Skip to main content

tv   Politicking  RT  June 21, 2018 9:30pm-10:01pm EDT

9:30 pm
media and congressional reaction to these numbers is going to be huge the impacts the e.p.a. and the defense department is going to be extremely painful. i wonder if fear of all those deadly chemicals in our household items is the real reason behind e.p.a. chief scott pruett's reported security bills clocking in over clocking in at over four million dollars scotty boy all right let's find out by watching the hawks. want to. get the. feel that this would. be good for the bottom six. with the like you know that i got. this week. that he. exists. rather on the watching the hard sciences
9:31 pm
are relevant and that's a lot and nothing every day every single thing to show you. these these that are currently bills are while announcing they're only kind of scratching the surface they're still all the experts are saying we need to study these things deeper because like the effects they're having a lab rats and things like that. are going to be just as bad as humans we've seen these and i mean this is gross stuff and this is a thing that you can't kind of quite understand because so many other countries and places around the world even in the united states before there is this idea of studying something before you allow it to be put all over the place and it makes you wonder if the you know it's a kind of chemical as you said military bases and things like that it just makes you wonder how much they knew the people in charge and how much was done to save a dollar here and there and you know it's interesting when the when wouldn't boudreaux the anonymous kind of white house aide move the e-mail exchanges that
9:32 pm
were you know even when covered and released and they're saying like oh you know this could be really bad publicity and all this will be wrecked what about the poor person dying of like you know cancer who because of what handling and being near their son is i'm certainly not too happy about the publicity in his own life that he's dying. i mean and i think you said over death right kind of the same general of publicity as a. sheep or the death so deal with the publicity because the medical expenses are going to be huge the e.p.a. actually began to temporarily monitor public drinking water systems back in two thousand and thirteen for a peep asked and these people just compounds some of the same drinking water act the agency found that the two most common people compounds were present roughly one percent one percent of the nation's public water supplies affecting roughly one hundred different municipalities now flash forward twenty to sixteen just two years ago harvard researchers estimated that based on that on that data some six million
9:33 pm
americans got their drinking water from sources that exceeded the e.p.a. guidelines now with the stories it comes to so it all falls together now with the story today this report that was just released we suddenly realize that that's actually you know the we know. now the courteous first holds are too high and that the minimal risk levels for just or we're exposure of the two chemicals are actually to seven times lower than the threshold right will be dangerous that means even more people at risk than the six million they've already seen cry i wish i could say i'm surprised but news flash breaking news flint doesn't even plain water . and the fact that the flint water crisis can come and go so quickly and with no action either from the president from congress when when that happened it's it's sort of amazing that we live in a world that is that i mean they want even protect their own they were protecting
9:34 pm
the active military members of bases from this kind of stuff right because they're just i mean they're they're tools they're not people i mean that's a you dehumanizing fire bunch of people is hey we're going to do these things that we're going to put you on really i mean we've heard about the burn pits we've heard about p.t.s.d. and now we find out that the defense department is going to face to face is a major contamination risk. more than six hundred military sites six hundred military sites so who knows how many people are in each of those due to these chemicals being used in fire fighting foam but it seems that it's really only fire fighting from that's the kind that they're using there so congress had at least that you said reported to congress that one hundred twenty six water systems on ur near military bases were also concannon a that and that fast food the huff post reports of a warning to the paper published allow another paper published last year of the veyron mental science and technology letters journal has said that the recent
9:35 pm
testing of four hundred food and beverage containers some twenty seven fast food chains across the country identified detectable levels of flooring which scientists say is a likely indicator of p f a s or p f c's and about forty percent of the samples so . what's your food's wrapped in is what your food is made out of is poison the water you wash it down with this poison if you're a military member and you have to put out a fire point. yeah it's toxic so i would be more a little higher if you're old this is ridiculous absolutely ridiculous. less than two hundred some one percent that's how much the white population the united states has declined in the last year with deaths of white citizens outnumbered birth rates across half the country and whether it's so aside drug overdoses or diseases of old age some wonder what this could mean for the future
9:36 pm
are to america's actually banks has a story. for the first time in u.s. history more white people died than were born and twenty sixteen data shows in twenty six states whites are dying faster than they're being born between one thousand nine hundred nine and two thousand and sixteen the number of white births fell by ten point eight percent that stands at just over two million researchers suggest the reasons for this to crease. ours a great recession a drop in fertility rates because people can't afford to have children and a rise of mortality rates as most of the white population is aging and dying of natural causes while others are dying from drug overdose at. a demographic at the university of texas at san antonio and a co-author of the report says it seems that white people going under the fifty percent of the population mark might be happening a few years earlier than project at some of the states most affected by this shift are oregon california arizona new mexico florida north and south carolina
9:37 pm
pennsylvania maryland and michigan researchers are predicting by the year two thousand and forty five whites could drop well below fifty percent of the population while the white population is decreasing the census says minority populations are steadily rising and twenty seventeen the hispanic population rose to fifty eight point nine million up two point one percent from two thousand and sixteen the african-american population rose to forty seven point four million up one point two percent from last year and the asian population rose to twenty two point two million people up three point one percent from twenty six scene the study shows although birth rates are falling on the larning rate for whites they're also falling amongst other races citing there's a lack of the young people supporting baby boomers and washington actually banks r.t. . wow that was a little shocking didn't realize that there's are numbered now well it's kind of
9:38 pm
a just. the last ride kids enjoy enjoy their time at the top what we fill a ride. well we're seeing if you notice a lot of those are sort of the retirement stage yes you know you've had a lot of people it's florida arizona new mexico you have a lot of people are going to go stuff because of warmer and you have a large retiree populations and also baby boomers are getting to that. you know their kids don't have the money to put them in the best homes or subsidize health care. and with rising rates of suicide rising rates of all simers we've talked about a lack of health care i mean there's a lack of care that's why it would that's why you have all of our it's mortality rate with with a lot of baby boomers who i think you're going to see a lot more of them dying a little bit younger and you know in my attitude you know i hear a lot of people jump online at home are. going to the white raves and you know idiots who think along white racial lines that we need to be you know one race is
9:39 pm
better than the others or like you know we're as i don't have to show them how well first of all if it's a competition we've already lost why people of lost if you look at the whole world of the right you know if you don't. aren't the aren't the majority in the world and that all of that is i don't ridiculous to me what this is to me because look you also have high infant mortality rates in black women you know the things like guys like chicago to address you know so what this looks to me is like the is throw out the color aspect of this and just say we're we failing and care and anybody who's like trip and because one generation isn't having enough kids crazy that's up to the individual and their family and their life situation you can't make people have kids because you're worried that your skin the skin color of your race is disappearing that's absolutely ridiculous but i know i'm seeing people talking about you and then you start to go no that wasn't it was that was a harry potter movie where i saw that you were talking about meeting blood purity
9:40 pm
and then you're like oh no this is real life these are actual people who seriously think that you know i mean go get one of those d.n.a. tests because i'll tell you you're not going to you're not just pure lily white whatever that you think you are in even if you are who cares who cares and also you know the idea of ever having babies you know it it's a lot of pressure in a world that is under financed and overpopulated and lacking in resources where we need to be don't tell don't want. people to have more kids and then tell black women that they should thout having kids and not expect for things to go or better when you when you see stuff like that you know studies like this is where you see a lot of those like you know the dark ugly places of life you know society and human moomba sickos of the internet kind of latch on to these things and be like see see you know other one of the most important things to remember is all this comes down to care and we as a society don't care enough about our elderly no matter what color you know we have this inside and don't put you know don't put our tax dollars in the right places to
9:41 pm
take care of ourselves so we don't see declining numbers like we're seeing and in the case of baby boomers they voted for politicians for twenty thirty years that made decisions that ultimately were against their better interests and and now they're going to see that because they won't have insurance they won't you know things like you know. about preexisting conditions will come back and suddenly you'll have a whole bunch of retirees who can't and then again there goes our color lives you know this is one of those intercession areas were ok this folks this particular you know group of color but really goes across all color lines and i'm actually kind of tired of like if we all end up just like one kind of color i'm cool with that you know. can i be careful in how do you know whatever it is to me because it's absolutely ridiculous that we're still going to racial lines you know and trying to preserve one race over the other in the fact that people use studies like this to kind of make those arguments is absolutely ridiculous to well and that's the thing and this is the it's white genocide or yeah you know maybe pay attention to what
9:42 pm
genocide actually is if you know where it's been committed because there's not a lot of whites getting jabot cited throughout history so that might be a good place to start in understanding the balance of power imperialism colonialism etc etc which we'll talk about little later so you are right as we go to break apart watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics covered on facebook and twitter your poll shows. that r t dot com coming up we talk slavery and car solution the celebration juneteenth the author of speak good deeds walk ups so stay tuned watching fox. you. get a phone no i don't have what was the last time that you went on the internet no i
9:43 pm
am not used to meet these village is it safe to go. are you sure there is no music ters there they are all going to be sure to build the baby doesn't cover his that is the. one who was going to support on the phone we thought. is dead as part of that was a good deal. that was worked out of us. previously yes and no they are being false form of wearing a muslim member of the society. let. us know. when a loved one is murdered it's natural to seek the death penalty for the murder i would
9:44 pm
prefer and it means going to the death penalty just because i think that's the fair thing the right thing research shows that for every nine executions one convict respond innocent the idea that we were executing innocent people is terrifying and there's just no way that hasn't been that we hear even many of the dems families want the death penalty to be. molly the reason we have to keep the death penalty here is because that's what murder victims' families want 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 and this isn't the way. most people think to stand out in this business you need to be the first one on top of the story or the person with the loudest voice of the biggest race in truth to
9:45 pm
stand out of the news business you just need to ask the right questions and demand the right answer. questions. so how many of you know that the united states actually celebrates a second independence day every year called juneteenth and how they annually on the eighteenth of june the holiday celebrates rightfully so the end of slavery across the united states but while we celebrate the importance of juneteenth this week with jubilation and pride let us not turn a blind eye to the diabolical legacy of the slave trade here in the united states and how that bloody racist history still impacts us today because while slavery was officially abolished with the thirteenth amendment on december eighteenth and eight
9:46 pm
hundred sixty five that doesn't mean it disappeared forever in the land of the free to discuss jim talent in the modern incarnations of u.s. slavery we are joined by author and educator baltimore zone. and it was that have you on course well i just want to start off for those that are aware because look it will be august juneteenth isn't one of those holidays that you see celebrated on c.n.n. you know it's not like christmas it's not like for the joy it doesn't get celebrated across the mainstream media as much as i think it should because it's an important bible holiday but what does that holiday mean to you and what is the cultural importance of juneteenth it's very interesting because you know lincoln freed the slaves right and we fought this war and you know the north one even though it's some of the confederate states is a little place as a result but the slaves were supposed to be free you know it's one problem. a lot of places the plantation owners forgot to tell them so i think oh i think this is i
9:47 pm
think this is a little bit going to forget it because it's i think is an important holiday because you know and you could never ever truly make this country a better place if you don't know the whole entire history of it we get these bits and pieces right little kids are brought to school and they're taught oh but you know you people were slaves. and dr king marched in then you got obama this is this and this is how history looks to a lot of young black people in the schools they go to so we need to talk about their own safety talk about the truth we need to. show everyone what america really is you know if we have a want to move forward from there how does that historical stand of slavery still play at and society today because i think a lot of people don't want us in the past it's history i got it but how does the fact you know the history of slavery in the united states affect black lives every day slavery was the most important thing when talking about the foundation of
9:48 pm
america and how this country was built and you know the founders and the big business leaders and industrial people they know this you know you can produce can grow to be a super power because of free labor now when the whole world started looking at the united states say oh my god you know you get treated humans like this good luncheon and beating them and selling them and take them away from their parents and you don't know these things you guys are horrible people america said wait a second we have to figure out a way to replace slavery and this is why we have the president just a complex of a president is actually better for america than slavery because slave masters had to take a health care you know they had to feed a slave they had to make sure it was ok to work now we get in slave labor is from a cost to read it people suffer the tax dollars are flipping a bill so we pay for the food we pay for health care we pay to house them in these big corporations get to make all of money off of it that's a great point that's a really good point and speaking of imprisonment you know x. to me slavery imprisonment forever intertwined you know this week we've got the big
9:49 pm
debate you know over immigration in the imprisonment of hundreds of parents and children at the some at the southern border the tragedy is playing out before our very eyes but the harsh imprisonment of people here in the states is actually an old story you know that's something that's been happening not a. recent generations but multiple generations ago for people living here you know . when you look at that and do you think enough people see it through the lens where we too could have caught up in the current event to actually step back and say wait a minute we've been imprisoning people come into this country either they're imprisoned and then brought to this country or they're imprisoned after they got here for a long through the time when talking about the taming it was happening at the border right now i've heard so many people would jump up and say we'd like nazi germany it's like that's in germany and i'm like no this is america being america talk to the native american people about those native american boarding schools where they tried to force a simulation of how many people die because that talk about chattel slavery people
9:50 pm
who literally stolen from their country forced to work in a country that they don't understand don't speak their language don't go to people and even whatever can slaves work hard to assimulate and be able to get married to become christers they still remain of risk of being separated from their families and in talk with japanese people in the camps that you know this is what america does breaking up families written people are part. and by the dollars so you know i don't you know no i don't think. we don't even have the luxury to talk about nazi germany because when the nazi study eugenics came through i'm very. happy to. see that there is this idea that we just think like that's not us that's not my america you might want to check what america you're living. there's a lot of really bad stuff like in our genes here like you said i mean you we put people in camps less than
9:51 pm
a century ago we put people in cans the same time and just because we didn't ask people doesn't somehow make us better and now when you see what's happening you said it's it becomes about greeted business you know slavery it was about labor it was about what they needed to get to make money and now what they're saying is again that. trying to sort of like make this all make sense is that in two thousand and twelve a sociologist at san diego state university found that as many as thirty eight thousand four hundred fifty eight victims of labor trafficking violations are reported just in san diego county and potentially as many as two point four million trafficking victims just among unauthorized mexican immigrants is that not a sleigh a well it's a slave trade that is the slave trade. why is that not why is that not so obvious other people and i just sensitive i just a snowflake to think that two point four million people being trafficked over borders from the us. for essentially tax free labor you know fully if you believe
9:52 pm
in humanity. that's the difference between being some type of corporate mogul and being a person when you have proximity to people and you can see their pain and their struggles and what they go through that you can you can have empathy you can sympathize with them when you're just a person pushing at the top of the food chain you're not thinking about any one of this easy food a person like our president to make little jokes and jabs about these kids being detained because then his children he doesn't even know a person who is that going to happen to even if it's like want to his maids you know he probably doesn't know her he probably doesn't know her children these things don't matter and you know to me i'm going to say this is me representing myself i think it's pure evil i think it's pretty bad even when you look at those images and you see those children if you don't feel anything when you see that then something is seriously wrong with you here's an interesting question you know i think part of the in my opinion and i'll ask you guys is is part of the problem the
9:53 pm
fact that we are still painted a very rosy colored history of the united states in our as when we started children in high school and the legal enough through high school that we don't paint a gray enough picture of us decisions government decisions and society decisions for people to really understand that this is something that's long ongoing that we need to be fighting against vigilant vigilantly today and for much of the future everything in our lives you know growing up as a child teacher teaches you that america is the best place in the world and even encourage you to you have to go anywhere else you already made it you're already at the promised land so it's like it's part of how we all came up. you know growing up in a predominantly black space where black people were. the common knowledge was africa bad america good canada bad america good america america america so it's like there's something very normal and we have. a duty to challenge we have to fight
9:54 pm
that let me ask you this actually i have this interesting conversation we brought up earlier today with that i'm curious to hear about it you know there's a lot of people pushing back right now you know what you said you see those images gets you angry that's evil anyone doesn't see the humanity of them now here's the question if you're in a political debate with somebody and they justify that in some way do you continue talking to that person do you continue keeping that debate going or do you just simply push them away and turn your back and say i don't want to talk to this person anymore because that's an interesting conundrum that a lot of people are facing right now because the country is split politically debates don't really work for me so i try to working with people who are intellectually curious about racism intellectually curious about other countries intellectually curious about you know the way we should treat each other how we're supposed to respect women in other people's property and things like that and i feel like i'm being more productive than fussing with like if this is twenty eight team and you tell me some of the stuff is normal you know then it's like i feel like and i hate to say it like this i just don't think i have enough tongue in this
9:55 pm
world. you know maybe that i mean we mostly exhaust ourselves you know the internet making this idea that we exhaust ourselves trying to that you know they say that you have to educate me well if i'm wrong then explain it to me show me the facts send me the link there's this idea that there is this labor involved that we're supposed to constantly you know be correcting other people or trying to educate other people when you're an adult you're an adult and twenty eighteen if you don't realize putting kids fencing is wrong or that the entire argument around you know in which there is a. right there have been about are the most variable all this radio you get cable in prison and you know that if you don't realize it that's nonsense if you don't realize that this. about corporations making money in prisons and locking people up to make profits for people on the wall street that give money to politicians then you're so far behind that i don't know if you can go forward and i think it is but
9:56 pm
it's hard we all want to do it really knowing let's try this again just to have this and then remember it cost more money to actually cage these kids didn't it not cage them so if this is supposed to be about smaller government and saving money then conservatives you got it wrong again ok. all right always a pleasure have you on the walk ins author educator speaker bold proposal thank you so much for coming out today. the scary site computer generated special effects in movies has ever made the terrifying chilling and blood curdling run a source rex in the one nine hundred ninety three film drastic parka just in time for the opening of the latest installment of jurassic world it looks like dr henry woo deserves a bit of a tongue lashing for one glaring mistake in his prehistoric creation the research from a group at the university of texas at austin studies fossils of the t.-rex most specifically the hyoid bone a fragile small bone near the top of the throat that keeps the tongue in place in t. rex hyoid what they found is that they were short and some learn to those of alligators
9:57 pm
and what this means is that the t.-rex couldn't move their tongues around all that much at all so ridiculously short arms and an immovable tongue. you know maybe dr ruth was what was right and drastic park monster really is a relative term who are present card records are they do have small arms or are that is are they remember everyone in this world and i've told you about this or you're not told your love story tell you all i love you i am going to have a lot of people are watching this all day and like.
9:58 pm
that sort of fear.
9:59 pm
all across the western world the so-called melting pot is melting down immigration legal and illegal is probably the most contentious and divisive issue energizing voters in germany the government may collapse and trump has made this a signature cause can the status quo be sustained. exists is holland kentucky. the place you go story time is. a coma any city with no coal mines left. the jobs are gone all the promises. that it was a lot of these people this of a. disappearing before their eyes. i remember thinking when i was younger that if anything ever happened to the phone lines here that it would become a ghost town but i never thought in a million years i would see that and it's happening it's happening.
10:00 pm
this is our team international and our special coverage of the biggest football event of the year the world cup final match on thursday. put in a stunning performance to beat argentina leaving the south americans on the brink of. the world cup. and football followers from all over the world make a central street in moscow on official heart of the world cup with the festivities already in full swing.

35 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on