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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  March 14, 2018 3:30am-4:01am EDT

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you have to say that the cia director torturing them and running a black site. but i see. not so much i think so but on to the actual news story that's been totally ignored i mean i've seen barely a whisper of it on t.v. all day today now i would say this is incredible yeah you know and people need to know the actual history of why we do why why we have such crisis levels of lead society and a lot of it comes from the fact that we sort of kick this the lead can down the road for the last thirty forty years yes so you know lead was added to gasoline or petrol back in the one nine hundred ninety s. which was the idea was to boost engine compression and then it was also used and house paint to sort of make them to boost the performance of households so it was banned eventually in one nine hundred seventy eight but remember there's probably still pains around so any of us who were born around the late seventy's were being
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exposed to this stuff and what you're looking at these. reports are people who lived in those areas people who were in the so we band at nine hundred seventy eight the e u n one nine hundred ninety two and what they're finding is that contact with led has been linked to among other things we found in the flint process high blood pressure hardening of arteries and coronary heart disease are just one of the many. that could have led to a rise and hard to see in this country that we all said was because you're eating fat or you're not eating enough of this or you're eating the wrong kind of meat that's a girly good point and the fact is that we were for a long time as you said i mean just saturated with lead everywhere saline and everywhere and the thing about bin laden's death was that they would go into the atmosphere would have burned them come down and get into the dirt and there you see a big problem. as well according to the centers of disease can control birds and people can be exposed. to lead
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a legacy on through pain household dust food water cigarette smokes working and certainly the best real jobs childhood exposure to lead. risks basically a child getting delayed development behavior problems i.q. deficits hearing and speech problems now i wonder if you look at the different at the numbers and you look at the levels and you look at these things what they're going to find out is that connection between areas in which there wasn't lead abatement or that these things work fix so lead paint wasn't landlords weren't made to take lead paint we're talking about poor communities or more metropolitan areas where we're landlords and slum dwellers can get to get away with it how many people and in what areas were and that have higher risk of heart disease that are probably african-americans latinos who are living in areas where they were exposed to. you know why is it always seems to be the problem is country is that a lot of times it always boils down to the one percent get you know taken care of
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because they get money through clean water and they don't get pesticides they don't get carcinogen forget part of best so then all the rest of us who can afford to live in the nice neighborhoods we ended up getting a little dirt lead played you know you know lead to fill dirt playground you know it wasn't everything else and flying in our air i mean it's interesting because this test actually you know it is a test they're still going to do more studies and all that but they found that it was conducted over fourteen thousand adults and they kind of tested for lead but basically somewhere between ninety nine hundred ninety eight and one thousand nine hundred eighty eight ninety already and i didn't know before. they found that like you know people with levels of lead at least six point seven that would grams milligrams were twice as likely to die from heart disease compared with people having low levels of lead in their blood that's just yeah and what they're saying about it was when my overall cardiovascular death risk was raised by seventy percent just by being in in levels of lead exposure and researchers asked. there's
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twenty eight point seven percent of the cases of annual premature heart disease health in the u.s. could be attributed to lead so you're talking about a quarter of a million americans who die every year from oprah vendible. well you know how it is because who did you who did trump fired today who's not being fired who's going to go is going through is that it's tabloid i mean it's stuff that used to be relegated to the bottom of a bird cage and now while people and let's not forget the flint water crisis they you know over yeah there are no you know we see this look i don't know every one of the you know of no one was talking about it everyone like i think you saw the beautiful your earlier everyone wants to kind of kick the can down the road because he wasn't too expensive oh it only hurts poor communities and. what we've got to do something about. when you're searching for a company computer repair service the things you look for are timeliness convenience and quality however you might want to look and how friendly they are
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with the f.b.i. before handing over your laptop artistry chavez has more on the saga of the bureau and the. newly released documents have surfaced alleging that the f.b.i. paid best buy geek squad employees to act as informants for years documents obtained by the electronic frontier foundation after filing a freedom of information act lawsuit in two thousand and seventeen show that the f.b.i. and good squad appeared to have a process for how the bureau would investigate and prosecute people who had given their devices to the geek squad to be repaired according to the documents they gave squad would let the f.b.i. know if they found what they believed to be child pornography on a device and the f.b.i. would go to the game squad facility to assess the materials and determine if it were illegal the f.b.i. would then take the device for further investigation and the relationship dates back to at least ten years one memo released to the f f from two thousand and eight details how best buy hosted a meeting of the agency's quote cyber working group at the company's kentucky
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repair facility another released document shows that the geek squad employees were paid when they would find child pornography shown here a five hundred dollars payment by the f.b.i. to a confidential human source while best buy maint. that their employees do not search for illegal material they in virtually discover it's the e.s.f. argues that that was not the case for mark wright meyer the california doctor was charged with child pornography in possession after gigs what employees say that they discovered it on his computer the organization claims that his case the shows that they give squat employees made actual efforts to find a legal material and may have used forensic software to search his devices best buy representative told r.t. in a statement we have a moral and in more than twenty states a legal obligation to report these findings to law enforcement we share this policy with our customers in writing before we begin any repair as a company we have not sought or received training from law enforcement and how to search for child pornography our policies prohibit employees from doing anything
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other than what is necessary to solve the customer's problem the e.s.f. plans to challenge the f.b.i. in court later this year for withholding other requested documents and refusing to answer questions about whether it had similar relationships with other computer repair companies reporting in new york trinity chávez r t. y. yeah well you know years of thing to have is that like. i understand. we have to talk about this and it's not it's not that i'm o. stand up here and say that this is wrong because i'm defending people alleged or convicted child having already out of you know on how do you get this person work and i'm happy that they're facing jail time that's a good thing however we do still we cannot sacrifice our bill of rights in our constitution just to get a bad guy there just civil liberties. and that's kind of the big question right now everyone's asking is you know were they really you know world differently they
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providing a public service because they did capture these suspects who you know and they did help convict this guy goes they went to his house and found you know reams of child pornography there you know but did the method. the use crossed the line and should we be allowing businesses to kind of good and bad with the f.b.i. to go through stuff before there's even a war involved who will legally no. idea i think legally there are the gates why should actually fix things that get sent to them that would be a big one they don't have great reviews i'm just saying they might be spending a little too much time looking for something you legal to get five hundred dollars for five hundred dollar ward than actually doing their jobs there is there's a problem there because it's it's an illegal search you know there's a search and seizure issue that is is that play there but also it's your you have law enforcement essentially paying company employees retail employees to go through
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someone's cut a customer's private data looking for either legal content without a warrant that's a myth that's a fourth amendment issue and something that quite honestly from a prosecutorial standpoint i would think that district attorneys wouldn't want that were federal attorneys when want that kind of a case because it's so easy to to go in for the defense and say this was a set up they're looking for it maybe they put it on there how do we know that the computer i mean puts in reasonable doubt of the hall and court filings and testimony has revealed that they were getting paid as you said by eight employees employees had received five hundred thousand dollars payments but essentially what you're saying is these people work for the bureau it's not it's one thing and also i'm sorry but it's one thing to sit and say you know it's our duty and it's our legal duty well then you don't need the five hundred bucks to yes you're exactly free you know it's enough to pay you for the other thing that really jumps out to me this is
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a give this isn't some employers who's fixin someone's computer who randomly finds this you know which is total and that is fine but if you you know the moment you give your computer over to private enterprise and they're looking through it and they see something illegal they have every right to call the police and say hey i'd . it's time for that but what happens when it's a bunch of honor but but but not when it's something outside of the purview of their job that you're paying them to do you know now like oh we're going to dig through someone's hard drive because the f.b.i. might slip us a grand you know just to see if we find something but then where is the line because then it will be well i found e-mails i found that i found it all there's a lot of things and as i always say you know oh well these people are doing something bad these people are doing something illegal well yes you could end up finding yourself doing something illegal maybe not to that extent but you could find yourself in the wrong side of the law over some pictures of your kids in a bath because some good person decides to drag you through the mud. as we go to break court watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics for
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governor perry for the twitter sphere for shows that are coming up best selling author of professor baltimore's own blackens drugs to discuss the latest on the ongoing corruption scandal to place within the baltimore police department don't want to miss this stay tuned to washington. is a. secret indeed just as the priests accused of sexually abusing children can get away with it literally i like to call this the geographic solution so what the bishop needs to do then he finds out that the priest is is a perpetrator he simply moves him to a different spot where the previous standard is not the highest ranks of the
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catholic church conceal the accused priests from the police and justice system to that end of that so that as the i intend then to include how to do this out into. the straight. guys are one for my guide to financial survival this. is a device used by professional scallywags to earn money. that's right these hedge funds are simply not accountable and we're just getting more looks good that. totally destabilize the global economy you need to protect yourself and get in for a while because you're for. the far right and britain isn't just on the march it's taking violent my daughter's action i know what you need to read that gives
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you know you know i see these organizations which will usually split in two which leads to different names i'll give you that look. a bit complex web of richard rodgers. according to court records baltimore so-called elite gun trace task force believed that any male who looked over eighteen years old carrying a backpack was suspicious they lied about being federal agents they kept b.b. guns in their cars to plant on suspects they assaulted stole from and threaten citizens all while doing so so under the protective cover of law enforcement quote
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their business model was that the people that they were robbing had no recourse those were the words of a u.s. attorney stephen shouting after a jury found two members of the task force detective daniel thomas personal and detective marcus roosevelt taylor guilty of rackets. sharing including over thirty individual cases of robbery and extortion hobbs act robbery and extortion and prepared and submitted false official incident and arrest reports among other things six additional officers hours gondo hendricks re-arm ward and even the gun trace task force supervisor sergeant wayne earle jenkins have pled guilty to some large charges over one hundred cases against individuals were dismissed already did evidence in the case and now a new corruption unit is looking into what we said dozen more officers in connection with the crimes but what happens now joining us to discuss the case and what's next for baltimore is a card when an author and speaker do you walk and well hey how you guys don't know is a pleasure do you always a pleasure thank you for coming to talk about this and i want to start by asking
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you and get into this you know one of the one of the most important aspects of this case you know really ultimately was you would be the kind of excusing of all of this you know everyone looked at the way they let it go on for so long you know why did we see that why did we see this kind of excusing going on because the victims were poor and they were black and their opinions and perspectives didn't really matter. you know so many people in baltimore city are really surprised and what's been going on in the media as far as like some of the charges you talked about some of the definition of this is this is business as usual we were we touched on as a little earlier this is like my childhood so the idea that it's happening is is i told you so much for me but at the same time it gives our country an opportunity to . challenged the police narrative that we're fed so much you know the narrative of
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the hero cop yeah well there's that idea that there is the bad there's a bad guy and a good guy and if that all makes sense it's great one of the least surprising to me things about this case is that baltimore paid almost two hundred thousand dollars in misconduct settlements over actions by just one of the police officer left i was just that was just her short just more so there was article in the sun back in two thousand and fourteen where the number was close to six million before family had sued and six million dollars as well so they took twelve million dollars this is is it money coming out of the pockets of these officers who are found guilty for these crimes this is money coming straight from the taxpayers and let me ask you something on the streets of baltimore in this neighborhood so why does her school if these personal behavior wasn't known was he known for being an abusive cop yeah people talk about it all of the time like this so many complaints the problem is
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who has access to those records right like even so bottom line has a new commissioner now but again what is his internal affairs record look like we know he was involved in three shootings of african-american men over his career right we know this but. we know that you know business as usual you know. he was scared for his life or he did what he had to do want to jump but we don't know what happened the citizens the public is not really satisfied with someone results from that and. again you always hear it is whole idea of you know was just a few bad apples in it a quote says one suppose the bunch i think chris rock said it best chris rock said chris rock said he said. some jobs you can have bad apples if you want to delta and he said all about balance a good movie have a few bad apples you thought up no battle at all and i don't think anyone would want that especially in law enforcement especially with police and i don't think
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the baltimore is the exception to the rule when it comes to situations like this i mean i remember when it was the l.a.p.d. everyone could try l.a.p.d. and rampart and all that you know the police are supposed to be the first responders they're supposed to be the heroes that's what we think of them as but between corruption cases like this and the shootings we've seen over and over from friday great of ferguson to all that where does that leave the country and its cities and communities and neighborhoods when it comes to trusting the police well as of now we have to do our job so we've got to stay on top of this stuff as people journalism people who work in media we have to talk about this we don't talk about it as soon as the spotlight goes away the story goes away you know as far as reform you know bubba my head against a wall i don't know i don't know it is system is working so well people in power are benefitting so well from this system that it's hard for me to see them stepping up and say no this is wrong we have money we have power with the people who helped
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orchestrate this so we're going to do something because the key to keep that most powerful powerful part of being an oppressive is that you don't have to listen to people because the business of the people you want to be in the press it you know right you know and i just want to add to that those is interesting i think i just saw recently that they now in baltimore just passed an ordinance or a law that says you know ok well if you serve you know for the city or if you're an elected official or whatever it may be or some capacity you have to be you have to live in the baltimore you know which blows my mind the bell. as a rule beforehand because i can't imagine a mayor not living in the city that he lives in our police cheap or something like that but how much of it i mean is that going to help at all in this situation i mean i would hope so you know if you think if you want to take salary from a place in you want to represent this place as a public service a lot of these people forget that they're public servants. you serve like that answer after you have tags for your work you work for us so you know if you want to
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draw money from a city then you should at least be a person that is living there in trying to contribute in a positive way again. the groundbreaking that this was one thousand nine hundred fifty two and you know we can say well you know i give you guys half fives were you know you could say oh my god this is amazing this is two thousand and eighteen and we're just having these conversations as if common sense doesn't exist so why is like this so rare that i have i think that's what really blows my mind starts selling common sense i have like little common sense you know because this is i don't know we don't have any winners and we don't just we're we have been drilling part of common sense we need to start drilling more for governor. but i would hope i would think that you know if you live in a city you want to see the city be you know right you know you want to see you know i mean you know the recent stories about waging a horrible and you know these guys and i believe i don't have it right in front of you i don't think any of these guys actually live in the bottom of most but most of
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the police officers don't you know that he stands for safety but these are the guys that are like taken safety away from people writing if you will if you can't live with your family in the area that you are you your job is to serve and protect and you have failed at your job as a cop but if you were introduced satisfactorily and they don't see it as a family this us against them thinking that it becomes we. until it becomes wheat that is always going to have arrived and that all second step thing is a complete garbage in the sense that especially if you're an officer you know you're breaking the law and these guys are charge of racketeering and all these other things then at that point you're no longer in office your criminal just like the people that you're supposedly so angry and mad at and go out and try to bust and beat down and all this stuff you know that they talk about the blind it doesn't exist if you're already breaking the law well let me just make this a little more horrible so last week last week then all of the names disappear from rome in case search early cave search is
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a system in place that actually. has every single last criminal in civil court case in archive so you can you can you can type and then you hershel you can read what he was charged with that you can get details on a case so all eight of the names disappear a lot of local journalists again that's why i said we have to do jobs because we started tweeting about it and writing about it and publish the stories they get the word out and then they need it we had a session to have a brief at it and he said it was a clerical error so out of thousands and thousands and thousands of cases on this archive it is database you telling me you made a mistake and delete it eight police off this is how small what's that right you know how far they come on i come on so that's why we have to know we have to do our jobs even if it's you know you said some of the things that are popular you have to screen these things because if we don't think you will allow these corrupt and crooked systems to operate and you know they're no one's going to hold them accountable and you see that corrupt and crooked systems on every level because it's you know it starts on local it goes up to federal unlike all of the absent
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a lot of the ways that these officers were sort of allowed to get away with this person along because there's this idea that the people that they're harassing and robbing from are just common criminals right except a lot of them weren't and it doesn't matter if you can be a criminal you still have a right i think that's the thing that we kind of forget if you're poor if you've committed a crime you don't have any rights i. i wish that would happen to these police officers i wish they would be stripped of everything and made to live like the people they have treated for so many or all of these. african-american people who were murdered. by police officers in this country there you know when they when the stories come up they get mentioned as if they were criminals when they actually never got their day in court you know so like again. this is like you know before as a child my friends and i we played basketball we hung around we didn't break laws when i was a little kid we just don't know and i'm talking like like ten years old and this is like around nine and ten years old when police brutality started for us this is
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when he started to target us as small children so you don't even get a chance to understand a culture where this thing isn't normal is still a normal. it's not a popular story on a local level but i'm afraid i feel like this should be more of a public story and conversation is where activists a lot of activists they're not talking about it so if you march and you force and you protest you do sit ins and sweep ins in hunger strikes foot police reform but then you have this big story what he's cops are being charged they're going to present your side only on it what is that a bow well that's one thing the one thing that we will not do was stay silent about it if you block us all that was right here in the state you so much for coming on to always a pleasure thank you. emma goldman once famously said if i can't dance i don't want to be part of your revolution well for those of you fearing a future robot revolution i hate to tell you give those robots just found themselves a dancer very present to you and the model the dancing quadrupedal robot
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created by each kid zurich's robotic systems lab in switzerland any model is unlike the dancing robots of yesteryear because he doesn't come with any preprogramed dance moves no no no when you see out of that low it's because he's reacting to the music in real time doctor and student theater frank and how funkhouser. told the verge that we wanted to have it so you could bring the robot to a disco they can figure out the music created choreography and think up to its motion apart from the fun of teaching on them all the dance the research and technology could also benefit the development of it's real time decision making and serious duties like industrial surveying and performing rescue missions but honestly i just like the idea of a robot who can dance parties will be a global revolution. all right that is our stroke you could tell you remember everyone in this world about told you a lot of sorts oh well i love the world and on top of watching those hawks that
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a great deal of. this baby and. this much eighteenth vote with your remote. for special coverage of the russian presidential election exit polls opinions real time results monitoring and much more. in the heart of the swiss alps this is a place probably more secretive than the pentagon more mysterious than the cia and better guarded than fort knox swiss customs i hear opponents place well all the site is controlled by them and they impose the opening time so i've just come up
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with this it was a dutiful missile plus the procedures in place of the strictest in all europe must to pieces by artists like picasso and modigliani i can't boards and sold inside this warehouse so that's where the report comes in it covers a deal which are naturally discreet commercially discreet stealth but also discreet secrets they concern for. from some of those paintings a link to dark secret sq nobody knows how many of these secrets a kept inside the geneva free pool it's such a position that you'll never obtain an inventory of all the works in the freeport who knows how many there are three hundred three thousand three hundred thousand it's a matter of confidentiality only is it the world's black books of the art business . well you know the cars they were kind of adopted because we were called pirates for
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so long. i mean they're in the small ball of sticks you don't harp on ships and it's. not something. the little self did big told fish already ninety percent of it daryn got any ball on the counter. to conduct fifteen scoops seventy five tons and they do it several times a day with a clean collar you get an idea on why. we have to understand we can not stay still and just. be witness of the deal for you. i'm doing this because i want the future world to future generations to have out and enjoy the ocean we have.
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to. but let.
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me. see as the secretary of state picked up the president. because they didn't see eye to eye. in the reshuffle cia director mike mayo is set to take over at the state. taking the spy agencies range will be gina he's known for her role in the cia's torture program. the british prime minister is expected to announce reprisals against russia over the poisoning of a former double agent and his daughter rejected an ultimatum to answer questions about the origin. in the program to block. the technology. in the security of the only.

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