tv Watching the Hawks RT June 21, 2018 12:30pm-1:01pm EDT
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in this entire administration not have anything to do with the human rights council i would like them to just stay away from the united nations and how this is not a perfect organization but it came out of you know stopping nazi is so and working together and the truth is all nikki haley has done the entire time this is there is grandstand about israel which if you're going to run for president eventually is probably a good idea because it makes sure the big donors are there i mean she had one reason one reason only for her to stand up there and talk about all the human rights abusers please we were you know the president was yucking up to some of those human rights abusers in saudi arabia with glowing balls and plans about all these wonderful things have going to saudi arabia women can drive cars you know it's ok they're totally their records. told you risked everything else oh yeah that would be how do you fall totally fine they can they can drive if they have a permit i've been so sure it's ok you know you know when i look at this i kind of
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part of my brain says like. i realistically when you look at not our intentions but when you look at our actual actions is the united states have a record that allows them to sit on a council pretty well. know what you are there some remember we were in on it because they want to be on the sons of iraq and obama brought us back on the floor and with the idea that we can help from the inside and we came in with. a was a lawyer who was not good enough and doesn't tell us we're amazing that's a brilliant. impersonation little more so the next and i think you go to. what's interesting though is the reaction across the board from different groups yeah. johnson. because the director at the human rights watch told the new york times that quote all this administration seems to care about when it comes to the council is defending israel and the trumpet ministrations complaint is that the council's biased and flawed they've just made it more so so that support is the only thing.
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she brings forward if the only thing she was doing was that one issue but she could have done something else and now she's going to leave so what she's doing is leaving israel according to our own logic in a lurch with no one standing up for them in the us. she says rove is so terrible to that but. you know if somebody was super excited about those that are bestest buddy you know. on twitter israel's president benjamin netanyahu said the u.s. decision to leave this prejudiced body is unequivocal statement that enough is enough israel welcomes the american announcement enough is enough is enough is enough and that's what we keep hearing but never anything nobody ever does anything wrong you can only talk about it on their terms you don't talk about this on their terms bring it out it's kind of what i mean when i look at actions like the it's like the ultimate example of like a little kid so you know it's like oh oh well you know right you know basically running away from our responsibility yes we should be sitting on the council because if you truly want to change things you have to be involved in it that is
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can't just run away because people don't want to listen to you and they want to hear your ideas it's the cheap way out it's the childish way out and that's exactly what haley and trump and the rest of them are doing when they want to like you know push away from the world table yes there's a lot wrong at the u.n. yes there's a lot wrong with some of the other countries on that you know. human rights council but you don't pull yourself out of the fight you keep moving forward you continue to fight. more and more young people are showing an infinite affinity for communicating through visual references which is why recent collaboration between archaeologists and digital linguists to create hieroglyphs you could text is so interesting but there are more than a mo g.'s i recently spoke with world renowned egyptologist ilian and pasadena california and he explained to me how looking back to the ancients and learning their language of storytelling through hieroglyphs is much easier than you might think. learning it. opens
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a lot of doors for you it's like being literature or not. it's like not being able to read and then all of a sudden all these books are right there and you learn how to read and then you can read it except the books are walls and ancient egyptian temples and once that happens if you want to lift you then go to egypt and look at these walls and everything changes because you see them in a completely to feedlots looking at pictures anymore because most people look at inch and gyptian lefse and look at them as him o.g.'s like the sun that loves their water and then there's a guy standing next to a cow right but that's not what it is it's a perfect language which i mean a perfect language. ancient egyptian kinks and all the royals. wanted one thing and one thing. to keep their memory
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alive to keep their glory alive for the rest of time. when they made up a language when they used that language of ancient egyptian paragraphs they were very strict about making sure that the language can be explained the language can be translated to anyone to all land any foreigner anyone that comes in the future they made it for you they made it for me so we can understand their glory it's very selfish and narcissist air it could be but a brilliant that's why that language is actually simpler than you think it is they didn't just write a word they would write the word with the ancient gyptian letters and then put right next to the word at what we call demonstrates. an image of that what that word is it's like baby proofed it's amateur proof you've used. you know
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chinese. a couple of words here and there if you try to go learn ancient gyptian lives it's easy in that learning chinese. food there you go study the past in order to better better understand your future as you say which is very fascinating because i mean look you know when you get into the breakdown of ira good books and you get into the study of ancient egypt as you were telling me about talking with them you said what we really know but i tend to say that you know that he was saying that only and there's so much i can't wait to show you guys all the stuff related to the people i talk to they're at it we in contact with her by the way i was lucky enough to go to. the world joe was in its final share don't worry lots of false stuff coming but one of those that are talking rummy romani was he was talking about only ten percent and we've only discovered out what we really see as ten percent of what is left of agent egypt has been discovered i mean some of that is either gone or under understand so even he said it's there if so much it's like the oceans and how important it is and i've always like looked at you when you look
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at an ancient civilization like egypt you say we don't you know like you say we've only discovered really ten percent of what you know civilization had to offer the world or for your knowledge that we could learn from them yeah that opens up all lot of interesting possibilities which is the key to getting into understanding that ancient civilization to better learn about how we maybe preserve our current civilization you know the mistakes that they made moving forward things of that nature yes and it's actually interesting is as a language as a written language as a storytelling device it's pretty it's pretty brilliant people we kind of understand once the rosetta stone came along we understand really what was going on and so you have three different kinds of hieroglyphs first less than an idea that's so hieroglyph comes to the greek adjective hieroglyph because of this cliff because it is a compound of two greek words meaning sacred and i carve a grave so sacred cravings are holy great holy words so the basic service you have
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far to graham's. that represent a specific sound so it would be like this specific thing would be more or less or whatever. any of grounds represent ideas or explain. certain that represents specific god and then if he says call it said demonstratives which are sort of hieroglyphics versions of punctuation so it'll be next to it saying this is this kind of word or this is this thing but what's most interesting is it wasn't the language of the people no no it actually truly was the language of the elites so when you when you're staring at the you know when you're reading that ira good books and you're looking at that it's actually only the most elite of egyptians could read this like royals nobles prescribes could read her books these only made up about three percent of egypt's total population at the time so they were like the top three percent rest of the ninety seven percent was you know fighting for rights i have no idea and without them here we are learning as you know we are
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taking back what was until you know something of believes that we were meant only for them and their glory and now we sort of take it back to learn and that other ninety percent and then out there is probably the stories of the ninety seven percent so we're you know we're making strides we've looked and we've taken you know we've knocked down two percent there's only one percent now that's the world back then it was three years ago progress progress but no i mean this is one of those fasting things i can't wait to see what you've got in store for us coming up with these with these specials not get out there early and they're going to be really good stuff the tip of the iceberg all right as we go to break watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered the facebook and twitter sphere full show and r t v dot com coming up sean stone talks collusion with bestselling author and speaker nomi prins of the fire and then we find out where all the psychopath is live you'll probably not be surprised to watch in the next.
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f.o.c. lady although. the iranian ayatollahs have become much more aggressive after the nuclear deal. twenty fifteen the only way to stop it is with russia and the united states work together at what i think we share in common is much more than what separates us and i believe that the united states has realized that russia has the g. two made interests in the middle east and before you know during the cold war and in it even after the cold war it was like
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the sun be the one percent. the roots to. do. with. this system is rigged talk watchers has long been a eureka like cry from activists historians and politicians courageous enough to take a long hard honest look at just what goes on behind the scenes in the world's financial and banking systems the systems that in a capitalist society control are very livelihood since the financial crisis of two thousand and eight bestselling author and speaker nomi prins is one of those people she's stared into the economic abyss that is modern capitalism and produced her new book collusion how central bankers rigged the world she sat down with watch in the
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hot zone johnstone to discuss her new book on the collision between wall street and me and i did states federal reserve take a listen. let's talk about your new book collusion. you get into the central banking system which in the united states of the federal reserve note many people would charge the federal reserve's is not only a private bank ultimately it's not really. federally controlled or even monitored because the feds never seriously been audited correct that's correct the fed itself is kind of like a corporation it has a board of governors but that's really equivalent to a board of directors. and its members are the private banks that it is supposed to regulate and the way that membership has worked since the inception of the fed from the federal reserve act of one thousand nine hundred thirteen through today is that these private banks have shares in the federal reserve in the bigger they are the more shares they have used to be reports that came out exactly as to what bank has
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how many shares and what their percentage of ownership is but those stopped in one nine hundred forty one so we just have to guess that we know that j.p. morgan chase has a larger share for example than some small local bank wherever and that's how the participation works in terms of how that relates to the government aside from the fact that it's located in the middle of washington d.c. right near the white house and all the other sort of power buildings of our government establishment they are appointed the heads of the board of the governors the chair of the fed is appointed by the president it is confirmed or rejected by congress so there is some connection from a political perspective as to that person who is appointed and whether or not they're excepted by congress there's never been an appointee that has been rejected by congress so there's a there's a political connection but there's also that banking corporate type of construction of course and so i mean considering that the dollar bills that we use the currency has federal reserve note written on it essentially it's a private it's
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a cheat it's creating the currency that our entire society is operating on the well and it's more than that they don't create the actual physical dollars that gets created within the treasury department but what they do create and what they can electronically create or i call it conjure in my book is digits basically for the private banks under their purview so the idea of a reserve is that these private banks are supposed to reserve money have emergency sort of capital with the federal reserve the certain amounts that they're supposed to have based on their size in the risk and so forth and the federal reserve basically issues no it's against that that capital and so the idea is if there's an emergency situation the fed can tap into. to its pool of reserves it's like an insurance policy for banks and sort of sorted out the reality is as we've seen in the last ten years since the financial crisis of two thousand and eight is the federal reserve hasn't just been using the bank's own reserves to help the banks it's been conjuring all this additional money out of nowhere there aren't even physical dollar bills that connect into it it's literally like tronic lee digitise
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for banks to have more money in their pocket in return for assets that they then provide the federal reserve so they get the cash they can bomb assets to the federal reserve the federal reserve now acts not just as a reserve or even a private company it's a hedge fund portfolio manager now right so basically the loophole in the constitution about congress being able to coin money so basically the treasury technically coins the money but essentially is the federal reserve that's behind the currency you're actually being. issued in a sense would basically be for the reserve dictates ok i would expand the supply of money in the economy correct that's right that expander that money supply extremely . exponentially exponentially aggressively since the financial crisis in order to be able to liquify or to keep our private banks solvent so it's really been one of the biggest subsidy programs for our private banking system since the inception of the country and what the federal reserve does by conjuring this money and yes getting around sort of old school method of physical coinage or physical
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money is that we're not trying to gauge what digitizer they can just basically do this with a flip of a switch with a tap of a of a keyboard or effectively just a computerized program to to issue money and so they do have meanings they decide the level of this money they decide that the costs are interest rate for money based on their old dual mandate of unemployment versus inflation but the reality is they stuffed a whole bunch of money into the financial system on the narrative that somehow it would be on land into the real economy it would somehow spur real productive growth and get back around to the sort of vestiges of what we need in terms of development and so forth that never really happened it really stayed within the banking system for their own per. ok so let's get into one of the real purposes of the banking banking sectors use of this money is being created by the way what the collusion of the name of your book with the clues it seems to me is strikes begins with this relationship of the private banks that basically are the shareholders of the majority hold owners of the federal reserve itself that are basically people
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beneficiaries so it's essentially like they're they're benefiting from the the increase of the court in the quantum easing effect rate of basically issuing more currency that's going from the fed into the private banks. coffers but then where does it go what are the private banks really doing with this money all this quantum easing that's been going on since two thousand and eight so one of the things they do is they buy their own stock that's been that's been the use of the last couple years that the fed is supposed to give them permission or deny them permission to major banks as to how much they can pay their shareholders and dividends how much they can buy of their own stock but what's happened is because they've had all this extra money and they haven't had any strings attached to it like you have to go and help people restructure their mortgages or you have to give a certain amount to small businesses there's no idea of sort of limitations on the money that they've been given so cheaply from the fed so they do things with it like speculate like create more derivatives like that or combine more packages of toxic assets this time around they're based on corporate loans last time around they run mortgage loans and they buy their own stock for example last year the vice
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chair of the f.t. i see the federal deposit insurance corporation that was created to back people's deposits to give them a sure you know if there's another financial crisis will still be able to get their money out thomas hoenig found that ninety nine percent of the profits of banks last year ninety nine percent that would be like all of the profits went into buying their own shares with the permission of the fed so these are the kinds of places that this money has gone at one point during the last ten years that they've been getting all this money from the fed our private banks they had increased their cash pools of about four by about four hundred percent so therefore times as much cash sitting around doing nothing not helping their customers not. helping the real economy just from the access that the fed had given them in this whole quantitative easing process and so the collusion yes is what the private banks the biggest private banks in any one country in the jurisdiction of that central bank so the u.s. intersection of the fed over the u.s. banks like j.p. morgan chase bank of america goldman sachs and in europe other banks for example
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the e.c.b. european central bank has jurisdiction over door to bank or u.b.s. the swiss bank and so forth so all of the biggest banks yes have colluded with the central banks but the central banks have also polluted with each other to keep the overall level of money available to these larger banks or larger corporations that they select in their various countries motivated by extra cash basically as opposed to using that money in any other purpose or simply not giving it to them right let's talk about the role of the central banks basically in terms of the overall relationship i mean really when we talk about the g. seven meeting sure the presidents will show up and kiss and shake hands but they're the day that does seem to be a very tremendous financial implication and sort of motivation to a lot of the deals being made there from these major companies countries but. what strikes me is that we're talking now about trade war school going on and basically a lot of we've seen that already with major sanctions on massive countries like
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russia that's ongoing iran obviously this new round of sanctions we're looking at and people talking about potential trade wars between even countries as large as the u.s. and china which are the two really global economies so what is that really mean what is the motivation behind this new drive towards trade wars that we're seeing even as far as you know brics it is concerned in the idea of. you know britain slightly isolating itself from europe and taking a step back and what does that really what is the implication for the global economy so first how do we get to that point and that implication i think that since the financial crisis when the fed went kind of crazy. firms of quantitative easing manufacturers conjure four point five trillion dollars worth of money to buy u.s. government from banks to buy toxic mortgage assets from banks it owns twenty six percent of the mortgage market because of having bought these toxic assets from banks that allows them to do all things we're just talking about throughout the world this twenty one trillion dollars of money that has been conjured by
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effectively the g seven central banks in order to give to their private banking system and to give the appearance of elevating their economy what does that also do that also allows them to potentially have outside countries to that g seven like china say look you know fed us you created a financial crisis back in two thousand and eight that crisis was created because of your recklessness your lack of regulation whatever we don't want to necessarily go through that again so one of the results of the financial crisis that was the beginning of trade wars was that china for example said you know what we need our currency to be more prevalent on the world stage than just a dollar why because we don't want to risk another financial crisis that becomes global that we get sucked into because you can't control your banks and this was exactly i mean i'm paraphrasing and it's in my book in collusion what the head of the people's bank of china and central bank in china was saying from the get go of the financial crisis so was the head of the central bank of mexico at the time gammer ortiz so was the head of the central bank of brazil at the time so there's
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all of these outside countries to the g seven that were very concerned about this policy of just infusing a sort of financial system with cheap money and as a result they started developing trade alliances with each other and one of the things for example that the u.s. stepped away from both under obama at the end of his term and then as a promise on the third day of his taking office under presidents trump term was it was the t.p. pay it was the transpacific partnership which was you know is a trade alliance between a lot of different countries including japan including china including mexico including countries that we do trade with but are now negotiating trade deals with each other. as a result of this this moving away i want to move away from from u.s. policy from the dollar is the main reserve currency. dr ryan murphy at southern methodist university in texas it's not the ryan murphy who creates the terrifying. american horror story but he didn't find something interesting but not that
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surprising in this state by state breakdown of where psychopaths actually live in the real life united states using data from a twenty thirteenth study that tried to estimate regional differences and personalities according to dr murphy's research which is awaiting peer review the district of columbia is measured to be far more psychopathic than any individual state in the country of course not all psychopaths are murderers the serial killers most of them are totally able to function in society but they do struggle with things like having a callous and conserve for the feelings of others their overconfident have short attention spans and are instance here in their speech politicians funded t.v. news personalities love ias corporate shill masters who pull all of their strings find a cozy home here in our capital. seems like the fifty states just aren't sending us their best people yeah it's so funny so funny well that it's not surprising that
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thirst for power and attention that you fly like all over the streets of washington understand i mean who wants it just like our going to talk about their own opinions and stuff like that and have people watch every day and deal why people would do that no idea that's very odd to me functioning now and how in love with yourself do you have to be to get on t.v. and talk about you know where. are the others are still theater ten from a one in the world were not told robust enough so i tell you all i love you i have a tight rope and that's out of the loyalists keep on watching those arcs never a great day about the. financial black guys i don't buy any i'm on
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a few. almost like. a celeb some of my ex in the future so crack out once guys or. when a loved one is murder it's natural to seek the death penalty for the murderer i would prefer need be to win the death penalty just because i think that's the parent make the right thing research shows that for every nine executions one convict is found innocent the idea that we were executing innocent people was terrifying there was just no way that doesn't mean that we're even many of the times nam billie's want the death penalty to be abolished the reason we have to keep the death penalty here is because that's what murder victims' families what that's going to give them peace that's going to give them justice and we come in saying. not quite you know we've been through this this isn't the way.
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for a world cup twenty eight team coverage we've signed one of the greatest goalkeepers of all but there was one more question and by the way he's going to be our coach. guys i know you are nervous he's a huge star among us and the huge amount of fresh camera you have to go meet eighty percent of the beach but probably with you and you'll solo a great game the greatest good you are the rock at the back nobody gets past you we need you to get the ball going let's go. alone. and i'm really happy for drawing down for the two thousand and three and world cup in russia meet the special one come on girl to appreciate me just to say the review theology team's latest edition may go up as we go so i need to just say look.
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this is all t. and all special coverage of the biggest football event all of the the fifo world cup. the knockout stage after eliminating parade from the tournament. the first game of the day seize australia and a vital point against them all but it wasn't without more controversy and the video assistant referee despite that fans was still in party mode. and football followers from all over the world make essential streets in moscow the unofficial fall of the world cup with the festivities in full swing.
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