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tv   News  RT  January 4, 2018 7:00am-7:31am EST

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so robust and then have the wallace twenty eight he seen three stories that have been with us for a loan time know they can brush new terms because of a lot of tweeting a lot of. little spice again battle does not put a way to twitter but so being a bug speaking of bugs we do that we're going to start way right there on fire today already so i want to ask you this do you believe that north korea just undercut trump states by opening up quite literally a channel a phone line to talk to south korea the debate is going to give the big undercut like oh well never go to the table never they don't they all want war they want to blow everybody up on the face of the earth at all most of us like he goes let's talk about the olympics maybe go on of course because once again this is another another indication another situation in which you have the united states being undercut by another country going in and doing diplomacy and it's
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a wild idea. but this is this is what's kind of heart is is we've seen this before it had to do with preconditions when obama was being elected it was this idea of in both elections it was this idea of you can't talk to them without preconditions and that preconditions we have to set and that's kind of what make you really brings back the old preconditions of the obama era of complaint so you have. a we said we won't take any of the talks seriously if they don't do something to ban all nuclear weapons and north korea we don't think we need a band-aid and we don't think we need to smile and take a picture well i know i'm like this was i thought i'd honestly you know how i felt about a lot of the passive aggressive spoken things that were coming out of the obama administration that i didn't think out. and i feel like this is even worse this is more this is more passive aggressive than anything at this week and talk. talk is written or respect. they don't even want to negotiate
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a long overdue peace treaty with israel. so the idea is that we give you millions and hundreds of millions of dollars one hundred ninety three the united states has invested over that time about four hundred according to her it's most of this money isn't just going directly to the palestinian authority in fact really none of it has a west bank and gaza which. part of me feels better about that because it's the ideas that we're controlling it's going to get us aid programs but then i usaid has a place another no where near as big as the media was like go crazy everyone's talking to a producer for c.n.n. he writes according to witnesses i've spoke to the protests to take advantage of the population's legitimate economic grievances to score points against the rouhani government which they consider to be much the cia's bird species are declining and popular and of the total population being sensitive to environmental and habitat changes birds are an important tool for ecologists project an impressive comeback on a stance and due to conservation efforts over the last two then migrates to the bahamas
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turks and caicos between october and between august and october but due to predators like the brown cowbird it is going to take more effort in order to invigorate the species as a constant state department of natural resources conservation biologist dave and lopez put it you never want all your eggs in one basket no pun intended which is where golf course developer michael kaiser comes in he's spotted the worst player on the land next to his seven hundred acre sand valley golf restored leaving him to purchase another seventy two hundred acres of land next to it for an open to the public recreational land for activities like hunting hiking and skiing on that swath of land he's working to restore the habitat for not only the warbler but to other endangered species the carb or blue bottle fly and the slender classless are and it's working because after simply clearing red pine trees from the land native plants whose seeds have been dormant in the sand for decades bloom and the plants
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that support butterflies bees and even birds are starting to come back now kaiser a chicago based greeting card scion is part of the reason wisconsin was named the best golf destination destination in the world in two thousand and seventeen due to the diversity of its landscape and as we move into twenty eighteen let's find more ways to use our love of the links to conserve and serve the ecosystems are part of the. as a wild story plus it's like i mean i think golf courses of always have that like bad yeah you know element like all they look pretty for the people walking on them but they like decimate the environment with all the chemicals they use. in the pesticides and all that so this is a really wild story but there was no then you tell me about earlier today the really just blew my mind that you have to tell people right now which is about bird watching as an industry yes as someone who clearly in the last year or two i've always been around bird surveys and as a big thing but money to sort of bird watching things important part of the ecosystem bertie's is birdies but they're also a big part of financially looking at the bird watching industry the bird watching
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in the united states canada and mexico chive billion dollars using with the and part of the thing that's killing birds and killing a lot of animals is you know human beings love it or leave it up that's more than two hundred ninety million acres of grasslands have been converted to agriculture in north america which then impacts the species we're talking about three farming yes everything apart converted to all this most recent in the way very good not good for the land by more than eighty five percent of the globally threatened birds in latin america have been impacted by large scale logging in cultural operations was that the more you know this takes the stand take stands and what's the what are called young jack pines and they're punctuated by open areas the blue in the summer glasses top of those talk about the scots and thrive in a sunnier landscape pine barrons prairie savannah's without the fig canopies all of this is possible by simply kind of just allowing the land to do what it naturally does rather than trying to excavate it and create it and shipped in the what we
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wanted to be right you know exactly and this is the thing is that what happened in wisconsin is that a lot of non-native pines were ground there after timber in that the turn of the century a lot of houses built the united states were built with wood from wisconsin and once that was all done they started really growing but the pines that they did were red pines are non-native they're used for wood pulp for what men paper manufacture . and what floors because they were native they messed up everything so now what he's doing is literally just allowing these jack lions and all that natural habitat to come back for butterflies and all of this and be is as we've talked about and so the a lot about mid twenty's or teen audubon magazine actually remarked on how the silver lining of the great recession of making golf courses not making as much money in closing is that they are now being bought up by conservationists and so now maybe these new golf courses built by people like cars or who are avoiding pesticides and all the bad stuff and using the natural land itself instead of messing with it that could make you know golf or conservation like that we like that's
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a very different than our presidents idea of what all of us in quotes i mean i said you know let's remember that made sure it you know majors but around a lot longer than us they probably perfected how best to create places for animals to thrive and then we can be. a letter's way about majors way better out of that as we can learn from her art as we go to break our watches don't forget to let us know what you think about topics we've covered of facebook and twitter your full shows at our t.v. dot com coming up going to make room for the wisconsin from directional coming from our deep collect the hawks that's to discuss a new political party of the year stay tuned to watch of the. day everybody i'm stephen both. coming with you next. right american interests george bush in our view to say this is my buddy famous financial
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guru when she's a little bit different i'm. going to run your windows up with all the drama happening in our country and have fun every day americans. really start to bridge the gap this is the great american. his goal is periodic album number seventy nine and that's unique attributes that make it great for money. with not more in the back you it has got forty years of history to it and it's evolved through all these technologies it's a unique protocol and it like gold it is attracting a huge amount of capital for the for this achievement and you can't say that you can simply go out there and create another one there are competitors of course just like there are competing species on planet earth for energy and survival but
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there's only one the apex predator or that is at the moment before he dies from all the dark. leaves. you. know that chillier. you. leap. on i. was going to go down. with every new year comes a new set of resolutions for most people they can range from losing weight and
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drinking last to being more active and finally cleaning out that front hall closet dangerous the front hall closet. but for filmmaker. the beginning of the new year marks the beginning of his quest to bring a real third party challenge to the two party dictatorship that dominates u.s. politics after the killing of his father and five others in the two thousand and twelve sikh temple shooting i was. political activism found cause and purpose in fighting for his seat in the us how house arrest district back in two thousand and fourteen but now austin is fighting for a third party future all upon us and now we have one bernie dealy if they actually had a party that had a strong platform which we do they might continue their independence but usually the most like. an uncivil rest you know civil unrest you have to pick a side or you have to pick you have to give up certain things that you have to pick a side that isn't too far from you and how do you that's really the challenge so
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how how will you go about building that new third party movement and i mean to tell me how to tell us a little bit about independent party united dot com so as you know probably the republican party was founded in wisconsin and rooted in wisconsin now. very near where i was born and actually i was thinking you know you literally thirty minutes from where i was is where the republican party started. and something like this is like a twenty year project a ten year project and the best way to to do it is do it almost like teddy roosevelt tried to do the progressive party remember when he was shot in the walky and then his speech ended up like ricocheting the bullet and he still gave a two hour speech yeah. we're at that point where we can see that both sides don't have the answers they're going to bark at each other for another two decades they've been barking at each other for these past two decades so the best way to do it is grassroots on the ground suggesting in nominating new congressional
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candidates or new state representatives or new city you know representatives and we're just launching now just to start rolling into that. that's interesting you say just launched now so did tell us a little bit about that web site independent party united dot com like what can people find on there. that's a great question tyrrell like so what we tried to do was summarize all of the salient points and the firm evidence now from the fake news but from people like you guys who really study it and really get into the nitty gritty of it so that if you go to that website you'll have everything you need to know about where you stand interesting where were. you have other third party movements you know failed and where you believe you know you will succeed you know i mean we heard this talk a lot over the last push in the last i would say ten fifteen years. even ninety eight when my father ran you know everyone parties here is here and then it kind of
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fell to the wayside you know what what what sets this apart from the other attempts to kind of organize in these independent disenfranchised voters. i think your father by the way jesse did an amazing job at showing how two hundred thousand dollars could both parties he was a true independent and. i think where it's going to. it's going to succeed isn't coalition building something that the green party doesn't do something that the other third party candidates don't do we suggest coalition building so something that we're doing with the independent party is it's not a religious conversion if you become an independent rather you are a watchdog on both sides you can caucus with the democrats you can caucus with the republicans you still an independent and suggest you know based on their rules you can show up at their events and you can have suggestions and discussions with them so coalition building is primary something that we've lost since the one nine
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hundred ninety s. since the internet has dawned everybody's kind of built their own silos and they've built. that does seem to be the hardest part because the truth is third party third parties or you know we call them third parties i mean outside of that two party monopoly is is considered you know it's going to ruin things it's going to do this it's going to mess up but now we have a congress and we see in the last twenty thirty years the whole time i've grown up is seeing this go from one side who has power who has this how can you do it they can't even coalition build within them in their own parties now with the power of independence is that you have they have to come they have to win with the last election started with they have got to have to learn to cope coalesce with with people from other part is like we saw with the bernie thing so how will you one of those things how will you build those but also also. the suppression that third party suppression by republicans and by democrats in the corporate media who
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consider anything about third party is you know a threat to democracy. i mean it's a tough one you guys know coming down the brass tacks those two parties don't represent the normal person one party is the party of big business the other party is an intellectual elite that wants to speak for the people right. this forty two. that we talk about if they stop giving their power to other people and say you know what we're going to select the best amongst us to run then i think we can you know we can offer a challenge we can create that that vibrant conversation however it's difficult because the amount of mudslinging that has happened in the past two decades it's unseen i mean down the fake news down to you know fake. like people actually alleging assaults or you know negative things that are detrimental
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defamation so as a third party our job would be to throw that mudslinging aside to get right into the real political strategy and philosophy of our country and i think if people stay there will be able to raise this party pretty quickly now you mentioned earlier the greens and libertarians are there are probably the two biggest third parties out there today what about those existing third parties you know where where do you see them fitting in to to your efforts for this independent party like you said coalition building your is that something where you would reach out to those two and say look you guys have ballot access especially to federal level you've made some moves here and there you know how do they fit into this overall movement. and you hit the nail on the head they've already started moving in these steps it's a matter of galvanizing them throwing away some of the differences and going at the
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similarities and a lot of similarities are we want corruption and both parties have proven themselves so corrupt that i mean most other countries are looking at us not as their philosophical leader on democracy anymore they're looking at us as a corporate oligarchical regime that needs to be handled and then i think with those third parties especially the green party is a good example. we can show that there is a bit of organizing that happens on the democratic and the republican side and though they have the philosophy right they're not playing the political game correctly and that's ideally maybe something we do in the midwest have a very well out of chicago out of wisconsin. and sometimes minnesota sometimes want to show. you the very midwestern thing is that we kind of say it doesn't really matter which is why i think it surprised people in wisconsin since it's been this whole wisconsin ruined everything because we voted
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for trump but at the end of the day it's you you didn't you expected them to just vote for a democrat you didn't realize that they vote on the issues they vote on on things that are very important that they you know if they feel they can actually affect their family they'll vote that way not about party and i think more people are like vote for the party and the person who has my values at stake and you think that values its about what are you going to do for your average working class american that has to be first and foremost primaries are the election process if you do not pass their pride in this allows us to buy both sides because those primaries are rigged when i ran against paul rock last from both sides i had made up stories from one side and i had e-mails going out from the other side telling people all he's from california he lives in california he doesn't actually come back to wisconsin though i used to come back all the time and if we can bypass those primaries we can actually get people who are like jesse like your father tyrrell somebody who
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succeeded in another field sees the corruptions from sees the corruption from outside and enters with a strong. philosophy and that's what we need right now we don't need people who are shelled to party we need people who are like stand up americans i couldn't play with you more we wish you good luck in your efforts you're different. was posted and more well we'll check in with you as the as the as the time draws near for the upcoming elections this year thank you very much former congressional candidate m r d thank you. thank you that's. civil rights activist erika garner passed away recently at the age of twenty seven erika fought tirelessly after the death of her father at the hands of unjust and racist police cho and erica girlishness she did held up by her story you everybody you know it everybody could be. and that is our show for you to have a great day all right. but i'm facing christmas alone out on the streets of london
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. well you look to be any better. i could look up the glory like going to school you know just saying look there's still give out me for the same. thing. but you don't really feel like human being you know. and then. that guy just came over to me saw me and gave no change in this book. it's the cradle of jazz. the america the america we. took an old just jazz feel. a city of climatic
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catastrophes alligators on the loose of poverty and crime by the least swell members of mob family close mouthed murder of street racing in the heat of the night this is new orleans. the best place in the world. headlines this hour iran's military chief declares the week long anti-government protests are over we look at how the demonstrators were encouraged from abroad also to come a rise in violent crime in one of germany's regions is linked to an influx of young male migrants according to government backed research and the u.s. national security adviser says washington should reveal what he calls insidious russian meddling to prevent further interference.
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fellow that welcome you watching r.t. international this thursday morning where it's just gone ten o'clock here in moscow . now iran's military chief says the civil unrest which has blighted the country for a week is now over but it's come at a cost of at least twenty one lives as protest repeatedly turned violent there were still reports of several small demonstrations overnight the unrest originally began as a working class protest against worsening living standards and unemployment as the as iran's economy continues to stagnate but they widened out into anti-government rallies u.s. leaders were quick to throw their support behind the protesters but as mc chalk and i reports they downplayed the key reason behind me unrest. when they ask for
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a better economy when they ask for the government to spend money on their own country as opposed to terror exploits overseas or in other countries sure we would certainly do when they say that to you i support mat i'm not going to go i'm not going to see that's why you're trying to trap me into something like that i'm not going to go there for that is no that is not our that is not our policy but we hear what the iranian people are saying poverty corruption and economic uncertainty have the potential to trigger protests the world over. and they can quickly turn ugly. but the international reaction to such unrest seems to depend on the country and question this is the precise picture of a long oppressed people rising up against their dictators. i mean in any country people can protest against high prices but when have a such them astray sions happen in our country opponents of the establishment come
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out and support them some western leaders are barely able to contain their enthusiasm for regime change and are rushing to throw their weight we are now seeing an organic popular uprising indian citizens on the largest scale since two thousand and nine the great to bring in people have been repressed for many years they're hungry for food and for freedom along with humor on is being looted it's on for change. in the west and how it's going to bring in. the west the power is. back in the arena prosy fervor can lead. to negative. the american president says he supports the protesters but these protests are not protests against the government these kinds of demonstrations happen in any country and they are against rising prices but each time these demonstrations happen we see that the authorities opponents use them for. their own
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purposes the majority in iraq i believe want evolution not revolution or. arab spring style which has brought so much suffering elsewhere on the other hand the west seems oddly quiet about the massive rallies that are being held across iran in support of the government. all the root of it is just a canard ics is the problem of youth unemployment i personally haven't been able to find a job for a long time but if people have a job they don't have any problem with the government because most of iraq economic problems are domestically generally but another reason why investment in new jobs have been slow in coming is that contrary to the obligations under the nuclear agreement western countries notably the united states have not taken sufficient steps to facility normal financial flows when it comes to iran the west
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says it's listening but clearly selectively is co-opting democracy for its own ends is a difficult habit to break and r.t. . now is the iran protest started to get wider international attention some posts on social media spread rapidly despite being proven as fakes this tweet for example shows a photo of a woman hissing police officers with the caption iran but it turned out to be a screen shot from an iranian movie after being exposed the man who posted it claimed it was supposed to be symbolic and the video which gained thousands of using this said to show a march in iran was later proved to be of a protest in bahrain from twenty eleven other fakes were probably less clear for example one post here claimed to show the uprising when it was actually a photo of a pro government bradley. now a rise in violent crime in germany's lower saxony region is being linked to an
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increase in migrants in the government back study but is it really that simple takes a closer look. why have reports of violent crime in one german state increased by more than ten percent in the last two years but this is exactly what a group of criminologist said zurich university of applied science says to find and what they established is that there is a link between the increased violent crimes in lowest sex to me and the influx of migrants but the authors say there are a number of important contributing factors the first and foremost is the age of the migrants most of man between the ages of fourteen and thirteen not generally speaking people in this age bracket are more likely to commit acts of a violent nature than people in other age groups secondly where they come from is important mike woods who come from syria iraq and afghanistan tend not to carry out
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the same number of violent acts as migrants for example that are coming from north africa and then third what is also relevant is the fact that there is a lack of women among the migrants only a quarter of migrants are female which means that you have groups of young men without their wives their mothers will be sisters and they are more likely to carry out acts of a violent nature now these findings do reflect earlier reportings that suggests that there is an increase in acts of a violent nature that are connected to the my current crisis since two thousand and fifteen more than a million migrants have a arrived here in germany that's say that wolf is there is an important mitigating factor and this is and it could be that people may be more likely to report acts violent acts that are carried out by migrants than if they were carried out by local germans not criminologists believe that only integration isn't the solution
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and should bring down the high level of crime rates among my goodness. from. our point of view the study shows once again that we must not abandon those who come to us but actively provide integration that means for example compulsory and comprehensive integration and language courses more places in kindergartens in schools let's ask people here in berlin what they think. i would say that this is coming from both sides the more people that come the more the dissatisfaction will be from those who have lived here longer i think that's something that should be driven by politics but and at the end of the day it's to us as part of the society that we all need to change and if you've got people that are pliable changing our behavior and that you can lose a really of it one of the more radical solutions would be to deport the immigrants from germany interation stuff it's all day they need to work at some point being an
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immigrant and working it's a different story we kind of try to to get them and get them something worthwhile to do while a solution to the problem continues to be sought the sad reality is that violent crimes continue. our team. while the chairman of the vice barden academy for integration believes the same behavioral patterns can be found among any group regardless of whether they have a migrant background or not. what is written in the report is basically common sense that people without any perspective with the living standards which are very hard more common to go into thinking about criminal activities if you talk about integration of immigrants it's a dialogue and on the one side for integration you have to build perspectives.

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