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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  October 12, 2017 7:29am-8:01am EDT

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use that are raising eyebrows especially of those directly affected by these most horrible terrible crimes you see the norwegian newspaper b.g. has uncovered that australian police in their efforts to take down the abusers actually took over and ran the childs play site for almost an entire year that's right in their efforts to bust traffickers of child pornography the australian police essentially became traffickers themselves by allowing for four members of the sharon upload numerous images and videos of child abuse and rape this of course begs the very very important question for not just australian citizens but for citizens all around the world just how far is too far should we allow our law enforcement members to become devils themselves in order to catch the devils they pursue. let's us that question and start watching the hawks.
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as you put it out of. what you know that i got. this. week so. well for our science i robot and i'm talking a lot less so that is the question it really is do you allow the police to go that far. in the you know in their attempts to catch truly despicable people i wouldn't mind so much if they were catching me truly truly despicable people which is the ones making that liberal producing it who are behind those pictures and that i didn't see in this case where you saw
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a lot of that it was just picking up. people who were treating it wrote yeah i mean i mean i'm assuming that they probably god you know some of the purveyor of the actual group are very or yeah you're right most of these it is a symbol of we're just on this forum trading these pictures back and forth and things like that it's like busting the guy buying drugs on the story but not the person who's bringing the drugs to the street and in this case the thing is the person being victimized is victimized every time one of those pictures a scent every time one of those videos is watched that is where the real problem lies and so you're revisit izing someone over and over and over again without their consent and so first you have this site which was started in april twenty sixth so april twenty sixth you have this site that was run by these two guys at its high it had more one million profiles. and when they are three months after police took over the site it had about four hundred twenty seven thousand profiles so this is
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a very well there's a lot of traffic going through there so they had the opportunity to you know go in there and find these things but instead decided hey will keep it going it will catch more so of the three or four thousand that were active users so you have all these profiles these profiles and that's one thing where you have active users you have three or four thousand of those were active users and at least one hundred who were producers. who either are abusing kids or film of the kids and distribute the videos on the for. me it's really hard for me to feel bad for the cops or hard to understand any sympathy for the police in this situation when you chose for a year. to keep sharing these images and allowing the bothers me and it is bothersome i think we have a similar case when i believe with the f.b.i. that we've talked about before and i believe that it was only the cup that opened for a good couple right this is what i was still hearing is the matter a few months. a newspaper that kind of discovered this and discovered that the law
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enforcement was you know behind the operation of this site after they had a centrally arrested the two people responsible for creating it the admins were named benjamin bachner and patrick all day they arrested him in new york just outside of damascus new york in october of two thousand and sixteen and in that arrest they kind of basically rolled over and said here's our passwords here's everything you know all that the police then took that information and essentially . assumed the identities of these two people who created this site in order to mine zero all of the purveyors of the people using this forum. you know it and that's really that's what makes it really diabolical and even the police themselves have talked about how difficult that was and exactly i find it hard to feel bad for them because they are these choices that they made this job but you do have to realize what things like this has a really adverse effect not just on the victims not just on the people involved in
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that but the police going after it because what we're asking them to do is as you said become those devils become those awful demons that are out there one are just forests egypt's paul griffiths told the jury about the effect that i have of him what he said was i have been working in this field for twenty two years seen pictures has no effect on me anymore but to sit down line and talk like one of these guys every time i've done it i feel like i have to take a shower after the very i can only imagine that's the least of how you would feel you know interacting with you know these kind of behavior is minimal a society but the one they confronted john with them browse is the head of this task force bio you know of these techniques this tactic of leaving it open ended you heard victims in the process not kind of thing he said we will do whatever we can within our legislative authority to achieve that sharing any such image is abuse of
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a child however it is something we can justify as being for the greater good and to prevent ongoing abuse of children so their kind of ideology i guess is that well you care when you get around without breaking some eggs i guess what the but this is the problem when you talk to someone who is was a mother of one of those victims one of those people in those pictures as she told told that it was she had said in one interview my daughter should not be used as bait if they're using her images then she should be paid or compensated for use it's not right for the police to promote these images and then suggest she shouldn't be used as bait and if you're going to put her at risk. she should give permission and she has because that child should be compas compas get compensated for it instead of rejecting lots of period of slippery slippery territory. the f.b.i. has spent more than a month and a significant amount of money to investigate apprehended obtained blood samples
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from a couple of papers but these aren't the kind of pigs that take showers in front of their assistants or the pig who covers up for the other pigs who harass lady pigs in the workplace you know these are actual pigs baby pics that's right the f.b.i. is trying to hunt down to six piglets stolen from a smithfield farm in utah by activists from direct action everywhere who were documenting the horrifying conditions of factory farming and it was straight out of the movies the f.b.i. sent six cars filled with agents and bulletproof vests just sees d.n.a. samples from any young pigs to farm animal sanctuaries with no connection to direct action everywhere the state veterinarian who came with the f.b.i. cut nearly two inches from one pig's ear for the test even the f.b.i. agents witnessing it were horrified one let the vet cut off the second pig's ear but it didn't stop there the f.b.i. followed step out of the same stories from their homes and made scenes questioning them in front of their friends and family the two piglets named lily and lizzie by the activists said direct action everywhere and lucy and ethel to the f.b.i.
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aren't special they are genetically engineered to grow human organs or shoot lasers out of their tails they are just piglets the only reason the f.b.i. is putting an ounce of effort into finding these piglets is a cover up for the factory farming industry to point the blame for a million activists who are just criticizing the treatment of the animals but it reality the conditions or food is raised do you think that the f.b.i. should be focusing on two piglets or are there bigger human pigs for them to spend their time tracking down. the people that would put animals you know or with an exaggeration. mass through a sun surely you know food that's probably not going to turn out not to be very good for us in the long term and. you know factory farming i think especially for worst ways to get developed food sources for the incentives as ever kind of devised it all or about i should say is truly horrible and what's
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really interesting is that there is only one specific ideology that has its own terrorism legislation what would you think that would be what do you think i don't know i mark three middle you are wrong no you are wrong it is not islamic extremism it's nothing like that it's actually animal rights groups have their own specific terrorism legislation in two thousand and six the animal enterprise terrorism act was passed in order to quote provide the department of justice the misery authority to operand prosecute and convict the vigils committing animal enterprises terror why and now this doesn't actually say a whole spring terror or her food supply from harm it ultimately protects the ultimately this law as basically protects factory farms and the corporations that own them essentially it's a law designed to protect corporations from essentially being called out corners where their food supply or doing something evil to animals in an effort to get as
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much food out to the populace as possible no it's just about something now it is above the this is one of those things just to put it into perspective this idea that animal terrorism animal rights terrorism as this huge problem since one thousand seventy nine by the way it's as some way that the animal rights and eco rights you know ecology sectors have committed. acts that have created damages of one hundred ten million dollars oh that's a lot of money to what he told one hundred ten million dollars that is a lot of money roy six figures. that's got to be a lot of money since nine hundred seventy nine are thirty eight years you want to let me put in the present is there a way i may break it down for you the nineteen ninety two n.b.a. finals oh ok. the chicago bulls versus the portland trailblazers the riots after that game was celebrated in seventeen million dollars it is money
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that's won while the new york blackout in one nine hundred seventy seven hundred eight million in today's money and one that might go all you to naming. lightning cost the united states economies that one hundred forty million dollars in twenty fourteen alone like i think doesn't have a special legislation because they're animal protests and like the factory for buildings it's a rival small drop in tar other people have been arrested and charged under this law for side walking talking sidewalks handing out flyers and just protesting that it's a joke it's an absolute joke and even this is the thing about this. it was rachel marron paul who's and a turn for the center for constitutional rights told mother jones back in two thousand and eleven when they were talking about it that basically the law is saying if you cause an animal enterprise to lose profits then you've committed a terrorist act the whole point of many protests is to cause a business to lose profits to convince the public that certain company doesn't
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deserve to be patronised here's the deal you're telling me the guy in vegas isn't a terrorist but these people trying to save to pay glitz are a good question terrible right now go to break card watchers don't forget to let us know what you think about topics with grover a very good twitter see our poll shows at r t v dot com coming up sean stone sits down with former new york state assemblyman filmmaker nelson dennis to discuss the current state of puerto rico after all of the crazy donald trump and hurricane damage stay tuned for the. and it always gives yeah when you go into as you go into. the show you also the you know mr wilson exposed. to so in other things are true that in the term that the that the. you have. to go to war if you will your
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view of it is to believe also all bush the glad i wish to god but not the number that the u.n. seems nobody can come up. with to it or got up out of that one down because you know i can recall in the state of the impulse you know you know that we're not a strong room we're going to shoot me in the least to use it for. me in the room he had a. few become worthless. you on employee artist types who can't get a job some of them turn out to be reno defining of ours through the vision that they present and they end up in some weird crack ridden drug house like east berlin or the lower east side of manhattan or soho in
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manhattan and then this attracts the buyers and the big money in the gallery and then that attracts the house lies in the suburbs and then that attracts the real property speculators and then they push the artists out. in case you're new to the game this is how it works not the economy is built around corporations corporations run washington washington controls the media the media. and voters elected 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. thank you all right. thanks.
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thanks. thanks. thanks. as for the rico continues to assess the colossal damage done by hurricanes arm and maria society has been debating the effectiveness of the government's response after what came across as a generally effective and media savvy response to hurricanes and houston and louisiana the president came under fire for a delayed reaction in puerto rico and whether it be paper towel throwing visit that seemed like more of an afterthought or the back and forth over whether or not to lift shipping restrictions under the jones act much has been said about the asymmetrical devastation this hurricane season has brought to puerto rico united states territory versus proper states such as texas and louisiana but as many puerto rican activists point out that difference may be more of a new feature than a bug to discuss how the territory as political history is now led to its economic condition sean stone sat down earlier with former new york state assemblyman nelson
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dennis. let me take you back even further the cause is there a real parallel context here there was another hurricane shortly after united states committed eighty ninety eight in one thousand nine hundred ninety two very next year son c.d.r. who will soon worst hurricane of jack century nineteenth century the island worse than hurricane rita and the american response the very following year in one thousand nine hundred was to devalued the whole region currency by forty percent and then the year after that in one thousand don't want it instituted that sort of aggressive a property taxes. that it never is existed before and the. currency devaluation and. property taxes it was like that not only klein shock doctrine on steroids and the net result of that was within thirty years of reagan's lost eighty percent of their lands and it became a one prop cash cow economy that are sugar and that eighty percent were in the
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hands of north american banking syndicates i use that in the context because when you fast forward now we have a lot of parallels here after a whole over a century we have a financial control board that has come in during the atari puerto rican economy over suppose that a legit debt that in fact would not exist were it not for the plenary jurisdiction of the us congress which which commands the puerto rican economy in the first place as an example is the jones act this section twenty seven of the merchant marine act of one nine hundred twenty eight david jones acts to police that any foreign registry festival in the puerto rico has to pay taxes you need all sorts of costs that get passed on to the puerto rican consumer there's one alternative that same foreign boat boat can route to jacksonville florida they offload the goods everything food medicine water or oil and they loaded onto an american boat and
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then that reroutes to puerto rico the result is that everything that comes into puerto rico is hyper inflated about twenty percent and us corporations are the ones that have been benefiting this for ninety eight years since one thousand nine hundred eighty and that and one law loan the jones act caused whole riegel roughly three to four billion dollars a year in other words you would have paid this is a legit debt a puerto rico four times over if it weren't for the jones act that one law would have paid to the debt and that that the condition that puerto rico has been it is a territorial possession of the united states and the us supreme court upheld that in to support in two cases last year so i just buy into. u.s.b. the most prominent one where the solicitor general the obama administration the executive branch solicited the the judicial branch it argued that puerto rico under the supremacy of territorial couples a look at session on
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a commonwealth not a bilateral that not an unknown not even an unincorporated territory but eight but eight territorial possession and the supreme court agreed and john that the problem what i read puerto rico is a facto colony of the united states and it cannot have its own economy. precisely i mean not only have no representation in the u.s. but this whole jones act as a colonial imperial policy essentially control as at the strangling the puerto rican economy talk about this that a port of seventy billion dollars and growing recently the trump said it should be wiped out do you think there's any hope that that this may actually occur on the top administration or do you think that was just him blustering in a moment of excitement. around the primal chant present i mean he's our president you know and i want to have some time with the guy but he has the attention span of
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a gnat and so you never know what's coming out of you know what's going to come out of there one day to the next at the same time as treasury secretary disowned half of what he said regarding puerto rico regarding the debt counseling debt first he supports a journal that he waived for ten days and so you know you can't this man could not be counted on except to go to puerto rico and your own bathroom tissues as if you know about a school play or we need some more structural assurances and eventually that's going to have to come from the u.s. congress because they're the ones that have plenary jurisdiction they're the ones that have controlled this relationship for over a century. and indeed. right now obviously puerto rico is looking at a situation or reminiscent of what happened in haiti and almost ten years ago but essentially what haiti has yet to recover from that devastating earthquake and even
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though people are saying that trump's response has not been as rapid as obama's was necessary with military personnel being deployed it wasn't as though the reconstruction was very successful from from the u.s. approach and now i think you're going to look more towards private investors companies like tesla saying they might they would be willing to rebuild the the grid and private companies coming in but what do you think are the most important steps that can be made to actually reconstruct puerto rico and after this complete devastation. you know what it is it's a mind you it's very it's a delicate balance because you need all hands on deck and at the same time there's a possibility of extolled in force what i mean by that is there's this big well p p three s. public private partnerships but it will remain to be made m p five of the private partnerships in the plunder puerto rico example is p r twenty two and p r five it's the most profitable fire ways on the island are basically under ownership of goldman sachs an op ed piece or ration under
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a thirty five year lease where the projected revenue profits are going to be close to two billion dollars for them over the next thirty five years so these public private partnerships they come in like a lamb but they go out in their own land of the will to land slowly because they can they can actually commandeer the public infrastructure for retail and so sad if that's a very real concern because the courts. airfields ways ridges schools hospitals even the bridges the entire public interest yorkshire oh puerto rico going to be literally up for grabs right now and. if what there needs to be in addition to ace eight. a mixture of some capital access and some measure of a partnership but to much of these people reeves is basically going to put their hands into foreign ownership on a very long term basis what can be done is to have
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a permanent jones accurately so that puerto rico can have its own shipping and have and negotiate its own international trade relations and establish its own tri-city structure right now or to go to the fifth largest market in the world for u.s. goods as more walgreens and wal-mart proceed a mile in puerto rico than anywhere else on the planet and they're all coming in all those goods sold us goods or be priced twenty percent higher so the jones act of asking as a an international price. scenario in puerto rico so one would be to provide and have jones act relief in puerto rico two is to require a stipulated reinvestment of any corporate profits that corporations are getting twenty year tax abatement deals in puerto rico where i don't pay for it interested in the capital gains it is amending jump olson who's been property from that optic imbalance that in puerto rico over the other guy but nick prouty somehow some cash
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wonders what you're getting a twenty year tax abatement deal then you should at least reinvest a small all stipulated proportion of those profits back into puerto rican infrastructure which you're using anyway as a corporation if you're using the highways the air the climate all the benefits of the that caribbean environment you shouldn't have any problem we have the best think of it that that should happen and that should happen for whoever because what we have it is companies that come based they get a twenty year tax break they leave it and this is the cycle of boom and bust for the puerto rican economy so that the second jones act and in a negotiated stipulated reinvestment of puerto rican into. juncture of stone or corporations at thirteen would be alternative technologies will we cited for her and and as obviously with the disparity we want to read son of very abundant in
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puerto rico well those can be harnessed and those to be very profitable very productive alternative technologies in in puerto rico another is to revive the puerto rican agricultural sector in the united states with the early like units agriculture seventy percent of the gross national product of puerto rico it is now point eight percent less than one percent so it still looks similarly with the same fertility the same climate and all of the libya would be on a raid path of sustenance if it could revive some of that agriculture between now the culture alternative technologies or reinvestment and relieve from the jones act all of those are in indigenous. very very empowering or resources that can be employed in puerto rico without having to relive the foreign capital and these people reefs so all of those i think should be in the mix
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not just have foreign investment under the guise of pete's reese. there isn't source of pollution as an existential threat to the multitude of wildlife and environment but leave it to a couple of annoyances surfer as evolving to tackle this global problem and now we have a solution on our hands need to boot sequence game and return to australia it's our first have raised over two hundred sixty thousand dollars in a bid to make the sudan a reality and bring it to market with a concept that seems almost too simple to work to do a lot was looking into making every marina and by extent the oceans a cleaner place for both wildlife inhibits the floating traffic and consists of just said natural fiber and that at the pump that sucks in the trash and oils from the water surface and at first. well fundraising run on indie go go the see bin is finally setting out on its maiden voyage clean up england's portsmouth harbor as well as a spanish marina and the port of helsinki in finland should the sea even prove
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itself sea worthy and is set to hit mass market with a price tag of around four thousand dollars which may be a little pricey to use in your family pool but it's certainly a worthy investment for towns and cities looking for an eco friendly solution to theirs litter problems like seeing people being innovative like single individuals or all those where all those world be like when we travel innovation try to clean up sup a little bit become a shark you know make a little money off of it and know make the world a better place now and it's affordable and it's a horrible four thousand dollars for a big marina like that with you know million dollar most everywhere that's less if you have every little one have it all right everybody that is our show for today remember everyone in this world we are definitely not told her love or tell you wall i love you i robot and i have a lot of people are watching all those hawks out there and have a great day and night everybody.
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luxury and free but also an alarming number of people living in the streets. the simple fact is now ladies there's just not enough shelter even if people on the streets right now decided to come in there's nowhere to come in it's been a struggle. this man found his own response of the problem and construct dozens of tiny homes for people in need of shelter when you have nothing and nowhere to go. you know having something like this may as well be a castle but do the authorities accept such. tiny houses on a parking space. is not a solution kroft someone monitoring the site otherwise it'll be a free for all the news there a better alternative to end the homelessness crisis. give
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on toy artist types who can't get jobs some of them turn out to be green no defining of ours through the vision that they present and they end up in some weird crack ridden drug house like east berlin or the lower east side of manhattan or so howard. and then this attracts the buyers of the big money in the gallery and then that attracts the house flies to the suburbs and then that attracts the property speculators and then they push the artists out. colin is still exist. rico's treated as one. hundred forty three cool. little can i knew a lot of. the island is controlled by the us government and some puerto rican screw even dependence. on our local good at either.
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the earliest. still many do wish to join the us hundreds more leave every day. from a long way from menial. beings. with the country at a crossroads anger of the island is on the rise. no. no no no no. no no no no no no no no no no no no look up for you to sit over. here and try to tell me something about. the.
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new york times editor and a friend who allegedly works that you cheat of all corners even the way mainstream and social media manipulate the news. very rare cases. to try to make up for the fact that something isn't in the terms but in those cases you will use something with intervention to make sure that like to. encourage the thing to be basically. the wall signs of people rally across cuts alone here is spain mops its national holiday with the region's future in the air after its independence declaration was postponed.

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