tv Watching the Hawks RT August 30, 2018 7:30am-8:01am EDT
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this case so to speak it's a failure of system it's a failure of the government i think if the government really wanted to extradite people so they could do it but they don't dare to do it because they're afraid of the left wing media. they would protest in their geo and choose so-called human rights organizations they protest against the bay even try to prevent physically the extradition of people the most recent statistics for this year show that more than half of deportation orders weren't carried out the most common reason for this is that when authorities turn up at the door address where somebody was supposed to live they're not there and they can't be found however this year we've seen a sharp rise in the number of people who've avoided deportation after they physically resisted repatriation of people that don't have the right to be here in germany is on the list for angle and merkel the chancellor makes her current tour around africa we have
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a situation now we're not all problems have been solved especially the british ans are still a big problem but what the chancellor has left behind violent scenes in the city of ken that's this is after a thirty five year old german man was stabbed to death last weekend police have a syrian and an iraqi man in custody in connection with the killing and that has sparked angry reaction and pitched left against right over who has the right to stay in germany i. peter all over the in. outspoken british rock musician roger waters of pink floyd fame is in russia for a series of concerts head of his gig in some petersburg he spoke to r.t. sophie shevardnadze and the full interview airs here on september the seventh here's some of what to expect. if there is
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a grassroots body called the way home ads of volunteers. separate for the people who actually started in istanbul it was that it didn't start serious but if that body exists and they go and help people. in a salad or the russians or somebody else to stop bob's of them then i support them whole heartedly with every fiber of my being put all the evidence points to the fact that that is not the reality i don't know if you did you did you see the the documentary that won the oscar. i mean have you ever seen anything so obviously scripted and carefully shot and. now for this book and google when you choose but whatever the way that most people
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get their news and they use those. social media in order to educate themselves or find out what's going on nothing but it's being the content is being censored by the corporations that earn it so it's it won't be free and it's not free now but it's and they're very are targeting. i wouldn't be surprised if i disappear because i'm anti war. when i was making this this record i just made is the life we really want. the guy was producing the record producing this record with me started telling me about how far to how arty was. just pure propaganda nothing but a pack of lies while i worked shirty so i've seen that you can see
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a documentary about fracking on american television because they were interested in it in time and telling you anything about anything and you can watch the full interview on september seventh here next though fears over asbestosis of seeing residents in the australian city of melbourne flee their homes after a warehouse blaze or someone else stories when artie's world news continues after the break. when lawmakers manufactured them sentenced him to public wealth. when the ruling closest to protect themselves. with the famous merry go round. the woman. nor middle of the room sick.
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and trump you know it's all about detente and getting along with the greatest ally friend russia there is you know play it good for the kids and you know if you open it up there's other things in there so while we proceed here in the first half i'll just see what what goes on. in israel lobby group has allegedly staged an anti palestinian protest in the united states i think extract from an unreleased al-jazeera documentary is said to show people who were paid to take part in the demonstration we spoke to the best of journalist who obtained
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a video here's what happened. if you happen to speak with any reporters just stay on message what is that message that's j.p. it's a secret that has been problematic is that has to be endorsing violence terrorism and. the protesters are on a fellowship program run by a conservative think tank called the moving soon. you should just ignore paul kelly and be out there these charities he's a suicide bombing at a campus you have to stop searching the shit out of here no pollack is at the center of a neo conservative prone likud political network in washington that represents the right wing of the pro israel lobby he has collaborated with neo conservative think tank in washington and the hoover institution to basically pay fake protesters to
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make it look like people are coming out and protesting palace die and activity in washington doing my worst nightmare is not to get a photo and to go on a high together or just like early identifiable and i call or threaten traitors or sold out of the jewish conspiracy her money because it's two thousand dollars plus benefits to our way of running out of how holocaust rights i don't this is out now is exactly what got us a pos yeah astroturfing is when corporations or political movements basically pay for grassroots support this is what is so revealing about the israel lobby in america is that they basically pay for congressional support for their donations they even are willing to pay low level people to go out in the streets that make it look like common americans actually support the israel lobby is goals when they really don't. know
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persistence. really make your life easier because they kill children they don't care a great. distress to find it all investigation into america's approach israel will be a may represent the most important test yet over al-jazeera is independent whether on network still has space to thrive in ms the unjust will kate against aka tiny hunched. now we've contacted al-jazeera to ask why the film was never broadcast we've also been in touch with the emergency committee for israel and the hoover institution for their comments we'll keep you posted if we hear anything back. residents of melbourne in australia are being told to stay indoors and keep windows and doors
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closed the smoke from fire at a warehouse the reportedly contain dispersed also is blowing across the district some nearby schools have also been closed as a precaution that's market is causing plenty of problems this morning it is be floating out across the suburbs here in the west of melbourne. and if it is say there are also some unidentified chemicals in that building the fire started on thursday shortly after five am local time and followed a series of loud explosions. next u.s. military drills in south korea which donald trump surprisingly canceled following his north korea summit in singapore back on the table. as you know we took this step to suspend to several of the largest exercisers as a good faith measure coming out of the singapore summit we have no plans at this time to suspend any more exercisers of the last large scale drills in the region
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where in august twenty seventh they involve ten days of exercises with about fifty thousand south korean troops and seventeen and a half thousand u.s. military personnel. i . north korea has repeatedly said it's being targeted by the military games calling them a provocation but donald trump's decision to restart them is causing concern in south korea and while the president seemed to imply old rules will hold said that may not have been the case. we will be stopping the war games which will save us a tremendous amount of money unless and until we see that the future negotiation is not going along like it should we should spend several of the largest exercises but we did not suspend the rest so there are ongoing extras all the time on the
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peninsula the region you've not heard much about the mid north korea could not in any way mission target those as somehow breaking faith with the asian. we spoke to analysts about how difficult the situation could once again become the p julian has made it very clear if the publication of the true will continue she would react if eight me so a nuclear test and i don't think peace is good direction at least from the point of view of south korea and i think it's going to press the interests of south korea to step in eve this situation continue to escalate and if this is what he's sort of saying is you better show me some steps which i can then say we're moving in the right direction he's putting pressure on north korea he's also in a sense putting pressure on south korea because of course south korean president is due to meet women in september south korea wants to open a liaison office on the border once in
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a way probably to regenerate new economic contacts and so the warm a relationship in south korea and north korea has been a sense of positive aspect of trumps diplomacy but now of course it begins to raise the question of a split possibly trump who want to go back to a more aggressive posture to pressure north korea and the south korean government may say we have perceived benefits from a calming of the atmosphere and improve the atmosphere the pentagon was always on happy with any suggestion that it would scale back its maneuvers it wanted to maintain the military pressure of the military readiness of u.s. forces in and around korea. i've heard that says trump has been moved to the pentagon position rather than the pentagon to really be happy with trump's position should news for now check in with him for breaking news and analysis twenty four seventh's i'll have your next world update in just over half an hour after we checked in with alex salmond he's next.
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p.j.'s national camera. run through once they showed some leaves for them. to joan to videos and so on with the roughly string of apps. going down more on string i don't rightly don't t.v. . shows seem wrong but old roles just don't call. me. yet to shape out just they become educated and in games from it because betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground.
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you know it's really. evil as i have all this from somewhere you know. i came back to the community. and people we are based on in on the road look at me oh look out is over i will go towards hand. will i wasn't all. right. she. says it. was all that. but it should be but still. i know you're going to this. doesn't mean i'm not topping the my life. i sing along have to die.
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welcome to the like simon chill but from barcelona and not on the railways london commuters from the plush bottles of the size the stuffing would be uniting in solidarity with one of the most militant trade unions in the country they have had enough of highfields nightmare of junkies untrained so overplayed that even the little white majesty's opposition can't get a seat for love their money there you might again one cry of back to the future of a talking to public ownership of the railways take
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a look at these dramatic figures from a recent opinion poll. public ownership is bought by more than three to one among the general public but even among what used to be the boat hockey brigade if a b.c.s. support for nationalisation is a very clear majority the congress unlikely alliance of london commuters and trade unions hold together in this week show we examine the case for public ownership and talk to the main railway union that are empty but their proposals and then the absence of a fool government response we talked to has started to lend a sense of perspective but first over to being in the studio for you should have males and your messages. now we've had some reaction to the last in our series of catalunya which aired last week gavin says the show interviews are absolutely brilliant so informative and lets the people speak and get the point to that busting and what a novelty in my opinion get special week by week thank you so much gabbin shelley treats inhalation to the show we did with their cattle and economists and says the
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show gave new meaning to applied economics alex's interviews of the economist education about catalonia and by analogy scotland they demonstrated how small countries can succeed cino emails and to see a good video presentation thank you very much you know for emailing from abroad to contact us now of course but everybody shared positive views in relation to the future of catalonia and indeed scotland in the european union poli says catalonia is testament to the vicious thuggery of the e.u. at absolute proof scotland will never be given membership spin as an eager member if it had broken the fundamental principles of the e.u. presumably the e.u. would have said so and finally joe says enjoy your guest in catalonia be interesting to hear their opinions my feelings are running high in the ongoing real debate here's a selection of reaction outside euston station but a representative sample of course but it's still much suppose i mean certainly if
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one hundred sixty you. can get very good value but it doesn't really seem like the way to run a patrol so. it's infrastructure. it really should be that it meets your collective it she should. ideally be the prices if you know the. chairperson who gave that quicksilver to their part of the place but when travelling europe and she was worried for longer distance the cherry tree the trees approach quite bad with the good the economy the culture that's what we need to do that and it got the noble cause you haven't got that many british people for the moment but for you it's going to reject killers very expensive if you travel around the country. on a on a lot of playing a lot of places it's the trains a lot more you know and yes we don't we have to have to find money just to get these trains then what should. be prices going up
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on the town i think it needs to the need to generate more only other thing probably size a solution always is probably seen by some people been the main way to go and knows a lot of talk from the labor party about trying to get back to. home by the country show at the moment i think that definitely reliable trains accident because everybody tend to be pretty consistently good coffee takes about it because it's not anymore. pricey being reasonable it's not the cheapest service but only takes two hours and fifty minutes to get from you since piccadilly still but i'm no delighted to be joined by steve hadley the assistant general say the largest real union that mt welcome to the mix i'm unsure steve thank you for inviting me. and comment it should be said before the real the unions have been campaigning hard for the retirement the public ownership but many people or some people use a little privatisation was assaulted and lots more people using the real is not
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a contradiction well not really i think that the group from population has acquainted largely for the people using the railways and just the price of petrol and of our forms of transport has made it was really quite economical to use open toe lately but i think that the main reason behind the our quest the green isolates the railway is the government's own figures show that a privatized system is over three times more expensive they run than a national a system because some of these are with companies that actually publicly wouldn't companies in the countries or more like a bill you was probably on the balance of the any battle that leaves privatizing polluters as you. well it well at the end of the day we have got we have got national israel ways in britain this just not british national israel ways and that's one of the great sort of contradictions if you're right that every country in europe can seem to make a profit out of british railways but the british government says they can't. not be looking at the information of the real we deliver the group which is the consort
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for all to it which promotes the interests of the the various companies who are in the real ways and they argue if you compare white lake and look across europe that as they put it the model shift towards the u.k. is greater than any other country in the whole continent of europe towards the view is well i mean that's probably correct because there's a thing coming in next year called the fourth railway boat and basically what that tremendous piece of legislation that's taken the worst system in the entire europe the most customer dissatisfaction the most expensive system on average five times higher prices and more paid people paying a continent and that's open that open right across europe there's going to be a compulsory competitive tendering for every franchise in europe and what that support does what it was important britain its markets are previously closed off the private capital because they were nationalized been opened up they privateers
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that want to make a profit out of the state had ticket can you looted their empty loot across europe and say there's a country which knows how to run it really is about as jam we do a great job as france to create jobs is the example of the sort a real way you'd like to see run in the modern age well to be honest i think that any national railway and europe is doing better than britain i mean that's the starting point i mean we don't want a return to the old valleys of british rail where we're the top dog in management structure i can a feudal system if you like what we want there's a an industry that takes shareholders and stakeholders in the industry like the trade unions. like a passenger groups like democratically elected local authorities and we want a plan and infrastructure and plan investment along those lines but if we but to the days of british rule you described as a feudal structure of no. astonishingly people still remember the beaching cuts
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when quite a bit i don't think was another example of. a government initiative to chop a benefit of the real way which is still remembered to this day but still is still in people's lips the beaching cuts of that happened under the publicly owned system how could you go on t.v. the same sort of chopping wouldn't happen again will they guarantee for that is that we have strong trade union and unions in a decent labor party i mean i think beijing was an apt absolutely massive phone call in the long term a lot of planes are been be opened i think the environmental damage that have done a probably at the p.s.a. test so i think that we're looking forwards with think we need a democratically controlled railway system is properly invested and it's cheap i mean when people are paying five times less on a continent people in this country are getting really ripped off for a terrible service and of course some of the biggest prices other than the london commuting ones i mean did you think when you came in to trade union politics you'd
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be standing shoulder to shoulder with some of these bull hearted commuters coming into the city of london lived in london for thirty years. and the seven says i've never been fantastic but the level of overcrowding now is something else and that again i paused on the lack of investment because they technology is there not that you could grow more trains but they decision has been taken because these franchises are awarded every five or six years maybe get eight years ahead of them there's no really in the real incentive for private companies they invest long term and isn't that congestion on the trains and making commuters lives easier what they want to do is get on make a quick buck and get back out again. have you got a structure in mind for a public will really how would we avoid the the british real feudal structure as you called it how could you see that a new structure for a new publicly owned really well thank john mcdonnell and the labor party is as actually forwarded a blueprint for that and what he's talking appoint is
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a democratically controlled railway you would have consumer groups you would have for example long transport or t f l as an i called you would have trade unions and that up at a party there but jointly control and a democratic way how the railway system operated and war and vestment took place and can you point to a like to like comparison from the last few years which indicates that perhaps a publicly owned real way runs better than a privately operated one well absolutely if you look at these coast main line which is now been repaired we planned that l n e r the only time that that actually delivered a profit was when it was in the public sector for nearly two years and put millions back and the treasury and only korea was privately run then publicly run no privately run again and no publicly run again yes and they'd and the private firms actually had to back at least three times in total because they wanted to they the
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contractors looted so at the start of the contract they make greater profits and as a contract was on the subsidies decrease that they get from the government so what they do they they they wanted for the first few years they cream off all the profit and then they hand back that he's so if you look at the structure of a new public system which would have the benefit of of having an integrated structure one wouldn't be an argument for having an integrated trade union representation of when you're the largest of the real workers' union by some distance but it will be an argument for having a single union operating for real we workers so's we didn't have disputes among. as well as disputes between units of management and we're absolutely we're an industrial union we're not for about a privilege for the higher pay grades or about a privilege for people who were awake already work we organized right across the railway industry and would encourage everybody to join in i am today. but without
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that for you know can i thank you for begin now it's time to show and i don't know if there's going to be a single really want because union steve but i know we're going to present you with the exam and quickly you know the drill and you don't have to wait your next visit to scott real. quick and then toast to your fellow workers ok thank you very much it's lovely great pleasure steve thank you for coming up after the break i speak to a story in michael fry a man who was made up of tecla study of the course lying to scotland which is via a back and forward between the private and the public sectors. and trump you know if it's all about a taco getting along with the greatest ally and friend russia there is you know play it good for the kids and you know he opened up but there's other things in
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there so while we proceed here in the first half i'll just see what what done what comes. i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter us is over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crimes happen each day. eighty five percent of the global wealth you long to be ultra rich eight point six percent market saw thirty percent minus minus two years some with four hundred to five hundred three per second per second and bitcoin rose to twenty thousand dollars. china's building two point one billion dollars a i industrial park but don't let the numbers overwhelm. the only numbers you need to remember is one one business show you can afford to miss the one and only boom but.
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they're not going to let us come out on other hand not out of the go to not out of the money out of the money the daily planet actually. this was a good time to. try to move there i'm. done that wasn't just a little money not why not tech ten there again why exxon and the whole people we believe just a little bit in. a. lot of my kids i don't want them up with johnny borrell the moment i want to tell them about how do it all the kids over there a little bit of them i'm a little like a model. without the things i don't want to put out a lot most cardioid not all the mothers love it. just.
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what politicians do something to. put themselves on the line they get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president i'm sure. some want to press. you to do right to be press that's what before three in the morning can't be good. i'm interested always in the waters about how. they sit. for manners sitting in a car when the fifth gets shot in the head. all four different versions of what happened one of them is on the death row there's no way he could have done it there's no possible way because the oldest did not shoot around a corner.
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