tv Boom Bust RT May 26, 2018 3:30am-4:00am EDT
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here it was trying to look into twenty fifteen this is my schedule so far. the n.y.p.d. has asked for the training it's expected in pittsburgh this year. but is this a solution. just over. the city of baltimore started training its police officers against racial prejudice last year despite that young afro american died in april this year players or demonstrations for the protection of black people in the riots that shake the city images that suddenly reminds america of its past. a task that continues to haunt the country. in the southeast of the united states three hours from atlanta america has a meeting with its own history on this former land of slavery blacks did not have
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the same rights as whites. fifty years ago the police were beating up blacks here. fifty years ago young african-americans would not have had the right to walk on this bridge. the march that changed the destiny of the black community is coming very to today the fight for black freedom to fight against racism to the right to vote like white people that. little bad boy all right all right first of all. on sunday march seventh one thousand nine hundred sixty five on a bridge in selma six hundred african americans demonstrated peacefully to demand their right to vote. the state governor ordered the police to charge the activists . over fifty people were taken to hospital. the event became a symbol. here fifty years later the president the protesters are waiting for is
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black history acknowledgement has witnessed. in his speech barack obama makes an analogy between the come immigration and the recent events in the country. he admits that there is still a lot to be done. of course the more common mistake is to suggest that. ferguson is an isolated incident. that racism is better. than the work that drew men and women to selma is now complete. we don't need the ferguson report to know that's not true. why does need to open our minds and our ears and our hearts to know that this nation's racial history still can assist long shadow upon us. on the bridge in selma many share the same feeling many still have the impression of living in a racist country. black people are popular anywhere not in america not in france on any ice this is a little different because we were former slaves so that mentality is still there
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even though we're not currently slaves we can still be viewed as slaves sometimes. and this white has a slogan black people i can breeze the last words of every gonna strangled by the n.y.p.d. . my god. why did you well this shot today because we can't breathe either way because for black. berry gone his mother was also they. had to get up here to feed you write a business and are right. this is a commemoration not a celebration and now we have to go forward with this we shouldn't stop until everybody gets justice you know justice in this city justice in every city you know because what happened on this bridge is similar to what happened to my son you know
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they had nobody guards for our wives and. kids and we didn't get jessie ship but we're still pushing on with was still on just like we're pushing on you know we don't wish to hurt. erik on his mother will continue to fight in order to sentence the policeman who killed her son it will not be easy to hand and for all those in selma today walking on this bridge is a way to continue the fight for justice and equality the fight that is unfortunate . necessary. the long litany of blunders and police abuse proves it the united states has still very far from having solved the issue with racism.
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the and. that is i was not happy about the. present the students all. hate. being that doesn't. it just tell you the other side of the knock on them and . by then i got a session on the nod that a. by then is a shift on. all our stuff and that's ok not inside and most is going on want. certainly not so it.
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don't you know so it was revealed to the pope multiple injuries among current america so for them to keep sophie hold most of the work but shows your your mercy on the phone to the bomb if you can perfectly possible sort of see so you're welcome to book in a moral sense of what month. hanumant out of nothing but i have hunted left off allowed me to see it how are they somethin that is a walk. down the mall not something outside of. the housing market and that's a heartless look ma says that's what i found maybe i made it up that the poor that .
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you never know what's around the corner never know was in the. excitement it's that moment where the adrenalin rush comes from. your knees and. by definition an extreme school to support. the violence is a pov and it's almost a schizophrenia. where you can do all these things and behave badly. they're going to befall a whole disqualified all. the more so full of the last. punishment and infirmed their role. in the thought. i would rather where no i figure out i really did a poll that i now want to get. the meaning in these music at least if you don't involve these constantly evolving.
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fifty years ago breaking in with into a concert gun as a sleeping pill does this is what i mean because octets does what he said to the side effects were terrible but not on no. induction entre board. you're not. across europe victims are starting legal battles demanding at least some compensation in something two ways first will the physical damage itself as well that the concert mind that the people who actually perpetrated this crime has never been pulled the justice and there's been a couple. funny enough when in fact nobody from the right to me so no it's not me let me.
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tell. you not to let me know coming from. corn i got up on their feet or not known. for sure but i doubt it's going to. you know. the headlines another day another diplomatic one a. u.s. president now says the historic summit with north korea's kim jong un might be back on after all by pulling out shortly after pyongyang raised its nuclear sites. and now everything is being turned into a massive cloud of dust marty was there to witness how north korea made good on that pledge to the u.s. . and the world so red hot topics in iran north korea and u.s.
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sanctions are discussed onstage by vladimir putin and many micron and other world leaders at the st petersburg international economic forum. and israel's supreme court a green light for the continued use of lethal military force against unarmed palestinians in the gaza strip. and read all those stories. on our website to back with headlines again and. have yeah had an up day here with that cable t.v. bill cut the cord we'll tell you where to find free t.v. on this week's show but first congress passes the controversial right to try bill
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is this the answer to the prayers of those terminally ill i'm holland cook in washington your watching our team america. in his state of the union address president trump said people who are terminally ill should not have to go from country to country to seek a cure i want to give them a chance right here at home it's time for congress to give these wonderful incredible americans the right to try this week congress sent the president what he asked for a law that lets terminally ill patients use medication that has completed preliminary f.d.a. testing and a small scale clinical trial while the drug undergoes further trials speaker paul ryan. because of this law terminally ill patients will be able to get access
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to experimental treatments and therapies to have a chance for a longer life this is families those who have been really hurting this gives them something that they have not been able to get more time and more hope. joining us from atlanta is dr elaina george who beyond her own practice is a member of the national physicians council on health care policy and she is a popular speaker and widely published analyst specializing in health care consumer driven solutions dr thank you for joining us. thank you it's a pleasure to be with you do you concur with speaker ryan's optimism for right to try. actually i do i think this is a wonderful day for patients who have terminal illnesses they're now going to get an opportunity to have a chance and i think that's wonderful you have called the end of the affordable care act mandate the beginning of health care consumerism marketplace in which
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consumers can choose from low cost plans for catastrophic coverage and more expensive more comprehensive plans do we risk a right to try caste system in which leading edge treatments are available to the haves but not the have nots. actually i see it the opposite way the people who have the terminal illnesses are the ones who actually can benefit everybody these are the people who are willing to to try something that not available willing to put their bodies on the line and if they work that treatment option will be available to everybody else so it actually is fast tracks in an interesting way the ability and the availability of new new medications and new treatment options as i understand right to try it protects drug makers from the consequences of adverse results do i have that right and as a consumer advocate does consumers having less legal recourse concern you. not
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in this case i think the people who go into it go into it with with eyes wide open and there they sign their approval or their consent to actually enter a trial and i think that's a different mentality as opposed to people not knowing what's going on and having the inability to know the bottom line it's a completely different system i think here it's actually is pretty open this federal law about to take effect follows thirty plus different state right to trial laws what has been. there have been the breakthroughs the headlines the successes and failures with this being done on the state level. well if it's from a state level the people it benefits those who live in the state i'm not sure if this actually will make it more prevalent that people know that it exists i'm not sure most people even if they have a state that has
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a right to try necessarily know that they have that option and then on federal level it allows that that information to be more out there and for people to know that they actually have choices and really health care really should be about choice and not about top down but from the patient centered aspect of it and patients need information so they can make an informed choice whether that means they have a catastrophic illness and they need there's there's options for them to enter trial or not i mean i think it's all about information when then candidate trump talked about terminally ill or otherwise desperate people having to travel to other countries he referred to what's been called medical tourism as a doctor are you concerned about the quality control elsewhere and newly.
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