank. and this is really. seriously send us an email. on the trial that we have spent countless hours poring through documents to tell the story about the ugly side of. corporate media everything uses to talk about these. i'm not
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a pretty clear picture about how disturbing accounts for that is because. these are stories that no one else might have known your host of america. west. ratings and salutations today talk watchers let's talk about come true ailes yes i said live on t.v. the dirty word that no credible same news anchors never ventured on live television oh my goodness yes come trails now if you travel by me conspiracy site online you'll find a whole smorgasbord of different kinds of some bad some skinny some bunk some honest but today we're going to focus on the pesticide variety the pesticide variety that is currently being deployed to the hurricane harvey ravaged region of
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east texas to help combat the coming swarms of insects like mosquitoes and flies who love multiplying exponentially in the heavily polluted standing water left in the wake of the massive flooding that overtook that area and while i massive effort to. well the spread of disease and bugs through a pesticide spraying campaign may look good on paper for the short term especially for those corporate chemical giants in the present pesticide industry the after effects the after effects name may not be so great for you know the rest of us in the long term yes long term a word pairing more frightening to politicians corporations and wall street traders than chem trail could ever hope to be you see the primary pesticide used for killing mosquitoes and bulk by the air force reserves according to their press release the environmental protection agency approved unregulated material nala a pesticide that according to mint press nudes is currently banned in the in the
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european union to the unacceptable risk it presents to human health. like the people of east texas and florida haven't had enough risk in their lives lately and now we're going to start pouring pesticides on them. i think it's time to start watching the hawks. you. know you get the. real deal with. the bottom. or the like you know i got. the. lyrics. for the what's in the harks i am tyrrel by the way and i talk a lot so i would love to have you had a good cup of pesticides yet this morning not this morning but i have been sprayed
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by these things years ago living and when i was living in new york city the west nile virus was going around and so they were spraying these big trucks. through the streets near central park where i lived and they were spraying and i got out of a cabin sucked in a whole cloud of this stuff and was very ill the next day called the city and they said it was the least like thing that they could spray because of the west nile so i'm not surprised that they're sort of skirting the isn't safe is it not because you know at least leaves toxic you know it's always about excuse or say well it's always there like well it's the least toxic like you say it's the less toxic but i mean we could spray on people just to kill bugs right malaria is bad of course right you know zico is bad these things are all you know there are many horrible things that are spread by mosquitoes spraying more toxic stuff i don't know that that's actually the best iranians are already having trouble with exploding chemical right lamps and her daughters are using the water in the air. and the
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blood was throw up you moron why an hour of probably you know ok i'm served on the road already but i don't know is it doubled. it will be a drought zoom thing though it is a good debate because look knowledge and knowledge has been. for use in the u.s. and fifteen years old school is sold under the brand name. chemical corporation has been the major manufacturer. here again here's where the debate comes in you're. here in the u.s. contends that one applied according to label instructions e.p.a. does not expect the use of knowledge for public health mosquito control to raise a human health concern people are unlikely to breathe in the moments large enough or touch anything with an open sock decided on it to harm them however the european union disagrees with b.p.'s wasn't that the european union is they got together and said i don't like that. but the two is just sitting there making plans about how to
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get a chemical that's or the main concern right now apparently it's like everybody else if you're going to size someone it must be some part of some larger conspiracy is there no complicity how about works the in the european union has very strict guidelines for assessments on certain anything toxic chemicals pesticides and these things and the ideas that they have come up with a system that if it doesn't if they set up a set of scenarios and it's not safe for people all day and they can't sell it what they say is the assessment. is demonstrated that bio sidle products containing knowledge cannot be expected to satisfy that satisfy the requirements laid down in article five of directive ninety eight which is what we're talking about the scenarios of value it in the human health risk assessment as well as in the environmental risk assessment showed a potential and unacceptable risk what they said was look at high enough concentrations this can cause dizziness they can cause. confusion convulsions and
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death death in a high enough concentration high enough concentrations but according to the centers for disease control and prevention. these are at levels that normal you know far higher levels than any license person would be able to spray in any one given area or one time however when you're looking at a place like houston are we going to have the e.p.a. and the centers for disease control down there making sure that no area has slightly more than what you're allowed or that the concentrations aren't you know because it's not like the government has made mistakes in the past when it came to using chemicals on people i mean especially those wouldn't be around unless there was people saying no it's fine for everybody it's totally you know it's not ok for the people in our natural isn't there why is it's great for everyone to do you think was used they used to spray it on kids in the street right same way with those parents and everybody is out of our little mini cans or just put it on you know but i'm old enough to remember when they actually sprayed us with poison to keep those away i bury it out there are these elements of the it makes you question
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them it's good to question these kind of things especially when you don't see one thirty jets are going to be like lying over there in the east texas area drop when there's stuff like your classic. it really doesn't have a very the government's going to put chemicals on planes that are bad for people and probably toxic and spray them all over a whole city so yes this is what's happening. i mean they're talking about six they're going to spread this a they're estimating over six million acres of war and now the air force says that their system they're playing a system that disperses this dispersant droplets that would amount to less than one shot a shot glass for the area the size of a football field so it's not nearly enough but we don't know that i mean look at the end of the day i think it's right to ask the question i hope they're going to do it safe i hope that this is totally you know a procedure that we're not going to find out thirty years from now just gave everybody in that area some horrible form of cancer god knows what but on the flip
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side it might not be like lethally humans now it is lethal to a lot of bugs species. we don't have a problem with those going to explore an international university published three papers since two thousand and eleven about this they've talked about toxicology and chemistry of science of total environment and found that butterflies are even more susceptible to this knowledge than so to things that we're desperately trying to save and they're both. for that those that are. thousands of indigenous brazilians live in the last amazon rain forest this far away from the horrors of modern society as they are from their fellow brazilians these ethnical ethnically and culturally distinct community is known as people are lost tribes abound in brazil a number in the hundreds traditionally brazilians here valued a value their remote neighbors and there's even
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a government agency called not meant to protect them in their native lands but not everyone is on the same page apparently as recent reports reveal brazilian prosecutors and fish oils are bringing charges against a group of coal miners who according to reports massacred ten tribe members they encountered looted and mutilated their bodies and then bragged about their adventures and a bar so hot washers is this just an isolated incident of road brutality or is there something more here than meets the eye you know that's a great question and i think that if you're going to put that question to me in my own opinion i think the when they do. over and over again drugs human history both in contemporary history today and you know ancient history yesterday that we never you know the invading force coming in to take expensive things from the land is never good to the indigenous peoples never you know when i hear reports like this investigations like this it breaks my heart because here you have an indigenous people it's proven true here you have an indigenous people untouched by all the
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crazy how but we're surrounded by still isolated in a forest you know living the way they did bring hundreds of years. thousands and what have you is a how much process of gold miners people stripping the land of its value and these gold miners basically probably eagerly mining by the way. it is called climbers they can kill them and later get caught because i guess it's bizarre they way they the group of gold miners bragged about how they encountered the group of made hips legs and killed them all up some of their clothes and jewelry as artifacts and then chopped up the bodies and dumped them in the amazon river amazonian river so they wouldn't won't bow is their thinking is that if we chop them up in the piece i mean that is good because to me and honestly that says a lot if there is a company behind these people that says a lot about how we train people and how we train people to deal with native peoples and also the region that you're trying to extract you know well but
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like i said it doesn't surprise me because we've been in the region that the bigger more advanced society goes into to extract well usually ends up destroying. in just a violent ways the indigenous people of that region and this is you know it's one of those things where how much is. natural sort of societal issues and how much is greed and that's the big that's the where you get into the big picture i mean look the brazil the group that you mentioned the were nine. they've lost their funding they've had their funding cut by seventy five percent in the last two years their whole lives of the keep these people save keep these tribes is safe and they've had their funding cut now why i travel why on earth would this group have their funding cut if i told you it was a politician wanting to say an office and from i mean would you be surprised no matter what i would be surprised if they do tell me how well according to many
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sources they mean the narratives and one of they even said to us that brazil's president to mary lou. literally so deeply unpopular. and mired in scandal that he's had to rely on on certain industries one of them is mining mining and agriculture to sort of remain in power and keep him protected from this corruption investigation and as part of the deal he is sort of forced to hire people from these industries and allow land and deforestation concessions so do the do that you know do these tribes stand a chance when industries who would most like to see them wiped out and controlled by the government i mean that's because here you have somebody who's being shady to stay in power so he's getting into shady business for shady people and making concessions that are putting the lives of these on contacted people's that are supposed to stay that way yes that was the point is that we also don't bug me just say that way and will preside over to do they don't want it don't want to they
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don't need it they don't need the rest of us. but this is one of those things that's indigenous peoples you come in you take and even in a place like brazil where we don't think about this but a lot of european college is a lot of colonies went in there there's a lot of imperialist stick situations that happen and this is this is how this ends up happening they're still going out there you know metaphorically raping the land and that money that is being taken should be spent to make sure these people and their homes are protected period i mean it's not my country but we we don't do it here either we're not doing enough for our indigenous peoples and clearly this is what happens they want to give away land put pipelines mine it take whatever they can strip out of a little boy why why do we move these ancient peoples it was beautiful. you know why do we need better me back was a human life goals of gold and oil god knows what about way more better than the
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indigenous peoples and beautiful tropical rain forest right already as we go to break or watchers over group to let us know what you could give of topics to cover a very specific. poll shows that are to dot com coming up author and journalist curable by any standards the hawk's nest to discuss his recent trip to the top of the world aboard the russian icebreaker brussels has fifty years of victory you will believe we discovered up there to watch fox. i made a professional is powerpoint to show you how artsy america fits into the greater media landscape is not all right but we are a solid alternative to the. liberal or conservative and as you can see that is margret we don't skew the facts either the talking head left these talking head
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righties oh there you go above it all so look out world artsy americans in the spotlight now every lead might have no idea how to classify and it actually took me way more time than i care to admit i do not know if the russian state hacked into john podesta emails and gave them to wiki leaks but i do know barack obama's director of national intelligence has not provided credible to support his claims of russia i also know he perjured himself in a senate hearing planned three months before the revelations provided by edward snowden he denied the deep n.s.a. was carrying out wholesale surveillance of the us. the hyperventilating corporate media has once again proved to be an echo for government claims that cannot be verified you would have thought they would have learned something after serving as george w. bush's useful idiots in the lead up to the invasion of iraq. it is vitally important that the press remains rooted in a fact based universe especially when we enter an era when truth and fiction are
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becoming indistinguishable. if you've ever had a desire to see the north pole and have twenty thousand dollars in your checking account you might just be in luck the russian arctic class nuclear powered icebreaker fifty years of victory offers to take adventurous eco tourists on such a ride the trip has a storied history having previously transported the olympic torch back from the north pole for the two thousand and fourteen winter olympics but for those of us lacking in funds or vacation day is despair not because environmental journalists that we're now boxing commentator karen mulvaney made the trip so we don't have to stay or go to weigh in on the pros and cons of eco tourism the state of our polar ice caps and the intersection of climate change and politics of any joined our show
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or let's you know it's really really interesting to talk to because this fifty years of victory there isn't a crew ship it's a working ship that works in the arctic and much of the year it's trying to carve a path through the ice for container vessels and cargo vessels and just for a couple of months a year it does this north pole trip for passengers and so these are pretty hardened mariners right there russians are not very sort of emotional about these things but the captain himself did say to the cops and i mean you've been doing this an awfully long time i think it's twenty five years and he's been sailing in the arctic and he's not a man who's completely convinced of the causes of climate change but he did say look it's very different now than when i started there's a lot more open water the ice is a lot thinner and that's absolutely what we saw you know with our own eyes when we were going up there you know you'd expect slates in summer for that to be lots of patches of open water but what really struck us was how have the ice looks. well
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then i guess the next obvious question is what are the what are the short term long term f.x. so this kind of polar. thing that we're seeing down there which we've worth more and about and scientists have been warning about mourning about and worry about now we're basically seeing it how can that affect the rest of the world. well obviously well it's very interesting question actually so obviously there are there are local and regional impacts particularly. on the wildlife obviously for ice the pendent species for polar bears for seals the walrus is potentially very significant in terms of the broader impacts that you can look at them in all kinds of different ways so for example as ice melts and becomes thinner and becomes more easily navigable of course governments of the likes of canada and russia in the united states less so but china also they don't look at this and say what a terrible situation that is that we've caused how can we fix it they look at it as an opportunity to actually transport more goods through the northwest passage of
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the northeast passage or even across the top of the world so what they're looking at doing is perhaps taking advantage of this and making a navigable sea way or of course also exploiting further oil and gas resources that i've had that you've been beneath the ice and sort of exploiting it that way so that's one possible consequence there's another interesting possibility in the ways in which it might be affecting climate elsewhere so for example there's so there's an arctic circle. that essentially keeps a lot of the cold air in the arctic there is a theory that what is happening is the ice melts then. decreases that is to say there's less heat being reflected more heat being absorbed and what then happens is hot air rises it disrupts that search that current that's going around the arctic unless what we talk about when we when we talk about you know these huge arctic gusts of arctic weather coming down into more temperate zones and that is why for
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example that you could be in new england and suffering very very cold winters and it being a consequence of climate change. you know one of the interesting thing. your article that i didn't really kind of know existed you took part of it was this kind of tourist trade. as you mentioned earlier of this working vessel but you know it kind of brings. people to the north pole. one of the elements is the kind of prose in columns of. eco tourism. how is that affecting the region and what are those pros and goes yeah i mean. the obvious cons are really you know whenever you have any kind of human presence in an area where there hasn't been human presence you're going to have some kind of impact especially if you go there in an extremely large ship that's breaking through through the ice and that ice is vulnerable and you have wildlife populations that
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are perhaps being stressed already as a change because of a change in climate among other factors so. i will say i was genuinely very very impressed that the expedition stuff staff and clark expeditions they were very. cognizant of their desire to try to limit that immediate impact there is an international body that regulates the activities of organizations that take tourists up into these fragile arctic environments they do very much try to buy those those guidelines you know if you would say that the produce potentially and this is this is what's often advanced as an argument in favor of eco tourism is that if people see these environments they going to care about the middle a lot more it's very easy to read an article about the arctic or about the antarctic or indeed anywhere else in the world you think that's pretty cool but the experience of actually being there is something entirely different and one would hope that what you end up creating are evangelists who can then go and talk about
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how remarkable this area is and how much we need to protect that kind of an intangible benefit right it's not measurable you certainly just want to hope that that's the case and that's why. it happens and in many cases you could definitely see that with the people on board that they were really impressed to be there we saw who just there to tick boxes and then go on to the next thing and you're not going to convince them at all but the sense of what the pro is apart from anything else that the more that people understand and see something the more they're going to care about. the united states this last week speaking of this when you see it you finally understand the united states this week you know we in the last two three weeks we've been hit by two major heard possibly a third and now the argument is almost immediate of whether it's climate change or whether it's not climate change and what does that mean and what you have is you are saying some of the passengers aboard the victory are some of the sailors on there just don't believe it or don't believe that that's what kind of having an
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effect on that why do you believe that this kind of blinders are denial still is so prevalent and widespread even for those directly experiencing effects i mean you know people were seeing it where a tourist will see hey i get it there's a change why aren't the some of the people that are right there in front of it and seeing. you know it's really interesting. you know there's been studies of the you know the kind of people who do climate change science some people who don't believe it because the people who they respect. tell them not to believe it for whatever agenda purposes they might have it's also a very frightening concept right the notion that we. it's one thing to be able to say yeah i'm mad we're having this impact on this national park through this building with something that's tangible the notion that we can actually alter earth's climate and that we are doing it ourselves through the very
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lifestyle choices that we like living and having. i think that that's very hard for some people to take and so consequently rather than kind of address it sometimes it's easier to just put the fingers in the years and pretend it's not happening. often there is not always but often that that can be to some extent a religious component to there are certainly you know evangelical christians for example are among those that have been the most resistant to the notion of this because it runs counter to the concept of god being in charge of the planet and being able to tell you what happens to the planet how can we be more powerful than god. you know there are all kinds of different psychological reasons as to why people are don't want to believe it and then of course there's the more practical reasons that you have for example fossil fuel industries you have big businesses that choose to not believe that it's in their interest to have people not believe in the same way as the interests of big tobacco people not believe that cigarettes
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cause lung cancer. quickly ask you actually what was the moment in your life when you kind of. saw the oh this is an actuality you know this is it was do remember the moment when you know apart from maybe reading or whatever when you really kind of fully felt the impact of. climate change first. climate change specifically i don't know that i do you know it's kind of funny i came across something that i wrote a long long time ago thirty years ago that i wrote just a general kind of environmental piece and it focused quite a lot on what was you know one. the bigger issue is the time and remains an issue tropical deforestation remember and it's funny to come across as i put a little footnote in their home almost to the extent that some scientists even believe crazy as it sounds that we're able to start controlling the climate or affect the climate through burning coal and oil and at that point it was almost like a crazy aside and i'm not sure when that came a point that i was ever really struck by it actually. it's just been one of those
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things i think that i've been fortunate enough that perhaps i've been able to be somewhat aware of it for a longer period of time and i've had a very good opportunity good luck to speak with a lot of scientists who've been studying this for a long period of time i think that's one of the issues top of that to get back to your point not many people know scientists so if you know scientists know how scientists operate not even necessary just climate scientists you get a sense that these are not people who go along to get along and make a fast buck you realize that these are people who are interested in the truth and argue for sypher asleep with each other until they get as close as they possibly can to the truth and i think when you're exposed to science it's a great deal and like i said i've been very fortunate that that's what a lot of my life has been you get a much greater understanding not only of specifically climate change but how scientists are able to come to the conclusions they come to on climate change it's not magic it's not religion it is
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a carefully pieced together theory. when the imperial college of london discovered fossilized space dust for me only ninety million years ago and the famous white cliffs of dover along the english countryside they may crack the code of long term space travel so it's estimated that twenty to thirty thousand metric tons of cosmic dust enters or up the rabbits for every year on year ten percent is thought to reach the earth's surface and the ones that do are rarely ever found these micro meteorites are less than a millimeter in size and normally melt into satirical drops as they travel through the atmosphere forming quite beautiful. dendrite den triptych crystals but the micrometeorites founded by the imperial college of london in dover weren't spheres the cosmic dust was an altered there are now coming up with ways to test for clay water and other things inside the dust while you well we could use the info information to track asteroids and comets that down the road human explorers in space could use as stops on long trips and as
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a kind of natural filling station in space so the glittering extraterrestrial dusted cliffs of dover whether there will be blue words over it for that you'll just have to wait and see. and you will end tragically our show has come to an atom so you'll have to tune in and wait and see tomorrow to talk about. that observes over the bay remember everyone in the world we are told we would love to know so i tell you all of you i am tired robot and on top of them all and keep on watching all those hawks out there that are a great day but. the mission of news with you is to go to the people tell their side of the story your
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stories are well sourced we don't hide anything from the public and i don't think the mainstream media in this country can say there might be average viewer knows that r.t. america has a different perspective so that we're not hearing one echo chamber that mean stream media is constantly spewing. we're not beholden to any corporate sponsor no one tells us what the cover how long the conference or how to say it that's the beauty of archie america. we hear both sides we hear from both sides and we question more. generally not what. anything get in your way to bring it home to the american people.
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welcome to. today we discuss the decline of newsprint and it's a fax on american journalism with former village voice writers tom robbins and michael musto they're writing online but it's for you know it's for developers it's for politicians it's for people who actually have a personal stake in the outcome as opposed to the citizenry that's the voice of the village voice is still going to exist as a web site so why can't they carry on the tradition of what the voice i wish. the village voice which six decades ago pioneered the concept of an alternative weekly paper announce.

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