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tv   Documentary  RT  July 8, 2018 4:30am-5:01am EDT

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revolutionary come on don just tell me who this group is because i understand british and american special forces are helping them and the russians are saying they seem to be holding refugees also to. russia says but who is this group backed by the british taxpayer another of law i mean what do you think there's a militia betting on the guess that you get a government in london and another country comes and says well we will back these we will fight back these oh you know the commandos what separate us commandos there is a lot of part of them they work with a card i mean we have we know these people well they deny there i'll tell them they did night that they say they are the vanguard against isis although they also seem to be considered really concerned would say all of the iran. look how can they be how can they fight isis if they already called out what it would isis isis is there look at them have isis that's been there for years at the border no one touched
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isis at the border between isis has borders with the golan the occupied golan heights where the israeli army on the other side we have pictures we have video of the isis members and item members chatting for a friendly chat with the with israeli soldiers i mean how did these isis get weapons they had to pass through these kind of areas they had to pass through through these downs and that a ton of areas what so-called we do whatever commandos meaning an army and guess what all the at that of our soldiers when we were attacking when we were liberating the syrian desert from isis most of the acts on our soldiers from behind game from distinctly area meaning that they not only taking somebody's house they just but they're all collaborating with isis i mean this is a clear cut and past with the reason in denial the reason may and some some m.p. is literally in the british parliament clearly said that they want to find the white helmet guess what the white helmets basis that we found in dumanis to go to
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all the knowledge there were the same as the most that are basis they were surrounded by and most are and they were run by no slop and almost all his outside hands are in syria and their top supreme commander in thought of all right now gets the israelis ayman zawahiri he used to be the right hand of the lead and i mean really it's sickening to to repeat the to see a third of that or jihadi that orders him and now the british government and the recently is finest in these groups the various you know phony organizations and forget organizations we have documents that we have receipts that this money reached outlined because alkali that is running the the white helmets everybody knows that and so they will as i say the white helmets deny. all of that but you don't think to raise a may is. is it a case of he doesn't understand because you seem to be saying that british taxpayer
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money is generating waves of islam ist insurgency in this yes yes they have but this that spares money is being it's been funded has been channeled to jihadi groups so what are you going to do and we're going to syrian government going to do about this last time britain bombed your country you didn't appear to do much what what is syria going to do about britain's involvement maybe maybe we cannot really have all in with the with the with the u.k. and we don't have any intention to help war with the united that i mean we are the victims here and we've been at that by a country which is a permanent member of the security council a nuclear. nuclear country and a coalition against us maybe we cannot we don't have enough strength really the will to face off all of these enemies at one time we are. our priorities now to clean our land from jihadi islamist radical radicalism and to to spread secularism
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and to go with our implants to have real democracy to have real lives you know western style maybe a lifestyle free of jihadi radicalism that's what we want to bring out people that maybe next if this oh if this your gay. illegal interventions continue maybe you will we will have to defend ourselves with the military power that we have i mean we're not the ones and acting you look we're not like that in the united kingdom or great britain we are being attacked illegally to to by the this government there is i mean is government in order only in order to say if it's to say it's on radical jihadi groups and keep. brock's east in our country jihadi proxies you know now there are wars unfortunately now. oh it was not by sending direct soldiers to the area of interest but by using jihadi proxies and guess what we aren't the ones who are being the heavy price of this you know what economy in our life it was
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a billion light dollar military like our resources and this has to do each and one time i mean we cannot really say you just like this for ever. thank you you know well after the break as london paints itself in the colors of the rainbow just celebrate diversity and pride in london what is it like to be part of the l.g.b. two plus community the rest of the year we speak to will be better to go assaulted by intervening in a homophobic attack in central london and from the loneliness of the long distance running to saturday night sunday morning where on today's working class film here as we speak the legendary star of a taste of honey we did touch your soul the symbol going up in part two of going on the ground. join me every thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to us from the
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world of politics or business i'm show business i'll see you then. the film money system is dying and so people are going to take way out of theater and see it hurt in secret and they're going to have to broaden past which is they can put their cash into obedience coin which would be this china social that with a score and hope to get more frequent flyer miles and a freeway ending down if they change or they can go down the path quite bad which is individual some of the. ministries police forces and city administrations of many countries depend on one corporation and another by michael stop on the border just one from going the rise of the god of this dome was coming down through the. woods as the fee that he got on into the sea at the last of them proprietary software you don't know the source code isn't
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that a such a security risk when you have a black box operating the public eye to microsoft dependency puts governments under cyber threat and not only that team think office can put us in more that's what we call softness of these missiles is it still missiles the only one to move the thing to move south of the suv. with. things this is the icing on stride and on missions to all patients starting there was a sting on who was in front of the up and his guards on the front. welcome back the british capital will all but shut down today not just because of russia twenty eighteen but also a london celebration of those who fought for l g b t blocks rights hundreds of thousands are expected to take part in pride and it's almost unthinkable that the party to resume leads repealed its hated section twenty eight against the promotion
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of homosexuality less than sixteen years ago became ill g.b.t. plus activists now just rest on their laurels or does justice need. vigilance joining me now is war veteran lee ward elite thanks for coming on before we get to the down a part of the gulf is a show and you're going to presumably be a bride today i will exhibit in new jersey what's going to be in the. i work in a bar a gay bar in the west on extremely busy it's a cabaret bar. it could be packed i'll be doing a very long shift but it was you meet in the news lately what happened to you which is. kind of shows a prejudice is no old good in this country so i was on my way home from the bar. there was a guy on the top deck it was my ball firing. the venue and he'd had an altercation and he was using such
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a vile homophobic language are you a protester decides you know you need to tone it down it's not acceptable another guy got involved and he got a few whacks around sort of he's had for. it was then i had to intervene to get him away from the victim had not been knocked unconscious they got involved i did in the. dangers although you are an army vet i guess i'm an army veteran. who want to sit on the fence i call sit back and just watch these things happen which is unacceptable you see on a day like this when everyone is showing how things have changed some might say this is very very rare this kind of incident and it's not happens every day a friend of mine was abused trying for you know his sexuality. to drag queen a friend of mine just a few months ago i was abused by two so-called christians you know
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attacked just outside cross. it's going to go acceptable this is in central london cause problems in general and we're not even talking about outside the m twenty five motorway but hate to think what it's like outside london river was i mean i should say dres i'm a voted against the repealing of section twenty eight he regrets it now but what you're saying is borne out by statistics stonewalls hate crime report from last year said one in five people experiencing a hate crime in the previous twelve months but four out of five n.t.l. g.b.t. hate crimes go unreported and they found that people really were reluctant to go to the police what why would that i think they just want to forget about it i mean if this was a racist incident. do you think people would be more likely to go to the police i suppose there would i think of a system is less accepted. i'm homophobic attacks when
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the bus was packed and i think it's only one person that she's stepped in apart from myself i'm sure if it was myself you know it was a shocking racist abuse it would be a different matter i'm sure an awful lot would actually get involved no fly people would and we would come such a long way off to so many people groups like stonewall and people like peter tatchell and. the legacy of of a bill they were always fighting for these raids up why do you think the media here in britain basically says the war is won for people's rights arguably i think it's a lazy answer to be honest so we've got as i thought to go i suppose i've got a life in london is easier. for people to live in these little villages in. middle of nowhere you know it's not as you talk it's very difficult life the wardle thank you. now to an award winning british screen
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legend who helped to revolutionize how the u.k. saw itself sixty years ago she lived in a nice groundbreaking play a taste of honey brought mixed race relationships teenage pregnancy enormous sexuality center stage changing the world forever while in recent years elites have arguably tried to temper its radical focus on class with your identity politics the star of the film version we did touching and went on to act in the leather boys dr zhivago and being julia rita who won the best actress award at the cannes film festival for a taste of honey will be at a special screening of the film at the curzon so in central london at three pm to more rita amazing to have you on going underground so what is the honey they're searching for which makes up the title a taste of honey i would say the honey was she was looking for love that's what she wanted someone to love and to love her. it's a little plot is the plight of a single mother well no not really because she starts off obviously and she's with
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her mom and they move from place to place from house to house and the mother really is interested in what she's going to do with her life not necessarily with her daughters and she meets this young man who's a sailor and the relationship develops a very quick relationship but it develops and she she falls in love with him as he does for that moment with her i believe you're going to give it away but i mean i suppose it's not really so much the blog it's the fact that it is so resonant or is seemed to be so resonant. in twenty eighteen when it comes to people living on the margins what do you think about that well more things really haven't changed that much have they just got instead of small little houses we've got high rises and but . no i don't think they've changed that radically not as much as they should have and you were coerced. as seventeen year old joe from soffit the director tony
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richardson said he saw well over two thousand girls and you came out of absolutely nowhere how how did you get the job i was working backstage in liverpool rep as an assistant stage manager and i read in the newspaper they were looking for an unknown to play the role of joan a taste of honey i knew about the play and i thought well this might be interesting and i think as you do when you're young fell out of i'll grab this opportunity and i did and i wrote to tony richardson and john all spawn wood for films and they wrote back and said if you're coming to london come and see us and my mum said we're going and we went and i saw met terry and i did a small scene from the play well actually this is the script that they had that she delineated written and. some improvisation and then i went back to the pool and i was asked to go back to do a film test which i did and then about two weeks after that i was working backstage
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and calling the actors on to stage and things like that and the phone went and i ran and said yes hello it was tony richardson and he said you've got a lot and i said thank you very much but all right you said we start in eight weeks and i put the phone down and in that mad moment i thought. they say you've got the part of me you haven't got the part you know that i think you know i'm sure it's like when people win the lottery they think have we got the right numbers have we won and yes i had got the part but it was nearly a year before we started shooting did you know that to find out later that richardson said it was the the eyes of the close ups that when you the poet well i'm obviously heard that i would have no background what is the problem nobody yes i i think he did. he said the old speaking or speaking did you i suppose he didn't
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have any consciousness about george osborne or you mentioned obviously the writer of look back in anger and one of one of the twentieth century's great playwrights he says the financial people involved in the film were already going. you need a much bigger star than well you know who they wanted audrey hepburn and tony was adamant i mean it's always been and still going to be a switch what an amazing actress and beautiful woman but you know tony and john were adamant that it should be an unknown and they wanted it to be me because brad was very lucky because a different his was released that year yeah that's a year so what did he i mean it's difficult to remember now but the mainstream media press predictably at the time they compared your walk to marilyn monroe but not in a good way and it was it all very snidely you know i'm married i think nowadays people could see what was said but i really don't read that that's their opinion
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and i knew i was a different looking kind of actress to a lot of actresses who had done roles need roles in films did you realise you were a bit after that in your piece you got so many more roles did you realise at the time you were part of a new generation of actors as it's been called with albert finney told courtney richard harris all men by the way but i think. you sort of did i came from liverpool because that's. and and then to london and then i was involved with the royal court theatre and a lot of actors from all over the country were there but different types of actors they weren't just from london there they were from all areas had all different accents and were accepted and you could feel there was an energy there certainly was that but you have to understand that because i arrived in london at that time i thought that that was normal that that's how it was only. quite a few years later on reflection did you realize my god that was such
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a lucky time because now inevitably ever know you're being honest about it probably didn't for night or when dame judi walters has been voicing concern about her few working class actors there are they're working according to one in a sea investigation only sixteen percent. are acting at the moment ago it was many more acting anyway to get over the. actors sixteen percent are working but yeah but the thing is it's getting the opportunity and then being able to produce the goods and really i think possibly stab some people have more of an opportunity but i am really in the end it's i believe in fate and if it's going to happen it'll happen but we should be helping of course we should do not back where we started though before a taste of honey no no no it's our business no because really they wouldn't have looked at us and tony richardson did so that was that would you know we were
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knocking on the door and he opened it and obviously i'm going to have to ask about dr zhivago what was it like to play a from there it off and russian peasant girl living. on a model million dollar movie. i was one for with david lean in that it guinness and but everyone had the most beautiful costumes but i had a boy a suit wellington's and about her life as a class thing going on he said even if someone did me just take a work in glasgow you can put on stuff and she looked like a lithuanian peasant girl i mean and i know a little scarf i had but that was mine i would look i've never really done a movie where i've had fantastic costumes have interest in costumes but never really super beautiful cos i could really happened it yet you see they go she had the costumes i got taste funny so what next. i'm going to los angeles in august i'm going to do
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a film called the end of this convention let's start shooting so i don't talk about it you know really you know because and that if the script is still being. convinced you just have to that's what that is showing him the q. and a's of the cousin so it's more a thank you that's it for the show we'll be back on monday when grammy award winning reggae legend jimmy cliff tells us about changing the lyrics to vietnam named by bob dylan as the greatest protest a little time to reflect the horrors of the ongoing nato war in afghanistan till then keep in touch by social media we'll see on monday the day south sudan gave to dependents from sudan arguably catalyzing a civil war that killed tens of thousands in the world's youngest country. corruption is everywhere in our no society we still have a high rate of unemployment and we see you have a lot of the bitterness you know especially in the hinterlands so i would say that
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our success story is a house it's a story once again because of how big the political game the political objectives but we didn't we didn't succeed in achieving the economy goes. across europe municipalities are taking their water supply back from private companies who feel to me to people this will simple song alone even if the company gets elsewhere they invite private companies to take over the utilities anybody tell us the rope was allowed from us you guys we got booked it while on the pier might be cool. i've been this is. just because i'm out of it over or over some more you know until the lift hill brought up locals are ready to stand up for the basic human right of access to water it's about water but it's also over. warlord it's about the heart and the redistribution of all as to all purpose and dare debt
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downwards the one. twelfth of may twenty seventeen overnight a dangerous computer virus has spread around the globe want to cry is the name of the cyber criminals have given the virus with which they blackmail their victims by
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blocking their computer data the ransom three hundred dollars to be paid in bitcoins. more than two hundred thousand computers on all continents are affected by this attack from the german rail network archibong to the ministry of the interior in russia and the japanese car manufacturer honda in great britain some hospitals even have to switch to emergency operation mode. how can one single nowhere single tenuously paralyzed companies hospitals and even intelligence services all over the world the answer has a name microsoft all the victims use the same software all are vulnerable to in the same way all are dependent on one single company as is every state administration in europe. what are the consequences this is what we've the team of journalists from investing. if europe wanted to find out the results are alarming.
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this is about the data of all citizens everyone is affected and the dependency is much deeper than just the use of microsoft word or excel almost every author or a team from the townhome to the vehicle registration office and the tax office works with software specially written for their purposes. these many thousands of special programs are written for the windows operating system. the more complex information technology becomes the deeper the state is trapped in the microsoft monopoly. no one knows this better than martin child who managed the german government's id for eight years. to burn and boyish and isn't defacto upping it
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from microsoft by in i understood my course of product and it's been it's become guns into. microsoft's media and it's thought as a dusk to die it's an exam i just manage when the vitals and on the soft einsatz income invite you to comment on in microsoft for him but he and i love microsoft poke around the bush woods and why the education and serve idea is that stand all the microsoft's off to a lot of them and thus you get into a little i know virtual kitchen up in his kite and think that's it just by to and because it's not latino that's once it has a lot of these already present a harvest does it up any kind for nineteen years to learn. afghan's idol admits the thought is you will because i'm nineteen has been developed home for ninety in the closet as a. marxist in the control is. the stata semitic of sinai and ninety ima via top and when one is off and comes.
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in the lab is ice but it's a boy or tie and is the shows my night t.v. shows and in the book as in the book every line of the artist and you know if it's on implementing the v.v. toy it's mine i.t.v. should be legal and it is i don't either as has been a good move in the gulf side of this. dependency is the result of a business principle with which the major software manufacturers and in particular microsoft have created monopolies worldwide keeping the source code secret. modern software is written in programming languages the exact recipe of a program or an entire operating system is created the source code every i.t. specialist can follow the source code however the computer and its processes count so the source code has to be converted by a translation program into machine code but this can only be read and understood by computers. this is the source code for the command show hello world as
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taught in every beginner's programming course the same commands translated into machine code looks like this. microsoft makes the machine code available to its customers but nobody understands it however the source code is kept secret by the company in order to protect itself from imitators this business model is called proprietary only the manufacturer is able to change improve correct and fix security gaps in the software but this means the user is completely at the mercy of the manufacturer for better or worse. all citizens data from text returns to fines flows through the state administrations large data centers. we visit one of these top security server parks in hamburg the exact location of which we are not allowed to reveal let alone fill
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. however the fences and locks are no protection against the open flank microsoft. so. as i stated i was there he said i was one of and out of all i understand there are others. i know i'm sure there's a reason eight hundred staff are going to let many women on. community go of the one house is the status of i don't see it as millions of it's kind of getting. one sided excellence. in education and takes on insulin as it starts at the jockey shows unless you get through to this of adults and microsoft provide. minds open tennis australia it can all be all open source software is good but i see india is a puppet theatre stuff to. give it is that the great question of why the south is up obviously to south korea can also are the focus on microsoft when they did or did it. this year and it was
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a difficult one of course and the good business yapping is titled see and listen we've got a little bit of a senior study again without being in fights if i love to be in india. bustle of things inside microsoft percentage that was on a school killing the stupidest of its own rules of microsoft it's enslin that's the same young asshole that puts and stuck on most microsoft isn't that hot and also all engine is going to last year if i don't microsoft put it behind that limit by force of product event i need it for bush just a bit on an ocean i needed to go in oakland hundreds are i now i new rooms because it's not a mistake of the nation are also on of guys are not even social. these alternatives have been around for a long time they're based on the fundamentally different principle called open source. in contrast to the proprietary software of microsoft and other companies open source software uses
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a source code that is publicly available. that's why hundreds of thousands of programmers around the world can improve it extended and fix bugs. the collective workforce of the swarm of programmers discovers and closes security. gaps and efficiently produces state of the art software including the world's most widely used operating systems linux and android. unlike microsoft windows linux is available free of charge. any organizational administration can customize it for its own purposes without asking a corporation for permission nevertheless most government i team managers believe that in public administration there is no alternative to microsoft even though this is long since become a profitable industry. i know that even get this from london is as much as once they've done that like a business i was one. of them when.

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