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tv   Documentary  RT  August 26, 2018 7:30am-8:01am EDT

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so we can continue to be the audience isn't it they don't know if we are ready to donate some people might be laughing but the issue is blowing and then there's peter strock that just sprays former f.b.i. agent who sent to trump messages to his mistress now he's raising money online he's already raised four hundred forty three thousand dollars half a million dollars want to go fund me just for heating donald trump has cancer patients on that site that are like hey we need him to can you pay for my treatments like no you really hate him we could tell and then there's andrew mckay the f.b.i. director who was fired without benefits now mccain has already managed to raise five hundred thirty nine thousand dollars this issue of him raising some money in order to pursue this you know that's one issue it's an ethical issue it's it's something that you know doesn't reflect good character and if you want to get more creative than crowdfunding you can always write
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a book i'm rosa manigault newman's new book unhinged tells stories from inside the white house thirty four thousand copies were sold within the first ten days and before on the rose it was james komi the fired f.b.i. director now he wrote a book about donald trump and within the first week six hundred thousand copies flew off the shelf writing books about donald trump is a smart move this year every single title on the new york times nonfiction best seller list has been about donald trump so it double trump yells his natori a sketch phrase that you don't sweat it it could be a ticket to making more money than he paid you to begin with what people have to realize one of the bout is a donald trump has been more. a source of jobs for more people who have done nothing more then become or exist as a disgruntled either former trope fan or employer associate i mean right. now it is
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a cottage industry to see how much you can hate that old trump be trade donald trump and cash in in the mean time i have never seen any thing like this and the obsession a fixation and obsessive compulsive disorder a focus to big way should i could think of no other way no no psychological construct that can best describe this our natural and unhealthy. focused rage and the not just. that one let me clarify not over a particular policy program platform vision idea no it's just him. after escaping islamic state imprisonment and fleeing to germany a girl from iraq's yazidi minority says she met her i still kept away pissed face
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to face not once but twice in the european country we spoke to us walk who told us she still lives in fear turned her more i know we're standing seven girls captured by fighters in taken to syria the worst time in my life was the moment when i still separated me from my family they took us away from our mothers fathers brothers they even abducted eight year old girls they tortured us raped just sold us into slavery we were looking for gasoline anything sharp knife scissors we couldn't find anything to kill ourselves with we were trying to escape but they handcuffed our hands and lax covered our heads and raped us they turned us into human shields when they went anywhere they took us with them so that the strikes didn't kill them a large number of years eighty women were enslaved by eisold and sexually abused with many still in captivity.
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has i met somebody that does look at this and i've got a. chill on my desk. without going to have an abominable social but i you know best summed up in a though that the woman if. you know now is not. the love out of my lower level than the alpha would love someone. who. is now nineteen when she was captured by i still four years ago she was sold as a sex slave to one of their fighters and after being abused for three months she managed to escape and flee to germany but once that she claims she was again horrified by two separate encounters with the very same man who got in slaved and
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raped. her nest in the trunk of germany was willing to take in one thousand women who had excused from i went there to forget what i'd been through i saw a boo as i was going home after school i couldn't believe my torturer could have found out where i lived the next time i saw he was two years later a car pulled up beside me and asked me if i was and i said i didn't know he morris walk how is it possible that my rapist is living here and has the same rights as me my boss called the police and told them what he looked like and they scratched his face and it looked the same i told them there'd be no other witnesses i told them i'd never imagined possible for fighter to be in germany however the police were unable to trace his name as german prosecutors however say the information provided by us walk was not enough to identify them at the fair and for our safety in germany she decided to move back to iraq. being gassed i told my dad that the person who raped me it was in germany that i didn't want to leave there no matter what my dignity is more important than being in germany i put my life in danger to
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escape from myself to retain my dignity and he wanted me to stay in germany you know in the one who was responsible for my misery is free in that country all i wanted was to be somewhere safe but after meeting him i was afraid the whole time that he heard me again so i couldn't stay there anymore. continuous and just about . you know world of big partisan movies. and conspiracies it's time to wake up to dig deeper to hit the stories that mainstream media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smarter we need to stop slamming the door on the bath shouting past each other it's time for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle
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for the truth the time is now for watching closely watching the hawks. make this manufacture consent to public wealth. when the ruling class is protect themselves. when the final merry go round lifts only the one percent. nor middle of the room sick. this week washington unveiled the details of new sanctions targeting russia coming into force on monday the measures are punishment for moscow's alleged involvement
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in the poisoning of a double agent and his daughter in the u.k. i have hard evidence of this has yet to be presented the new sanctions ban foreign assistance and sudden arms sales to russia they also brought credit lines to the country and for him but the export of security sensitive technologies some members of the u.s. congress want to increase the pressure on russia even further. ongoing efforts to interfere in our sacrosanct election process and those are just some of the unacceptable behaviors of the putin regime russia's attempts to interfere in the two thousand and sixteen u.s. presidential election are well and widely known to suppose that. russia has undertaken a campaign. in its attempts to compete with us our allies and our partners. gives us more tools with which to respond wants to break apart the american public
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your task is to bring the economy to its knees. on the. ground. and. on the russian economy but the economy had been brought to its knees russia could face more restrictions from the u.s. in november and these could reportedly hit banking and trade between the two countries as well as limited diplomatic ties as also a threat that russia's state line could be banned from u.s. space days before the latest sanctions were imposed the russian president they would have much impact. regarding the sanctions those actions are counterproductive and meaningless especially when it comes to a country like russia so it's not just about the u.s. president's position it's about the position of the so-called establishment the ruling. i hope the realisation that this policy has no future. cooperate in
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a normal fashion. being tough on russia isn't that popular in the u.s. that's according to a recent gallup poll it indicates that fifty eight percent of americans think it's more important to improve relations with russia instead of taking strong steps against moscow something that's backed by just over a third of those asked so we asked people in the u.s. capital whether the best approach. you know i really believe anything anymore i don't want to believe that these tell you one thing but you have another reason for playing and i want everybody to get along you know i think you need. peace we need a better relationship with everybody in favor of russia and would be really difficult right now in a situation now where and when. you know the current president i mean it is nice to get along but you can't trust russia they always been on the economy so they get what they deserve i think. they have to be and putting.
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senses into other countries that were allied with the. period to be related to the gulf many russia anyway the cold war was terrible for everybody you know we need to read the delicate needle of not encouraging bad behavior while recognizing that there are a world power that needs to be respected for their capabilities and you know navigating through that is not a simple. videos of most of a british police officer slapping a fourteen year old girl during an arrest of the images soon spread online and certainly divided public opinion i should warn you this it's pretty you know it does contain some scenes of violence. if you i was. right i was i was sure. was my new year's was.
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was russian police say they responded to a disturbance involving a youth fighting and in attempting to get the girl under control a male officer struck the teenager in the face and they claim that was in response to her trying to grab a taser and police radio at the girl and a fifty two year old woman arrested on suspicion of assault and two officers had to receive medical treatment for bites and cuts and here's a little of the reaction has been to this why would a fully grown man police officer need to palm strike a fourteen year old girl the video shows nothing more than police brutality the officers in question need sacking the open palm head was to disorientate her so they could get her arms she was being very violent in my opinion and not force was very necessary agent john donne no excuses for resisting arrest there's no deserved
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or not about it he used adequate force to protect himself and detain the suspect police chiefs have to justify the officer's actions are saying the video does not give a full picture of the situation on r t f or my british police inspector peter cook and social justice campaigner george bada went head to head over this incident. clearly to many people like myself it seems that there must have been a better way of dealing with that situation than bashing that go in the head in bashing a head into a metal shutter to grown place officers can find a way of restraining a fourteen year old go back to them i'll tell you what you say tell us i just tell us that's why this is this is wise and tell us your the police officer you tell me the only alternatives available to the officer that i could see were allowed to keep a name and snatching his taser and radio was very well taken to the ground and you've been moaning about every police officer on a four year old go in there and if the officers use of force isn't right then he
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would be prosecuted or disciplined for it that act of bashing that would bashing that girl in the head and i do think it makes a difference that she was a forty year ago if she was a you know six what's called man i think would be a different situation in terms of place again i think if the police aren't trained to deal with fourteen year old girls that are being violent in ways that don't require them to bash them in their heads into metal metal shutters since any police officer uses any force whatsoever it's described as police brutality which it isn't you also keep saying for a girl lot that has any relevance fourteen year old girls can cause are just like anybody else you tell me that two grown police officers two grown police officers with four limbs to deal with on one person they can't restrain those four limbs and and the body without bashing the head into mental chatter and to go back to a point i made before and i don't for you this wasn't about having a hate to a man you should have taught it was. this is about recognizing that if the police
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can respond to a video like that with with period defensiveness i think the problems are only going to get worse between sections of the public that already have a lot of doubts about the police black clothes matter in the us for instance it's not as if the police haven't been brutalizing people for many years it's that people now have smartphones and can record it you would be better off supporting the police into. going to keep older and questioning why fourteen year old girls of brawling in the street with all the children of that day instead of questioning the actions of the police doing their best to deal with that situation. so fifth generation fighter jets vehicles of all kinds and over six hundred units evolvement and equipment displayed during the international military expo held in russia russia's most famous weapons manufacturer the kalashnikov group was among the exhibit is this latest robotic offering provoking the internet meme me into action . for.
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her. career. her. weekly returns and her. when a loved one is murder it's natural to seek the death penalty for the murderer i would
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prefer an it be to me death penalty just because i think that's the fair think the right thing research shows that for every nine executions one convict just found innocent the idea that we were executing innocent people is terrifying there's just no really hasn't been that we hear even many victims' families want the death penalty to be abolished respects the death penalty hears 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 and say. not quite enough we've been through this this isn't the way. it was you know provision of my back going to what it was understood i like. you know that ok. but i. owe. you for your height oh i lost his boss because
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i lost but paid you know that any of that but if you just got to go which was as you know just like anybody on a month all of those it doesn't but that's honest i don't know if it is really a. so i says you know but i was you know. you know just i mean what almost what it i'm already what it was but the bottom you just got to go eat and eat i mean it was a lot. of it up as well i must say i mean i really feel that it will get us out of getting worse but those were the ost that is beautiful saw that those people are going to respect all of this but i would probably say just this by this part of this i will ask him i will write about him with us if you could a car bomb i just bought that already yes equestrian he thought of getting up there calling with you just implementing my thought aloud problem you just got to go you .
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welcome to worlds apart the iranian nuclear deal once branded as a major achievement of american diplomacy has now become the poster child for the absence of it dull trans decision to renege on the agreement not only reopens a major international problem but it also calls into question the very means of solving it with ellie's betrayed and adversaries befuddled how should the world navigate its way forward well to discuss that i'm now i'm joined by jared blanc senior fellow at the carnegie endowment for international peace and formerly use state department chords in a very very raw new claim from mentation mr blank it's so good to talk to you thank you very much for finding time for us thank you now i'm sure you are greatly
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disappointed by present trends decision to walk walk away from the. but hopefully there is still some room for damage control how much of a do you believe can still be salvaged well i suppose you can call damage control there from the u.s. perspective no good outcomes here one possibility is that the the path that we're currently on the successful and that's that immediately after president trumps announcement president rouhani said ok we're going to stay in the deal for a little while and give time for the other participants mainly the three european countries to see what they can offer us to make it worth our while to stay in long term that could succeed it would be good from the perspective that would keep her on the nuclear program under control and under inspection but it would leave the united states very isolated and europe for the position to confront other problematic iranian policies alternatively those negotiations might fail which. would lead to a resumption of industrial scale enrichment and
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a serious serious problem for the region in the world now trump is obviously in violation of the american obligations but to some extent he's choosing his word because last winter he gave the europeans what looked like an ultimatum that he was going to do it on allows the transatlantic allies could it be on sound ways of shoring up the deal and i gather from your article is that the talks which began in january were progressing fairly well what do you think may have happened to upset all about progress well i think it's a combination of a lack of sincerity on president terms part he wasn't really looking to come to an agreement with our allies he was looking to act on his animus toward his predecessor barack obama. and also the total chaos and dysfunction in this administration and so the president gave his ultimatum senior officials worked on negotiations with the europeans i don't think there was any process to brief the
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president on the progress and so you know he heard about it from president mccraw and from chancellor merkel but but had not been buying into the decisions made along the way as you pointed out in one of your articles they were a number of things that could have done he could have extended the sanctions waiver to allow a little bit more time for the talks and yet he decided to and it abruptly after all those meetings cordell meetings with president micron and chancellor merkel to the russians that looked kind of fluid do you think he was trying to make some point to send some assets to the europeans or is it just mr trump being who he is you know it's hard to know if he was trying to send a message but certainly after all the bonamy of the meeting after the supposedly improved atmosphere in the merkel meeting and then he actually treated his intention to make this announcement. and so telegraphed where it was going while
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foreign secretary boris johnson was actually in washington trying to convince vice president pence and the secretary of state to continue the negotiations it whether or not he was intending to be rude whether he was trying to send a message this clearly isn't the way allies behave toward one another the russians are often accused of and into taking all sorts of conspiracy theories and i personally think that's a cultural thing rather than political because we enjoy a counter intuitive explanations and one such conspiracy theory that's been. stalking me as a vice preparing for this program is a thought of whether or not iran is the main thing here or do you really think that . the major thing here asked mr trump sas is this fear of iran's potential nuclear program oh absolutely not if the concern were on the nuclear program the solution was the j c p u. if anything the pulling out of the running the risk that iran will restart industrial scale enrichment that
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raises the possibility of increased conflict across the board so if you want to conflict with iran this is the way to go this is obviously not about trying to contain iran's nuclear ambitions but also that what i think this is really about is barack obama president trump is trying to tear down the accomplishments of his predecessor i think it's pretty clear from his public remarks that he does not understand what was in the way or what is in the g. c.p.o. a and it doesn't really matter to him he doesn't have a policy objective he just wants to disparage barack obama and what about the so-called european allies because. there are some many issues involved i mean the fate of the european. exemptions from tariffs on steel and aluminum is still very much up in the air mr trump is supposed to make his decision until june first . now there is a threat of. secondary sanctions we're talking about
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a very very large chunk of the economy do you think all these economic issues and i'm trying to phrase it very carefully not to be accused of russian bias but still do you think these economic issues are going to be featured in the political discussions on the run sure i mean the first thing you need to say about this is that from from europe's perspective iran does not matter economically so whatever decisions europe makes these either j c p u a are going to be national security could decisions and political decisions if they want iran to stay in the j.c.b. way they're going to have to offer some additional economic benefits but that's not because europe is deeply in hammered of the possibility of trade with iran i do think though to your questions your broader question europe is perceiving all of these things as a piece of the steel and aluminum tariffs the recent sanctions on russia. the
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resumption of sanctions on iran i think you see the united states disregarding the needs and interests of its allies and europe and other allies are going to have to look at this and decide how to respond in order to protect their own console and yet mr blank you suggested before that in the event of troops pull out your of will likely side with the united states even if it blames the current administration for ruining this deal and if it does i think the european leaders will essentially have to accept that their level of credibility is the same as trump is that they are moral equals and i personally don't think there's much trouble on that side of as far as the u.k. is concerned but when it comes to germany when it comes to france do you think they can afford it from a moral point of view do you think chancellor merkel for one can bring herself to be seen as standing shoulder to shoulder with trump and that well first of all i think that's a little bit unfair trump is the trump is the actor he's. the decision maker in this terrible decision the european leaders are now stuck with
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a series of very uncomfortable dilemmas that they will need to resolve but but they're not the ones who created this disaster what i wrote though is that if iran were to were to respond to our violation with a violation of their own i'm quite sure that europe will side with the united states if you have the us out of out of out of compliance in iran out of compliance then europe will side with us even if we were the if it's our fault if iran manages to stay in compliance i think europe is in a much more difficult situation and the possibility that they will try to strike a additional bargain with iran to provide some replacement economic benefits is real but i think the question here is not only striking additional concessions for iran but also negotiating that with the united states because i'm i'm pretty sure you're heard a number of officials in the trauma administrations directly almost ordering our european companies german companies to get out of iran to seize their business
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operations there immediately. that's hardly seems to be building bridges that you employ a bit with the allies but putting that aside do you think the united states needs to be taught a lesson here that's essentially the question i'm trying to ask you do you think the european union needs to take a moral stance in this on this particular issue to show the united states the trumpet ministration and in this example that this is not ok to conduct international politic policies like that i mean american in the middle american former official i'm not going to call on europe or anyone else to teach the united states a lesson i think europe has got a very very hard set of decisions to make where they'll need to decide they need to weigh problems in the transatlantic relationship against their real concerns their national security concerns about the resumption of iranian unconstrained nuclear program and i'm sympathetic to how difficult those decisions are going to. the as i
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started out by saying from the u.s. perspective there are only bad answers here either you've got europe essentially isolating us because they find a way to save the deal or you've got europe to save the deal and return iran returning to unconstrained arrangement which is a huge problem for us for europe and for the world but hold on mr blank you may have forgotten but it was the administration you work for the obama administration which was very proud of forging the so-called european consensus on sanctions against russia back in two thousand and fourteen and the rationale back down was that. russia in your eyes violated certain norms of behavior and needed to be signed a signal that this is not the way you conduct yourself on the international arena now we now have the united states which clearly violated its obligations to reach is involved in behavior that you clearly disapprove of you made it very clear
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throughout this program which also leads to an increase in confrontation in the middle east should the united states be sent a similar signal that this is not the kind of behavior that its european allies welcome on the international arena. leaders around the world including from our closest allies have condemned this decision and the very fact that europe has now shifted from negotiating with the united states to negotiating with iran is a strong rebuke to the decision the president trying made i would i describe president obama's leadership on sanctions with iran with russia with other countries a little bit differently from what you did i don't think it's a question about germany making a moral stand or a value judgment what i would say is that we were able to convince countries around the world that on a variety of problems we had a plan and a way forward and that if countries were willing to suffer a certain amount of economic dislocation in the.

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