tv News RT May 4, 2018 1:00am-1:30am EDT
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ok and i'm relying on the i japan or to develop the car and the car rises in value that i'm driving a security bill i'm driving a car ok a lot of things change the way they're meant to be collectibles i buy collectible coins from a from a private mint that's not a a security that a a collectible item and i'm expecting value and hopefully the company's going to promote it so there's a fine line the guys in the crypto space always say that that they're talking about disruptive technology what we have here is disruptive law we have to reexamine their nature structure of law we have to we examine the nature of what these things are well but my advice for any of the folks out there is make sure you have an attorney when you're doing these things don't just rely upon what you think not that it's clear on the law but boy it could be worse if you don't have somebody advising you if gary to wall partner former see if d.c. official camera appreciate it good day serializer great thank you.
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and is nora list the giant nickel company located in the world's most northern city and russia about to take a big hit related to potential u.s. sanctions r t correspondent peter all over fills us in on the latest. we heard about banks being too big to fail now the question is being asked whether russian metals giant nickel is too big to sanction the company which is located in and takes its name from the world's most northern city three hundred twenty kilometers inside the arctic circle or they may well have too much clout in the industry for donald trump to risk putting one of the biggest metals producers around on the sanctions list as well as a major producer of nickel and platinum not else is responsible for forty percent of global palladium output crucial to the auto industry slapping sanctions on companies being able to buy from or trade with norilsk would have
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a huge knock on effect on global markets and perhaps more importantly in the united states it could have an adverse effect on pensions invested in the metal industry company bosses are confident that they will avoid any new sanctions however last month sanctions were placed on major shareholder. who owns twenty eight percent of mining operations and nobody else chief executive to me at the time in president trumps move to not push forward with any more sanctions against russia in response to moscow support for bashar al assad in the syrian government of that is left not in the company and the city has one hundred eighty thousand inhabitants depend on the metals industry feeling positive so positive in fact that not a chief operating officer said it. has announced that they will be pressing on with a multi-billion dollar investment program. and time now for
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a quick break but hang in here because when we return some of wall street confidence that other businesses around the country are hitting the road in leaving new york and other places in their rear view mirror straight after the break we're joined by hilary forward the president of broad market to talk about why and speaking of moving our key correspondent. ashley banks look at how people are moving around cities in a decidedly different fashion as we go to break here are the numbers at the closing bell split screen on the big board today and three red arrows on stocks for the second day but point and gold all making gains will be right back.
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welcome back guys a redesign a picture sharing app snap chat put an end to months of user growth snap check again knowledge in a q one earnings statement press call that there break in their stride would have consequences into the next quarter c.e.o. evan spiegel said the company still had a lot of work to do to optimize the new design but we also pointed out that the one hundred ninety million monthly users in march still top one hundred eighty seven million users at the end of the fourth quarter of twenty seventeen snap chat revenues came under expectation came in under red expectations at two hundred
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thirty one million dollars. the sprint mobile merger is resulting in some shifting of corporate chairs the c.e.o. of sprint marcello chlorate says he will shift to the executive chairman position at sprint and take a role as chief operating officer and chief executive at sprint's controlling shareholders softbank international sprint's current chief financial officer michael combs will replace clora as c.e.o. by the end of the month and t. mobile c.e.o. john legere is expected to lead the combined new company ephedra lan try trust officials allow the merger to proceed. more fallout from the political privacy controversy at facebook as the company that kicked off the frenzy cambridge and a little has filed for bankruptcy cambridge you may recall deployed personality test on facebook and the social media site says the political research and consulting firm improperly used and retained facebook profile data that had
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purchased from facebook cambridge said the controversy had driven away customers the firm reportedly had tried to woo corporate clients including wrist eighty's benson and heizer bush the fate of the firm's legacy resources the voter profiles and databases it created remains unclear cambridge analytical reportedly created with a least fifteen million dollars and financing from billionaire conservative donor robert mercer mr mercer supported president trump's candidacy and the campaign engaged cambridge analytical services. more than a thousand financial industry jobs are moving from new york to nashville tennessee alliance bernstein holdings the global investment management research firm is making the move to music city after evaluating thirty different other cities around the nation a smaller contingent of some researchers traders and wealth management professionals
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will stay in the big apple but the c.e.o.'s that were. from finance legal sales and marketing wall make the move to tennessee but the number of businesses making geographic moves in is increasing and it's not unique to new york for now we're joined for more on this we're joined by c.e.o. and the president strobe mark hillary for which hillary thank you for being here you know we knew that companies move all the time but this seems like it's increasing and it's happening for a variety of reasons explain it to us yes thank you bob great to be back again yes is this is nothing new i mean this been happening over a period of time and we saw bank leave new york went to jacksonville florida or at least expanded there and we saw the same thing with goldman sachs they expanded their operations in salt lake city and then pacific investments they did the same thing in austin texas so this is a shift from the high tech states to the lower tax states where the income tax levels are lower and where the companies can do better that simply why companies
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say how can we do better how can our people do better and they know that and so if we take a look at the the states around the nation that are losing that exodus of jobs what are those states and why are they losing them you mentioned that a key one but what are these states and why is it occurring what's happening because the kind where the gates gains the gains out when you think about even this is because quite sometime think about boeing boeing actually went down to south carolina same thing for the tax reasons the reason is the two that what they were left with in seattle were exactly you know let's see i want to but that's not all because also that was also union issues a lot of companies are moving because of the taxes and the other issue is union they're moving to non union states that was more the reason for boeing and then look at international companies when b.m.w. came to america they went to south carolina why lots of reasons including the union issues in the lower taxes so it's for taxes and the non union states ok now if
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you're a if you're already a high tech state you know we went through this. whole debate during the tax bill be end of the year where it was the northeast states in california in a lot of people say well wait those are states that are. not trump supporters and maybe republicans don't care about that i don't get too political really knows why this is oriented but it is interesting is that some of those states new york etc are losing some of some of these businesses yes and you know what happens and that's again stick to business rather than politics you know business wise branding issues they stay around a long time bart think about taxes too says that's what we used to call massachusetts where taxes juices was really from the seventy's but it's taken a long time for that image to dissipate i mean right now taxes juice is probably in the center of sort of the tax petrol income tax wise corporate tax wise but it still has that negative image for business and that's not good that's what's happening to two states like california another issue of course is real estate real
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estate taxes and you look at states a good comparison would be save a month to new hampshire vermont you have a ship pretty much the same size you have she has nearly double the population i think the mom has something like six seven hundred thousand people new hampshire has one point three four million and you know what it is people don't want to pay the taxes you know. i'm interested you know we were we're following we've reported a bunch of times and about amazon you know picking their second site second i got as you have second headquarters and supposedly they've been talking to people telling them that they are talking to people in cities that they didn't get the deal what is the status to two hundred cities they've actually let two hundred cities know why they're not in there and they let me here it down to a smaller lay have no ordinary down so small a group is kind of controversial one of the controversies is there are smaller businesses in the states that they're looking at where you think everybody wants their headquarters where the states don't a lot of people do for jobs obviously it helps the real estate rate the
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unemployment rate however small businesses kind of like the. they might affect they don't like it why because they've been paying taxes for many years and you know multi generations of say a local hardware store they've been in a state they're paying their taxes and now amazon comes in puts not a business so there is some controversy and some a dichotomy of desire i would call it really great stuff now before we go i want to go back to last time you were here we're having a conversation about forward positive steps of folks like people at starbucks the c.e.o. the c.e.o.'s and maybe the negative steps or zuckerberg at facebook right want to ask about. you know they had a rough couple weeks here i think what are we doing right what are they doing wrong you mean that earnings call yesterday but it was a woman people would say was it the wrong time of the month i just think that you know he's a phenomenal man i mean he's a above and beyond the great it's a sex and everything else and it's really not all or the car factory or even good we're going to sleep on the car factory floor but i think he's either really
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exhausted or actually now we always talk about what c.e.o. should do or not do you know these are going calls are very short term they're talking month to month they're really talking this quarter you know you can't invest in a company for three months and expect to make money every month and so far he takes a long term vision and we in the business community should all respect that so he doesn't have much tolerance for that the problem was that that lack of tolerance and the lack of patience kind of came through and he said you know that's a dumb question let's move on a little is just a brockton but i think i think in the in a long term perspective he was right but that isn't a model for c.e.o.'s to take as it certainly doesn't the admiration of the analysts so the media or the shareholders and of course the stock has tanked since then long term i think you'll be fine but in the short time it was a very are on the question of what we should see their short certainly having their troubles at tesla titles having they're going to auction issues that they're making calls and they can get them off a production line though i did like the picture that this is seared in my mind of the rockets that both came back and landed the two rockets a space that's
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a pretty for the families a brilliant man i just think it probably was. we have bad days but his prostration came through with this very short time perspective well he's taken a lot of hits here with ford which president c.e.o. founder a lot of great titles but you are so appreciative that you're a guest here that's supposed important they thank you for being with us thanks again for appreciate it. and we covered the business of bike sharing around the world but in addition to bikes and other vehicles more and more people are moving around on the other two wheeled devices and there's a big business associated with that to r.t. correspondent ashley banks explains. more and more people are ditching the traditional way of getting to work either by taking an overt bikes like this one and now motorized scooters earlier this year line by one of five companies taking part in the district seven of the docklands bike demonstration project at its
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electric scooter line called line which are available throughout the district costing one dollar to unlock and fifteen cents per minute to write how these work will you download the app to on to beat the dolphins scooter to your smartphone when finished you either push down the locking arm or tap into right on the app in the device is locked up users don't have to return the scooters to docking bays they can leave them on the sidewalk that way other riders can use them scooters are two hundred fifty watt motor scooters having a thirty seven mile maximum range they're very affordable and easily accessible mary caroline pruitt a marketing and communications official at line bikes says quote our goal is really to not only provide an affordable sustainable transportation option but to improve urban mobility in the future of transportation and city before line bike releases scooter whine away boxes rolled out a soft launch of scooters in the district of way bought scooters are a hit in the district way bonds will partner with other cities around the country
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these motorized scooters aren't just unique to washington d.c. but a major cities across the nation according to bike share companies more than one hundred twenty thousand riders have collectively taken more than three hundred thousand rides on their vehicles since september a lot of people are ditching the metro the bus and driving saying riding bikes and scooters are a lot more fun and convenient shortening their commute from sometimes forty five minutes to just as more and more people are using these devices across the globe businesses are looking for more affordable ways for people to get from point a to point b. and washington actually banks are. as a programming note on tomorrow's show we're going to be discussing the april. jobs report it will be come out by the bureau of labor statistics about eight thirty and we'll have all of those numbers in detail by the time the show airs and walsall have nicholas o'donovan who's going to tell us about home prices in miami where
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he's based there the home prices are going down in some of the coastal areas due to global warming all that coming up on tomorrow's show that's all the time for now thanks for watching sure to catch us on boom bust that huge boom bust at you tube you tube dot com slash boom bust archie so long for it i'll catch you next. in the heart of the swiss alps this is a place probably most secretive than the pentagon small mysterious than the cia and better god did than forty six swiss customs i hear opponents place all our all the science is controlled by them and they impose the opening times for just the opposite it is from is all plus the procedures in place of the strictest in all
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europe must to pieces by artists like pecan so and modigliani i can't boards and sold inside this warehouse that's where the report comes in it covers a deals which are naturally discreet commercially discreet step but also discreet because they concern fraud. some of those paintings are linked to dark secrets nobody knows how many of these secrets a kept inside the geneva free pool it's such a pleasure 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 thousands is it a matter of confidentiality only is it the word black suit the our business. i played for many clubs over the years so i know the game and so i god's. football isn't only about what happens on the pitch for the final school it's about the passion from the fans it's the age of the superman ija killian erroneous and
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spending student twenty million one playa. it's an experience like nothing else on here because i want to show what i think what i know about the beautiful guy migrates it will transfer. and thinks it's going to. palm oil is one of the most controversial products of all time it's a solid vegetable fat that's very cheap. twenty seventeen production grew to sixty three million times that rapid growth an international demand for cheap oil has led to the massive expansion the pommel plantations which and the destruction of the rain forest. get into these you know a lot more than ten million hiked as of unique rain forest has been destroyed and
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it's a process that just keeps going. the czech republic admits to producing the type of nerve agent used to poison a former spy and his daughter in britain despite earlier refuting russian claims that it could have been one of the countries which handled the substance. of german police raid a migrant center where a group of refugees forced officers to release an asylum seeker earlier this week. and russia's foreign minister says that if israel has evidence that iran violated the two thousand and fifteen nuclear agreement it should and they go over to the un .
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broadcast a lot of direct our cities in moscow this is our international certainly glad to have you with us and the czech president zeman has confirmed that his country hasn't been involved in producing the type of nerve agent used to poison the former russian spy sergei screwball and his daughter in the u.k. in march bill it's a small amounts of money were produced in the czech republic and we know where it will be hypocritical to pretend that such a thing never happened. the czech president saying that's not the child had previously been produced and stored in the country could be seen as a very major development to the script whole saga given that this is a point that russia have been making for a very long time saying that this nerve agent that was said to have been behind the pope poisoning of sergei and screwball and his daughter could have been produced in a number of countries including the czech republic and the us now it has to we have
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to be clear that the czech president did say that. was held in the country in a small amount and has been destroyed however this is key given that previously checked ministers had denied this possibility russian claims that the czech republic is one of the four countries most likely to manufacture the nerve agent used to poison surrogates propound his daughter holy unsubstantiated and highly speculative. the russians crossed all boundaries when they said the novacek agent could have come from the czech republic that is a lie now if you remember the u.k. was saying that it could only have been russia behind the attack or two used a recent maize term quote highly likely and this was along with the wider picture with british official saying that russia had a history of similar incidents that it had been behind that it could only have been russia to have a motive in this case as well as a handful of other accusations that had led to westminster to point to moscow and
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of course what unraveled was a major diplomatic standoff bringing ties between russia and the u.k. to a new low diplomats were expelled from a number of countries there had been boycotts by top officials of attending the world cup to be held in russia in the summer of twenty eighteen so certainly major circle major consequences for this development and of course despite the fact that we have seen a major scientific lab such as porton down being unable to pinpoint the production of the nerve agent used in the attack as having come from russia and the fact that russia all along has been saying it had nothing to do with the incident and denied that it was involved in this for paul case whatsoever it had called for a joint investigation and really saw what happened as anti russia histeria this is what the latest is that we heard from the russian foreign minister on this the government's accused russian launched a massive and see russia political and information complain without showing any
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evidence it's even didn't wait for the conclusion of the british investigation they ignored all those proposals for joint troop and legal demands to produce evidence including samples of the substance which was used. and of course curiously what we have seen is within especially the first month of this major screw up all scandal unraveling this was the major biggest story on all sorts of headlines especially of course here in britain as well as throughout the world yet recently especially following sergei script wall and his daughter hughley is conditions improving this story has kind of disappeared from the political and media limelight so we will have to see whether or not it might resurface given these latest statements from the czech republic the czech president cited a report from the country's military intelligence that said that a small amount of a noble nerve agent was previously produced tested and destroyed in the czech republic however the president said that another report by the czech counter intelligence agency identify the agent not as not which old but as
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a similar substance called to thirty we heard from chemical weapons expert james tour probably at least a dozen countries that have the capability to make these persistent nerve agents and it doesn't surprise me that the czech republic and many other countries could could do this the czech republic is very advanced in their chemical and synthetic chemistry ability and many countries have made it in the past to smart of study making nerve agents and many countries have made nerve agents if you want to study what a persistent nerve agent can be like something that that is harder to detect something that. lasts much longer than a typical nerve agent like sarin or so monor g.s. then you'd want to be making these in understanding how they work sometimes countries make it just to learn how to defend against it so yes this could have been made years ago and kept around for many years. police in southern germany have
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raided a migrant center after scores of asylum seekers forcibly prevented the deportation of a man on monday artie's peter oliver has more. well if we start on monday with the incident and kick this all off it started when police in the southwestern german town of. gartin but important book arrived at this refugee center with the intention of taking away a twenty three year old man from togo who is about to be deported now as they arrive to do that crowds of people start arriving saying he should be set free those crowds got bigger and bigger we're hearing one hundred fifty plus refugees surrounding the police in their car that was there we hear from the police that this was a particularly aggressive crowd that threats were being shouted the police officers eventually for air fearing for their safety well they released the man and then retreated now the police chiefs haven't condemned those officers they've said that
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they what they described was a really horrific situation a potentially dangerous situation that they were right to pull out there now three days later thursday we saw a major police raid take place now we're hearing as many as two hundred police were involved in this and they detained that twenty three year old along with seventeen other people but speaking to the press senior police saying that they had to move in when they did to stop this situation descending into further chaos you know i'm kind of it's for you we will not allow the creation of a law we will work against it we have clear indications that most black africans here see the police is that the story i want to fight against them we've never experienced a situation like this before that was young well as more information has come out about this throughout thursday we've seen quite angry reaction from politicians particularly at the fact that it this man was essentially on the run in free for three days and we also heard from the interior minister horse and who is typically
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a bully and in what he had to say. what happened there was a blow to the law regarding population we shouldn't let them trample on our hospitality. attacks on police officers are unexceptable in a constitutional state such conduct must have criminal consequences is clear that frustration is no excuse for crime but there are a lot of questions being asked namely well why was this able to happen in the first place how can it be stopped from happening at other refugee centers in the future and ultimately who is to take the blame for allowing this situation to escalate as rapidly as it did. a man whose wedding in yemen was hit by a saudi airstrike last month has declared the horror of what happened he lost at least twenty family members and friends and is among the survivors who have been telling their stories to r.t. . at the moment. the rocket landed and the whole world turned
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red and i felt i was turning in the many with us from now. on the. other was some victims who were in homes others were injured in the stomach head hands or licks my cousin and other relatives were injured when. i came to see the wedding i was looking at people dancing and then. i was he's in my leg the shrapnel from the road can't. we went to the wedding and suddenly during the celebration the strike came we didn't have anything then no weapons no nothing i lost a foot the same happened to my brother my other brother died because of the bombing
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we tried to flee but could not walk we had to wait until ambulances came and a dozen of the wounded are in a critical condition saudi arabia and its allies have been bombing yemen since march two thousand and fifteen supposedly to support the government against shia rebels saudis have repeatedly insisted that they do not target civilians and coalition has carried out a number of its own investigations into airstrikes that have led to mass casualties as rights groups continue to call on saudi arabia and if a conflict. russia is urging israel to back up its nuclear allegations against iran that story much more still to come this is our two international.
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