tv Watching the Hawks RT May 2, 2018 12:30pm-1:01pm EDT
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the legal limit is five parts per million five. so with our daily diet infected with weed killer you know i think it's time to add another big spoonful of watching the hawks. what would. it look like real that this would. actually lead to the bottom. like you know that i got. this. week so. we're in the middle of the what's in the hearts i am i robot for and i'm top of the well if you just say leave killer i know that you know ate so have you about this last week of your butt at the grocery store to never going to.
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subsist on hope dreams unicorns now that looks good but you know nobody's really. i'm sure you are in the rainbow is that i live on also probably full of. fans and i mean it's just have to that's the thing it's like when you think about that if it's on everything and there are many many many many many and growing number of countries and governments around the world legitimate governments that are saying we don't want this on our food we it's not allowed here and they're banning at all so i have to wonder they didn't do that just for the heck of it yeah i know they did and you know you're right this is better used for a long time not quite glyphosate as a chemical has been used for over forty years in the production of food in fact and you're also right the international agency for research on cancer the classified life was safe as a probable human carcinogen all the way back in two thousand and fifteen still using it today now the f.d.a. is charged with annually testing these blood samples as i mentioned earlier for
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pesticide residues to monitor to make sure that like you know in. austral farmers or whoever isn't using an overabundance of illegal amount of them but. the agencies only recently started testing for gliders glad to see you only restock them or yes well we one of the things you look at is you follow the money you have these situations and you ask why are they doing this because they really believe that it's the best product on the market and that it is necessary in order to keep our food supply together and truthfully that's not it because if that was true their lobbying efforts would be more toward that it would be more toward making this available to more people who would be making the information that it's in their food less available so if it's a good stout compound that. monsanto total lobbying expense before in two thousand and seventeen was over four point three million dollars that's a big number and twenty eighteen alone there already over a million dollars so far already yeah they haven't even had all summer yet so yeah
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and i mean this is something we keep seeing where there's you know every time there's a law going on about having to label things having to make sure that things are being labeled appropriately i mean this country we have truth in advertising and it's a lot but somehow if you have enough millions to hand to capitol hill you have to go ok just about poison with a smile well and we've talked about this so too is a lot of the problems too as it's always like backwards it's not tested before it goes on. it may have injured a bunch of people and what's really interesting is that f.d.a. chemist richard thompson i mentioned earlier testing the stuff you brought from home now is the toxin of life you say was made as he was validating his analytical methods which means that those residues that he found like everything from his cereal to all this except broccoli. they'll probably more than likely not actually be included in the final report that the f.d.a. eventually submitted which could be i think the end of this your next that's incredible the guardian reports when confronted an f.b.i.
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spokesman said only that the f.d.a. had not found. and any illegal levels in corn soy milk or eggs before commodities it considers part of its life was saved special assignment however it did not address the unofficial findings revealed in the emails you know the problem is that you see this happen all the time where you get people that you know the revolving door of congress where people know they've got a real good job waiting for them in the private sector maybe with or they're coming from so residents are assigned to the cabinet positions where they oversee our food and farming to own all those things in court that don't look the other way. and the thing is we need to know things before we can make decisions yes and with all of the things going on in the world all these things are going to hurt our health whether it's obesity type two diabetes a lot of these things can be related to environmental causes like this and you know it's one of those things are consumers and citizens have
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a right to know what is in the food that they're buying and tracy woodruff is a professor at the university of california san francisco school of medicine had told the guardian that people care about what contaminants are in their food if there's a scientific information about these residues in the food the f.d.a. should release it it helps people make informed decisions taxpayer paid for the government to do this work they should get to see the information that's true we we've paid the money. and now we're sitting here holding the bag and they're not telling us what's in our food i want to refund from the f.d.a. if they're just going to keep letting then fine if there's any agency then why bother having it turn it into private organizations if we could just have them suing everybody i think of this figured out a problem. and that's all there is so the problems here. and all of this weird sort of zooms and finding this out it's very depressing very very depressing hearing about all this it makes me feel really really lonely for a little. well emotional isolation more commonly known as loneliness has been
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proven by vigorous research to have negative health outcomes linked to linked to loneliness which include high blood pressure cardiovascular disease disability cognitive decline and depression and a new survey of over twenty thousand adults aged eighteen and over by health insurance provider cigna found that those most at risk of being negatively impacted by loneliness are younger than previously believed the participants completed the u.c.l.a. loneliness scale a twenty point questionnaire that assesses subjective feelings of loneliness and sites of social isolation the survey revealed that generations each adults aged eighteen to twenty two and the lineal adults age twenty three to thirty seven are lonelier and claim to be in worse health than or older generations it also showed that social media use alone is not a predictor of loneliness as many have thought that students have higher loneliness scores then a retiring and most of all that there was no major difference between men and women
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and no major difference between races when it came to average loneliness scores a mere fifty three percent of participants said that they have meaningful in person social interaction such as having an extended conversation with a friend or spending quality time with a family on a daily basis and if you're thinking this is all just fear mongering and that people have always felt like this well you'd be wrong the percentage of americans who reported. feeling lonely was around fifteen percent in the one nine hundred seventy s. and one nine hundred eighty s. and as many as a call by many in the medical profession loneliness is a modern day epidemic so how can over three hundred million people in the united states on this planet the seven billion be so isolated from each other or at the very least feel like they are that's a great question and i think it's one of those topics it's easy to overlook mental health and that feeling of isolation you know you don't you wouldn't have nearly as many shootings and things like that i believe that people were having you know
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we're dealing with the mental issues that we're dealing with them today's day and age and loneliness is a major factor of someone's feeling alone and isolated they are far more liable to kind of move into hate and move into blame and move into those kind of things than if they have like a really great you know wonderful life you know well you know a lot of friendships and not even with a lot of people but just deep but even if it's just one or two points there's a deep connection or deep connection with a family that does play a role especially our physical and mental health as you're as you were point out so that was interesting about the u.c.l.a. questionnaire is you know we have a thing where you. go this is a mental acuity at the present and do as well as you but i will say i did i did just above average really which is not good about being as you know i took at my got a forty three ok so i'm considered high i'm lonely but i have you know you out there so i feel less alone but look you know you're not alone in feeling lonely brightly when you break down the numbers with forty six percent felt alone either sometimes
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or always and this forty seven percent felt left out forty three percent felt that their relationships were not meaningful and forty three percent felt isolated from others and that's the biggest thing is that everyone would like i think the media reaction is to say oh well social media we're connected with the world clearly is not actually connecting us that's the national got reaction and they were they were saying in the study is that how much how little or how much. someone use social media had no impact on whether or not they were lonely and it really was like people were counting actual real world and interactions and that it's you know it's between subject of an object of loneliness there's there's a lot in there and one of those things when they talk about this a being well it's a mental disorder it's this it doesn't really count as a health problem but here's what happens what they found is in twenty seventeen they've done a study that was published in the proceedings of the national academy of sciences and what they found is that people that were suffering from loneliness have white blood cells is very interesting so they have white blood cells that were observed
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to be more active in a way that increases inflammation in the bodies so inflammation of the body is response natural sponsor we get a if you get a wound if you get an infection your body reacts to that swelling and inflammation but the body isn't meant to be inflamed all the time so in a lonely person their immune system is so overworked that it leads to higher incidences of things like cancer neurodegenerative diseases heart disease is it literally changes your blood when you're you're constantly in a state of i hurt so i need my body feels like it needs to heal itself and you know i look that's one of those important things i mean improve storks society you don't you go back and look at those you know the worst thing that could happen to somebody as good as roll out of the group or to get out of the tribe or whatever. on a prehistoric level that's a death sentence so you know yeah. that level anymore but that doesn't mean that
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feeling of isolation also can't be a death cert no it can't be and that's the thing that we don't think about is that taking yourself whether it's you know we sort of break up into tribes everybody has to have their tribe they have to have their place where they belong so they can tell everybody else that i belong in this group. but then there's all which people are left out when there isn't this perfect tribe as we all become more individualistic i guess so thank you political parties thank you know right great job guys you really made it easy for all of us but a twenty year old advertising executive in the u.k. a couple years about an hour ago i described loneliness the millennial world and for weight dating and for women saying when we're all cohabitate in but not necessarily romantically inclined it's possible to feel deeply lonely even when your house is full of people and you're going out all the time shagging people you don't love can make you feel lonely dating apps or bleak admitting you're lonely as a single woman is x. is especially noxious nobody wants to come across like a desperate warty old maid so we pretend we're not alone laughs i say tired maybe i
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like i have made it i was only sometimes i don't like the creepy way but we have to just admit that we need people we can only do it a lot when we've got a star reach you know you want to change the world you got to be inclusive not exclusive art as we go to break court watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered of facebook and twitter and see our poll shows that are c dot com coming up we go back into the arms of the octopus as we present the second half of the johnstone's interview with author charlie robinson on his book the octopus of global control stay tuned to watch the whole.
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what holds us institutionally to. put themselves on the law is. to get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president of israel or somehow want to be brits. it's a right to be for us this is what before us three a boy can't be good that. interested always in the water there's a book called. first sit.
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thank you thank you. thank you. thank you. thank. you no single term has defined the post twenty sixteen political era as much as fake news is the rallying cry of republicans against the radical left wing no good mainstream media and the go to defense of c.n.n. viewers against the burn it all down cynicism of conspiracy theory proponents but
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behind the fake news and the fake news accusations what are media giants really trying to hide as leaks and reports reveal unprecedented collusion between powerful institutions like governments big banks and the media shong stones that down with charlie robinson author of the octopus of global control to discuss what the media's agenda of a b. and who stands to benefit. when you speak at the point if you talk about the plan as far as you know you say it's rigged and there's a control mechanism but what is the plan i mean if there's a certain you say there's a six this circularity to history and we basically a lot of the challenges a problem for facing now resonate with the one nine hundred twenty s. and the mayor of new york's referring to the octopus of control back then so what is the goal as far as how you understand the pattern. yeah the goal is control obviously they want to take they want to put us in a state of fear so that we give up our rights to them it's the galeon dialectic you know that the old problem reaction solution they they have
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a solution they want to impose they know it is unpopular they can't get it they can't pass it right now so they create a problem then they offer the then they wait for the reaction of the public which is to freak out and say please please help us government please help us and then they offered a solution that they wanted to offer along all along and now you're begging for it instead of protesting against it so. then their goal is to is to take away our rights to. take us back to serfdom basically and if you think that sounds crazy just look at the disparity of the wealth in the united states how it's so concentrated the top one percent you can say that it's not a feudal system well that we would be heading back to that but the numbers prove otherwise that when there are. things have changed drastically in the last fifty years and not for the better i mean people that have full time jobs at was a wal-mart and wal-mart hands out paper work for them when they get hired showing
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them how to go file for benefits from the government because they don't pay them enough so we're living in a feudal society right now. yeah absolutely and in terms of how that's maintained we know that the media obviously plays a large part in the mechanism how do you assess this whole modern take on fake news i mean i'm personally i always tell people the news is always been fake it's just that we're using that word because trump has used it and now there's a certain awareness and it's not just because you know r.t. and other networks exist that fake there is fake news it's like you know the news was always fake they're trying to brand certain people as fake news and there obviously are stories that are put out through certain sites that are online that are completely imaginary but as far as the the understanding that the media companies have always proliferated false narratives and untruths what is this new fake news in your mind how is that a cessation essentially creating a craft in the paradigms that we're operating under. well they're trying to
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marginalize people that don't that aren't following the script alternative media by labeling them fake news it's like a machiavellian. strategy project on your enemy what you are guilty of i mean the fake news is c.n.n. if you remember in the ninety one gulf war you've got charles jacko in the sirens going off in the scud missiles coming in and he's in this crappy studio obviously with a blue background he grabs a gas mask his buddy grabs a helmet they're running around like like maniacs and i and i was joke that if you turn the volume down on that and crank up the benny hill theme song it's a perfect match so c.n.n. does that then a nine eleven or a couple days afterwards they had the audacity to try and pass off the story that mohammed atta's passport was found intact a couple blocks away from the world trade center when it fell at the foot of an f.b.i. agent i mean the guy reading the story even couldn't believe the words are coming out of his mouth because he he followed up with if you can believe that note we
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can't believe that that's the end c.n.n. has been state news from the beginning so when don't trump calls and donald trump them but when he calls them out for being fake news he's right and the the real news the alternative. news sources you'll see what they've been on you tube has been deemed monetizing them first and now they've been flat out. giving them three strikes within the course of a week and banning the channels altogether so you've got that to me is a sign that the alternative media is doing something really important because if they weren't then they wouldn't be a target so the people are not watching c.n.n. and m s n b c and fox news anymore i think people are understanding that it's total garbage instead they're going to james corbet corporate report or x. twenty two report or you know. people likes to follow knew that are talking about real issues that don't have
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a corporate. genda and then allows them to speak freely and speak the truth about it and people are more moving to that and you can just watch the reaction by you know video companies like you tube there they're freaked out they're panicked because they're afraid that the truth is getting out and that's because it is so yeah absolutely and that's why this obviously this push to sort of. utilize google and facebook and other companies to make sure as platforms that there may be censoring certain sites they will use that word censoring but they will limit the ability for certain eyeballs to reach these other sources but as far as you mention a feudal society it does seem to me that partly there's an issue of it's not that people like education but there's a lack of time and willpower to actually deal with the issues because you're dealing with struggling to make ends meet we have a flexible economy don't have nestlé fix jobs to make enough even compared nine hundred seventy our wages are lower so we're basically trying to you know just to
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make ends meet we're living in debt you think that's partly why people are not revolting in a sense because we're just trying to get by we don't have the energy for evolution or is there also maybe a pharmaceutical drug factor involved there how do you see the landscape i see that is definitely part of it and it's understandable if you're if you're struggling to put food on the table and you don't have time to worry about what's going on in syria you've got bigger issues too to deal with and of course too but we've also been. over the course of the last forty years we've become a bit dumbed down and some of it is our own doing you know with that with eating. unhealthy food and you know watching too much t.v. and things like that but there's a chemical component to it as well i mean the pharmaceutical industry. holds itself out as a beacon of hope and health for people they are the exact opposite they are destroying people beat the pharmaceutical industry kills a quarter of
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a million people every year say in two years the pharmaceutical industry will kill more americans than died in world war two and you're not going to hear that on the news because i watch the commercials and watch mainstream me news and then wait for the commercials and fifty percent of them are pharmaceutical industry so the minute some reporter grows a conscience and decides he's going to talk about how. the dangers of vaccines the head of merkel be down in his boss's office the next morning screaming at him threatening to pull billion dollars worth of advertising so you're never going to get an honest discussion about the pharmaceutical industry on the mainstream media because they're beholden to them for advertising dollars so they created this you know there's this this model of advertising for t.v. but they forgot that it puts the advertisers in a in a position of power to control what the stories will be and a lot of people whom you know in the united states just think if it's not if they
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don't see it on the news then it didn't happen or if the news you know we're in a headline society where you read the headline that's about it we all have like you know media eighty d.c. so to dig into the story and to get into the get into the bottom of it you have to have the time to do it's like you said there's a lot of people that just aren't aren't freed up in their day to actually research tests and so so i do for them absolutely. where do you see this going what is the what is the future of the plan as you call it well i mean we're. worse we're starting to see the. push for the internet of things five g. technology all these things anything that is really bad for you will be sold to you as a benefit so there's a microchip microchip that we don't have to lose your wallet you can just have your microchip in your arm and you can scan it and and won't that be convenient and it is great that you've got. you know everything you need literally buried under your
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skin yeah it's great until they decide to turn your chip off and then you can't. then then you can't access your funds so i think that there's a there's a definite push for like the blending of technology with us and we're beginning pigs for a while and i think we're all sort of guilty of that i've got a cell phone and i'm constantly on it reading you know looking online and things like that so i'm not i'm not in a position where i'm necessarily lecturing anyone on it but i think we have to be careful because. that technology that sold to us as being a benefit for us can be turned on us and i think we're seeing that right now with the whole. social media aspect of you know russia russia rigged the election and social rift that we have to be careful of all these people that are using this social media technology to corrupt the minds of the media has been corrupting the minds of people for years and years where they care and by the way if it is it only
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took one hundred thousand dollars to swing the election sort of towards donald trump then i think everyone would be advertising on facebook for that's it's preposterous and it's but yes lives are being pushed by the media in a coordinated effort if you ever want to know if something is. not as it seems wait for the media if they're all in agreement if they're all pushing the exact same story or the same goals for war or this or that when they're all drilled on it their stuff it's all right there's something about something to it if you be wary of that you know. she came griffen dreamed of playing american football with his twin brother should kill and when his name was called as a fifth round draft pick by the seattle sea as a hazy ox in his dreams realized as his brother it signed with the team last year but she came griffin did make history for twinning like a boss he is the first one handed player to ever be drafted into the n.f.l. and before the move to the n.f.l.
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let's just talk about him he was nearly twenty sixteen american athletic conference defensive player of the year took his college team to a thirteen and i was season as captain on the field he's fast clocking in a four point three eight second forty yard dash oh and a training camp he bench press two twenty five twenty times three more than his identical twin to game griffin isn't someone to pity he has someone to admire where an ordinary person will work hard griffen worked harder not because he had sailed but because he wanted to and that. what makes sikkim grip and extraordinary for love stories like that definitely love stories like that they don't inspiration good inspiration all right that is our soul for you today remember everyone in this world will hold your love the sword so you all i love you i am tyrrel for sure and on top of the wall and keep watching those hawks out there and have a great day and night everybody.
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pummel is one of the most controversial products of odds on it's a solid vegetable fact that's very cheap. twenty seventeen production grew to sixty three million tonnes that rapid growth in international demand for cheap oil has led to the massive expansion of plantations which means the destruction of rain forests. given duties you alone more than ten million hiked as of unique rain forest has been destroyed it's a process that just keeps going. the new global economic war is unfolding in the realm of education the right to
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education as being supplanted by the right to access education loans higher education is becoming just another product that can be boys and sold but it's not just about education anymore it's also about running a business where you could. kind of. want is the place of students in this business model out of our college towns more now and running stream or higher education the new global economic wall. i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter the u.s. has over twenty trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crimes happen each day. eighty five percent of the global wealth if you want to be ultra rich eight point six percent market saw thirty percent rise last year some with four hundred to five hundred three per second per second and cornrows to twenty thousand
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present donald trump makes his first trip to the u.s. state department to swear in former cia director mike pay it was the country's new top diplomat. so they're trying to bamboozle the entire rule and birdland the president trying to say well i know enough of that it's just the u.s. traded to abandon the iran nuclear deal with prime minister benjamin netanyahu claiming that terror and lied about its weapons program and violated the landmark agreement also ahead. made a right tree however a comparison with black bloc us in this smashing windows torching cars and clashing with police over the french president's labor.
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