tv Boom Bust RT June 20, 2018 3:30am-4:01am EDT
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but this could be you know very significant in later matches specially in the knockout rounds this is one of those incidents where sometimes you don't get the penalty should have done and you're complaining that cost you the tournament in previous world cups i was think that's kind of an iconic item you know we had the visit is in my mom previous thought and i think rapidly becoming the iconic item of russia twenty eighty could be the mustache if maybe it's going to be the most that's a victory the way things are going it's the chip the chance of mr nash there it is everybody wants to be the russian manager because he has the golden touch now this was a gimmick started by a late night russian t.v. host i wanted to show support for standards of chess of who we still go to see smile it happened yet. and everyone's been encouraged to go first that's a semi smile i would say. that's when he has at his very very i was probably on his wedding day i think the focus is this is good you know this is this is binding people together it's like come in the number made their way there with a everyone talks about the world cup and they have this they see that that's it.
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that's going to be a bestseller now i'm sure that that's going to be very popular you know he he is a hero at the moment for russia of course is every decision that he has made has been the right decision and every stuff to choosing his mate has paid off and has actually worked at c four for him so so far the russian manager is a hero of the russian team of course he can talk about the cherry shifa score three goals and zuba but you need someone to lead them and he has done that and when he picked the squad and people forget that he pictured really old fellows picked fellows that had retired from international football and still is working i saw they were excellent today again they they were when they you think thirty year olds and a half against mosul are some people saying the best player in the world barely got a kickback from the penalty it's pretty impressive his best player in the world i think are the only some people who say some people some people think it's a. leg so you know if you can see who or who is accidents and people are watching
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the game because he's a massive new recruit supporter and he obviously he's been watching he's actually been saying you know he's watching this with two hops which i don't understand anything off alexa huntress just won two games what's how about. i was on you can see the people are walking out from the stadium well maybe not as loud at the moment but there are bits and pieces of them chanting russia russia. celebrating this victory and last night i spoke to a lot of egyptian fans a lot of russian fans they both told me that when a loser is still going to be a massive party on the russian side it's clearly obvious that the party will be massive egyptians will see whether they will paci well they will live up to that promise and party as well but undoubtedly the atmosphere is building up already a lot of people here a lot of jubilation and the same goes for the stadium itself the level of support from the russian national team supporters was absolutely unheard of. everyone's
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happy here just absolutely unheard of in a sense that at luzhniki at the opening game five nil demolition of saudi arabia there were very loud but yet very monotonous this time there were actually songs there were actually dances in the stands and it's something along the lines of what you mentioned earlier peter that maybe this is something that the lessons that they have learned from the visiting supporters from all over the world particularly from latin america but we are expecting again a massive con of all industries of st petersburg tonight just as it happened ten years ago in two thousand and eight when russia beat the netherlands to make it to the semifinal of the euros which was also unexpected i remember those scenes very well the cities went wild particularly moscow and i'll be in the streets in st petersburg tonight to see what that would look like early on the serbian manager billy bora-bora rich joined our team and central moscow and shared his impressions of the world cup so far. hope you're enjoying the atmosphere first of all what do
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you think of this world cup so far. we have three super super on rio's i was hoping to read the book. you know it's all good to see because people enjoyed to be in how many teams did you crunch into and during the world cup five five five i thought of records that must be your noise or your records but this is very good for me i don't look for the record already with all your experience he thinks that i steamy scenes and far in this company just now. i've suffered being too much to day so they've got to say thank you talk to their either play good game speed they have everything the organisation it's related to do they play a perfect game to the earth to get sure they go first never because when a no no no no throws a normal goal the verdict this surely was about the main pressure that began to there was great to everything when you need to have your. all that happened on just
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day six of the world cup and our team will be where the action is throughout the tournament to bring you every last twist and turn. and now on to other world news the u.s. has announced its decision to withdraw from the un human rights council secretary of state mike pompei when other u.s. officials slams the body charging it with hypocrisy and shrub wants to move the ball forward from day one his call that institutions are countries who say one thing and do another and that's precisely the problem with the human rights council . as president trump said at the u.n. general assembly there's a massive source of embarrassment to the united nations that some governments with the greatest human rights records sit on the human rights council for too long to human rights council has been a protector of human rights abusers and a cesspool of political bias for a long time we've heard the trumpet ministrations speak highly critically of the
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united nations and specifically the un human rights council but now we have the dramatic move of the usa officially withdrawing from the un human rights council not being a member of this body that it's been a long critical of now we've heard from mike pompei o secretary of state and he specifically cited criticism of israel by the un human rights council as a reason for the usa withdrawing from the council's continued and well documented by skins israel is unconscionable. since its creation the council has adopted more resolutions condemning israel and against the rest of the world combined now israel has thanked the united states for their move withdrawing from the council and there have been widespread reactions from elsewhere and the secretary general would have much preferred for the united states to remain in the human rights council the un human rights architecture plays a very important role in the promotion and protection of human rights worldwide and
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now we've heard from the executive director of human rights watch mr kenneth roth he responded saying quote the trumpet administration's withdrawal is a sad reflection of its one dimensional human rights policy defending israeli abuses from criticism takes precedence above all else he went on to say other governments will have to redouble their efforts to ensure that the council addresses the world's most serious human rights concerns un human rights council has been quite critical of the united states in a few areas there has been a recent report on poverty in the united states saying that government policies by the u.s. government have not been addressing the economic rights of the population there have also been concerns widely expressed about the treatment of migrants in the united states most recently regarding the issue of the separation of families along the u.s. border from there we have heard from the president of the u.n. human rights council and he said that the u.s.
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withdrawal is a topic that should be explicitly discussed by the council we did hear from the haley the u.s. ambassador to the united nations and she said that the usa would be continuing to push an agenda of human rights around the world however they would no longer be participating in the un body. russia is among the nations continuing its support of the un human rights council according to russia's permanent mission to the un the body is the key international platform for cooperation in this here moreover moscow says it will continue its work on human rights and plans to run for a place on the council ramsey baroud author and editor of the palestine chronicle thinks the us quitting is actually a good thing since trump has been power the us has further cemented its policy of isolation that isolationism of donald trump did not just reach the council but also other international institutions and other american commitments under international law the powers and so forth and so on no i think they just
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basically decided to do what's in my opinion is a positive thing remove themselves. from the human rights council and say it's a positive thing in this is the u.s. presence in these institutions has only served to target its enemies to protect its interests. a former cia software engineer is facing charges over what has been described as the largest information leak in the agency's history prosecutors claim that during his time at the cia josh marshall to unlawfully obtain information on its intelligence gathering capabilities he then allegedly provide it to provided it to an organization that purported to publicly disseminate such information and while the indictment does not mention this organization by name the whistle blower's lawyer said the prosecution was looking for any links between him and wiki leaks you have been i believe that mr schultz who was involved in that
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leak a sport of their list a geisha in their obtained numerous search warrants for mr shouldest phone for his computers and other items in order to establish the connection between mr shelton and the weekly clique. sheltie works for the spy agency as a software engineer for sixty years as a result of this investigation he was arrested last year on child pornography charges so far he's the only suspect behind the leak of more than eight thousand classified documents named by prosecutors if convicted on multiple charges sheltie faces over one hundred years in jail he is believed to be the source for wiki leaks vault seven it's described as the largest ever publication of confidential documents on the agency all seven expose the hacking tools used by the us government and wiki leaks said its source was looking for a public debate on the controversial use of such tools patrick henningsen from twenty first century wired dot com says the case against the whistleblower is aimed at intimidating others. and so this this does send out
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a chilling message to any potential government was so blowers that you will be pursued by the government and that under the letter of national security you will have very little defense this conversation seems to be around how the u.s. press its over the cia needs to secure its hacking tools and that seems to be the main thrust of the conversation not about what why and how these tools are being deployed and for what reason and i think that's where the conversation needs to be if you look at what was revealed in vote seven one of the real revelations is is that the nature of the hacking tool in other words the cia has the ability to to hack and leave finger false fingerprints in other words make it appear that somebody else had carried out the hack and this is absolutely relevant in terms of the whole russia gate conversation meanwhile the democratic minority on the u.s. house intelligence committee claimed to expose what it calls russia's effort to sow
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discord online and to prove it they've published hundreds of tweets by our twitter account our washington correspondents america has the details. the house intel committee close its investigation into alleged russian interference back in april after failing to find any conclusive evidence linking russia to the crime but today the same committee has publicly released all of our network's twitter ads a move which appears to be an attempt to save the russia gate theory from extinction representative adam schiff released a statement explaining the decision by releasing this to its data we hope that researchers will continue their important work exposing any additional russian operatives who used similar tactics and themes and provide the american people with additional information to protect our elections and political debate in the future . the official statement also contains a hundred page document listing each and every one of our advertisers and promoted tweets from twenty sixteen all seventeen hundred of them but most of these tweets
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weren't in any way related to the election some of them even nonpolitical stories so the assumption that our networks tweets somehow influence the u.s. presidential election in trump's favor sounds pretty outlandish here are a couple of examples one final act of love indian man can't afford an ambulance so he carries dead wife home from hospital and number two a ghost photo bombs mother in the clearest ever phantom pic apparently those tweets are examples of the tactics and themes used by russian operators that managed to influence american voters and handed trump his historic election victory so we looked into how many tweets were actually election related about twenty two percent most to be even more precise hillary clinton was mentioned about one hundred times and donald trump about one hundred seventy five times and we also have tweets covering the candidates criticism of each other as should be noted that twitter approached us before the election with a multimillion dollar advertising proposal to promote our election coverage we
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rejected the proposal and after that twitter under pressure from the u.s. government banned us from advertising on its platform despite the fact that we weren't violating any of the rules so considering that we can't advertise or promote any of our tweets a logically speaking the house intel committee shouldn't be worried about influencing the outcome of the twenty eighteen election. that's a roundup of today's top headlines and today's world cup highlights but you can always head to our web site for the details on all those stories and more. they just don't commit the type of sloppy corruption in the u.k. that's what people respect the paper that the most ferocious bottlers of corruption they're the concierge of global banking corruption and they do
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in the spirit john these images if you see. the watchman's of blood from a piece from the pub. when to intimate oh is that. and there have been removed can you hear michel i hate him and i should have the most him. zenas says harlan kentucky. over all of this move the voice people were very funny very moving. a co money since he was almost no coal mines left. the jobs are gone all the coal
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miners the said. that it was alive to see these people the survivors of a world disappearing before their eyes. i remember thinking when i was younger that if anything ever happened to the coal mines here that it would become a ghost town but i never thought in the million years i would see that and it's happening it's happened. it's not a financial survival job that it was all about money laundering first to visit this fitness industry different. get this a good start well we have our three banks all set up for something and you're up to going to america something overseas or the cayman islands or do all these banks are complicit in their tough talk received a softer give mccoll it's a camera to do some serious money laundering ok let's see how we did while we've got home got a nice luxury watch for max and for stacy oh beautiful jewelry and how about.
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luxury automobile again for max you know what money laundering is highly. much kaiser of course. nineteen seventy eight. to ninety nine and i i say a better executed. i perform sixty next years in the seventy years. people that recommend the death penalty the jury the judge that they had performed the execution i think that they were. in light a different story on giving
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a definite it when i'm. the united states is the last country in the developed west to execute criminals. about fifty percent of americans are for the death penalty and fifty percent against it. our capital punishment system is flawed this is not a matter of vengeance it's a matter of just the fact that we believe serves as a turn capital punishment is tainted by racial disparity having my father's killers executed in me
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a sense of closure is it to restore society or is it an issue if you take a life should your life be taken and justice is about us as a society. one nine hundred eighty two was my first execution. i was a correctional officer. one of my main jobs were to save lives so when it came down to execution i had to transform myself into a person that would take a life. jerry givens was appointed executioner in one thousand nine hundred seventy seven when the united states reinstated the death penalty. he grew up in the housing projects of richmond virginia. and remembers one tragic night at a party. when i was a teenager i would. hold my.
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i want to. quote a young lady because. i was. told if. my thing is that if a person take the life of another person and that person's life should be taken and that's what i believe. jerry received training to operate the electric chair and later to administer lethal injections. he became chief executioner in one thousand nine hundred two. i would say my team members take pride in the work that preparations. getting this person brady plays next step in life prepare him just to see is he it's for the last time or. a last kiss of his mother sister wife or daughter. with all of human you know and this is one human that had made
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a mistake and we had to carry out the orders. outside of this team of eight jerry told no one about his work as an executioner not even his wife. we'll keep. secret and i kept it a secret from my my family. since one thousand nine hundred seventy seven other executioners across the united states have put over a thousand four hundred sixty people to death it's a punishment supposed to be reserved for the worst of the worst. but it was a gorgeous day it was a beautiful morning we met some friends in boston and. twenty three thousand runners and half a million spectators gathered for the boston marathon. karen brossard her
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husband and daughter which cheering a friend over the finish line. we were there for maybe ten or fifteen minutes all excited with the crowd watching everybody come through and the suddenly it was this incredibly loud. explosion. there were seven of us there six of us were injured. one of their friends lost both legs that. i knew that my husband was pretty badly injured. my daughter had shrapnel from her hip. and i had trapped.
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the two blasts injured over two hundred sixty people and killed three including krystal campbell. and eight year old martin richard. police pursuit two brothers in a dramatic manhunt. twenty six year old tamar alonzo meyer was killed in a shoot a. day later police captured the younger brother dzhokhar a life. cool. over the next few months karen braun in their daughter like many of the bombing victims had to undergo multiple surgeries. going to try to not let this change who i am i'm not going to let this prevent me from living
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a life that i want to live. i'm not going to be afraid. one later that summer karen traveled from a home in new hampshire to boston for star ny observer a mint at the federal court. we were all seated together and he walked out he didn't look at any of us but his hand was obviously entered and my immediate response was i hope that her i hope it's pople. not like me. and the recognition of that about me was scared because that isn't who i am. a of pled not guilty to all thirty counts seventeen punishable by death. the
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federal prosecutor asked victims if the u.s. should seek the death penalty. i don't know. i don't know. i. i don't know what justice is i got an e-mail. terrorist acts are rare much more common are the murders and other violent acts that happen every day across the united states. in philadelphia shannon schieber was finishing her first year of graduate school. she had been up studying it was early thursday morning therefore i would say it was friday morning. about two o'clock in the morning she was preparing to take a bath. the assailant who who attacked her he pried open
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her sliding door. she screamed for help as she was being attacked. the next door neighbor heard that he called nine one one. you know. what. he told me that he heard his neighbor she had screamed for help and he heard like a choking he said. the police arrived within twenty minutes they not done the door but no one answered. the next day when shannon didn't show up for a lunch date with her brother shawn he drove her apartment building. for lucy and its neighbors came down and answered the door and sean said i'm trying to reach my sister or i can't reach you. the guy just would pale they say oh my god i called
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the police last night they went running up the steps they broke open her door and she was laying naked on her bed. by the time we got voted off even though the police were swarming the radley apartment building and they let us know immediately that she had been attacked and that she had been murdered. we were beginning to face the fact that part of us had died and i mean it hit us very quickly. i just remember the prince that we'd be able to gather to get through this. that weekend they attended mass.
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when we got to the lord's prayer. say the lord's prayer out loud was a real confrontation. for your so trespasses as we prepare the future a specific instance. i had to abandon. something i had been saying. all from probably thoughtlessly thousands of times over my over or. and if anyone would have asked us well what would you want to do if you if you ever found who did this i didn't i just why be so angry i want to i'd want him dead to maybe i don't know i never had this happen it was just so painful. eight days later that she burst buried their twenty three year old daughter.
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