tv Documentary RT March 11, 2018 1:30pm-2:01pm EDT
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i am getting private messages and you know the woman i would never safe there it will not you can you expand on that why why are they going to have a sexual way units every time we have a head to do you can reason you have acquitted people we have found only twenty five percent of the woman and the little little girls they have. they have been assault it is very said reality. tell us who the perpetrators are of that sexual violence the people in control and men. are in control and they can oblige. me while europe is having to deal with the families of ice or fighters returning from syria and iraq after the fall of the terror group there are some states like france of even unveiled plans
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to start their reintegration into schools child been ski reports now from paris on the threat posed by radicalized children they are just children born innocent into a world of brutality. but while most children are playing with dolls and because these are being taught to play with guns and knives and some have even been trained to kill. well i mean it would depend on each individual if it should be up to the kind of failure the cool would be actually trying the guns knives and how to kill people and not only that we have seen people being killed and of course that makes it some form of normality for them but she's really scared because that means when they do that will be. more like go do something very similar to the real threat to society it's impossible to know just how many children have been brainwashed by myself but they have already
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started to return home to germany belgium the netherlands meanwhile in france the authorities putting together a plan to reintegrate the returning children of john hardy the prime minister has said that sixty eight have already come back and many more are expected to follow. the programs to help these children readjust have been announced by governments across europe but is it too late to reverse the damage already done. the little children are not only victims but they're on the cusp of being forced into being perpetrators but in the video that we just saw are you see the sadism of the adults being played out through the children so there they are destroying the mental capacity for the child to
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differentiate between reality and fantasy in normal lives murder the road ahead for these children she says is difficult and while there is no guarantee that therapy they receive will be successful is hopeful if the child had a fairly good our emotional experience early the child will tend to be more resilient in coming through very severe trauma. that's one thing the other thing will be very much dependent on how well trained the therapist are governments in europe hope that by offering care and support to the children who are turned they can help them cast off the horrors they have in do it or even carried out and yet the risks still high that it might be too late to right the wrongs of children
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brainwashed and raised as i saw fighters shola deep in ski r.t. paris. and other news this week come first a u.s. president donald trump signed off on a controversial order slapping hefty tariffs on steel. imported to america today i'm defending america's national security by placing tariffs on foreign imports of steel and aluminum the american steel law minimum destry has been ravaged by aggressive foreign trade practices. it's really an assault on a country where foreign companies will have to pay a twenty five percent tariff on steel and a ten percent one of the many i'm sold on the u.s. market however it was announced to that canada mexico will actually be exempted and since then a whole host of other countries have requested a waiver to. be
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a fence we are allies we work together we cannot possibly be a threat to national security in the u.s. so we are counting on being excluded we should get exclusion there is no case for imposing tariffs on a stroll and steel exports to the united states principally to the west coast of the united states but of those states that have asked for an exemption only strayer has been granted one so far leaving allies like the e.u. guessing as to what could actually happen next brussels now says though it could impose myriad tariffs on peanut butter orange juice motorbikes and jeans originating from the u.s. ben harris queeny chairman of the conservative think tank says the e.u. has little room to wriggle. well i think what donald trump is doing is employing a tough negotiation stance so he is showing that he is willing to lay those
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terrorists down in less the european union reforms the way that it trades with the united states than the rest of the world and i think he genuinely means it the european union can goodly dismiss all of the criticisms of it as much as it wants but it very quickly finds itself on bended knee to the people it dismissed previously. now the official one hundred day countdown to the fee for world cup was launched in moscow this week r.t. has been collecting its own team of football legends to the host are special coverage of the tournament former liverpool striker stan collymore and the former manchester united goalkeeper peter schmeichel are already on board and this week r.t. announced another world class signing. for all the world cup twenty eight team coverage we've signed one of the greatest goalkeepers of all but there was one more question by the way who's going to be our coach. guys i know you are
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nervous he's a huge star among us and the huge amount of pressure you have to the center of the beach but how would you. agree. you are the rock at the back nobody gets past you we need you to get down there we have to go. alone. and i'm really happy to join that for the two thousand and thirteen world cup in russia meet the special one. needs to just read the review the r.t. team's latest edition may go up as we go. to look. where you might have heard saying come on drop the cliche but it was actually him during a press conference who called himself the special one and of course sports journalists haven't let him forget it since he's currently the boss at manchester united and he's one of the most decorated coaches of the modern game. it really
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is an incredible add on to the program to the show that we can bring someone of his stature in the knowledge that he has a football he couldn't he can come in from a coach manages perspective and actually. put a little bit of spice on a football match. i think i wish football stadiums for like this when i play that brilliant assembly and you get an idea about how the atmosphere will be and that they're all in in around the same kind of theme but they're all very different as well very in the one one looks like a u.f.o. than another one i said the stadium is such you look like a cake. i've been to all the eleven cities yet we will finish or that within the next three weeks. but what i have experience of everything has run
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smoothly and everything is really well organized so my my my advice is to to relax a little bit about the things that we see every day in the western media and then enjoy it and it isn't just the same some fans that are preparing for the world cup in sochi marines even dolphins and sea lines have marked the start of the one hundred day camp down with a small football tournament in the rain along with spectators who dressed up in the colors of different countries taking part next summer. football fever has started nashville had feed the sour anti establishment parties have made major gains in italy's general election we'll have that story just after the break.
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what politicians do something to. put themselves on the line. to get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president and three more somehow want to. get it right to be first this is what the before last three in the morning can't be good for the. interest of all those in the waters in the. first six. months.
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thank you. one of his groups and riot police clashed in the greek city of their salon a key on saturday night. mass rising from bombs that officers responded with gas and stun grenades some two thousand and a kiss mostly from the balkans had gathered for a march against nationalism throughout through the city this rule denies to the greek ultra nationalists staged protests in thessaloniki against the name macedonia being used by greece's move the neighbor during that rally and being held for. italy's general election last weekend failed to produce a clear winner with no party gaining the forty percent necessary to form a government coalition talks are expected to get underway in the next couple of
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weeks while the anti establishment five star movement garnered the largest number of votes reflecting the unpopularity of italy's current migration policy another big gain it was the right wing league party which also has an anti immigration stance france's president has commented on the italian election to admitting migration was a key factor. japan not in the world in which we live it is possible to stand by your ideals but one cannot ignore the brutality of the current context italy has undeniably suffered from the pressure it has been under for months it specially when it comes to migration and in your we cannot simply put that to one side. well more than six hundred thousand migrants from africa have crossed the mediterranean to reach italy over the past four years and see chalk and discuss the possible consequences for europe of the italian election result with a political analyst. do you think brussels is worried yes is really really worried
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because you know first of all by some honest nor even though their right wing coalition they are not so happy about the eurozone about you or your union and several times article itself when you see that you want to abolish the sanctions against russia or you want to change even their foreign policies or retaliate he wants to restart again cooperation with russia. for sure but not happy about this is really concerned about the only bridge so i can see even the united states if we were. struck for just how you see it they publish some analysis some videos about you dolly and they are really concerned about these and. in the future we can really choose to joke with the balances in europe by in the international arena. we've been watching the weekly here in r.t. don't forget we've got plenty more stories for you to do at our website at r.t. doc.
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when the make this manufacture come sentenced to the public will. when the ruling closest to protect themselves. in the final larry go round listen to the implicit. claim we can all middle of the room signals. from the real news group. sex drugs or financial survival guide. when customers go by to reduce the price. in elf well reduce and lower. that's undercutting but what's good for market is not good for the global economy. global war hawks selling you on the idea that dropping
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bombs brings police to the chicken hawks forcing you to fight the battles that will . produce offspring of tell you that what we gossip the public by file for the most important news. off after doesn't tell you on the cool enough and let's not buy their product. all the hawks that we along with all the ones. the belief that. the air .
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and. i. are. in the middle of the sixties there were thirteen million students enrolled in higher education in two thousand and fifteen there were two hundred million in less than fifteen years there are expected to be four hundred million to overachieve. who is shall not heard you hold libet you didn't mention it to her leveraging the border and. while the demand keeps growing university tuition fees skyrocket the world over the cost of education is high increasingly it's terrible for college i was born now i'm ministering i don't understand how can a school be
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a scam. in the name of so-called economic pragmatism and as a result of international competition universities are turning into a huge money making machine it's. none of my family members went universe i think i wanted to be i wanted to be got one. from shanghai to new york to berlin countries around the world reflect trying different moves. each remodelling its system in its own way but at what price and who profits from it was. at the starting point of our story which begins at the end of the ninety's. at that time you had this financial izing itself all the while expanding many intellectuals
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european university presidents and expert groups engage in a vast reflection on how to build a more complete more ambitious europe. how to strengthen its intellectual scientific and technological influence. what is the secret of the united states and its economic power. the answer lies in higher education and research. a realm that has become undeniably strategic. at the end of the twentieth century american universities prevail andrew europe is afraid afraid of finding itself on the sidelines it needs a strategy and so european gauges in
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a series of reforms to make its higher education more competitive so it can serve europe's economy its productivity its job market and its liberal project england will quickly set the tone before anyone else and to get straight to the point. after the second world war we had a system where local education authorities around the country were responsible for providing a grant to students and giving covering. that was at a time when roughly three percent of eighteen year olds went to university around twenty thousand a year. all science students will for their first two terms beta glad to again lectures on physics chemistry mathematics and biology it will also be a bottle of a science student or majored in philosophy knowledge is not a straight affair but a huge net one in one piece covering all subjects all all places.
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in the one nine hundred eighty s. and nine hundred ninety s. there was a funding crisis amongst universities lots of vice chancellors complaining that they didn't have enough money to cover the amount of students are now coming through the system so the government commissioned a report and this was called the daring report and that came up with a number of recommendations almost one hundred recommendations roughly half for the government about how it could. maintain sustain and improve higher education in the u.k. and one of the most controversial parts of that report was the introduction of was i in one thousand nine hundred seventy the british left led by its young charismatic candidate tony blair wins the elections after eighteen long years of conservative rule. at the age of forty three the head of the labor party takes charge of the country with
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a program whose foundation is to apply private sector management models to public services so as to make them more efficient more productive. higher education will be no exception. right. we need to widen access to universities get more money into universities and the best and fairest way to do it is a balance between the state and the graduate. face became reality and nine hundred ninety eight and it was a key landmark in the history of higher education in the u.k. because at that moment the principle of free education free higher education in the uteri finished. for this historic reform tony blair introduces the yearly one thousand pound tuition fee a smooth way to start five years later prompted by his second term election tony blair authorizes universities to charge tuition fees up to three thousand three
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hundred pounds yearly and tony blair. head of britain's labor party successfully passed a reform that the conservatives would never have dared bring forward. in two thousand and ten the labor party rallies the opposition the coalition made of liberal democrats and conservatives led by david cameron take charge of the country very rapidly the debate of the jewish and fees arises on the political scene again this time the government intends to alter ised up to nine thousand pounds yearly all the while reducing the portion of public funding and catered to universities this new reform violently divides both members of parliament and public opinion that have been very difficult choices to make we have opted for a such of policies that provides a strong base for university funding which makes a major contribution to reducing the deficit and introducing a significantly more progressive system of graduate paper and stuff we inherited
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and i'm proud to put forward that magic to this. very. order. there is nothing a bank that chinee benefits to the lowest income graduates that justifies doubling or tripling the debt of the vast majority of right isn't it credible that the party opposite who actually introduced the principle of graduates paying and thank you for two jewish and fee increases is able to drum up quite so much fake anger on the issues out there was any young person ask any young person in any poor communities in our country what is your prospect what is your what do you want to do many would say i want to study i want to qualify i want to go to university i want to achieve something in life. help them.
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less they are very poor or they're going to borrow money to survive to get through university they simply will not do it this decision matters so much to so many people. i'd say to the house if you don't believe in it vote against it was. to the right three hundred twenty three you know most of the last three hundred true. god. was. i. was when it was really from three thousand that it became one thousand pounds i was up to university if they wanted to introduce nine thousand pounds a maximum face or anything between six thousand and nine thousand and one
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surprisingly most university decided to set nine thousand pounds most students have now half a million students going through every year most of those will be paying a minimum nine thousand pounds a year and that's stuns. over the course of fifteen years british politicians are ruling class that enjoyed free access to education inflicted a paying system on the new generation. british students along with a european fellows now have to deal with these new rulings that's the way it is. they're young they long for a solid future that thirsty for knowledge and dream of climbing the social ladder all that has a price tag and they'd better get used to him. and that i grew up in a working class family in the south of poland the young woman could have enrolled in a university in krakow in copenhagen or even amsterdam. it would have been free in
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england and it was granted a student loan to pay for her nine thousand pounds tuition fees. i knew i was going to go abroad to study and i think well for a little while i thought it was going to be scotland but then. i think i decided it was england you know like way back and it just stuck with me and i and i came here and it was it was scary it was so scary because i was away from home i was here alone i didn't have anywhere to turn to and look at me now i study chinese of all the courses that i could have chosen i can't wait for you know what the future holds and what i'm going to do i have so many ideas but you'll see. i talked to my grandfather once and we're talking about everything else and then
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kind of started talking about university and how much money that costs and everything and i had many thoughts about ok maybe maybe i'll quit maybe i'll you know it's too much maybe it's not worth it and then i realized well how my going to pay it back but that's one of the reasons why i stayed and other reason bigger even is that i like what i do i think i'm not quite sure where that came from my need to go to university i think is because. none none of my family members went to university i think i wanted to be i wanted to be that one first person who did that and my mom really wanted me to do that as well she did encourage me strongly i don't know what i would do with her if i fail i would i would feel like i failed her and i never want to do that ever. because being here and doing
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what i do and being university is my way of paying her back problem that she's to me i think that. yeah i'm good it's my way of paying back for everything. and. will the european students be forced one day to get into debt. should education become a sellable good. must didn't become self-made finance he has to earn an education. northern european countries see things a bit differently.
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