tv Keiser Report RT January 30, 2018 11:00pm-11:31pm EST
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you know here's a guy who you would think is naturally going to vote for the democrats and he doesn't mention putin but he mentions president as a reason why he himself is invested in the stock market and if the markets continue to go crazy and you never know markets can stay irrational for longer than anybody could stay solvent trying to bet against them but here here's a kid that you would think everything if if he's watching rachel maddow how he's supposed to be scared he's supposed to be hiding under his bed you know in fear of some nuclear attack instead he's he's he's took a third of his trust but he has of course like most when else in brooklyn are going to have a trust well he's taken a third of it and he's going long stock markets in e.t.f. for the first time since the financial crisis lots of curious timing on that you know the post-crisis the dow got down to nine thousand now it's flirting with twenty six thousand and these will any of us are piling in now at this level but
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they hated it at nine thousand that's the way markets are they're despised the lows when people should be buying and they're loved at the top when people should be cautious so this is a classic kind of contrarian indicator that if you've got the an educated now piling in at all time highs i think the professionals will start to ease out for the exits before the mad rush well this is a dangerous sign that this next tweet because of course many of these millennial he'll be buying by an online discount brokerage and here's one of them a tweet about one of them t.d. ameritrade c.e.o. says he has never seen client cash levels this low clients highly active in markets again another contrarian indicator so when you have low cash levels in accounts of people are fully committed that's typically a market top when you have. great bullishness that's generally on the market top
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when the pulled call ratio is extended a level more bullish bets than negative bets that's generally a market top so always contrarian indicators are telling us that the market is nosebleed territory and that's when most people you know pile in because the euphoria generates irrational choices yeah well i know that even ray dally oh i guess one of the richest hedge funders in america he was over in davos saying that anybody sitting on the sidelines is basically an imbecile they're going to miss out because markets are going to continue to soar this year certainly with all the tax cuts so that's what he thinks maybe maybe for a year though these money is a week ok i'm sure the democrats are hoping that he's not ok because they need a market crash if this is the sort of you know it's the economy stupid well let me point something out ray valeo can make
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a statement like that and be long the market and also heads so he could put ten billion dollars in the stock market and for two or three percent of the vestment he can be hedged with puts in futures contracts limiting his last two or three percent if there is a crash the people who are listening to him will go along the market or on the hedge the t.t. ameritrade or the discount brokers they'll pile in the money as a pile and but they won't be hedged so if there is a ten twenty or thirty percent correction or a crash they'll feel it all laurie dahlia will feel the two percent and they'll be like oh i guess i was wrong but on. the last two percent and by the way here's my next idea and then so finally because this kind of ties in with this young kid millennial being from new york and what it's how trump even came into office in the first place and looking forward to twenty eighteen is bronco milan tweeted. you know he's a professor at cuny city university of new york and he said. in
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a book about inequality so he said of the dallas crowd he says as bronco milan says of davus attendees they are loath to pay a living wage but they will fund a film on a orchestra they will ban unions but they will organize a workshop on transparency and government you know just in terms of whether or not the sort of fellow monic funding crowd of the m.s.m. b.c. watching elite of new york some of the people that we can think of whether or not that they'll have some economic answers that will trump the rising stock market are now feeling some sort of wealth effect that trump is making them feel smart because the markets are going up because they're invested oh speaking of a lot after the break we'll talk to one of the richest of them out there in the crypto space don't go away stay right there.
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with lawmakers manufactured sentenced to public will. when the ruling classes protect themselves. with the final merry go round listen to the one percent. we can all middle of the room sit. in the. room. at the plate for many flips over the years so i know the guy even saw. the ball isn't only about what happens on the pitch to the formal school it's about the passion from the families it's the age of the super money to kill you know your own lives and spend the two to twenty. a million on one player. it's an experience like
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nothing else on to because i want to share what i think what i know about the beautiful game played great so one more chance. and thinks this minute. why go back to the kaiser part i'm extractor time out of turn jeremy gardner of augur and many other crypto related projects a long term friend jeremy carter great to have you on finally thanks for having me man all right this is awesome now tell us what order so auger was one of the very person applications ever built on top of the theory of blockade is it decentralized application it is a decentralized prediction market platform effectively in unstoppable online
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betting platforms that predicts the future right now i have some experience in the prediction market while going back a number of years i studied your experience. the hollywood stock exchange so jeremy how does this say use the block chain in a prediction market short so it is entirely written on top of a layer of smart contracts so there is not a single component of the augur platform that essential isin any way including though the event resolution process which is really the most novel innovation of augur is that instead of relying on a single central. entity to resolve say whether donald trump was elected president or not thousands of people report on the outcome of ads from around the world using a token that we issued out one of the very first i.c.'s defenders a very first utility token ever created because it's a token that is not used judd secure a block but to make application work instead so it's
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a bit of crowdsourcing using the tele talking to get into some things process is like verifying a resolution as you say so it's efficient and what about the experience we've seen in the past it's a prediction markets like in trade with in ireland is that you know a lot of people don't like to add prediction markets around because they like to be able to control the news cycle they like to be able. specially in america now with so much going on in the political space we like to control things prediction markets tend to give a more and propagandized look at things and it can get it you know prettier attracting some attention maybe that you don't want to attract if you thought about that what's your thought i mean that that is why we've created a de centralized prediction market there is there are new servers like in trades you can't be shut down once that application goes live it's a pandora's box it is open forever there are the i mean there are thousands of nodes all around the world validating the transaction to hosting the platform it is
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totally on some sort of bill but we have gone and we have reached out to there are appropriate regulatory authorities he thinks and play into what the platform is we explain that it's totally open source recycling that the auger does not create any of the markets or the forecast foundation which is behind auger it's anybody that uses a palm from the goes and great with kids as markets and to be clear i'm not speaking on behalf on augur of all that i'm no longer associated just a co-founder and ambassador to the popcorn ok so the cherry gartner story actually gets kind of interesting here so i read about you the new york times and there's a story out there the talk about the crypto pro. and they bill has how i characterize it. and they've carried this so they have the in the what is it the trip though castle in which is my house and separates your house it's your house in san francisco and there are twenty somethings at home of the twenty something about to turn twenty six a month and you guys were early into the trip the space yanks were augur was pretty
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much fun and interesting on you know let's let's be honest of you know bucket loads of of of of wampum you know and so the new york times chose to take the angle that you know why are we giving these young guys so much frickin money and is this a good thing and i must say that the characterization you know painted you you know i would say in a not in a terribly flattering way oh no. intellectually vapid right and so your experience you know i talked a little bit about this was that the mainstream media was a different experience than you expect there yeah and you know i always hated that term means she media just sounded like this horrible of justification of popular news but at the end of the day where you begin to realize especially as you interact with journalists reporting for these this large news organizations is that they have neither the time nor the capacity to truly explore the ramifications of technology that they're writing and reporting so and say with
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a doozy look for soundbites it looks for things that make it very easy to process so if it's about like fast and like fast money instant wealth. and stupid means he can write about that because the part of mousavi and his can comprehend that i didn't write my bicycle lambo stupid me now i mean it is it is very difficult to take the time to explain to an audience that may not understand what you're a database technology which is roots of us and go and explain what a block changes and dusted they take the path of least resistance and often that is just one that is very intellectually empty you know looking at this open source projects going back to linux you know it's technology guys and they're solving the problem of the software presented to them by microsoft and i thought you know we could do a better job of going to open source this and nerds and techno guys and programmers behind the scenes nobody ever hears about them came up with this product that was
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world beating product when software becomes money if it could have been coined as software that is money it's open source money right how has this impacted the general mindset of the young entrepreneur and developer programmer because it seems like it's not necessarily a match made of haven't you could you give a guy who's maybe artistic you know spends. one thousand hours a day right here some least maybe worth and got a hundred million or two hundred million dollars in monitise liquid form so as a cultural observer and as a veteran in this space at your age talk to me about that is that a fair like observation what do you think about that the older folks get the harder it is for them to comprehend how natural this technology is in this new us asset classes to millennialism below because we've always had below get we've already had in game digital currencies were used invertebrate of several years there's been you
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can mine digital gold and there's actually a real world value that you can go exchange those token internet tokens for you what you haven't had is digital scarcity and that and that's the real innovation that provided and what makes it such a promising asset class to digital natives young people that have been on the internet like myself at least since we were like eight or nine when the world wide web really kind of took off. if used very natural the whole idea of scanning a cue our code to set aside money it doesn't feel that strange to us but i have to admit it is somewhat troubling the the ments riches other being created because it creates the wrong sort of narrative about the sec knowledge if you look at the articles written about me recently did there is no attempt to like go into any sort of anything that i've actually done in this industry these just want to write about like how much money i made and what it does is it perpetuates and becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy of this culture of greed of of fast money and that's
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what it was never about for any of us that got into this early and most of us have seen the real upside of this we've got it because we truly believe this acknowledge you change the world and make a better talk about digital scarcity because that really is a key concept up again referring back to my experience i was like a safe in the past that i created for the virtual specialist it was. deal with the fact that you've got millions of users and there was no you had it figure out a way to create prosperity across all those asset classes because you had proponents of people coming in by leonardo dicaprio so that price had to hire and distort the market and so he had no scarcity had a trade a specialist mechanism to create the digital scarcity by affecting the way price discovery work ok now with this digital scarcity that problem is solved yet and it's true across all the crypto assets and it's something that let's say the gold people who don't like don't get you they don't understand that second you for an a
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few lines address there what they're missing about digital scarcity that would suit you have to understand in order to grasp the scarcity that exists in because one is the fact that big coin is like i said before open source money and it's aids features are programmable and deflation twenty one million big quinta will ever be created is something that is hard wired into big code and there's really no chance that that will ever be changed and so we soon. if you don't believe in code and you don't believe in software like you're not you're like you're never going to get picked quite interested in sharing a coffee a chocolate ice until you know you've got a good regret your time's going to slam you earn her for ages i'm. victimise ages two for folks for folks that do not appreciate the power of software because eight
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in too many people can seem like magic it's like you literally write something into a computer in it and enemies other things now steve jobs said he said anything we do if it's any good should appear like magic right and you know there are people that don't use up our products you know ok so now the market is i'm here at the conference here at the conference there's ice hundreds of ice yes it's crazy and is there. we hit that we hit peak i.c.m. we've probably hit peak by c.e.o. i think we're going to reach a point very soon where there's more regulatory enforcement there's a massive shakeout in the industry a lot of these really didn't go and disappear but the idea of an i.c.a.o. this democratized way of crowdfunding from around the world for new technologies and ideas or even just the ones in and that's probably the most interesting concept is of course security tokens you know last capital we did the very first security token to represent represented
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a limited partner interest in our beds for fun but moving forward i believe launching turn an entire world into a stock market so anything that is scarce in the real world in theory you can securitize in tokenize on a block and so i think we'll have that happen in real estate with intellectual property such as digital rights management to pay for say art as you identify yourself as a liberal and. liberals progressive precisely progressive. they are the last of this technology got the libertarians you've got the american capitalists you've got your conservatives and yet what you're describing there is would be a progressive. and yet they are the last to take a look at this how do you break through that to them. for me it's been a process you know i i grew up always around available but i grew up in the most liberal medium sized city in america this is a and when i would go home and try to talk about this technology now it is
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a scene friends that i went to college in high school with sometimes angrily posts about big assets i realize it it's a trudge in and the only thing you do i don't waste my time trying to enjoy some i think that's an approach you can take a much more interesting to me is actually developing applications that are so good for the world that are so damn ensure blee. better improvements upon what we have are totally new innovations that you can't help but accept that this is a this is a powerful in promising and socially beneficial tool trying to convince someone and the other way you know it's futile. everybody got to thank me on the kaiser report my flushing are great but that's going to do it for this edition of the kaiser report with a base guys are mistakes ever like i guess jeremy gardner is the founder of aadhaar now with author but it is author check out author if you want to see us on twitter go to guy to report the next time.
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he. says harlan kentucky. voices you can go green street families. a co money since it was almost no coal mines left. the jobs are gone all the crew was said. that it was love to see these people a survivor disappearing before their eyes. i remember thinking when i was younger that is anything ever happened to the coal mines here that it would become a ghost town but i never thought in a million years i would see that and it's happening it's happened.
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representatives from most syrian groups including the government opposition agreed to form a committee on a new constitution despite heated discussions during peace talks in the russian result of softie. in an unprecedented move the pentagon bans a us watch other overseeing the situation in afghanistan from publishing information on who controls water on the ground that's amid a string of deadly terror attacks in the country. that's the message u.s. officials were given by angry palestinian protesters stormed their meeting as tensions over donald trump's recognition of jerusalem show no signs of abating.
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this is r.t. international coming to you live from moscow i'm kate partridge thank you for joining us. groups from all sides of the conflict in the syrian war have been involved in a heated day of talks during the peace signs in the russian resort of sochi and it seems they have produced a turntable result what i'd guess different points first of all they've agreed on twelve points twelve points along which a future syrian state will be built it's it's a guideline the document itself made the rounds that geneva multiple times but ultimately it got nowhere it was finally side here in sochi and it's a road map that governs everything from syrian from syrian government itself to
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syrian sovereignty to how the military will be overhauled the other big thing that was agreed on is a constitutional reform committee to amend or rewrite the syrian constitution the interesting thing here is that seats on it will be saved for those that were unwilling and able to attend these talks this will be passed on to the u.n. so the u.n. will oversee this new committee and the u.n. special envoy to syria will personally guide this initiative there was also of course drama nobody saw it coming this morning there was no into bit but from late arrivals to cancel participation even arguments and shouting matches there's even heckling i want to express my sincere gratitude to our colleagues.
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and friends again i would like your attention. if it's long lives in russia then let me speak please. there was sides as i mentioned the. unwilling to come to these talks we're talking here about the hardcore position of the high negotiations committee that is based in saudi arabia and compromises many rebel groups they sent a delegation on the turkish pressure reportedly that came to sochi but they refused to leave the airport they stayed for about ten hours at the airport of sochi and they took offense at the various banners that were hung up in the city for these talks the turks tried to get them to come but to no avail nevertheless there were many other parties many denominations ethnicities christians you see these muslim susan shias there's certainly a lot of debates internationally turkey russia iran three big players the
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guarantees of the astronaut peace process they were all here in the western part of this for example the united states they only sent junior representatives and from what we've been told by a good level of they haven't displayed much optimism much enthusiasm for this sochi peace peace conference that is the true new year to go towards yes it's way more difficult to negotiate when it's not like minded people who sit around the table like in paris and washington but opposing sides but agreements by opposing sides are way more stable money lasting and sustainable the news achieved in an in a circle of like minded states taking decisions for the syrian people and the syrians can decide the fate of their country the other thing that organizes and the russian foreign minister wanted to make very clear is that sochi is no will turn it in and it is not a competitor to the geneva process the geneva process will continue under the
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auspices of the u.n. controlled by the u.n. and overseen by the u.n. and the u.n. security council the u.n. special envoy to syria he was. here as an observer seeing what was happening seeing the discussions. there were discussions in the room today and you're proving it. is normal in a democratic environment so we've gone to the normal we now have the text we have the theory we have the documents that have been signed by everyone what we're means to be seen is whether they'll be put into practice you know whether they'll be enforced and what will come of this. staying with syria where one person has died and two have been injured following a bomb attack on a turkish military convoy in it live that's according to the turkish army two of the victims were civilians including the person who died the attack was carried out by kurdish militants the convoy was on its way to live to assist in the creation of the deescalation zone. or meanwhile an iraqi kurdish television channel has film
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some of the damage in the kurdish enclave of affray and in syria africa has been under attack by turkish forces for over a week the video shows the aftermath of shelling as well as civilian casualties. now the u.s. inspector general for afghanistan says the pentagon told it to keep quiet about how much of the country is controlled by the government and how much by the taliban and other insurgent groups however the spokesman for the resolute support mission in afghanistan says the data isn't classified and there was no intent to conceal it hugh says human error is to blame for the misunderstanding well here's what the inspector general's office said in its report. this development is troubling for a number of reasons most least of which is that this is the first time signal has been specifically instructed not to release information marked unclassified to the
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american taxpayer the instructions are coming from the pentagon and they are given to the special inspector for general afghan reconstruction and from what we understand they've instructed him not to give out certain pertinent information especially about casualties among afghan forces but one of the key things that they've told him to leave out of his reports is the balance of power on the ground he's essentially not being permitted to reveal what territory is controlled by the taliban and what territory is controlled by the afghan government what territory is controlled by the i still forces and that's key information if you want to understand what progress is being made and how the war is really going now at this point the usa has been in afghanistan for almost two decades it's had its forces on the ground there have been air strikes and such and we actually have kind of an admission from secretary of defense james mattis that not a lot has been achieved during that time this is what he said during understand the
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urgency to understand it's my responsibility we are not winning in afghanistan right now and we will correct this now at this point there has been a little bit of a change in strategy in afghanistan the usa is escalating its airstrikes and bombing of afghanistan at this point four thousand three hundred bombs were actually dropped in the year of twenty seventeen that's more bombs that were dropped in two thousand and fifteen and twenty sixteen combined however it hasn't really had the effect of changing things on the ground in fact the i still forces and the taliban forces have actually increased the number of attacks that they've carried out let's take a look. at the. now
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at this point the usa is sending mixed messages about the possibility of negotiations with the taliban we heard in october rex tillerson the u.s. secretary of state say that the usa was not willing to negotiate with the taliban entirely but that it was willing to negotiate with what he called moderate voices among the taliban now we've heard from donald trump that there will be no negotiations with the taliban no talking to the taliban whatsoever there's no talking to the taliban we don't want to talk to the taliban and we're going to finish what we have to finish what nobody else has been able to finish we're going
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to be able to do it now we've heard a response from the taliban essentially mocking the united states and saying that if the usa wants to find them it knows where their office is located in the city of doha at this point we are not hearing moves from either side the taliban or the united states about resuming negotiations so at the moment it appears that the violence and chaos in afghanistan is going to continue. the middle east expert on the risks believes the latest move by the pentagon is tantamount to an admission of failure in afghanistan. siegmund some horrific attacks launched by the taliban and by isis which have now begun to talk accountable the afghani capital previously we saw that they know there were attacks by these extremist groups but they won't focus so much from kabul kabul was considered to be relatively secure what we've seen now is that even the capital is no longer so.
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