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tv   Keiser Report  RT  August 30, 2018 10:30am-11:00am EDT

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it's amro again says palestinian families are facing segregation and inequality in their daily lives because of the barrier fence. neighborhood around seventy seven families from the schools from the. from the universities from the other neighbors we call their gate and they are all simply gated and equal because that road is a little stimulus from the main street is that. they walk on the i mean. living they walked on the side of that old you know we have twenty two checkpoints one hundred movement in one kilometer square in the city center of people on. the issue of illegal migration is shaping chancellor angela merkel's top of africa germany sheltered a vast amount of migrants and is now struggling to resolve the problem of failed asylum seekers because many lack basic identification papers are europe correspondent peter all of a report. migration policy in germany is firmly in focus right now but what to do
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when it's been decided that the person doesn't have the right to be here and should be deported well at the bizarre end of the spectrum is the case of one man in frankfurt who the city's office of public order confirmed to r.t. its how a whopping five hundred and forty two criminal investigations against him the man who doesn't have a passport can't be deported because the authorities can't prove which nation he originally comes from oh and by the way this has been going on since ninety ninety eight over the last twenty years most of his offenses have involved drug charges driving offenses driving without a license and violations of the residency act but who year is remains a mystery we have a loose biography that suggests that he was born in one nine hundred fifty nine in north africa in the past he said that he was from morocco and also from algeria it
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could be that he is from one of those two countries or it could be from somewhere entirely different opposition figures say that this case shows the flaws in the current system in germany but i'm not surprised this is the most extraordinary case the most ridiculous 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 could do it but they don't dare to do it because they're afraid of the left wing media. protest and their. so-called human rights organisations they protest against of even try to prevent physically the extradition of people the most recent statistics for this year show that more than half of deportation orders were carried out the most common reason for this is that when authorities turn up at the door address where somebody was supposed to. if they're not there and they can't be found however this year we've seen
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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 angela merkel as the chancellor makes her current tour around the we have a situation now we're not all problems have been solved especially the british and are still a big problem but what the chancellor has left behind violent scenes in the city of chemist'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 r.t. berlin fears over us past us of seeing residents in the australian city of
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melbourne ordered to stay in their homes after a warehouse blaze it among our stories when our news continues after the break. join me every thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to us from the world of politics or business i'm show business i'll see you then. you know world big partisan movie. and conspiracy it's time to wait to dig deeper to get the stories that mainstream media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smarter we need to stop slamming the door. and shouting past each other it's time for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for
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the truth the time is now for watching closely watching the hawks. and trump you know it's all about detente and 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 there so while we proceed here in the first half i'll just see what let go let. alone again an israeli lobby group has allegedly staged an anti palestinian protest in the united states a leaked 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 investigative journalist who obtained the video here's what happened.
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if you happen to speak with any reporters just stay on message what is that message it's j.p. it's a secret that the pilot of a ship that has to be entrusted by terrorism and. the protesters are on a fellowship program run by a conservative think tank called the moving situation to just ignore paul kelly and . there are these charities these are suicide bombing characters that you have to stop such a fish 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 make it look like people are coming out and protesting palis die and activity in
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washington my worst i fear the russian market is a photo of god together and we're just like really identifiable and i call or write traitors who sold out it was dear to her money to buy currency because of two thousand dollars plus benefits to our way of putting out a small white house runs a. restaurant business out of her home is exactly my best possible 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 want. persistence.
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they kill children they don't care for that right. under stress to find it all investigation into america's approach is really little b.s. they represent the most important test yes all belgian series independents whether romney still has space to thrive in this the unjust will pay to get a stock atari how. well we've contacted al. zero to ask why the film was never broadcast we've also approached the emergency committee for israel and the hoover institution to get their reactions if we hear anything back we'll of course let you know what they say . next a raging fires trickle several explosions at a chemical storage warehouse in melbourne in australia causing a potential threat to nearby residents the buildings reportedly constructive asbestos and smoke from the blaze is blowing across the district residents are
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being told to stay inside and keep their windows and doors shut some nearby schools have also been closed as a precaution to say the cause of the fire is as yet unknown and there are also some unidentified chemicals in that building the fire started on thursday shortly after five am local time. u.s. military drills with south korea which donald trump surprisingly canceled following the north korea summit in singapore back on the table. 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 as you know we took the step to suspend a several of the largest exercises 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
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region more in august twenty seventh same day involved ten days of exercises with about fifty thousand south korean troops and seventeen and a half thousand u.s. military personnel. north korea's repeatedly said it's being targeted by the military games calling them a provocation and donald trump's decision to restart them has enraged the u.s. maintains that it's acting within the previous agreements. 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 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. what we heard from analysts about just how difficult the situation could
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once again become used to julian has made it very clear if the publication of the drew will continue she would react if eight t.v. so nuclear tests and i don't think pieces good direction. at least from the pull of the wolf south korea i think it's the best interest of seoul south korea to step in even this situation continue to escalate and if there's a cold war 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 him in september south korea wants to open a liaison office on the border once in 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 want to go back to
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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. so that says trump has been moved to the pentagon position rather than the pentagon never really been happy with transposition ok that's the way it looks for now i'm calling brian moscow thanks for checking in with r.t. this hour i'll be back with more in just under forty minutes to see that by.
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thank. you for. what politicians do something to. put themselves on the line. to get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president. or some one of the reps would. have to try to be for us this is what the forecast for you no more can be good to have interested in the waters of my cottage. back. because you know provision i might buy going to what it is understood i like. oh. you're so you know i lost his boss because i left for bagel that any of that but if you just gotta go with us you know just like anybody on
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a month all of those it doesn't but that's honest i don't know if it is really a feel. so i says you know but i was you know i got you know just i mean what i most wanted i'm already whatever sped up part of me just got to go eat i mean it was a lot because they don't want to. give it up as i must admit that he was i just don't get it i'm getting worse but those were the old they're just beautiful sounds those people are going to respect i'm one of those but i was just this by this part of this i'm with. my family fussy about my just but that they're already here said whiskey and in the thought of getting up there calling us implementing my thought aloud. franking gave americans a lot of new job opportunities i needed to come up here to make some money makes me twenty five thousand dollars as a teacher or i could make fifty thousand dollars
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a year trucks or chose to drive trucks people rush to a small town in north dakota was an unemployment rate of zero percent like the gold rush is very very similar to a gold rush but this beautiful story ended with pollution and devastation a lot of people have left here i don't know too many people here and just slow down so much they lost their jobs that laid off the american dream is changing that's not what it used to be. it's a tough reality to deal with. our
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skies are this is the kaiser reporting i just rummaging around the studio here you find all kinds of interesting things this is a toy. that was popular a while ago to teach kids how to hijack airplanes. on a telephone and then here we have a russian listing go. through a patricia much much roast a rogue abortion and. putin you know it's all about they talked and getting along with our greatest ally and friend russia here is you know playing to good for the kids and you know open up but there's other things in there so wildly proceed here in the first half i'll just see what go what comes because you clearly cannot speak russian even though you russian double agent you must also call it nestling dollars that i would think you know about russia i learned from watching boris and natasha on the bullwinkle show that's the same with most of our commentators are russian experts on the window and rocky yeah moral you know how
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many squirrels make it to cartoon stardom but there it is rocky the squirrel the flying squirrel and bullwinkle the moose great show this is how russia experts learn all their information about russia and the united states yeah but i want to turn to this headline about education i'm talking about are experts on the news here you know they learn from cartoons but in fact perhaps us the best way to learn because the knowledge economy is a myth we don't need more universities to feed it governments around the world believe that to remain competitive in a global economy they must become smarter and an attempt to boost its knowledge intensiveness the u.k. government has just launched a plan to overhaul the university sector it is to transform universities by creating many more of them the hope is that this will increase the number of people with degrees and the u.k. will be a more competitive. i mean that's a job yeah that's as close because there's only cambridge and oxford and those are the only two universities where you can go to and then get a job that pays more than minimum wage or you're working for delivery room so this
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is just virtue signalling by the people in the bureaucracy trying to make pretend that there is some kind of egalitarianism in the u.k. that allows for advancement of people willing to work hard that's false it's a rigid class structure it's almost as bad as the indian untouchables when it's living up in the caste system if you're too slow smen cuny and you're not going to end up workin for the b.b.c. that's never going to happen so let's see what's under this one ok underneath here oh this is. clinton and you also ok this was a very famous period in the collapse of the soviet union when america rigged that election to put their man in yeltsin who then gave away the country to frickin oligarchs which pretty much destroyed everything for a while before putin kamal i know that you were educated at n.y.u. in our university system here and i could say that i'm sure pretty sure that after that when you will not know who any of the press you know i'm i'm i'm a bit frightened now because the next i'm going to digging deeper into history when
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you know nobody really cared about this. really at all because you know we were all much more innocent in those days obviously in the united kingdom they want to expand the university system they want to offer more degrees of course. in the united kingdom actually even though they just started to introduce university tuition fees versus the us where we've had them for decades they actually graduate in the united kingdom with even more debt than americans do but we do have the american system to look at and they fact they found that the majority of jobs being created today do not require degree level qualifications in the u.s. and twenty ten twenty percent of jobs required a bachelor's degree forty three percent required a high school education and twenty six percent did not even require a high school. degree meanwhile forty percent of young people study for degrees this means over half of the people gaining degrees today will find themselves working in jobs that don't require a degree you know
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a degree to work at chipotle and get into projectile vomiting i don't think anybody north of ours anybody who works there is smart enough not to eat the food i got that all mixed up it's amazing but also you see what happens in the united states is and as they point out is that those who just get a college high school degree i say you're really afraid you definitely are afraid of is it before it will raise enough of an who is the american next next and afford the next in our ford and then have a crew stephanie kennedy the answer is. so they went backwards and forwards is no timeline is now accurate timeline here and in reagan's america we don't cave in to figure out what that they were going to do. oh that's our own reagan. going wrong this was detente you know yeah yeah even i well jealous you know he's the only man in america that actually knows anything about russia and he says this is to be emulated the trump is emulating the reagan gorbachev of detente era where
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they met for hours on end in closed door sessions to talk about denuclearization a very pressing political agenda we didn't have twenty four hour news cycle the time and we did have the equivalent of russia gate but it was the republican the right wing that was pushing that they were saying that i reagan was russia's dupe and they were his like their puppet and so yeah so ok now now the next in line i bet you just killing me i bet you it will be kennedy and khrushchev that's my instinct but i could be wrong so it's a cliff anyway so so in the united states they're saying that low skill jobs are now being taken more and more by people with university degrees pushing alex the bottom rung of that but it's also this is. scariest thing this section i'm about to read to you now it is uncertain whether universities are even delivering on their core purpose one recent study tracked thousands of students during their time at
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university it uncovered a rather disturbing picture after two years at university forty five percent of the students showed no significant improvement in their cognitive skills after four years thirty six percent of students had not improved in their ability to think and analyze problems in some courses such as business administration students' cognitive abilities actually declined and the first few years so your cognitive ability declines in the first few years as a business administration student somebody like donald trump he studied business at university of pennsylvania so. these are the people that are running our economy by the way you go to business school and apparently you actually become dumber when you go there well there's a reason for that because wall street hiring people with no empathy if you're already well rounded liberal education you would by definition improve your empathy
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toward other peoples other cultures ideas you'd be able to think cognitively if you will use a term about a multiplicity of ideas but a wall street wants people are without empathy they want people that are on the spectrum the autism spectrum and suffering severe autism because they want them to look coldly at the numbers and to harvest gains like you would harvest organs on a kidney you know from whole most people and that's what they want so makes sense that cognitive abilities are on the wane because of the commerce becoming financial ised and that's being paid in this economy the people the time not being paid to think you're being paid to steal you know you mention the caste system in india they do have the brahman class and they're not expected to work they're just expected to think you're expected to just be a scholar and think about things we used to have that back in ancient greece and stuff you had philosopher and something to your family. and he just thinks he says
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he's working somewhere in the city of london but actually i've never actually seen him in the cambridge just because he's westernized he has to pretend to be a working hotel he's also the i don't know but our ages yeah the fact is that we use that thinkers and philosophers we no longer value that and therefore you know in fact you're the highest value in the us economy is to go to business school and apparently that you're being. you know you profit from thinking less so that's actually proven here but this is a system as you said financial eyes and it's all really a debt racket and they they they you know cloak it with these high falutin words like we're just trying to educate the population it's a knowledge economy we're all just going to be smart and. well full rather well known operators you know in august some are bombing children in yemen you know that you don't want empathy ok so who's in the open up now open it up go ahead and listen to this opening up there. in its. looks like i think
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of so i think that's cruz jeff smisek khrushchev that's that's that's that's a bad record i think that's actually jimmy carter right and brezhnev jimmy carter or and you. yes british. jimmy carter on or in there and brazil so what happened during the president carter era cold war it was pretty hot at that time the cold war was hot and that was the days when a lympics used to be great now it's the opposite in cold war to point out the olympics it's all like you know it's not like oh boy caught in something like that back then we used to be like it was like professional wrestling are professional wrestling which isn't really professional it's just fake it's all entertainment. with the bad just like you are in this period you had the famous hockey summit canada versus russia during this era you would know better than know this was when the philadelphia flyers started beating up russians on i want to ask putin when i
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interview him later this year about that series you hope yeah i heard this that i'm going to be interviewing putin about hockey detente ice hockey detente later this year again i'm going to quickly move to this final headline because you know an education might not be necessary it is certainly not necessary really for a soldier more than tariffs china sees trade war as a new u.s. containment tactic it's about time of course much of what the u.s. has actually done over the past two decades i would say since two thousand since two thousand and one the invasion of iraq that russia gate stuff is actually all i believe about containment of china and now china as he says they don't see the trade war as actually being about the trade war the. it's about containment of china they don't want china to grow anymore and this this opinion piece over is in asia and a hong kong newspaper is saying that basically they're both underestimating each other and their willingness to resort to military means america china america china
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that they both could start a hot war. america and case to go to war china russia that's the point of this new doll. exercise you see america has always been you know some degrees. you know bodies like frenemies i say american russia or from the me where frenemies right but because we only have forty seconds left i'd like to see who actually is in the final. seeming it's kind of the increase as it gets smaller their representation of these presidents really good or for worse this is the worst one and you can. hard to see. it's yes kennedy and. khrushchev not a good likeness of it yeah it's not a good likeness so that yes say that it actually looks like gorbachev but on the surface recently i think the chinese people have made this their orders wrong and
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they put gorbachev in kennedy put him twice as here's what christopher impression a member of the cold war there the bay of pigs cuba it all goes back to cuba and the cuban bay of pigs see that's the kind of poetry i don't see on mainstream media they only see here on the cause report why because they were in love well we got to go to the second half don't go away much more coming your way. i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter the u.s. has over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crime stamping each day. eighty five percent of global wealth you long to be all for rich eight
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point six percent market saw thirty percent rise last year and some with four hundred to five hundred three per circuit first shot him because he rose to twenty thousand dollars. china is building a two point one billion dollar a i industrial plant but don't let the numbers overwhelm. the only number you need to remember is one one business shows you can't afford to miss the one and only boom but. they're not going to that how can other man not out of the dug out of the not out of the mouth of the money the daily planet actually. this was a good time to. try to move there i'm.
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not allowed to give up my little money not why not act and then again why exxon and the whole people we believe there's no b.s. . a lot of i can cite about the bubble so john even a lot of the moment i've got a mother how do it all the kids are there a lot of them i'm a little like a model looking at the things i don't want to put on a look at my work party without all the mother blood it. just. a little not enough it's real. it was a levels from somewhere you know. i came back to the community of. people we are based on and on the road look at me all you got
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is all bible towards him. you. see. she. says you mean to tell him that he was all that. but if you don't. know you're going to this. is the fucking awesome i'm not touching him in my life. i see a man have to die. i . get a. i. leap
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. at. welcome back to the kaiser report i'm max kaiser welcome to the show the one and only the crypto genius sinclair welcome thanks but i feel you know the first name now like madonna is just sinclair around the gun with whatever you call them claire skinner of bit mari is also at the black block chain summit the black blood change summit i was coming up. look we're trying to take this amazing technology and solve some long existing problems in the black communities and we
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think this is a great way to do it so we're going to have some experts in some of these particular topics be an education dealing with energy as well as having folks who are well versed in black chain technology we're going to put them together discuss these issues try to come up with some you know. actions you know that we can take from there and it will have a hackathon from that point until november and then we're going to take all that energy from the hack a thons and hopefully next year we would have done something better and we're not going to have a meeting after meeting to meet we're going to actually do like they did with the declaration independence they went out and start shooting folks there after we do our meeting what they're going to outshoot people going on doing kind of the what this is a conference on don't understand. finishes it up in the city probably in. the declaration the end of it is a huge deal not because of the meeting but because of what they did after they declared independence they went out there is they're getting it i mean if you like shooting a film well not like actually shooting people's guns so we're not go shooting by
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were used technology we think is better than politics with things but in protesting we even think it's better to philanthropy was ok this is an element of my focus on this project to sell the black struggle in america east think and you're position is that technology is another rail that offers emancipation. not to be too you know fine a point on it is that a fair statement absolutely could be underground railroad or just another a oh absolutely that's in dire need in a racism let me tell me if i'm wrong racism is as prevalent in american society today as it's ever been right is systemic it is actually something is a part of fabric and we need to do something to change it i think technology wait for someone to come save us is not going to work so i sometime a nation jim crow is gone but the president does your complex is amazing is here and is our generation's actually felt the most like coming of age in eighty's you
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think about it you know prior to that it was a lot of prison population but we have it all these other things and next thing you know we're in an even worse situation so i think it's it's time for us to use technology to wait for you know the cult of personality of people that we love as political office like obama or people that people hate like a trump that's not a political strategy we need to use technology and not get caught up in these distractions and messing pounce is a distraction but when you ok so she is black that's yes yes and that sow talk a little bit about that. we talk about marriage it was your idea who put lovenox married. so i want to be you does not imagine that you want to ask me that question what is this about what is so black about my ex tell up tell you i think it's about i think it's about you know liberation and the fact that this technology of blah
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chain and because i'm is is offering a way forward from our constrictions in our restrictions and in our chains in a lot of ways you know racism hurts everybody go and that's just the victims of racism that are out right there but it hurts everybody and this country as either ban it you know built on a cemetery of indigenous population and then made whole made possible through slavery you know that was the economic innovation of previous centuries was slavery that was the block chain there on the chain gang there was a fricken chain of people you know that's how america got wealthy right seller and now you know we're all black in that sense when they bring in censorship now and when they bring in wholesale kind of sensory essential ship on the internet that that's intolerable we're back to all fighting the same fight now you know i think you're i think it was mardi gras near she talked about when you look at victims of
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racism as canaries and they. was a current in a coal mine so because of this racial environment it's not the kineret is a fault but there respiratory system is more sensitive because of the things going on but they gas to kill everybody so i think what you do say does directly relates to the fact that many of the things we've seen from drugs being put in communities and the military industrial complex it may start off with one population but is let me ask you this question you know i was familiar with the crack head and the not or not not in the and there's it's janner it they get that man he's on he's on heroin ok now in the white community they say oh we have an opiate crisis. you know some of my brother is a couple years older than me he's been on drugs for moses adult life and he sed talked about how to prison changes that we first got in early late eighty's if it
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was very punitive he said now they've got some little programs for folks to kind of like do good of others think of like why people have an opiate crisis and they're micro dosing right. black people are strung out on terra and they're cracking animals then so that's the same again there's a way you practice on one population now it leads to the other problem in the meantime bus lavery you know it's hard to compete for fair wages when you've got one population that could be owned by one and yet you're over here trying to figure out i guess you're right all the farms that accompanies a response of the crisis they ran out of people in the ghetto to mess up you know they had to go jump over to the white population to make money because they already messed up the black population be bad so they got to jump over to the white population that's why we're all in the hood we're all black centrally so his black now talk about technology let's talk about this the technology added at it there's two schools of thought one is we heard safety in talk about his book to the bitcoin
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standard and it's a very western approach to money hard money and why bitcoin is a better source of money but in when i talk to you you know you come to it from a slightly different angle of there's a spiritual element to this that goes back way back way back before america way before western cultures it goes back thousands of years you know maybe even half a million years that there's something more critical at stake here there's an essence here there's a spiritual quality to it ok speak on that yeah i think what we've seen in these economists even in the blotching space their context of what sue is ation starts in a very late stage and even when you're on must first principles we're looking at the conditions in the world to start. just one hundred years ago or two hundred years ago in america through five hundred years ago those were still very recent i mean we've been civilized people for thousands of years and what existed before
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that you know european a so-called western culture is very late very young so there's been cultures in africa we still can't build pyramids so even when people talk about technical innovation we still can build a pyramid and have them in mexico and they have in africa so if a blotch in a big clay is the perfect money we all say it is and if it disenfranchises central banks and banks and it puts family out of business and it takes us back as a culture as a civilization to one before we had that western notion of money well aren't we all a gone back to our african roots essentially like because it could take us back to africa all of us the entire species of humanity of humans back to something that is primordial now in for a moment so there's more humane more humane and that whole humanity comes out of a spiritual space is not the other way around and i think that the spiritual space allows us to exchange value in a way that is more than just transactional there's something else there's an energy
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there there's something more to it you see many of these analysis they leave that energy out as if these all it is a series of transaction there's more to how we got where we are now in this saying that which runs a cousin a listen to say fifteen and he talks about economics starting with scarcity well it's octavo yeah and others who take it back spiritually thousands and thousands of years actually the economics was defined by abundance absolutely abundance so you know again people who talk about the people is an ice people but it in a day you look at many parts of the world people didn't have to worry about winter coming and run around being afraid to somehow something was going to be there if you look at your been some of these other cultures there was a real sense of scarcity that made people baby more confrontational if we look at many parts of the world where it was i love the motherland. right i mean they felt they left africa which was abundant to go search for something else outside of the garden of eden not only did they lose a color but they started thinking about everything in terms of scarcity and they
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were already living in the garden of eden right sosa toshi is black here the successful will go back to eat in which is second africa thank you and i think if we all start changing that mindset we can create a space no matter where we are and i think that's where because we're amazing about the the global power of this technology it doesn't have a jurisdiction we all can start creating community beyond these artificial fake borders that never were very helpful anyway and if you think about it we start talking about you know decentralization and african realized they still are two thousand languages and it was already decentralized it was it went to the colonize it came in carved up spaces they had nothing to do would actually create a better space but it was actually done to that subdue people so i think we can get to that space now not just with the internet with actually with this next layer would transactions and being exchange value in
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a very powerful way through the blood letting network do it again we're laying second layer second layer we're doing lightning right now we did it yes we did our first remittance transaction from a node in nigeria to a node in zimbabwe back in march so tell people what that mari is so big mari is a pan african blood chain we hold big korean big corning cash and we're going to be coming up some additional services in one of the big things that we've been doing is or allowing people to cash out of crypto in zimbabwe we have a bank particle agra bank that we've been working with that allows people to cash out and we're now expanding to other african countries one of the big things is dealing with regulators you know one area might not be is warm is the other but if we have an expansive offering we can be in multiple. african countries and our target is trying to decolonized it in a day you know barclays a lot of these banks make their money off exploiting us we don't need them anymore we actually can exchange value peer to peer and uses amazing technology but we know
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the blocks in technology and the peer to peer applications are exploding in africa much probably the most adoptive place in the world is it probably because there's just already a natural tendency to think in this way i think that after tends to be the problem with most of these developing countries those not the local people most of these african countries as well as latin america are still you know neo colonial states where they still look to the west for approval so if you're a banker in africa and you're trying to do business in europe you're still going to unfortunately be manipulated by the swift bank or the other systems that are out there so i think this is a great opportunity though to use technology to change it up case so it's a black block changed some it still may tenth and eleventh why howard university historic our university historically black college amazing place in d.c. i'm speaking
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a thank you max for speaking and we're going to thank you for us it's so she's black then up thanks for being on the kaiser part yet let our life out of our. own for it to go we were really just thinking would play out i'm going to say i'm still oh i got to. sing claire ok calm down or let me get down to get through with this like this that hey we've got to go and that's going to do it for this edition of the cast reportedly nice guys are safe here and i think our guest claire skinner. if you want to like i just on twitter it's guys report and so next time.
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you know world of big part of. law and conspiracy it's time to wake up to dig deeper to hit the stories that made stream media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smart we need to stop slamming the door on the back and shouting past each other it's time for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the troops the time is now we're watching closely watching the hawks. because you know provision i might buy going to what it. has but i. just lost his boss because. we don't have anybody among my fellow those in person but that's honest i don't know if there's been any of them. so i says you know what i was you're not. you're
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not just i mean what i'm already but i was. going to. give it up as well i must admit that he feels i just don't get off on getting noticed but those were the people saw that those people are going to respect i'm one of the. place where this part of. my family fussy about my just but that already yes equestrian in the thought of getting up there calling your seem to mean to carry out my thought aloud. for a man or sitting in a car when the phipps gets shot in the hand. long form. different versions of what happened one of them is on the death row
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there's no way you could have done it there's no possible way because the list did not shoot around a corner. seemed wrong. but all rolled just don't all. get to shape out just a few cuts to the ticket and engagement equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. the good food russia brand has just been launched at the international food and beverage exhibition in viet nam several companies from siberia landed in the city to present russia's biggest competitive advantage and that's our get it and g.m.o. free food at low prices but. i couldn't find any natural milk when i went shopping
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here it be enemies and other imports of dairy including milk powder having greediness like mt and they recommend those things to children from three years of age with a general rising consumption and demand for a higher quality of life in viet nam the russians are confident that their approach is the best we know that russia how a lot of good products specially now russia surely can supply a lot of i.v. couto product with the high quality and then we look for the sea brought up you know it will mock as russian producers participate in the world's largest food exhibit thanks to the russian expert center with its help intrapreneur and their new markets while foreign consumers get high quality natural products which it was important to present a new brand that we're introducing on the asian market good food russia we expect this brand to become a driving force for the russian products which will be marketing is top quality organic food these are the real qualities by the way and we tell that to our
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partners overall the mission was a success it is hoped that good food from russia sampled in viet nam will leave a lasting impression as well ron cost r t. as a decisive battle though looms over the last rebel stronghold in adelaide province in syria the u.s. discards russian intelligence on a possible chemical attack being prepared by terrorists that. we know because there's enough before when you try to fly the plane they try to put the onus on other groups and we don't buy into that. a video of a young palestinian go scaling an israeli build fence to get home in the west bank goes viral we speak to the activist who fill me in so the. germany struggles to deport an undocumented migrant who's been investigated for more than five hundred offenses as the issue of illegal migration overshadows chancellor merkel's tour of africa. we meet outspoken british rock star roger waters he's in russia for a set of gigs he's got plenty to say about the world's biggest issues and where he
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gets his news from the guy who's producing the record producing his record with me started telling me about how far to the how it was. just pure propaganda nothing but a pack of lies when i worked shirty. there is one in the afternoon this thursday the thirtieth of august on call in bray in moscow with your world news headlines from r.t. international the united states is ignoring warnings that terrorists are preparing a chemical attack in italy a province in northwest syria a state department spokesperson simply said that they don't buy into that when asked about the intelligence provided by moscow. the russians are claiming now and this one another group started by the chemical weapons and planning an attack so you know and i think that's more false flag type reporting it i'm going to be as a seen now for when you try to put the blame they try to put the onus on other
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groups and we don't buy into that russia says it has information on the delivery of toxic substances to it live province it claims it got there with the help of the self-styled rescue group the white helmet has to be used in a false flag attack russia's foreign minister sergey lavrov explained to the motivation behind the plot the chemical weapons provocation which is being prepared is aimed at keeping el nuestra day counting on using it against the so-called regime as they call it following the alleged goot a chemical attack russia's warning that rebels will try to stage as similar incidents in the evening to draw the u.s. france and britain in get them to hit a sad again russia says an incident is imminent especially after the u.s. and the allies jointly stated that they would act if it looks like as had launched another chemical attack that's almost an invitation to do so says moscow. now when the u.s. is stirring the situation around we want to know how could damascus have chemical
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weapons if the u.s. france and great britain destroyed them last year you know what the us and says we never said that france did its do or die for the jihad ists rebels nowhere left to run nothing left to lose and their sponsors the west the gulf which have pumped billions upon billions of dollars into a cause that's on its last legs the mascot's and moscow a trying to work out a deal to reduce perhaps avoid the bloodshed but the job for it syria russia adamant these swamp of terror and zealotry has no future. group which are. this is the last place for the terrorists so from all points of view this abscess should be removed of course what everybody's fearful of is escalation given the us russian military buildup in the region everyone has
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a gun pointed at each other and given that this is it the final act of the syrian war the urge to shoot might just be overwhelming the united states doesn't believe that the rebels have that capability whereas there's tremendous documentation to show that they do have the capability they've probably been storing it for months if not years in the province and they have used it in the past they have that capability and it is a last ditch hold for them so it cannot be ruled out and it's not it's not beyond the realm of possibility that the u.s. is trying to get assad out they're going to continue trying and and even though donald trump wants to. get the u.s. out of syria there are elements within the u.s. government that don't want that to happen or back to concerns about the white helmet specifically the group being accused of assisting the delivery of logs
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supply of chemicals to province they've been linked with terrorists several times before now outspoken political activists and british rock musician roger waters from pink floyd has long been a vocal critic of the syrian organization shared his thoughts with r.t. he's currently in russia on top and spoke at length with sophie shevardnadze. if there is a grassroots footy call the way of foreign tears. for the people who actually started to stumble it didn't start shit was started by an english soldier. in istanbul but if that. body exists. and they let me 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
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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. now for facebook and google when you choose but whatever the way that most people get their news and they use those. social media you know or in order to educate themselves or find out what's going on nothing but it's being it is being the content is being censored by the corporations that earn it. so it so so it it won't be free and it's not
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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 this is the life we really were. the guy was producing the record producing this record with me started telling me about . how archie was. just pure propaganda nothing but a pack of lies while i worked churchy so i've said that you can't see a documentary about fracking on american television because they weren't interested in it in time and telling you anything about anything if you want to see our full interview with roger waters it will be shown on sophie and co on september the seventh here on r.t. international. next a video of a young palestinian girl climbing
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a security fence erected by israeli forces in the west bank has provoked outrage online the girls apparently trying to get home after israeli security forces closed the gate that campaigners say it's becoming a daily routine for palestinians we spoke to from the hebron freedom fund who filmed that video. never the army closes. you know do that every day and the distinctions are there if the students from the neighborhood use mean. few minutes only north of the school we have a give the school a boy to school only one or two three minutes from the neighborhood but a solution policy and the situation policy. of this is really cute petion it makes them. walk around and sometimes climb the gates and climb the fences. so the straight for you where all this happened is in the south of the west bank in the district in hebron the old city that's where israeli
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authorities erected the one hundred fifty meter long fence which you can see marked here in blue now palestinians living there have two ways to get to their homes the checkpoint and the gate that you saw in the video now we are asked the i.d.f. why such measures were felt necessary they replied that the barrier was put there for security reasons after an israeli man was stabbed to death there last year but last thursday it had to be locked for several hours for repairs when a number of palestinian sabotaged it the i.d.f. says residents were able to pass through from a nearby gate which was a few meters away back in may israeli forces kept that gate closed for six days as a punishment for stone throwing as they put it.
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amro again says palestinian families are facing segregation and inequality in their daily lives because of the barrier the fence. neighborhoods around seventy seven families from their schools. from their universities from the other neighbors we call their gate and they are all. unequal because. they walk on the i mean. living they will go on the side of that old you know we have twenty two checkpoints one hundred movement in one kilometer square in. new in this van has plowed into pedestrians and motorcyclists in the city of manning in southern china local media reports that at least one person has died several other people injured now just a warning the following video we're about to show you is distressing to watch the
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incident occurred outside a district hospital nurses and passers by can be seen running towards the injured to give first aid there are fears that the number of dead now is there's no word on any calls or motives at the moment and of course when we do hear any moment get more details we will update you on that story. the issue of illegal migration is shaping chancellor angela merkel's top of africa germany shelter a vast amount of migrants and is now struggling to resolve the problem of failed asylum seekers because many of them lack basic identification papers our europe correspondent peter all of a report. migration policy in germany is firmly in focus right now but what to do when it's been decided that the person doesn't have the right to be here and should be deported well at the bizarre end of the spectrum is the case of one man in frankfurt who the city's office of public order confirmed to r.t. as how what ping five hundred and forty two criminal investigations against him the
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man who doesn't have a passport can't be deported because the authorities can't prove which nation he originally comes from oh and by the way this has been going on since ninety ninety eight over the last twenty years most of his offenses have involved drug charges driving offenses driving without a license and violations of the residency act but who year is remains a mystery we have a loose biography that suggests that he was born in one nine hundred fifty nine in north africa in the past he said that he was from morocco and also from algeria it could be that he is from one of those two countries or he could be from somewhere entirely different opposition figures say that this case shows the flaws in the current system in germany but i'm not surprised this is the most extraordinary case the most ridiculous case so to speak it's a failure of the system it's
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a failure of the government i think if the government really wanted to extradite people they could do it but they don't dare to do it because they're afraid of the left wing media. protest and their. so-called human rights organisations they protest against of even try to prevent physically the extradition of people the most recent statistics for this year show that more than half of deportation orders were carried out the most common reason for this is that when authorities turn up at the door address where somebody was supposed to. if 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 angela merkel as the chancellor makes her current tour around africa we have a situation now we're not all problems have been solved especially the british ans
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are still a big problem but what the chancellor has left behind violent scenes in the city of chemist'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 r.t. berlin the u.s. is resuming controversial joint military drills with south korea along the border with the north the details when we come back.
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the big. politicians do something to. put themselves on the line to get accepted or rejected . so when you want to be president. or somehow want to be. considered like to be for us this is what we're for asked three of them or can people get. interested falls in the waters in the. first six. months.
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all over again an israeli lobby group has allegedly staged an anti palestinian protest in the united states a leaked 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 investigative journalist who obtained the video here's what happened. if you happen to speak with any of our fighters just stay on message what is that message that's j.p. it's a secret you're going to know that i'll be hot ashes that has to go into arson fire and terrorism like. the protesters are on a fellowship program run by a conservative think tank called the things that you should just ignore it
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hopefully be out there these charities. set off a campus and backstop situation here no polic is at the center of a neo conservative likud political network in washington that represents the right wing of the pro israel lobby he's collaborated with neo conservative think tank in washington the hoover institution to basically pay fake protesters to make it look like people are coming out and protesting palestine and activity in washington my worst nightmare is. just a photo of t.r. high together or just like early identifiable and like all orders for traders it was dear to her body because thousand dollars plus benefits way of running out of the house right so i don't piss out of her is exactly the best policy yeah astroturfing is when corporations or political movements basically
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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 do. resistance. killers. kill children they don't care for at any rate. i'm distressed to find that all investigation into america's approach is really may represent the most important test yet all belgian series independents whether on networks still have space to thrive in midst the unjust book hate against talk atari hires.
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ok well we've contacted al-jazeera to ask why the film was never broadcast and we've also approached the emergency committee for israel and the hoover institution for their reactions on this if we do hear anything back of course we'll let you know exactly what they say. u.s. military drills with south korea which donald trump surprisingly counseled following the north korea summit in singapore back on the table. 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 as you know we took the step to suspend 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 the last large scale drills in the region were
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on 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 . don't screen has repeatedly said it's being targeted by the military games calling them a provocation and donald trump's decision to restart them has enraged beyond yank the u.s. maintains it's acting within the previous agreements 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 peninsula the region you've not heard much about the mid north korea could not in any way misinterpret those as somehow breaking faith with the negotiation well we had from analysts about how difficult the situation could once
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again become used to julian has made it very clear if the publication of drew will continue he will you return to fate t.v. so a nuclear test and i don't think this is good direction. at least from the pool of people of south korea and i think it's the best interests of seoul south korea to step in even this situation continue to escalate and if there's a conflict what he's sort of saying is you better. showed 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 kim in september south korea wants to open a liaison office on the border once in a way probably to regenerate new economic contacts i'm so the woman 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
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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'd say that says trump has been moved to the pentagon position rather than the pentagon never really been happy with trump's position ok that's the way i look for now thanks for checking in with our see this hour kevin owens here with the next world updates in just under forty minutes from now.
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they gave us national camera. roughly once they showed some leave for them. uncool videos and someone with the broken eastern that's. down more on string i don't rightly don't t.v. . you know world of big partisan movies lot and conspiracy 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 shouting past each other it's time for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the truth the time is now for watching closely watching the hawks.
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that are going to learn how to not their money and not out of the blood of the other not out of the mouth of the money that they are letting someone. else. this was a good time to. try to move there i'm. not allowed to get my money not why not. why it generated the old people we believe just a little bit here. a. lot of my kids i don't want them up with john even they are of the moment on account of mother having little accusers are there a lot of them i'm a little white community old enough to want the people i don't want to put out they are the most cutting and i don't know the mother bloodletting.
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four man are 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 us did not shoot around a corner. cracking gave americans a lot of new job opportunities i needed to come up here to make some money i committed twenty five thousand dollars as a teacher or i could make fifty thousand dollars a year truck so i chose to drive trucks people who rushed to a small town in north dakota was an unemployment rate of zero percent like gold rush is very very similar to a gold rush but this beautiful story ended with pollution and devastation
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a lot of people have left here i don't know too many people here and slow down so much they lost their jobs that laid off the american dream is changing that's not what it used to be. and it's a tough reality to deal with. in trump you know if it's all about a taco getting along with the greatest ally and friend russia there isn't enough play to get to the kids in need of help her up but there's other things in yourself . proceed here in the first half hour to see what what goes on.
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i. think. it will be against you know. your for your hideaway lost his boss because you got that you just part of the media which was you know. let me put your money but the pessimist want to go to show your grandmother think when i mean when i think to india thank you and you know it anyway oh ted. showing us that you know part of us you're not. you know just i mean what almost what a lot more people respect a part of me just going to. make chicken to smile at a loss coming from although there's an italian on low. and in the up on what i think there's a must go. with. the. priests . always had a were do. my thing with lassie equal kind of woman you just got to thirty years if
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westy and you know the thought of getting up there calling i think. it's the this is quite a focus on the boards you know people for. them what i mean by that anybody made a comment to you when they were there obviously but there have been. in the eighty's madeline was considered one of the most crime ridden the caissons in the whole world it was here the drug lords. the infamous cartel the gang made millions of dollars selling to. cain and its leader killed anyone who stood in his way even though the cartel was responsible for thousands of deaths happening
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remains a popular figure among the country's poorest people in some parts of the city he was even known as columbia's robin hood. medlen is also home to a close friend of ask fans they call him popeye and he confessed to murdering two hundred fifty people and organizing two and a half thousand killings he spent twenty three years in jail for the crimes. popeye hasn't become an outcast in the city where he once killed on the country he's very popular styling himself as a blogger and political activist who came to madeline to meet him to try and understand this colombian paradox why he is treated like a superstar. i must admit i was very nervous before our meeting. at least by the. end of the interview to either hide or that's a political brilliantly and i think even if we have.
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to. settle. the police your way out of the security you have the sort of. other than you don't leave those. best i mean primarily with. this tele role. is to leave those limits or in a large problem you just go to the media. understand ok i just know you're going to meet i. was in the premier league. so it is. merely the i got that i mean. they start out a complaint you see if there are you know they're moving. but i cannot
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based on other components a little bit about it but the media. is going to be put on by the. law get out with little thought it. could mean a little i am not into i want to. squat into police. responded to by step what is this guy just what i need is good then i support put us on i give up. you know. we had a moshe weave when. i was home in thirty. years what this sweet dog. sounded like. the. way you know the name you. obviously melanoma thought of him up and. let them all coming up with. i don't know your place on the camino and i'm a. million dollar man of the single thing let me go splat i'm going to throw thing
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i said. you know the best part of the moon do. you need them in order to. be published. mid year in. the end of. the media. in the mid eighty's popular cocaine empire came under attack the colombian government signed a treaty with the united states that allowed local drug lords to be extradited to the us saying. they're not the public school. we're not the. only of. this is. a moment that media spittles. yes it was very poignant the course part of the other day like to see all. the illustrations.
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i know listen for a moment. i am fed up of his i'm not. the answer costello thirty proudly lists the political thought through. the phone us but my specific comment some of. the philosophical been only are you have to study to find yang this is the kill before this stuff ready for the stock in humans you cannot say so but if those are you allowed to describe it i mean. here you. got all the what you want about. them into a conscious bundle on the end you know not of the truth of to keep it i see some of the keep model. still got those are the fruits of you get up and get on
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a hike and you know i don't do well i had a monsoon which i think very. close to my list and that is a lot of suffering for. you know when i was little time enough to not be so lucky but i knew the cycle were not being done you know people inside. young people will see cut you know the score and those at the moment thought of the non-farm honestly. there's a million of them i did a few of you know what i can tell you but then i got out the door he had opened. and yes i would have been huddled up with us a lot of other than just a little bit. but i got him a little because he's a gay woman. born and see my a full moon. but it's not like i don't like it up until now of what i meant and i can say the most but i'm on.
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but i you know from comment out of. the world is not a handbook inconsistent as i stand on the sun itself is how wonderful see you are the kids. cannot give up what i say spousal. just thought i had a. loved one in a storm although it isn't as how you don't know. this. kid from the fear not taking the simulator and i'm. just i'm biased because you want me and. you know we think it's not i really how will seem quaint but that ain't going to me at the risk of being the way already louka. i'll just put up with you got use about this i don't know so you do know is. this grossly on. you and i think it's gross eunice i'll go get on the. well i mean
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i want to we could you want to know which of you. said all along when you're going to get where you're my to tell us if there was ever a war yeah right president i want to go through this thing. to look at ok to move your. paisley i guess what they did in the putting that. i can see in the new page a little simply so you could i could not of mine because complain about me what i said is. very normal but i mean it doesn't deal with any of them are not bad enough yes you can imagine fear so and the thought is not what it was a lot of your novels. for your speech. all of the in a lot of mom with some of the any solo in the oath to mr allen i will
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definitely allow you the ocean for thought of going to. i can tell when our last. work is going to say and look it up when you see of. the people legacy of you're going to do if i don't want to start model. on one holding the bag on account. of the. public i think that there's a level to get us. to. sit where you meet your love they love. music i don't go no it's not like look at the contrary bikers to what they view. they will reach oh yeah someone give it to me that kind of voiced it but also i tell it just let me die out when i like and will get there you know monkey kind of another they don't get us i thought i lost yes first i mean i'm on my p.c. and if you can't wait to. put it there's an awful lot of somebody you know that i want you. yank out here's
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a crystal like you give it what i think what i'm really your sense he says he columbia. don't just think it's going to go along with the. boys on how is it that he owes us now i said that the i don't. know we were getting ready for our trip to metal and we were warned that it was a place where just a dollar might have anyone killed we couldn't help but ask a pro about today's going rates. villegas he going on i'm out that way i'm out i see of this like i'm in it the middle of bay me no way am i thought of by listening but i mean a lot of it. what about it but they come at us like this are going to the only. copy the. second at those as when we are still in office on and that's when i get.
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the under state control the then the almost i don't bother going to the on this stuff going through in my therapist one hour. now i like one dollar. per day. clues is most. mystery men tend to get around we do. use when you are in what you are going to tell us including one young man. said to me what the hotel but i call it delusion in their faces when they just alister me of course this was you know you. only. by. those. by. a.
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provisional or somebody around the corner it was true which is you move in there mr muscle man was developed you could just at least. one thing go in project do a study to see it out there but i not of course think of project or study. what can make this group a lot of what i mean. you know. you're then we need it all know we love us you know pull us out of us. said we're not a good us well on monday night columbia you're ducking mumble and. you know what to . do you know. what i mean what are you doing here why do you know it's you know me is it will pay you. this place where you know monday night you oka me missed out of work you know young barnacle they gave us you know nobody there was never the don't. you know katie i got i mean the media just look
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at the spot on so look at. the out in alina yellin it'll be a mini the. one. kilometer one of the holes. cut in you and r.c.m.p. love into what was going to be an easy get us counsel. you're not then you know you need to molly called us implementing my thought out loud problem you just gotta go you. don't know me i mean honestly almost as equals you nothing but the rest of the sicko but the end you personally. i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter to us is over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten like color time stamping each day. eighty five percent of the global wealth you longs to be ultra rich eight point six percent
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market sucks thirty percent just last year some with four hundred to five hundred trades per circuit first shut and bitcoin rose to twenty thousand dollars. china is building a two point one billion dollar a i industrial park but don't let the numbers overwhelm. the only numbers you need remember one one business shows you can't afford to miss the one and only boom both . shows the same wrong. roll just don't call. me lol that is yet to shake out these days to come out ahead and engage in a close to trail. when so many find themselves worlds apart. just to look for common ground.
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the communal movement of enough air which it's really. evil as a levels from somewhere you and. i came back to the community and people we are based on and on the road look at me all look out is on my wall going towards him. for a little while i was at all. like . she's going. to see me doing that because of. what it should be but still. i know you're going to this. is
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the five thousand or so i am not topping the my life. i seem on have to die. join me every thursday on the alex simon show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports business i'm show business i'll see you then. come on this is psychiatry say that popeye is ok i suppose it must be safe to ask him to demonstrate how used to torture and kill them but he willingly agreed to our request with enthusiasm. and adelle gargoyle we're not i used to look at the deal being open to that people just almost started on the yellow and here i. thought that there wasn't that idea like it up as a nod or that that. they don't put up with. you know if you look at the new day you
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go not the idea is to go i'll go how on you guys will you put up with. it look the . you're going to put in but really interesting is that they're going to rise but up is another to have. it as you know promise you're not. the monkey that it would. it was you know provision on my back and it would have been. based on those. you know the rocky. but i call it as you know going to prose in august but i keep what i will get the name you depend on the last rocky but they will pick up you know just a model. how about they don't keep yet keynote you know how about from the state of . clicks off election. thank you melissa.
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yes and up as well i must say i mean to really hear so you can get on to it in one respect those were the ost speedy tucson. and they'll cut i mean they have a crystal that i've got about. which of them are some eagles in the lead in the lead what i like a demolition that was. on the lead in several youngish and even if he doesn't. then go you know well you know it's necessary not to. like out to be will. get a thirty killer position of a i get up out of. but i do i mean by that. equine the guy up is when i need it i don't get on this. is how you him by little not that of the country the santissima even muddy. looking at the skin oh
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boy. they way you put up on our ma see she like ok now gallows thousand news jago next up the anything can. be in the market is that i thought out the window you know till it was just i thought of leaving for good like a muscle you know with a kind of i mean to him at interlaken. and there you hear bang going to leave you left right there are a democracy. ok good thing. you figure that is still a school open see this but the simple will find the meeting is too. long we'll see large beard on or so poor people can be but i'm opening up a common law about the comic opera but i honestly had to do more but up on the scene.
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thank. you for a good comeback. in the couple days and i'm not the case at the. polo vs a month on the part of the first t.v. screen at the. top of. the mean on. the call over. that if. they we're not leaving on your part becoming even the. minute a little money out of the. commitment it is a money loudly soon and that is how money. out the. people. can or cannot. be. the good life.
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for. you like. there was no. one where you as your normal person. there was you know what then and. now look at obama. so i would ask. so we're still so high to alaska but it's like pay you what you were paid to hike or a killer must have to hide
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a person doesn't love that flash and. some others have become or you. know i'll. probably see only a policy of those in some way be it they call it by some impulse they you know me and i was i mean a lot in this thread you think it's enough for you i think i was literally just because he. had a quarter of the stuff you know about the police yes it's time for you look on the boat that was made ok system out on the top when the police just ripped off for you and i mean this could mean i could pilot did i get a real appreciation look at the limited pleasure you. had been to the things that made the cops to break up that they're making peace with or like us if we do it we're going to try and up what are you. special what are your commute the moment. you look it up if i don't know if this will come to us we pull up if yes i would also people i think you know i think that look if it was if i mean you. asked.
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me if i would say so when we look at if i get out when we want to. some of them listen to the phone book you know my must be full of people so which come up to my mouth and the final poll but it's not just about that i started to see. here that it can only put it on a lot of data but it's a little bit in the schools to see i mean the place i don't know. looking inside states you know just doesn't have this little book at the heart of the fight that lasted. till you know the theme of this is. you know little to get us out of this in the coastal zone right i see right. thank you kids. in office numbers of the countries and please don't listen to the star witness list how do you know the
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point of putting me down this will. mean a. lot of power that. i don't think it was of course them was innocent this little girl in a look at the funny we don't talk until. the pharmacy full i was thinking it's a family might see the body sink and look at the kid came up with nothing but i meant to say that although this is a problem like this never having seen the good from my eyes just this film i was appalled at some of its last of the concept and we try to make out the limit for my part but i really thought it. was time for them to make it i mean i could argue with. they don't want to marry until it hits the floor it was for me thought it was just as when i was. about this a lot of the things. gentlemen jam up me democrats want. me to leave my name for
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them of the decade i could argue with a cloud. about your partnership it up at your feet it was throwing this season c c i'm on it yeah you're right on it was live a question of the system olesen for you know my question of feel for the time you know when you're sick of it could you make. the money america more us. or you know what you are going to say i just don't you. enormous don't keep the pick i'm going to find another bunch of happened to us on the southeast as a last time thing. he plays. most kids could see the moment thing this is a plan out of ten percent. don't get us like they come with somebody. i
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mean it was a lot getting on which honestly i went alone. and pretty you know michel and. you know i'm going to stroll into school that i know only. sally was that i'm interested because of the end of. the cinema don't want us i just see. the. thousands. upon top illegal look at oh my there's a me that says you know said rose and not pretty she on the up or another multilateral concept will see this and that idea is still available there are nasty lines i can and. show reporting experience here. yes that's correct pass. it with the enemy go. in
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a me go that when i meet up with this is let me go. first but. when i see it there is a common in. it that i know what the real i mean in an election in which i think i work a presence because this will put it into the papers say it's the plastic load of interest to own when you are. equal to one up when you're on time this came into. it up with alan if they were to see me at them. banks guys are financial survival they say money the bellatrix clergy abuse it this is a central plank so for die a gunman is going to call them right now say stop them.
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with gold make its manufacture come sentenced him to public wealth. when the ruling classes protect themselves. with the financial merry go round of lives only the one percent. we can all middle of the room signals. from the real need is really. good politicians to do something to. put themselves on the line they get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president. or somehow want to be preached. to the right to be press that's what the before freedom or can't be good. i'm
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interested always in the waters of our. question. not that one other time that another not out of the budget that cuts out of the money out of the money there's plenty that at exhibit. this was a good time to. try to move there i'm doudna mom. not out loud to get my money not why not. why extending the old people we believe is the o.p.'s. lot of ikea's i live on the bubble so johnny what are the other moment i thought of mother
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having little accuser is a little on the way community old almost all of the things i don't want to put out a are the most hardy without all the mothers love it. for a man or sitting in a car when the phipps 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. cracking gave americans a lot of new job opportunities i needed to come up here to make some money i could make twenty five thousand dollars as a teacher or i could make fifty thousand dollars
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a year truck so i chose to drive truck people who rushed to a small town in north dakota was an unemployment rate of zero percent like gold rush is very very similar to a ball drop. a lot of people have left here i don't know. got laid off.
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as the decisive battle looms over the last rebel stronghold in. syria the u.s. discards russia. possible chemical attack being prepared by terrorists. you know because there's enough for when you try to put the blame they try to put the onus on other groups and we don't buy into that coming up to the video of a young palestinian girl scaling israeli built fence to get a hold in the west bank goes viral we speak to the activist who filmed the incident . when he struggles to support an undocumented migrant who's investigated for more than five hundred offenses as the issue of illegal migration overshadows. africa. and problems as well we don't spoken british rock star roger waters seems in russia
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for it said the gig so you've got plenty to say about the world's biggest issues i wish we could seize news from. the guy who was producing the record producing this record with me started telling me about how. hard she was. just pure propaganda nothing but a pack of lies when i was up churchy. watching too just the afternoon here in moscow this is the international first of the us busy ignoring warnings that terrorists are preparing a chemical attack in a province in northwest syria a state department spokesperson simply said that they don't buy into that when asked about the intelligence provided by moscow. the russians are claiming now and this one other groups are stockpiling chemical weapons and planning an attack so
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you know and i think that's more false flag type reporting talking about this is enough for when you try to play the blame they try to put the onus on other groups and we don't buy into that. russia says it has information on the delivery of toxic substances to had lived province it claims it got there with the help of the self-styled rescue group the white album it and is being used in a full flag attack possibly coming up russia's foreign minister sergey lavrov explained the motivation behind the plot. the chemical weapons provocation which is being prepared is aimed at keeping el nuestra they're counting on using it against the so-called regime as they call it following the alleged goot a chemical attack russia's warning that rebels will try to stage as similar incident in evening to draw the u.s. france and britain in get them to hit a sad again russia says an incident is imminent especially after the u.s. and allies jointly stated that they would act if it looks like as had launched
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another chemical attack that's almost an invitation to do so says moscow. now when the u.s. is steering the situation around we want to know how can damascus have chemical weapons if the u.s. france and great britain destroyed them last year you know what the u.s. answer is we never said that france did it's do or dive for the jihad ists rebels nowhere left to run nothing left to lose and their sponsors the west the gulf which have pumped billions upon billions of dollars into a cause that's on its last legs the mascot's and moscow are trying to work out a deal to reduce perhaps avoid the bloodshed but the job for it syria russia adamant the swamp of terror and zealotry has no future. this is the last place for the terrorists so from all points of view this abscess
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should be removed of course what everybody's fearful of is escalation given the us russian military buildup in the region everyone has a gun pointed at each other and given that this is it the final act of the syrian war the urge to shoot might just be overwhelming the united states doesn't believe that the rebels have that capability whereas there. tremendous documentation to show that they do have the capability they've probably been storing it for months if not years in the province and they have used it in the past they have that capability and it is a last ditch hold for them so it cannot be ruled out it's not it's not beyond the realm of possibility that the u.s. is trying to get assad out they're going to continue trying and and even though donald trump wants to. get the u.s.
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out of syria there are elements within the u.s. government that don't want that to happen well but to concerns about the white helmets the group being accused of assisting the delivery of a large supply of chemicals to adlib province they've been linked with terrorists several times before political activist and outspoken british rock musician roger waters from pink floyd who's a long been a vocal critic of the syrian organization shared his thoughts with r.t. he's currently actually actually in russia too and spoke at length to sophie shevardnadze. if there is a grassroots body called the way home is of foreign tears. for the people who actually started to stumble it didn't start it was started by an english soldier. in istanbul but if that exists. and they and
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they go and help people. to the russians or somebody else to stop bob's of them then i support them wholeheartedly 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. now for this book and google when you choose but part of the way that most people get their news and they use those. social media in or in order to educate themselves or find out what's going on earth but it's being
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it is being the content is being censored by the corporations that earn it. so it so so it 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 as fighters as the life we really were. the guy was producing the record producing this record with me started telling me about. how archie was. just pure propaganda nothing but a pack of lies while i worked churchy so i guess you can't see a documentary about fracking on american television because they weren't interested in it in time and telling you anything about anything yes really insightful chart
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the full interview with roger waters going to come upon so few cold september seventh only on this channel we are r t international. video of a young palestinian girl climbing a security fence wrecked by israeli forces in the west bank has provoked outrage online she's apparently trying to simply get home after israeli security forces closed the gate there campaigners say this is becoming a daily routine these days for palestinians we spoke to from the hebron freedom fund who filmed what was going on here whenever the army closes the gates the you know do that every day and the distinctions are there if the students from the neighborhood use me in. a few minutes on leaving or to the school we have a give the school a boy to school only one or two three minutes far from the neighborhood but
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a solution policy in the separation policy. of the only question makes them. walk around and sometimes climb. the gates and they climb the fences. let's try to get a handle on this more close up this is what happened bringing them out there it's the south of the west by the district in hebron the old city it's where israeli authorities have erected one hundred fifty meter long fence and you can see it there in the blue palestinians living there have got only two ways to get to the hoses the checkpoint all the gate you saw in the video we asked the i.d.f. why such measures were felt to be necessary when they replied that in fact the barrier was put there for security reasons after an israeli man was stabbed to death there last year but last thursday had to be locked for several hours for repairs which is the twist of the story when a number of palestinians sabotaged it the i.d.f. says residents were able to pass through from a nearby gauge just a few meters away on the back it may israeli forces kept close for six days as
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a punishment for stone throwing as they put it. he's rummer against his palestinian families are facing segregation and inequality in their daily lives because of this barrier the fence. neighborhood around seventy seven families from their schools from the. from their universities from the other neighbors we call their gate and there are all sickly gated and equal at all because that road is only in eons from the main street is the jewish settlers
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they walk on the mean street and living there they walk on the side of that old you know we have twenty two checkpoints one hundred movement in one kilometer square in the city center of people on. the issue of illegal migration is shaping chancellor angela merkel's tour of africa right now germany sheltered a vast amount of migrants it is now struggling to resolve the problem of failed asylum seekers more generally as many like basic id papers with one particular case in point is our europe correspondent peter oliver. migration policy in germany is firmly in focus right now but what to do when it's been decided that the person doesn't have the right to be here and should be deported well at the bizarre end of the spectrum is the case of one man in frankfurt who the city's office of public order confirmed to r.t. its how a whopping five hundred and forty two criminal investigations against him the man
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who doesn't have a passport can't be deported because the authorities can't prove which nation he originally comes from oh and by the way this has been going on since ninety ninety eight over the last twenty years most of his offenses have involved drug charges driving offenses driving without a license and violations of the residency act but who year is remains a mystery we have a loose biography that suggests that he was born in one nine hundred fifty nine in north africa in the past he said that he was from morocco and also from his from algeria it could be that he is from one of those two countries or it could be from somewhere entirely different opposition figures say that this case shows the flaws in the current system in germany but i'm not surprised this is the most extraordinary case the most ridiculous case so to speak it's a failure of the system it's a failure of the government i think if the government really wanted to extradite
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people they could do it but they don't dare to do it because they're afraid of the left wing media. would protest and their. so-called human rights organisations they protest against of even try to prevent physically the extradition of people the most recent statistics for this year show that more than half of deportation orders were carried out the most common reason for this is that when authorities turn up at the door address where somebody was supposed to live. if 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 angela merkel as the chancellor makes her current tour around africa we have a situation now we're not all problems have been solved especially the british ans
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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. i. peter all over r.t. berlin. come up here and out international paid to protest an unreleased al-jazeera documentary reportedly exposes israeli lobby is footing the bill for an anti palestine rally we'll tell you all about that and more when a comeback. you
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know world big partisan. and conspiracy it's time to wake up to dig deeper to hit the stories that made stream 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 for
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the truth the time is now up for watching closely watching the hawks. again this is not international with me kevin coming up next then the story about israeli lobby group that so legibly staged an anti palestinian protest in the united states a leaked extract from the unreleased al-jazeera documentary said the show people who were paid to take part of the demonstration we spoke to the investigative journalist obtained a video is what happened. if you happen to speak with any reporters just stay on message what is that message that's t.p. it's a secret you're going to know that all of the action is that has to be in charge of
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this. terrorism and. the protesters are on a fellowship program run by a conservative think tank called the institution to just ignore paul kelly in the uk there are these charities because of the suicide bombing at a campus you have to stop searching the shit out of here no pollack is at the center of a neoconservative probe 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 make it look like people are coming out and protesting palestine activity in washington doing my worst nightmare is. a photo of to go on a high together and we're just like early identifiable and like all orders for traitors it was such
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a dear ceremony how much it costs two thousand dollars plus benefits our way of putting out a house like house for it so no i don't this is out now is exactly the best of us 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 as goals when they really don't want to. distance. kill or cease fire that killed children they don't care about at any rate. i'm distressed to find that all investigation into america's pro israel lobbyists
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may represent the most important test yet over al-jazeera is independence and whether our networks still has space to thrive admits the unjust blockade against aka tare host. i can tell you we contacted al-jazeera to ask why the film was never broadcast we also approached the emergency committee for israel and the hoover institution for their reactions to if we do hear anything about her course we'll give you a further update about it. story china earlier on today plowed into pedestrians and motorcyclists in the city of manning in the south of the country local media reporting at least one person dead there and several others injured a warning following images of distress in the instant took place near a district hospital seems the nurses impasses by the move pretty quickly at the scene they can be seen running towards the injured to give first aid there are fears that the number of dead them iraq is no word on the cause or what happened
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there. u.s. military drills with south korea which donald trump surprisingly canceled following the north korea summit in singapore back on the table. 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 as you know we took the step to suspend several of the largest exercises as a good faith measure coming out of the singapore summit we have no plans at this time to suspend any more exercises. the last large scale drills in the region where in august twenty seventh seen they involved ten days of exercises with about fifty thousand south korean troops and seventeen and a half thousand u.s. military personnel.
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north korea has repeatedly said it's being targeted by these military games calling them a provocation donald trump's decision not to restart them has enraged pyongyang m.p.b. u.s. maintains it's acting within the previous agreements that 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 peninsula the region you've not heard much about the mid north korea could not in any way misinterpret those as somehow breaking faith with the. so where from here we spoke to a number of analysts to get their thoughts about how difficult or not the situation could become now. just a few julian has made it very clear. the publication of the drew will continue to
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reactivate t.v. 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 interest of south korea to stop you leave this situation continue to escalate if there's a conflict sort of saying is you better show me some steps which i can then say we're moving in the right direction is 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. in september south korea wants to open a liaison office on the border once in 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 trungpa 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
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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. and so that says trump has been moved to the pentagon position rather than the pentagon never really been happy with transportation we'll continue to follow the twists and turns keep you posted that's it for now though follow all the day's news and so much more from a straight to mobile device with our app here in moscow is kevin owen saying thanks for watching and stand by for more programs right after this break. let.
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me. i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter the u.s. has over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten like her current champion each day. eighty five percent of global wealth he longs to be all for rich eight point six percent market saw thirty percent i just want to secure some with four hundred to five hundred three per second per second and bitcoin rose to twenty thousand dollars. china is building a two point one billion dollar a i industrial park but don't let the numbers overwhelm. the only number you need
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to remember is one in one business show you can afford to miss the one in only. four men are sitting in a car when the feds get shot in the head. all four have 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 list did not share around a corner. not enough they would see rick. able as a line. i came back to the community. and people we are down in on the road lookouts me all you got is
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all bible god's hand. that. she's going to receive money doesn't that give us all that. we all knew this. was the most touching me in my life. i see none have to die. greetings and salutation. this week on
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a late summer sunday in jacksonville florida described old twenty four year old opened fire in the local video game tournaments and shattered after new competition the gunman david katz of baltimore maryland shot down two fellow gamers and wounded roughly ten others before turning the gun on himself and taking his own life. it wouldn't be it seems another weekend in the united states of america without more violence more crazed madman another round of ludicrous theorizing on just what or who is to blame for another terrible tragedy naturally the political left immediately point immediately pointed to the gun than the killers hand as the ultimate culprit but it was the right the political right the conservatives the found a new enemy. of the people to blame for all the violence in our society and they chose. videogames q fox news and retired political science professor carol swain who proclaimed on the martha maccallum show i think that
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playing those violent video games clearly influences behavior and we know that in the military they sometimes use video games to break down people's inhibitions and so there is no way our children are not being affected by violent video games and movies that they watch so what was this horribly violent vicious shoot 'em up game cats was playing the clearly rotted his brain to the point of bile and rampage. why madden n.f.l. nineteen and american football simulation video game wasn't call of duty wasn't wasn't even grand theft auto yes he was playing a video game simulation of the n.f.l. the same n.f.l. that is featured every sunday on fox t.v. i wonder why martha maccallum and our panel of guys didn't blame the violence of n.f.l. football as a reason for the shooting. video games have long been the perfect target
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of politicians religious leaders and others as the bane of morality for our children so today let's find out just why videogames have taken center stage in the blame game as we start watching all this. at the bottom. you know that i got. to. well for what it was for the hawks i am sorry robot and on top of the law list and i just want to state as that the video games that she's talking about that the military is the most violent the ones that actually if
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you were going to say have any kind of connection that are first person shooters an entire category of video games by the way first person shooters the ones that they're talking about that the military uses are things like ghost recon call of duty black ops call of duty modern warfare ghost recon advanced war fighter. one thing about what these all things and that have in common for most of the game you play as a u.s. army soldier or a marine or a navy seal or a special forces assassin out to. take down somebody else so by and large the bulk of the most violent video games or are war games that recreate world war one world war two vietnam korea any of these like major moment push the military industrial complex right where before you so you know. wow it's interesting you know it's it's also true the goods it's like people are quick to blame everything but
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the person who did you know the leader of the quick to blame of it well it's got to be this it's got to be this because we always need a reason for violence which is i mean and now it's video games and what is that there's no evidence that supports that video games cause about dave you're in fact the u.s. secret service conducted a review in two thousand and four and did a bit of buying causes of school shootings that have found just twelve per cent of studied attackers twelve per cent by about a forty one expressed an interest in violent video games more of them had copies of the energy book and their house than have video games in our school shooters so it's sort of like saying what if you find a book what if you find a board game oh my gosh what if you find this i think it's interesting because there actually was a study by the southern. journal that was talking about that it was published in february twenty sixth and that showed that actually video games can be tied to a decrease in violence and that researchers found a reduction in crime rates in areas the weeks following major videogame
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exuberance and so i have played a video game that i don't commit crimes away when we go to brand new brand new madden brand new n.b.a. two k will play rather rather than going out running the streets i'm going to tell you folks for the folks at home i play a lot of video games and i've never wanted to actually go out and play a real dragon because that would be inappropriate i mean of one or two controllers in my time but i've broken at the moment in my time but yeah it's never people it's never like i've never you know raged outwardly at somebody next to me when you lose you lose this is a disturbed young man who doesn't know how the reason this event he got beat got beaten by an african-american and i that's. that's where i think that's wise i think though it lies on those who are much more concerned about what toxic young white men and a really bad society that teaches and a lot about what's interesting too is the american psychological association and
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media psychology division actually advise the officials of reporters to stop making the connection between video games and real life acts of violence they said quote journalists and policy makers do their constituencies a disservice in cases where they link acts of real world violence with the perpetrators exposure to violent video games or other violent media there is little scientific evidence to support the connection and it may distract us from addressing those issues that we know contribute to real world violence which is usually poverty depression exasperate should you know of feeling that they cannot get ahead no million diverted racism brain different things of yeah it's not about it's not about the game about what you play. on november twelfth eighteen forty professor john anthony gardner davis was shot and killed by a student on the grounds of the university of virginia kind of the first school shooting and since that nineteenth century a school shooting we've had many more but whether it's virginie attack newtown or
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parklane they all have one thing in common the data surrounding the events isn't telling the whole story and may even be making things worse the us department of education civil rights data collection division reported that from twenty fifteen to twenty sixteen there were two hundred forty schools in the u.s. that report or at least one school related shooting but a recent national public radio investigation revealed that of those two hundred thirty five schools the federal government reported school shootings in one hundred sixty one of those schools told n.p.r. that no school shootings had taken place thirty seven schools in cleveland alone told them that they intended to mark the previous data point not the one that was reported for incidence this is incidences were miscategorized with only a levin being confirmed the remaining fifty nine. could be proven or disproven by n.p.r. that means that only four organizations are collecting and compiling statistics on school shootings and that they all rely on either self reporting by the school as
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media reports or incomplete law enforcement reporting and that inaccurate data is what the federal government uses to determine how much money should be spent on what programs and which many six states spending about nine hundred sixteen million dollars on school safety programs since the park was shooting in february of this year the very least we could do for the people actually lost in senseless school violence is to base those safety programs on correct information i could not agree with you more we absolutely should be using the correct information when we base any kind of legislation or make many going to societal decisions because we have told the data how can you make a note of you make any kind of good the sound of subject matter you know and also. it's hard for me hard for me to to want to put the safety of my children in the hands of but see divorce and drive issues it was tough for me that's not a great mood it was tough especially when those two have bad information.
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and you can't blame whitebread see the boss was around the way that's just to be clear if that's us and come up with a system she's just she's doing what they've always been there and you're just not into any better but she is using this data the plan for the federal government to pay to arm teachers with firearms in schools which i'm sure maybe off topic but is the best if you arm a teacher at a school what happens if the teacher decides to go to swim bait and shoot up a school. we will get them a calming video game which is money because they always they like the violent video games make you violent then why don't we just have more calming video games that make you feel better about yourself and not hate your body or your gender or your skin color or your religion for good i mean this is a crazy idea i'm out here it's. we're because like i said there's only four organizations that we rely on for this information right now and it's much like police shootings it's it's fairly disturbing the fact that you have the see your cd
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which is civil rights data collection part of the department of education you have every town for gun safety which is obviously an anti-gun organization and therefore as much restriction as they can get through. and so there's obviously an agenda you know not that i think they're being. i'm not saying that they're lying about the numbers to make their point but i'm saying that they're going to take the memories and trust to it to some extent you know they trust certain things that are going on there and the only other two are the f.b.i. and the washington post. the organizations those two how dare you. but one thing i found really strange is that when n.p.r. got in touch with them and said hey we found these mistakes the federal government so it's part of a division of the department of education the c.r.c. responded saying that they rely on schools to self report but doesn't check to see if the information is acra for accurate before publishing and they also went on to say this year in d.c. accept correction requests for up to one year from the moment of the submission
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period opens for the twenty fifteen twenty sixteen collection the corrections period closed on june thirtieth twenty eighteen and for this reason your data correction request cannot be accepted however dated no will be included on the data file so insuring is or where the error is your reporting now one of the ears that n.p.r. was trying to point out is that there was an incident say november twenty first twenty fifteen a it was a saturday and a student posted a picture of himself at home holding a gun and had post not in a manner just you know gun opposed to social media and that was listed as a school shooting and they will not correct it because while you're at it most of the day we have to correct her legs are just going to leave this data out here for davis alliance says versus the olive. it's just if you were are a data scientists are such that you don't use that. you know that lawyer every town i mean they they track every time a firearm discharges a live round inside or into
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a school building or on or on to a school campus or grounds as documented by the press you know it's look here's the thing it's like i think the problem that you have here is that most of us in watching news or reading information you think a school shooting you immediately think of which is they're going in telling people the major school shooting not you know someone accidentally discharging a firearm in a pickup truck in a parking lot or something of that nature you know this is like you know like a friday and tomorrow scott think of all as rudra i'm going to grow our country code approach talk what sort of don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we cover the facebook and twitter see our poll shows that are to dot com coming up we delve into the allegations that a chinese company may have hacked all of the recordings e-mails all she was secretary of state and that are to use actually banks reports on the rare guilty verdict of the texas police officer charged with the murder of a young black teenager so stay tuned for watching the whole.
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and trump you know it's all about detente and getting along with our greatest ally friend russia here is you know plates are 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 let's go what.
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they're not what i learned how to not that i'm not out of love though they're not that i'm not out of the money out of the money the day of the night at the gym and . this was a good time to. try to move there i'm. not that i wasn't going to have a lot to me not why not. why x. chanting in the old people we believe just a little bit here. little of my kids i don't want the bubble so john what are the other moment i want to tell them about how do a lot of kids or is it a lot of them on the way to my building let's put out the pink i don't want to put out a look at my work party when i don't know the mother blow that it. figures
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are being pointed accusations are flowing a denials are flying in washington after the daily caller dropped a bombshell this week reporting that a chinese own company operating in washington d.c. area. in the washington d.c. area hacked hillary clinton's private server throughout her term as secretary of state and attained you know all her e-mails now the daily caller it tributes this story to just two anonymous sources but that and stop u.s. president from taking to twitter and drawing criticism tweeting out hillary clinton's e-mails many of which are classified information got hacked by china next move better be by the f.b.i. or d.o.j. or after all of their other missteps their credibility would be gone forever the f.b.i. countered the president telling reporters that the f.b.i. hasn't found any evidence that clinton servers were compromised here to help us suss out the latest claim
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a foreign government hacking in the potomac he said she said they said that follows conservative commentator dave miles. and i dare you to say that again is that i mean is that i've. got there are one says that not just isn't it interesting because the daily caller you know kick start of this incredible story but they are just sources to two anonymous sources which i mean time i hear anonymous sources always make time to raise you know why why should we believe the daily caller's claims why should we think that this is accurate information with reporters well you know you could take it all the way back to when the former head of the f.b.i. james komi said that no prosecutor would ever bring charges against hillary and take the case also brought up the possibility that yes. there could have been bad actors that got involved and got a hold of some of hillary's e-mails as a matter of fact there's a fox has reported on an e-mail from may of two thousand and sixteen where peter
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struck a peter struck was a counter-intelligence along with lisa page this story says that the inspector general of the intelligence division went to the f.b.i. with this information that hillary's e-mails had been hacked by the chinese and that they had all of her e-mails and that peter struck was one of the people that was told about it and did nothing and then an e-mail. that was back you know fifteen sixteen there's an e-mail reportedly from peter struck where he said we know that foreign actors got a hold of some of hillary's emails so that that we know so it all does make some kind of sense. look i was particularly taken when the donald trump said are you sure it wasn't russia i thought that was a great line and i want to do that three months but but but you know why should we believe this really i mean it's not beyond the the realm of possibility china was accused just a few months ago of infiltrating and hacking the navy and co and some some specific
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submarine anti-ship missiles and all that stuff getting the plans for them and all that so china we know is very active in the espionage i think they learned it from watching not perfectly honest they probably got it as fast hand such as kind of why this is a bad idea but what do you think if this indeed happened a chinese company that may or may not have connections to their government has access to clinton's e-mail during that time. what kind of fallout could we see of a security breach if it comes out is prevent of this size well imagine of hillary having shot or even saying it but imagine if hillary had been president a talk about blackmail i mean the chinese government if this is true would have had over thirty thousand deleted e-mails that nobody ever saw except her and her cronies in their possession to blackmail city so that's one thing as far as now i mean that if they have it it hangs over her head it could be leaked someone
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could hack into the chinese government computers or you could have some rogue person leaking it to wiki leaks or somebody so if this is true it's out there and all the classified information that hillary dealt in and let's not forget we have found out that baracoa despite his that his claims that i just found out about. our server would be in the media with everybody else he was one of those who corresponded with hillary on her secure server so we might if this ever comes out china might have that correspondence between barack obama and his secretary of state hillary clinton so there's all kinds of possibilities if this ever does become public if this is true you know it's interesting president trump you know immediately tweeted out this story after story right of the caller saw fox news reporting it which then you know obviously caused this brief war of words the tablet that was talking about mythos in you know with the f.b.i. and the accusations and making accusations is this war of words and tweets actually
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distracting us from getting to the bottom of this story and others because it seems like sometimes donald like immediately puts out the tweet and then everybody you know the mainstream and everybody focuses on donald this tweet and who he's fighting with rather than the actual meat of the story. well guess what guys and you know this nobody's talking about this really i'm glad i'm thrilled that we are and you are to go kudos to you for having me on to talk about this but there's this isn't a big story today they're not saying hillary's e-mails could have been hacked by china the media has no interest in that scenario in that story line it's not russia if this was russia maybe they would have given it some play although of course it's hillary so maybe not but china they couldn't care less who is spying on us they couldn't care less who is hacking us they couldn't care less who is breaching our national security if it's not russia they want us to believe russia is the only
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person who's got nefarious intent and would do anything to interfere with elections and is the only one spying on us they don't talk about us doing it to other countries and they don't talk about other countries doing it to us it's just russia you know and i think there's so much we knew and that's what i want to my next question comes to you because i feel like we've gotten so caught up in this idea of . nuclear disarmament in certain areas as if that's going to make all the you know the change in the world and everything will be peaceful but really right now it seems to me that cyber security and cyber espionage is far more dangerous between learned from snowden and everybody else and the spokesman for the chinese foreign ministry actually stated that these accusations are nothing new and said china advocates at the international community jointly response of cyber security threats through dialogue and cooperation on the basis of mutual respect and quality and mutual benefit russian president vladimir putin has also stated that it needs to be an international dialogue and agreements over cyber security so my question is just
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like with nuclear weapons just like we have with chemical weapons just like we have years every generation at some point said we need to get a hold on this why are we not having any international sit down in geneva with all the countries and say look we've got to get a handle on this and make some rules about cyber and espionage and spying. well that i mean that's a good question again i don't know how much faith you could put in any agreement that would be reached because governments could always use third parties and say we did we don't know anything about that guy or that company or that organization that's that's hacking into your government file so i don't know but i'll tell you what bothers me more is that when it comes to cyber security this country you know it really reached its peak under obama the eight years i mean think of how advanced we all got the whole world when it comes to the ability to do this kind of thing cyber espionage the threat to our power grid which is so vital because if our per
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our grid goes down we're dead i mean that we're dead literally if it goes down for an extended amount of time no food no fuel no medicine no anything so i'm more concerned that we have not as a country done more to protect ourselves against cyber threats including the. grid and everything else and shored up our defenses and yes would be wonderful to have you know and international forum where we all promised. but i don't think those could really ever be trusted maybe that's just the skeptic in me and i'm not well i'm a gent x. or so i'm very skeptical and i have you know already better and that i will say at me as my leg you know could hit the liberal that i am i totally agree with the honest idea that we no concept i think our government does nothing to think of what could happen in those things if we were in long range even diplomatic wars with countries where we can't get fuel we can't there are so many ways that you know people and it's always the people at the bottom the working class and the poor that
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will have you know extra bottled water and actually food to get them through the night of the first to suffer very interesting too because they brought a good point i think we've spent far too much time off but you know when looking at . security apparatus in our cyber capabilities i think we spend far too much time and often rather the defense and i think that's a great point that you brought up and you know i think you touched on this earlier it's interesting to see how the how the mainstream media is just completely went to sleep on this story even even if it's true you know protect. they've completely just not even really even gone in that direction or even asked about it you know why why is that why do you think that it's like why are we so obsessed with just one country hacking us or you know him or not at all like why is that obsession there we're out of the media because if china hacked hillary that doesn't in any way further the narrative of trump can't be involved trump can't be accused it's
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not going to get trump out of all this in the minds of the media it doesn't push their narrative in fact that it dilutes the narrative it confuses people what you know you tell me china not just russia so they want to keep the focus on the bad guy the bogeyman that they've created russia and make it seem like it's only happened in this election it's only donald trump trial. vista blame trump colluded it just doesn't do them any good and their goal is to get rid of trump it's been that way from day one after the election and saying china did something to hillary just they're not interested you know it's also interesting too because remember i think it was just recently we had reports of them feinstein for x. amount to yes her driver was was accused of being a spy for china seems like there's a lot of leaky holes in the democratic side of things would come out of china spies . you know a lot of a lot of leaky holes and by the way if i may i think every time i'm on your show somehow it comes back to this where the heck is you have sessions trump said you
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think that what he said what are the chances the justice department the f.b.i. will do the right thing here i say zero sessions has to go this is another thing that needs to be investigated he has no interest in it he's in hiding i don't know where the guy is but he doesn't belong is the attorney general of the united states again we agreed to write to you i think but i think a lot of us just sort of seems to be distracted by going after you know medical marijuana and legalize it and that's something that's right alison calm down and focus on a job he needs to do. really is incredible and this is an incredible story and i'm very curious to see where it actually ends up and where it ends up going but thank you so much for coming on the day with us to discuss this always a pleasure having you on steve always my pleasure thank you guys appreciate it thank you. and finally today we finish with a verdict we rarely see in the story involving a shooting death of a young black man in the police here in the united states on tuesday
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a jury in texas found springs police officer roy oliver guilty of murder in the shooting death of teenager jordan at birds was shocked by all over after leaving a party with his friends back in two thousand and seventeen ortiz actually bank says more on this surprising conclusion to a very familiar tragedy were oliver was found guilty yet. killing unarmed high school freshman jordan at words as the teen with the leaving a house party last year many are calling this conviction where an employee twenty nine twenty seven teen officers were dispatched to a house party after receiving a call of under age drinking for oliver says as he was in the home he heard gunshots outside and thought there was a shooter. he went outside and saw a car filled with five unarmed teenagers including edwards they also shot into the vehicle striking edwards in the head the fifteen year old died and stanley oliver
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later found out the gunshots were coming from the car but instead were being fired near i'm nursing home in the area oliver was fired from his position shortly after the shooting took place over testified last week and said he saw the car moving toward his partner and thought the officer's life was in danger however his partner testified saying he didn't fear for his life and didn't feel the need to fire his weapon at all edwards family and friends were more than happy with oliver fiction and the words family attorney said quote this case is not just about jordan it's about tim you're right it's about walter scott it's about alton sterling it's about every african-american who has been killed and has not gotten justice and texas governor greg abbott tweeted shortly after the conviction was announced this life should never have been lost oliver is only the second officer to be convicted of murder within the past thirteen years he faces the possibility of a life behind bars and washington national banks are here and that is our show for
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you to they remember born in this world we're not told we're loved enough should tell you all i love you i am tired rover and on top of the polish people are watching those hawks never grew very much everybody. the leave him. alone and not me not a witch it's. evil that's a line of all's from some of you. i came back to the community. people we all be standing on the road look out for me oh look out his own bible don't torture him.
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let's. see. she's going. to see me down in that song. if you don't. know we're going to this. it doesn't also i'm not touching the my life. i sing my song have to die. because you know provision on my back when i want it. but i. just i don't hide oh i lost his bus because i just got then you just gotta go we don't have anybody on a month all those imposing but the best on us i don't mean to any of them. so i says you know what i was you're not. you're not just i mean my most important i'm
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already but a sped up part of me just gotta go. i remember the lord. has been up as well i must be healed i just don't get it i'm getting worse but those were the oaths they speeded to silence those people are going to respect i'm one of those but i was just this better this part of this i'm going to come up on my bed and we've got a bomb i just got that already yes equestrian in the thought of getting. calling cuisia your demented not that i love bob let me just quote to you. the good food russia brand has just been launched at the international food and beverage exhibition in viet nam several companies from siberia landed in the city to present russia's biggest competitive advantage and that's our get it and g.m.o. free food at low prices but. i couldn't find any natural milk when i went shopping
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here it be enemies and other imported dairy including milk powder having gradient a slight amount and they recommend those things to children from three years of age with a general rising consumption and demand for a higher quality of life in viet nam the russians are confident that their approach is the best we know that russia russia how about a lot of good products specially now russia surely can supply a lot of agricultural product with a high quality and then we look for the sea brought up you know a simple mark as a russian producers participate in the world's largest food exhibit thanks to the russian expert center with its help intrapreneur and her new markets while foreign consumers get high quality natural products which it was important to present a new brand that we're introducing on the asian market good food russia we expect this brand to become a driving force for the russian products which will be marketing is top quality organic food these are the real qualities by the way and we tell that to our partners over all the mission was
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a success it is hope to that good food from russia sampled in viet nam will leave a lasting impression as well ron calls for if r.t. . as a decisive battle looms over the last rebel stronghold an adlib province in syria he'll add now estimating this is new and there are around ten thousand al nasra terrorists there the u.s. earlier though rejected russian intelligence. possible chemical attack being prepared by the jihad is. going to be seen before when you try to put the blame they try to put the onus on other groups and we don't buy it and. also coming up a video of a young palestinian girl scaling an israeli built finds to get hold in the west bank goes viral we speak the activist who filmed their. struggles to deport undocumented migrants he's been investigated for more than five hundred offenses as the issue of illegal migration overshadows chancellor merkel's current tour of
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africa. and coming up as well we meet outspoken british rock star roger waters who's in russia for a set of gigs and he's got plenty to say about the world's biggest issues and where he gets his news from. the guy who's producing the record producing this record started telling me about how far to how it was. just pure propaganda nothing but a pack of lies while i was. glad you did to welcome its three pm thursday afternoon here in moscow my name is kevin oh and this is the international first the big headline the crucial battle looming in the last rebel stronghold in syria government troops of surrounded militants in italy province the u.n. special envoy for the country says there are around ten thousand to a loser a terrorist. it lip has another fact and we have to recognize
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the high concentration of foreign fighters and in particular highest number of of. the fighters. of the north or whatever name they want to call them selves is it more or less our own health and. the u.s. though is ignoring warnings that terrorists are preparing a chemical attack in italy province in northwest syria a state department spokesperson simply said that they don't buy into that when asked about the intelligence that's been provided by moscow the russians are claiming now and this one other groups are stockpiling chemical weapons and planning an attack and you know i think that's more false flag type reporting trying to be as a seen now for when they try to put the blame they try to put the onus on other groups and we don't buy into that more detail or that russia says it has information on the delivery of toxic substances to adlib province it claims it got there with the help of the self-styled rescue group the white helmet and is to be
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used in a false flag attack is the worry russia's foreign minister sergei lavrov explained the motivation behind the plot. the chemical weapons provocation which is being prepared is aimed at keeping al nasra they're counting on using it against the so-called regime as they call it following the alleged goot a chemical attack russia's warning that rebels will try to stage as similar incident indeed live to draw the u.s. france and britain in get them to hit as sad again russia says an incident is imminent especially after the u.s. and allies jointly stated that they would act if it looks like as had launched another chemical attack that's almost an invitation to do so says moscow. now when the u.s. is steering the situation around we want to know how can damascus have chemical weapons if the u.s. france and great britain destroyed them last year you know what the u.s.
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answer is we never said that france did it's do or dive for the jihad ists rebels nowhere left to run nothing left to lose and their sponsors the west the gulf which have pumped billions upon billions of dollars into a cause that's on its last legs the mascot's and moscow a trying to work out a deal to reduce perhaps avoid the bloodshed but the jihad for it syria russia adamant this swamp of terror and zealotry has no future. group which are this is the last place for the terrorists so from all points of view this abscess should be removed of course what everybody's fearful of is escalation given the us russian military buildup in the region everyone has a gun pointed at each other and given that this is it the final act of the syrian war the urge to shoot might just be overwhelming the united states doesn't believe
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that the rebels have that capability whereas there. tremendous documentation to show that they do have the capability they've probably been storing it for months if not years in the province and they have used it in the past they have that capability and it is a last ditch hold for them so it cannot be ruled out and it's not it's not beyond the realm of possibility that the u.s. is trying to get assad out they're going to continue trying and and even though donald trump wants to. get the u.s. out of syria there are elements within the u.s. government that don't want that to happen but are concerns about the white helmets the group being accused of assisting the delivery of a large supply of chemicals to a liberal vince they've been linked with terrorists several times before political
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activist an outspoken british rock musician roger waters from pink floyd long been a vocal critic of the syrian organization he shared his thoughts at length with the currently here in russia on top he spoke to sophie shevardnadze. if there is a grassroots footy call the way of foreign tears. separate for the people who actually started to stumble it was it didn't start it was started by an english soldier. in istanbul but if that body exists. and they and they go and help people. to 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
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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. now for this book and google when you choose but whatever the way that most people get their news and they use those. social media you know or in order to educate themselves or find out what's going on nothing but it's being it is being the content is being censored by the corporations that earn it. so it so so it 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
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disappear because i'm anti war. when i was making this this record i just made is the life we really were. the guy was producing the record producing this record with me started telling me about. how archie was. just pure propaganda nothing but a pack of lies while i worked churchy so i've said that you can't see a documentary about fracking on american television because they weren't interested in it in time and telling you anything about anything is really insightful what she want to see more of it i can tell you the full interview with roger waters is going to be on stuff in co september the seventh so not too long to wait only on r.t. international right here. video of a young palestinian girl climbing a security fence wrecked by israeli forces in the west bank provoked outrage online
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she's apparently simply trying to get home after israeli security forces closed the gate there campaigners say that's becoming a daily routine these days of palestinians. from the hebron freedom fun to actually filled what was going on here. never the army closes the gates to you know do that every day and the restrictions are there if the students from the neighborhood use me in. a few minutes on leaving or to leave the school we have a go the school avoid the school only one or two three minutes far from that neighborhood but a solution policy and a separation policy. of those that really. makes them. walk around and sometimes they climb. the gates and they climb the fences. let me show you a bit more detail where this happened in the south of the west bank in the district
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of hebron as old city would see the map there that's where israeli authorities arrested one hundred fifty meter long fence you can see the fences we've highlighted blue palestinians living there have only got two ways to get to their homes there's a checkpoint all the gauges saw in the video we asked the i.d.f. why such measures they thought were necessary they replied quote that the barrier was put there for security reasons after an israeli man was stabbed to death there last year but last thursday that gate had to be locked for several hours for repairs when it was filmed there what a number of palestinians sabotaged it the i.d.f. says residents were still none the less able to pass through from the nearby security checkpoint saw first time that gates been a flash point back in may israeli forces kept it closed for six days as a punishment for stone throwing as they put it.
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this. is again this is palestinian families are facing segregation and equality in their daily lives because of that barrier. fence. the neighborhood around seventy seven families from the schools from the. from their universities from their neighbors we call their gate and their road to get it and an equal road because that road is a little australians from the main street israeli jewish settlers they walk on the mean street and are living they walk on the side of the road you know we have twenty two checkpoints one hundred movement barriers in one kilometer square in the city center of. the issue of illegal migration is shaping chancellor merkel's tour
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of africa right now germany sheltered a vast amount of migrants of course and is now struggling to resolve the problem of failed asylum seekers as many lack basic id papers are europe correspondent peter oliver reports. migration policy in germany is firmly in focus right now but what to do when it's been decided that the person doesn't have the right to be here and should be deported well at the bizarre end of the spectrum is the case of one man in frankfurt who the city's office of public order confirmed to r.t. its how a whopping five hundred and forty two criminal investigations against him the man who doesn't have a passport can't be deported because the authorities can't prove which nation he originally comes from oh and by the way this has been going on since ninety ninety eight over the last twenty years most of his offenses have involved drug charges driving offenses driving without a license and violations of the residency act but who year is remains
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a mystery we have a loose biography that suggests that he was born in one nine hundred fifty nine in north africa in the past he said that he was from morocco and also from algeria it could be that he is from one of those two countries or he could be from somewhere entirely different opposition figures say that this case shows the flaws in the current system in germany but i'm not surprised this is the most extraordinary case the most ridiculous 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 they could do it but they don't dare to do it because they're afraid of the left wing media. protest and their. so-called human rights organisations they protest against of even try to prevent physically the extradition of people the most recent statistics for this year show that more than
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half of deportation orders were carried out the most common reason for this is that when authorities turn up at the door address where somebody was supposed to live. if 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 angela merkel as the chancellor makes her current tour around africa we have a situation now we're not all problems have been solved especially the british and are still a big problem but what the chancellor has left behind violent scenes in the city of can 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
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stay in germany. peter all over the in coming up here paid to protest an unreleased al-jazeera documentary reportedly exposes israeli lobbyists footing the bill for man to palestine rally just one of the stories when we come back. chose seemed wrong. but old rules just don't go all. the way to
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get to shape out just because to add to it and engage with equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart. just to look for common ground. you know it's all about a talking getting along with the greatest ally and friend russia you know play it good for the kids and you know if you open it up and there's other things in there while we proceed here in the first half i'll just see what let's go look. again this is off international and israeli lobby group has allegedly staged ninety palestinian protest in the united states elite extract from an unreleased al jazeera documentaries said to show people who
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a paid to take part of the demonstration we spoke to the investigative journalist who obtained the video is 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 all the shit is the best interests. of terrorism and. the protesters are on a fellowship program run by a conservative think tank called the institution to just ignore paul kelly and be out there these charities he says suicide bombing at a campus you have to stop searching the shit out of here no polic is at the center of a neo conservative prone likud political network in washington that represents the
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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 make it look like people are coming out and protesting palestine activity in washington my worst fear is. just a photo of. the world. just like really identifiable and like old words for traders it was fierce for money. cost fifty thousand dollars plus benefits a way of putting it kind of sounds a bit like us right now i don't this is out of no business actually there is a boss yeah astroturfing is when corporations or political movements basically pay. or 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
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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 want to. distance. killers. that killed children they don't care about at any rate. i'm distressed to find that all investigation into america's pro israel lobbyists may represent the most important test yet over al-jazeera is independent whether on network still has space to thrive admits the unjust blockade against uk atari. as a footnote to this i can tell you we contacted to us what the film was never broadcast may also approach the emergency committee for israel and the hoover institution for their reactions when we get anything but from them we will of course update you.
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user from china. plowed into pedestrians and motorcyclists in the city of nannying that's in the south of the country local media reporting at least one person dead and several others injured according to initial estimates the one warning the pictures coming up here are a distressing. that took place ironically may say near a district hospital nurses and process boy could be running towards the injured to give first aid at least the most to get there quickly the fear is that the number of dead could rise still no word on that though still no word on what is actually happened to all the motives for. u.s. military drills in south korea which donald trump surprisingly canceled following the north korea summit in singapore back on the table. 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 as you know we took the step to suspend
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several of the largest exercises as a good faith measure coming out of the singapore summit we have no plans at this time to suspend any more exercises the last large scale drills in the region were in august twenty seventh seeing them fall ten days of exercises with about fifty thousand south korean troops and seventeen and a half thousand u.s. military personnel. so reactive north korea well it's repeatedly said it's being targeted by these military games calling a brawl a provocation the u.s. maintains it's acting within the previous agreements. we should spend did several of the largest exercises but we did not suspend the rest so there are ongoing
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extras all the time on the peninsula the region you've not heard much about the mid north korea could not in any way misinterpret those as somehow breaking faith with the negotiation so we're going to go next we spoke to analysts about how difficult a situation could once again become their. just a few julian has made it very clear if the publication of the drew will continue she will react if eight nuclear tests and i don't think peace is good direction at least from the point of view of south korea and i think the best interests of south korea to step in eve this situation continue to escalate if there's a conflict what is sort of saying is you better show me some steps which i can then say we're moving in the right direction is 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. in september south korea wants to open
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a liaison office on the border once in 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 trungpa 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 the u.s. forces in and around korea. and so that says trump has been moved to the pentagon position rather than the pentagon never really been happy with trump's position that's it for now follow all the day's news and so much more from a straight to mobile device with our app if you haven't voted it why not check it out right now if you get a moment here in moscow as kevin i would say thanks ever so much for watching was thursday afternoon a stand by for more great programs lined up in your part of the world right after
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the break. when lawmakers manufacture consent to stick to public will. the ruling classes protect themselves. with the financial merry go round listen to the one percent. in the middle of the room sick. to. be relieved. because as you know provision out of my pocket i wanted to. ask but i.
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owe. your soul your height oh i lost his boss because i just got then you just got to go resources you know just like anybody on a month although she doesn't but that's honest i don't mean just any of them. showing us you know part of us you're not. you know just i mean my most important i'm already but it was sped up out of me just a lot of the media and. i mean it was a lot we're going to go out when. there's an up as well i must admit that really feels i just don't get it i'm getting letters but those were the old list beatle songs those people are going to respect i'm one of those but i want the best and like i said this this well is one of these i will ask him i will write about him if i see you could have got a bomb i just got that already yes it will be and he thought a thing of it but i think with you you're simply meant to carry out my thought aloud but let me just quote to you. leave. me nothing which it's
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really. viable from somewhere you. came back to the community and people we obvious. found a note he wrote lookouts me all about us all bible hand. all. the way. says. she's going. to save money doesn't that give us all that. don't. know we're going to this. was the first doesn't cost. me my life. i see
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a man have to die. cranking gave americans a lot of job opportunities i needed to come up here to make some money i could make twenty five thousand dollars as a teacher or i could make fifty thousand dollars a year gross truck so i chose to drive truck people rushed to a small town in north dakota was an unemployment rate of zero percent it was like a gold rush is very very similar to a gold rush but this beautiful story ended with pollution and devastation a lot of people have left here i don't know too many people here anymore slow down so much they lost their jobs that laid off the american dream is changing that's not what it used to be. and that's a tough reality to deal with. this
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is boom bust broadcasting around the world from washington d.c. i'm bart chilton thank you for joining coming out today you. student loans debt has reached the new high one point five trillion dollars as the top official in the u.s. government charged with protecting student loan borrowers quits saying the trump administration has turned its back on young people and their financial future will be joined by the council on civil justice and consumer rights person from public citizen remington a great end job on garcia's back to the president of the united states student association plus russian president vladimir putin raises the retirement age for seniors who have a special report probably i shall have a low budget in moscow and as we consider a deal or no deal with the us mexico and maybe or maybe not canada regarding the trade negotiations we'll get to the c.e.o.
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of straw market reported what you'll join us for an important discussion plus we take a look at south africa as the nations struggle economically and faced with increasing violence in agricultural areas arctic correspondent ashley banks gives us the disquieting details a busy broadcast as usual let's get some headlines to start us off. legislators in the state of california home of the world's fifth largest economy have sent a bill to require that the state go one hundred percent carbon free by twenty forty five to the desk of governor jerry brown senate bill one hundred approved by legislators on a forty four to thirty three vote in the assembly also strengthen their medium term energy reform goals for twenty thirty increasing the mandate from fifty to sixty percent energy from sources that do not add to greenhouse gas content in the atmosphere governor brown who will host a and serve as a co-chair for a climate summit a global climate summit next month is expected to sign the legislation historic
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wildfire conditions in extreme drought in the state are major reasons the legislation was seen to be approved so rapidly according to the measures sponsor assemblyman kevin daly on why is the only other state to have set a date for going carbon free experts say. thirty five percent of california's energy from carbon free sources are twenty sixteen and that advances in energy storage are needed for wind and solar to achieve all season twenty four hour reliability to comply with the new legislations mandate. and in the tech sector facebook is also making a smart move to brand itself as a climate cautious company the social media site announced that yesterday that it had a goal for their powering their data centers with at least fifty percent renewable by a full year ahead of time the company says that they are now on track to reach one hundred percent on that metric by twenty twenty after they have a concert contract of more than three gigawatts of energy sent setting their goals in twenty fifteen with twenty five hundred megawatts secured in twenty eight team
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the progress what run praise from garry cook of green places said quote if we are to stay within the one point five degree threshold that scientists say is crucial to avoid catastrophic climate change we need many more companies stepping up to adopt aggressive renewable energy and greenhouse gas reduction goals. and the crisis of affordable education in the united states has reached a spiriting new milestone as the leader of the government agency that's supposed to support student borrowers said that his bosses looking out for lenders not families and the u.s. federal reserve has reported that the level of outstanding u.s. student debt reach one point five trillion dollars this year with more than forty four million americans with an average of a thirty seven hundred dollars in educational debt standing out there the number is increased by twenty thousand over the past thirteen years the total burden of education related indebtedness in the us was just six hundred million in twenty and
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twenty two thousand and eight and only topped one trillion back in two thousand and twelve meanwhile there is little prospect for major reform or even slight improvement on these issues as the top official responsible for student loans at the consumer financial protection board the c.f. peeve. he has resigned doing so in a scathing letter to acting cia director mick mulvaney we've spoken about him before that a party officials frontman wrote to mr rove any quote under your leadership the bureau has abandoned the very consumers that is passed by congress with protecting i have seen how the current actions being taken by bureau leadership are hurting families for more on this we are joined by counsel for civil justice and consumer rights at public citizen reminiscing a greg remington thank you so much for being with us who can be fun i look for to talk to find given this disappointing and disquieting news right of course so look i mean this is a big deal this guy is in charge of protecting not just students but former
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borrowers and they're go there go their families seems like a big deal right it is a big deal to see if he has returned seven hundred fifty million dollars to students since it was stood up and was stood up after the financial crash the great recession and part of the reforms in dodd frank were to create a student someone to look over to be an advocate for student bars and over the last few years they have done that said fred and has done that rohit chopra when he was in the role has done it but now we have seen in this scathing letter that his resignation letter we have seen him say look they're not doing it anymore and you know this is a concern in general with p.b. about looking out for the interest of you know more in the financial sector as opposed to consumers but let me ask you i mean with regard to student loans specifically what is the. buds meant thinks it was so wrong what are
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the policies and practices at c.f.p. be they were problematic leading to his resignation well there are a few things i mean mick mulvaney isn't that dumb and he knows that he can't just shut off the lights of the c.f.p. so what he's doing is trying to roll things back piece by piece put on the. breaks delay and deter when he can so they've done a few things piece by piece to do that so for example they've taken the student loan office and they have put it into a new office that's just about information education so it really defends the enforcement totally it's i know this i mean it's set up by statute you're going to have somebody that's dealing with student loans so they've taken that position and they said you're going to share office with those other people so it still i guess officially meets the mandate of the law but it's sort of practice it's not doing the job exactly because dodd frank says you have to have been so they can't get rid of it but they can put him in the office and say you share cubicle with someone
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else another example is the nab the end litigation so the c.f.p. be sued now which is one of the largest service loan providers but now that was a that was a good thing i was going after a bad actor but that didn't start under this administration did exactly it started on the obama administration and other states are also suing now but we're getting word that mick mulvaney will support a brick put the brakes on that so we are concerned about that and then there's the defense role coming out of the part of education to the part of financial what's that so that says that if you're cheated by a school that the school goes under it goes bankrupt and and you have all this debt but no diploma you can apply to get those student loans expunge get some relief for exactly and so they are buying ministration put these rules in place to update them and this administration under betty devolves trying to roll them back and so in his resignation letter he said look you are not allowing us as a student loan and others see it could be to talk out against these these bad
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things that the problem education is doing so it's piece by piece but but slowly but surely you can see them trying to put the brakes on wherever they can and before we go let me just get your opinion on cathy cranage or she is the nominee to replace the acting director of the. what's your take on her she going to choose. anything there if she got through she has zero zilch experience in consumer law she's an acolyte of mick mulvaney i suspect that he's just going to text her from across the street and tell her exactly what they should be doing at the agency so we unfortunately can expect we can expect more of the same right now but more the same is not helping students it's not helping consumers it's helping payday lenders and doesn't look like she's going to get through the senate when it doesn't it depends i think that if we make our case that she has no experience possibly but there is no vote currently on the on the senate calendar we thank you so much for being here really appreciate the actual job in explaining things for thank you you thank.
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and we continue a conversation with another expert the president the united states stood association. who joins us again great to have you back with us we sure appreciate it that was a big number this one point five trillion dollars what do you make of it well one of those good afternoon thank you for having me on that is a big number and when i think about this number i think for different parts the first one is what does that mean for education what does that mean for this country and what does that mean for the individual person for education education's a right anyone no matter what your identity or what your financial background is should be able to access and drive in your education and you know what we're seeing right now is that it's becoming a commodity and especially with that one trillion dollars right there the second thing in regards to a country. this is about economic justice this is also about the progress of this
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country when people are taking out loans you know that is an investment that people are doing on their future however what we're seeing is that people are not able to make investments in their life they're not able to buy cars unable to buy homes are not able to start businesses and this is important for our economic x. is the our economy as a country so it is very alarming when we think of that the other presidents to the country is that education is supposed to be this equalizer right however what we're suit we're seen for the student loan crisis is that it impacts some of the most marginalized communities in this country that includes black and brown folks that includes pell grant recipients that includes areas and a portion is that is the debt disproportionately in one minorities in the country well what happens is that they're the ones who are most at risk and they're the ones who are usually the people who are getting. out. predatory loan programs
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and again like these are the folks who are told that if you want a chance in life you work hard and you receive an education however what's happening to them and also a lot of other people this goes into the third part about what it means for the individual is that these are people again who do what society tells them however they're put in the spot where they for decades house to make these payments and there are people who are making student loan payments of their own and also their grandchildren unfortunately and this has an impact on their mental health we have to think about you know what are they sleeping what are they thinking about before they go to sleep how do they wake up a lot of people are very depressed because of the situation that they're put in and they feel lied to they feel buz and six truly unfortunate so one. they are they are more of a target for predatory lenders with high rates except try to get an education and to since they are in this circumstance are they disproportionately the.
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hold a greater amount of debt than others other demographic areas groups rather i don't have the answer to that question however i do believe that you know again these are the people we need to be uplifting the most in this country and they're the ones who have been greatly impacted i mean i think about my own story i'm first narration daughter of immigrants my parents told me you work hard you know at a college but you know that's not really the reality i feel like i'm getting punished for doing what i'm told for trying to make something ari myself you know the remington are speaking a little little bit you may have heard about the predatory lenders and are taking action against it are there things that government or state governments or others should be doing to crack down on predatory lending absolutely i mean with the example that mr rimington provided with the ent we have states like california illinois and washington. conducting their own lawsuits against and sons and with
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predatory loan programs they're all bad guys you know there isn't one that's good or bad as you are ok with taking advantage of students with people who are just trying to have the means and the tools to make something of themselves and you're ok with manipulating them removing any chance that they have a life then you are bad and need to be held accountable to that we're really glad you're there keeping an eye on this just one garcia present a united states student association thank you great to see you again of course thank you there is yet another u.s. securities exchange commission case in the news today this time current national football league player for the cleveland browns mychal kendricks who previously as a defensive linebacker with the philadelphia eagles has been charged with insider trading mr kendricks has been accused of making trades on mergers and acquisitions using inside information supplied by a former goldman sachs analyst time now for a quick break but stick around because when we return russian president vladimir
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putin raises the retirement age for seniors are russians ok with waiting years to get their pensions have a special report from shuffle the lot of us in moscow and will there be a deal or no deal on trade with the us mexico and canada henry ford which is to your straw mark joins us to consider what might or might not occur on the trade front plus we take a look at south africa as the nation struggled economically and is faced with increasing violence in agricultural areas argue correspondent ashley banks gives us the disquieting details as we go to break here are the numbers at the closing bell we'll be right back. for a man or sitting in a car when the phipps gets shot in the head. all
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four have different versions of what happened one of them is on the death row there's no way you could have done it there's no possible way because the list did not shoot around a corner. seemed wrong why don't we all just don't call. me. yet to shape out this day he comes to the ticket and engagement equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground.
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there are one other contact on the other. end of the budget that cut out of the amount of the money that they are going to have examined. this was a good time to. try to move there i've. done them want to get my money. why not. why exxon and the old people we believe that those again. but i can say i don't want them up with a johnny but i already have them on the totem i don't have a lot of kids there's a lot of them on the way to not be old enough to go out to the people i don't want to put out a of the most hard when i don't know them of the brotherhood. welcome
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back there's major retirement and pension news for workers and russia's president vladimir putin has pulled back a step steep increase in the retirement age for women over ruling his role long serving prime minister some have speculated mr putin's weighing in on the matter at this time may have been inspired by a visit yesterday to cities in siberia where protests against the retirement legislation have taken place for more on this we're told to r.t.c. yulia shop over low. putin has come to the fore the unpopular pension reform in russia in his televised address to the nation mr putin said the country's working age population was shrinking and the number of pensioners was growing making this
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change essential he called it a very difficult but necessary decision with out of the country's economy might simply collapse so the retirement age for women will be gradually increased from fifty two to sixty years instead of sixty three as initially proposed but a five year increase for men from sixty to sixty five will stay women with three or more children can retire three years there. the draft bill proposes raising the retirement age for women by eight years to sixty three and for men by five years this is not right we care for women in russia the retirement age for women shouldn't be raised for men that's why bravos raising it only by five years talk of change to russia's pension legislation has been brewing for a long time there have been no changes in the one nine hundred thirty s. and even during soviet times there was much discussion about the need for reform the blood bath that was the great patriotic from your nineteen forty one to
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nineteen forty five calls. to the democratic russia and the u.s.s.r. not just directly with a vast number of people killed but also indirectly through that toll taken on the birth rate both during the war years and after in the one nine hundred ninety s. the country faces the economic and social crises with their catastrophic consequences that lead to another fatal blow to the demographic even fewer children were born then they or way to learn number expected it's worth mentioning how the pension system in russia works the pension contributions of people working today pay for those who are currently retired adults funding their parents' generation in turn had under their parents' generation when they were at work according to presidential spokesperson demitra bischoff alleging that putin is thinking about the country's future and is therefore not abandoning his responsibility at this important moment for russian society their dress has certainly attracted the attention of the whole country as the topic is acute and concerns everyone without
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exception millions of people listen to it at home and work our artsy. part of the united states and mexico reached. agreement in principle on alterations to the north american free trade agreement on monday u.s. present. donald trump is position is administer a shoo in to go it alone with mexico and leave canada out of the deal canadian foreign affairs minister chrystia freeland hoped to hop on a plane rather and she was in washington yesterday and today she's actually set to meet the u.s. trade representative robert light hisor within the hour will there be a deal or no deal we'll have to see we're joined by henry ford which of stroke mark to help us sort this all out i actually worked on the hill on trade issues that gave you a lot of things to work there on time and i recalled we did fast track that nafta
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you actually have to provide the president any president with authority to negotiate and in this regard on nafta it's with three it's not with two does this pose some problems for the administration there are many problems that can come about i do think that when a very powerful position though don't forget most of the canadian exports do come to the u.s. and we voted on the deal with mexico so i do think that this is going to go through also with regard to the timing bought the midterms the coming up how many people are actually going to run saying i think i'm going to eliminate jobs and i don't want to agree on this because i think i'd rather leave us in limbo and not have more jobs for our automakers i'm for all dairy producers and for the midwest and when you talk about timing i mean it's ninety days what the president must submit ninety days the congress has to approve it's under expedited that's a fast track part of a promotion authority so they say they want to do that on friday the administration they're going to get there i think they might well do because the mexicans want to do it and also don't forget you talked about the canadian foreign minister free
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just from a european vacation and i would actually call it capitulation i feel like that capitulated because they tame him very late if you remember to p.p. two thousand and fifteen october they came in very very late coming in late to this it's sort of like do or die now and i think yes i would be surprised if we don't have an agreement by friday and you know there's nothing particularly magical about friday i mean. saturday sunday monday tuesday a week from friday because this ninety day clock you know takes us all the way till the end of november the beginning of december and congress is usually out by that time and as you say the makeup of congress could change or it could change and also have to get we want to get it through and the mexicans want to get it through because they want to be a done deal because they need to mexico coming in. let's just say left you know he's going to move out of the presidential palace everything else that he or that he's going pro what he may not want the same deal so i think is that i think speedy
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and designed by the mexicans as well as canadians left. coming in and does not want anything to do with foreign investment in mexico in this agreement because he campaigned against it so yes you're right there's a they're not going to work at mexico he doesn't have foreign investment i don't know if that's a good point but the c.e.o. straw market where foreigners think you hillary thank you very much. british prime minister theresa may is on an african trip in a cape town speech cheaper claiming united kingdom will become south africa's largest of the g. seven investors in south africa that's after brecht's it gets included next march the u.k. is a major export destination for many south african products as is the netherlands zimbabwe japan and yes the united states many question prime minister may's ability to deliver on the south african investment pledge considering the precarious position in which the u.k. finds itself with regard to bracket and the pm personal political popularity in the
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u.k. however south african president cecil ramaphosa who was elected earlier this year is the fifth post apartheid president replacing former president jacob zuma could certainly use the u.k. investment as he is undertaking efforts to ignite the nation's economy after a decade of stagnated growth in july chinese president xi jinping visited south africa and play. fourteen point seven billion dollars of investment in the nation over the years the south african economies begun to move away from once particular will be profitable sectors based upon natural resources those like diamond mining and agriculture and towards where knowledge based economy companies like tech and e-commerce related companies agriculture in south africa has been particularly hard hit recently with regard to drought what we call day zero that's a story you may recall we've covered in the past about the stairs of the of water in the drought stricken cape town area while the time while the time for that for
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days era has moved out to a year from now a year from august drought and water scarcity in south africa is still impacting agriculture production throughout the country a little less than fifteen percent of south africa's land can be used efficiently for agriculture while only about three percent is considered high value agricultural land where commodities such as corn wheat rice and chicory root are produced south africa is unfortunately having other issues on agricultural lands including the seizure of lands and of all things violent attacks and even murders for that we turn to our to correspondent ashley banks. fox news host tucker carlson recently hosted a late night program on south africa and clued in land seizures and homicides even deeming the south african president a recess many south african groups are saying these reports are false donald trump tweeted in
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a response to the late night programming saying quote i have asked secretary of state pompei o to closely study the south africa land and farm seizures and expropriations and the large scale killing of farmers south african government is now seizing land from white farmers research published by agra farmers organization in south africa found from the fiscal year two thousand and seventeen to twenty eighteen the number of killings of farmers was at a twenty year low however some white africans believe farm killings are being under reported kate wilkinson a senior researcher at africa check says quote nobody is disputing that people living and working on farms and small holdings are the victims of violent and often brutal attacks and murders what is disputed is whether they face an elevated risk versus average south africans south africa's president announced earlier this month it would move forward with changing the country's constitution to bring about land
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reform the african national congress said in a statement a call to action to decisively break with the historical injustice of colonial apartheid and patriarchal patterns of land ownership and to build a south africa that belongs to all some right wing groups are opposing this move by the african president and have pushed the false narrative they've already been numerous seizures of white on land here's what the c.e.o. of our free forum had to say you know what just drove all she's the government. so we need the international community to send out the warning to set. it is not in the interest of the country is what you need just of the country's economy if you think you will position and for this to trump's tweet was a great start others from anti land reform groups met with the david duke former grand wizard of the ku klux klan among others last year to see what their next steps should be meanwhile the south african president is
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a looking to move forward with land reform in order to create economic growth and agricultural production and washington national banks arts. and that's it for this time thanks for being on board you can catch a boom bust on direct t.v. channel three twenty one dish network gentle way the or streaming twenty four seven on t.v. that's the free t.v. at channel one thirty two or is always catches that youtube dot com slash boom bust r.t. will see the x. time. in a world of big news. and conspiracy 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 back and shouting
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past each other it's time for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the truth the time is now for watching closely watching the hawks. it was you know provision on my part going to what it was understood i like . oh. you're so your height oh i lost his mask is a good look at any of that but let me just go with us as you know just like anybody on a month on those in person but the best honest i don't mean just any of them. so i says you know if i was you're not. you know just i mean what i'm most wanted i'm already whatever sped up part of me just a lot of the media and. i mean it was a lot because they don't which i don't know if it up as well i must admit that he was i just don't get off on getting noticed but those were the old they're just
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beautiful sounds the people are going to respect i'm one of those but i was just this well is part of this i'm with. my family fussy about my just but that's already yes equestrian he thought of getting up there calling cuisia you seem to mean to carry out my thought aloud problem you just got to go he'd. leave me. alone and have enough it would seem to be. evil that's what i was from some of you. i came back to the community and people we all be standing on the road look at me oh look at his own bible don't torture him. let's. see.
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she's going to receive money don't think that because all the. fuss is you don't. know you're going to this. i. mean my life.
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un envoy for syria the terror groups in the country's. chemical weapons washington isn't looking into any false flag saying the blame is being shifted from damascus. going to be the scene for trying to put the blame they try to put the onus on other groups and we don't buy into. a young palestinian girl. to get a hold in the west bank goes viral. germany's struggles to deport an undocumented migrant who's been investigated for more than five hundred offenses as the issue of illegal migration overshadows. tour of africa right. roger waters
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here in russia. the world's biggest issues where he gets his news from. me. nothing. well i want churchy. by their clergy due to four pm thursday afternoon here in moscow thanks to you need to be with me kevin our first in the headlines then this is a crucial battle is looming in the last rebel stronghold in the syrian province of it live the u.n. special envoy for syria says there are around ten thousand al nusra terrorists there right now and that the group is capable of producing chemical weapons however the u.s. state department has dismissed the idea of a pending false flag attack by terrorists which of course could escalate the
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conflict further. the issue of avoiding the potential use of chemical weapons if indeed crucial and would be totally unacceptable we all are aware that both the government and. the to produce weaponized chlorine the russians are claiming now and this one other groups are stockpiling chemical weapons and planning an attack so you know and i think that's more false flag type reporting to i'm going to be as a seen now for when you try to play the blame they try to put the onus on other groups and we don't buy into that well russia says it has information on the delivery of toxic substances to adlib province it claims it got there with the help of the self-styled rescue group the white helmets and is to be used in a false flag attack is the worry russia's foreign minister sergei lavrov explained the motivation behind the plot. the chemical weapons provocation which is being
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prepared is aimed at keeping al nasra they're counting on using it against the so-called regime as they call it following the alleged goot a chemical attack russia's warning that rebels will try to stage as similar incident in the evening to draw the u.s. france and britain in get them to hit a sad again russia says an incident is imminent especially after the u.s. and the allies jointly stated that they would act if it looks like as had launched another chemical attack that's almost an invitation to do so says moscow it will. now when the u.s. is steering the situation around we want to know how can damascus have chemical weapons if the u.s. france and great britain destroyed them last year you know what the u.s. answer is we never said that france did its do or dive for the jihad ists rebels nowhere left to run nothing left to lose and their sponsors the west the gulf which
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have pumped billions upon billions of dollars into a cause that's on its last legs the mascot's and moscow a trying to work out a deal to reduce perhaps avoid the bloodshed but the job for it syria russia adamant these swamp of terror and zealotry has no future. group which are this is the last place for the terrorists so from all points of view this abscess should be removed of course what everybody's fearful of is escalation given the us russian military buildup in the region everyone has a gun pointed at each other and given that this is it the final act of the syrian war the urge to shoot might just be overwhelming the united states doesn't believe that the rebels have that capability whereas there. there's tremendous
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documentation to show that they do have the capability they've probably been storing it for months if not years in the province and they have used it in the past they have that capability and it is a last ditch hold for them so it cannot be ruled out and it's not it's not beyond the realm of possibility that the u.s. is trying to get assad out they're going to continue trying and and even though donald trump wants to. get the u.s. out of syria there are elements within the u.s. government that don't want that to happen but to concerns meantime about the white helmets that groups being accused of assisting the delivery of a large supply of chemicals to adlib province they've been linked with terrorists several times before political activists know spoken british rock musician roger waters from pink floyd who's long been a vocal critic of the syrian organization shared at length his thoughts with us now
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he's currently on tour here in russia he spoke to sophie shevardnadze. if there is a grassroots body called the way home is of foreign tears. separate for the people who actually started to stumble it was it didn't start it was started by an english soldier. in istanbul if that body exists. and they and they go and help people. to the russians or somebody else to stop bobs of them then i support the 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
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obviously scripted and carefully shot. now for this book and google when you choose but whatever the way that most people get their news and they use those. social media you know or in order to educate themselves or find out what's going on nothing but it's being it is being the content is being censored by the corporations that earn it so it's so so that 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.
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when i was making this this record i just noticed as the life we really was. the guy was producing the work of producing this record with me started telling me about how far to eat how r.t. was. just pure propaganda nothing but a pack of lies all the while i work shirt. so i've said that you can see a documentary about fracking on american television because they were interested in it in time in telling you anything anything about. it's really interesting watch if you want to see more of her but you do we can tell you the full interview not quite yet but roger walters is going to be talking at length to sophie and co coming up september seventh only here on out international. if you have a young person you go clubbing in israeli security fence in the west bank's provoked outrage online now she simply trying to get back to a house after the i.d.f. closed off route home campaigners say this is happening all too frequently for
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palestinians we spoke to from the hebron freedom fighters who filmed what was going on there. never the army closes. you know do that every day and the restrictions are there if the students from their their neighborhood. mean . you're on leave you know treats school we have to give the school a boy to school only two or three minutes from the neighborhood but a solution policy and the situation for the city or of the really good creation makes them you know you know. walk around and sometimes climb. and climb the fences. just to close in on this give you a bit more of a handle on what's going on to bring the map to tell you what happened it's happened down here in the west bank in hebron the old city israeli authorities put up one hundred fifty meter long fence with blue she can see what it's like
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palestinians living there have got two ways to reach their homes the first is either the main entry exit checkpoint about fence the second the gate you saw being scaled by the girl in the video there is often as you've heard here closed we asked the i.d.f. why they felt close in off those routes was at all necessary they replied that the fence was for security reasons after israeli man was stabbed to death there in the area last year that's why they closed it but last thursday that specific gate was again locked for several hours. israel claims it was for repairs after palestinians sabotaged it the i.d.f. also stressed residents were still able to pass through the other main security checkpoint anyway it's not the first time this gate has been a flashpoint back in may israeli forces kept it close for six days as a punishment they said for stone throwing.
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was. against his palestinian families are facing segregation and equality in their daily lives because of the barrier the fence. the neighborhood around seventy seven families from their schools from. from their universities from the other neighbors we call their gate and they are all going to get it and equal it all because that road is only one of the indians from the main street is the jewish settlers they walk on the i mean. who are living there they walk on the side of that old you know we have twenty two checkpoints one hundred movement in one kilometer square in the city center of people on. the issue of illegal migration
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the shaping chancellor angela merkel's current tour of africa germany sheltered of course a vast amount of migrants so far is now struggling to resolve the problem of failed asylum seekers because many of them are lacking basic id papers our europe correspondent peter all of a brings you up to speed on this one to. migration policy in germany is firmly in focus right now but what to do when it's been decided that the person doesn't have the right to be here and should be deported well at the bizarre end of the spectrum is the case of one man in frankfurt who the city's office of public order confirmed to r.t. its how a whopping five hundred and forty two criminal investigations against him the man who doesn't have a passport can't be deported because the authorities can't prove which nation he originally comes from oh and by the way this has been going on since ninety ninety
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eight over the last twenty years most of his offenses have involved drug charges driving offenses driving without a license and violations of the residency act but who year is remains a mystery we have a loose spiral graphy that suggests that he was born in one nine hundred fifty nine in north africa in the past he said that he was from morocco and also from algeria it could be that he is from one of those two countries or it could be from somewhere entirely different opposition figures say that this case shows the flaws in the current system in germany but i'm not surprised this is the most extraordinary case the most ridiculous 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 who. could do it but they don't dare to do it because they're afraid of the left wing media. protest and their. so-called human
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rights organisations they protest against of even try to prevent physically the extradition of people the most recent statistics for this year show that more than half of deportation orders were carried out the most common reason for this is that when the authorities turn up at the door address where somebody was supposed to live. if 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 angela merkel the chancellor makes her current tour around the forecast we have a situation now we're not all problems have been solved especially the british and 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
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sparked angry reaction and pitched left against right over who has the right to stay in germany i. peter all over the in. into us today as corpus for now here in moscow still ahead after the break paid to protest and then released al-jazeera documentary reportedly exposes lobbyist for the bill for an anti palestine rally or about that we come back. join me every thursday on the alec simon show and i'll be speaking to us from the world of politics or business i'm show business i'll see them.
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you know it's all about a talking getting along with the greatest ally and friend russia there is no place to get to the kids and you know if you open up there's other things and there's a. proceed here in the first half i'll just see what what go what. seemed wrong. wrong just don't hold. me. to shape out to stay active. and engagement equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground.
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i guess there's really lobby groups allegedly staged ninety palestinian protest in the united states but it struck from an unreleased al jazeera documentary said the show people who were paid to take part of the demonstration we spoke to the investigative journalist obtained a video here's what happened. if you happen to speak with any providers just stay on message what is that message that's j.p. it's a secret you're going to know that all i want to mention is that yesterday in tarsus. terrorism. the protesters are on a fellowship program run by a conservative think tank called the things that you should just ignore it hopefully be out there these charities these suicide bombings at a campus you have to stop searching the shit out of here no pollack is at the
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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 the hoover institution to basically pay fake protesters to make it look like people are coming out and protesting palis die and activity in washington d.c. my worst nightmare is. a photo of to go on a high together and we're just like early identifiable and i call or threaten traitors to the jewish conspiracy for money how much it costs two thousand dollars plus benefit this way of putting out a house like house for it so i don't this is out now is exactly the best possible yeah astroturfing is when corporations or political movements basically pay for grassroots support this is what is so revealing about the
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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 dealt with. resistance child. killers they're. killed children they don't care about at any rate. i'm distressed to find it all investigation into america's approach is really may represent the most important test yet over al-jazeera is independent of whether our network still has space to thrive admits the unjust blockade against our could tare .
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i can tell you we contacted al-jazeera to ask why the film was never broadcast we also approach to the emergency committee for israel and the hoover institution for their reactions nothing back as yet soon as we do though we'll update the story for you. he came in for a murder charge there earlier on last few hours a van plowed into pedestrians of motorcyclists in the country's southern city of numbing near the border with yet now local media has reported that at least one person has been killed and several injured a warning the pictures showing what happened there are distress you are coming up now that incident took place on the road in front running you might say of the district hospital of us was the only good thing is that the rescues going to get these guys quickly it's believed the driver lost control of that vehicle before finally crashing into the pole as i say hospital staff and passers by could be seen running scripts they could to get first aid to the injured others attempted to lift the van and physically remove pedestrians stuck under it the driver's been taken into custody instance not being treated as intentional.
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u.s. military drills with south korea which donald trump surprisingly canceled following the north korea summit in singapore a back on the table. 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 as you know we took the step to suspend several of the largest exercises as a good faith measure coming out of the singapore summit we have no plans at this time to suspend any more exercisers the last large scale drills in the region were in aug twenty seventh saying they have all ten days of exercises with about fifty thousand south korean troops and seventeen and a half thousand u.s. military personnel.
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north korea has repeatedly said that it's been targeted by military game see it calling it a provocation the u.s. maintains though it's acting within the previous agreements we should spend did several of the largest exercises but we did not suspend the rest so there are ongoing extras all the time on the peninsula the region you've not heard much about the mid north korea could not in any way misinterpret those as somehow breaking faith with the negotiation you spoke to analysts about how difficult the situation could become now once again. just a few julian has made it very clear if the publication of the drew will continue she will you reactivate the miso a nuclear test and i don't think pieces direction at least from the point of view
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of south korea and i think the best interests of some south korea to stop the eve this situation continue to escalate and if there's a conflict 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. him in september south korea wants to open a liaison office on the border once in a way probably to regenerate new economic contacts and so the warming of relations with 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 trungpa 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
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the train 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 and so that says trump has been moved to the pentagon position rather than the pentagon to really be happy with transposition. of a news course on our side to r.t. dot com and you can follow all the day's news and so much more for us as well straight to mobile device as it happens with our up if you're not downloading yet why not check it out if you get a minute it's twenty five minutes past four here in moscow kevin i would say to them thanks for watching stand by for more great programs from arts international after this break. you know world big partisan movie lot and conspiracy it's time to wake up
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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 and shouting past each other it's time for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the truth the time is now for watching closely watching the hawks. for manners sitting in a car when the phipps gets shot in the head. all for 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 us did not shoot around a corner. once
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the shorts leave for the. future it is with a group eastern. on string you don't really don't t.v. . on welcome twelve is a part of much of the twentieth century of rising levels of organizational came
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hand in hand with rising incomes moving to a big city more often than not a ticket to a better life that still holds true but not everywhere the majority of people leaving for big cities in the global south particularly in africa may actually see their fortunes worsen rather than improve is a ribbon a zation turning from a blessing inter cursed well to discuss that and now we're joined by robert buckley senior fellow in international affairs at the new school in new york mr barclay it's a pleasure talking to you thank you very much for your time thank you now almost every country in the world has a version of the breakfast at tiffany's movie about a young man or young women moving into a big city attracted by its opportunities but i understand it from your writing that it is a rather mythologized perception of what urbanization is like more and more people are moving to bigger cities not because they want to know because they're attracted
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by big lights but because they have no choice is that right that's right you know let me. that. the general phenomenon or how it started of is that indeed cities grow more rapidly and urbanization happens as incomes increase and so in some countries and particularly in sub-saharan africa we've witnessed a phenomena in which people move to cities because the conditions in the countryside are to their conflict or drought and so they're moving to cities in a situation where their income is an increasing but that doesn't mean their situation isn't improving relative to where they were they were in dire straits in the countryside and came to the city so urbanization is not correlate it with increases in income but it doesn't mean that it's causing their situation to cure i heard you say that many cities are now. prepared for the kind of and the flagstaff
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new residence and they're planning on making planning changes only after the occupants have arrived rather than before as was the case with let's say new york or barcelona in the nineteenth century. and that in your view leads to the proliferation of slums i wonder if you consider slums a kind of c.d.'s in the in the broad sense of the world i think the sense of. kind of the mythologies of how urbanization fits into an economy was generally the notion that as urbanization increases societies become richer and that people coming to cities would often come particularly poor people and say in a slow as a way station on their way to becoming integrated into the city but no we're finding that in many african countries this is the third generation of families living in the same slum and they're not integrating into the society and so and slums are increasingly according to u.n. data in most african cities it's
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a majority of the population indeed lives in slums without sanitation facilities and often without clean water you said before that moving into a bigger say did does not necessarily mean that doesn't mean at all that your life fortunes are going to worsen but i think. at least here in russia we associate living in a city with higher living standards down in the countryside high levels of hygiene high levels of health care but from what i understand living in a very high dance community is like slums without proper access to health care or sometimes faith knocks us to health care at all what actually increases your likelihood of contracting disease it sure. is that do we understand at this point how those communities even function how do they address those kind of challenges you know not extremely well for example. one of the issues that i
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consider will not of tension two is the provision of said taishan and one reason i did is that in sub-saharan africa for the past twenty five years which has probably been their most rapid period of economic growth there's been almost no improvement in access to urban taishan it's forty percent of the population has access so when you have figures that low the evidence suggests that no one benefits from the provision if you increase from forty to forty two no one benefits because you still have people desiccated in ellie's and you still have feces everywhere and so the sense of the health effects of something like that could be extraordinary and then if you compare it with many african cities are in dire straits already and there urbanization rates are at some of the highest levels ever so you're compounding a problem that's already severe with an influx that. could create really nothing short of the catastrophe i think well i think they want to hear because you did
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describe it as a looming catastrophe here on our hands do you think. their world community at large is well aware what's going on i don't think why not i don't know i think there is attention to it but i think things like senate taishan it's a topic that a government official wants to discuss it. something that you don't get a lot of ribbon cuttings for opening up a new sewer system you know that you would with redesigning the bolshoi or something like that. that's one conjecture about why that's the case but frankly i don't know but there is don't let me overstate it there is attention to it but i don't think the resources correspond to the need the argument that is often used to persuade donor countries to. provide resources for that kind of effort is the theory for migration if you don't want people coming into your cities you need to spend some money on making bad lives more livable do you think that is
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a persuasive argument. and it's one that as you say it's i think. a myth that's been held by many officials in. public officials and indeed international agencies that the sense that you can prevent people from coming to the cities i know in some countries they in fact subsidize people to take a bus back to the countryside and they get on the bus and they go back and visit their relatives and then come back to the city and so it goes to my earlier point the one the way you are take you laid it is the cities throughout history have offered bright lights and learning and occupations cities are a great thing and it's just how do you deal with this demographic movement is has always been a difficult process but i think right now in some countries it's a particularly difficult process i heard you say that almost all of the world's next two billion people will leave and they celebrate islam saturated. communities
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given the scope of their problems already do you think they have the problem of slums will ever be resolved is that even possible given where we are at this point of time. you know and so i think you know there's a joke in economics where people said this is unsustainable and if the. sustainable it indeed will stop. so i think. given the potential problems here you could get people not moving to cities at nearly the rate that has been interested you could get a reaction from government. and so economists tend to be cynical and they tend to believe that in the long run things work out and so that's one view but i think there is a need to prompt people to react to this so that you react before the problems occur but i mean the problem of migration especially from the south. africa is i think has been in the making for over
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a decade i mean it precedes the war in syria and if you think about billions of people moving to very poor conditions regardless of whether they provide sanitation there or not it seems that the only way out of that situation is not the op not. to build more housing there but actually it's you going to. and you see you know the thousands dying crossing the mediterranean into europe and the world probably hasn't had this many migrants in fifty years since world war two i mean it's it is an incredible situation in that we see a lot of the news about international migration but the same thing is going on within countries and there's a rapid movement to cities in the same kind of phenomena now if you're alluding to the fact that not many. politicians are policy makers. very
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key in. the problem or perhaps do not take it as the first priority and. there is a i think a very romantic. urban circles that c.t.'s will find solutions to all the world's problems since it is not a nation state is that they'll do that do you subscribe to that point of view so i don't think they care and i think cities have been far more innovative the national governments and i do think there's a sense in which cities are becoming politically more important and the ideas that are generated in the world are you know i think so much of our culture and ideas come from cities and that comes from just as one writer jane jacobs talked about the only place where you can see the stranger of the or other traveler by going to a city and so there's just so much going on ideas are generated and so cities are i think are a fulcrum of change like that but nevertheless central governments are still important very important in terms of addressing larger issues like income
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distribution and climate change you know what makes me concerned about this kind of discourse is the fact that they have long seen a gap that's when politics and policies you know ideally politics is supposed to be a facilitator of policies but i think they're increasingly diverging especially in the western countries and my concern is that if we think this way of cities you know leading the way we will essentially leave all the major issues of life you know war and peace of life and that the politicians. do you have that sense and i wonder if you believe that politicians. care enough about the things that you supposedly care i think there's an awful lot of politicians talking . about ideas that are clearly not only not evidence based but based against
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evidence and that to me is i don't fully understand but i do observe it a lot and. it's quite distressing and. i don't know how to explain it but it is a it's a real danger and i think measures to. policies that are shown to not be effective is but create political value in some way. is quite peculiar i don't want to make this into a political strictly about the state is where obviously recording it at a time when there is that major fear over confrontation between our countries but then the united states russia over syria and you know it just strikes me that. so much attention is paid to delivering a strike on a country where it's as you say we have millions possibly even billions of people living in squalor conditions and nobody ever would even discuss that on on
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television how do you gather a chance to talk about things that worry you so i think there's. an active discussion it's just there's not much action that's kind of depressing and there's a lot of action. as as i said things that are clearly not only not evidence based but against the evidence. they're used there's a famous old conservative economist milton friedman who said that economists role are to provide the information and people make the right choice what we see today is something quite different and that information is provided and actions are taken that have very little to do or in fact are the opposite of well mr cleaver have to take their. short break but very welcome back in just a few moments stay tuned. antro
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you know it's all about a talking getting along with the greatest ally friend russia there is you know play to good for the kids and you know if you open up there's other things in there so while we proceed here in the first half i'll just see what what go what. they're not what i look at how i've done other than out of love go to one of the not a lot of the money out of the money the day of the night at the gym and. this
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was a good time to. try to move. mom. not that i wanted to know how little money not why not. stop why x. chanting in the hall of people we believe is the beer. bottle of my kids i don't want them up aside john even a lot of the moment i thought oh mother how do a little accuser is it a little odd i'm a little white kid might be old enough to go out to the pimp i don't want to put out they are the most hardy would i told them of the blow that it.
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will come back to worlds apart with rubber and buckley's senior fellow in international affairs at the new school in new york. mr brooklyn just too good to finish. the issue all far. where politicians. attention to. syria is a lot. on my mind a lot and i think there is also something. you know that country also requires and arjen how specialist like yourself because it has lots of formerly urban communities where the infrastructure was damaged a great deal some of those communities and now trying to go back to normal but obviously the resources lacking or a very short i wonder if we understand as a global community at this point how do you try to rebuild those cities not only syria but perhaps also in iraq in a way that would encourage free conciliation of the various ethnic groups rather
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than strengthen the divisions that provoked those conflicts in the first place. the famous english economist lord keynes who said. should be to be like dentists and to say we can repair this tooth and so terms of working in cities you have to have a context that the environment the broader political environment is reasonable and that people can reach the politicians will be responding to the people when you have a state of war. there's nothing i can do with my motor skills. he works. and suggesting to go to syria and tried to vote for him from their own so i'm just asking whether it is no commission exhaustible to carry out something on that scale that has already i mean to rebuild something on the scale that they have in syria. i think we've had if you go through history it's been cruel and
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destructive over and over and so our cities have come back and many are quite beautiful and wonderful places. if you look in the middle east and places like syria i agree with you it's totally depressed. and i wish the political issues involved with it could be resolved i don't begin to understand it or how to do that but i think until that is done there's very little hope that those cities will be able to turn the tide i think it has to come from the broader political context rather than from the city context kirkley from wrong i understand that the us specialize in sort of matching. or correlating the city's layout its morphology to the economic activity and. we have an interesting example here in russia of the capital grozny which was destroyed two decades ago which has now been built with having a federal subsidies but i think there is
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a mismatch between how the city looks and how it operates in terms of the organic self-sustaining growth i mean if you have the money you can give them the city will exist but the question is how you make it self-sustaining. how do you figure out how to do the latter part of what doesn't require so we just did some work what we referred to as trying to avoid what they called the. syndrome and it's this man who thought he was the king of kings and had a statue built of themselves that said well you look at me despair because i have such a beautiful place that i've designed and it's in fact in the middle of a desert building a city is a very organic spatial structure that responds to economic incentives and it's impossible for one player to know how to allocate and make the investments for the entire city i think as you mentioned earlier in new york in barcelona the plans
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there and what they did was quite quite basic in terms of set up a structure so that people can respond to the incentives and build and paris and places like that they're just there as paris is a city of. light still it's still quite beautiful and building a city that organically responds to the incentives and structures long live structures that can take advantage of where people want to live how they want to live and so forth is unquestionably the most important thing to do so a public policy maker to assume that he or she could do that is the highest degree and almost certain to fail now i know that you've also studied the morphology off largest thirteen largest cities in russia and you suggest that it's is less than optimal in terms of encouraging economic growth what do you see as the major impediments so let me qualify that in a couple of ways first of all i haven't been to russia in eighteen years i worked
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here during the transition and now i've come back and it's delightful to be back and meet many old friends and just russian people are so friendly to me and. so my investigation was with the co-author when fact is my son and he's a geographer who worked through satellite images of russian cities and what we did was compare those images to would cities look like around the world and what we find is that the types of structures of the cities the density of the population is such that it's unusual it's very unusual and so. papers written during the transition suggest that was quite costly to the russian economy and it was one of the reasons that the government was seeking to reform the way cities function what we found is that those patterns seem to not only persist but in some places to intensify so twenty five years after the reform you still have cities where instead of having most of the people living in the center of the city you often have most
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of them living on the outskirts of the city and so the idea of the city is that people get together and they congregate and they. exchange ideas with a western city but i guess for us. the russians. that kind of martha. you know something deeper about our culture we are very centralized people with some authoritarian tendencies so i wonder if that layout is ultimately going to reflection of not only our city planning but also of broader things in our culture you know you could as we say in the paper you know number one we're not sure it matters that it's different if it does matter we're not sure that it's as costly as it could be but if you look at the studies in america these kinds of distortions they matter they matter a lot in the. limits or the reduced economic growth and you know states by fifty
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percent and so did see ability to move to cities that have the highest productivity if you can't move and you can't move to the places within those cities that afford you the opportunity to exploit your skills it stands to reason that you would be less productive whether that matters on a broader scale or whether it's something cultural we don't know we're just reporting that it is different here. russians to say do they agree to take think what the causes are that we think what can be done about it and what can be done about it is quite difficult question. also attributed to a. problem which you describe as too many people having too many rights to control the property which makes consensus very difficult and i think part of the reason is also that the russian people after a long history of collective existence have also become very automatized they have void collective solutions collective action even their fifth objectively
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that to their benefit is that something permanent or do you think that may change over time to have we seen in other cities how this collective muscle collective from the positive way how does it for. so that was yesterday i gave the presentation and four russian experts responded and people from the audience responded that was it almost a continual theme. it's not only the difficulty of negotiating it's the lack of desire to do so and that while the buildings units were privatized many people don't feel that the building has anything to do they have anything to do with and that they should that should be provided to them and so one commenter said they're not real owners they're view themselves as residents and there is this very collected feeling and so that's something that i think is profoundly difficult to change and it will take time i also think that in terms of the transition that some
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people take for example a person living on the outskirts of for example. in a quite a distance from a job who has. transport heavily subsidized utilities heavily subsidized and not many job opportunities there are not as many as there were in the old days. what does a person do if you think of that the house that been given if you put the real cost to the utilities their opportunities and their transport in fact they weren't given an asset they were given something that detracts from their wealth and so that person is in a tough spot and so a lot of russians i think are in that spot and it makes it a very profoundly difficult political question it's an interesting observation especially given that there are authorities like to complain about the lack of social mobility on the part of the population but you can also i guess think about the policy is that what and courage that social mobility by for example restructuring some of those subsidies or how paying people to make. rational
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decisions about their property but i think they are making rational decisions and it's difficult for the government to move away from subsidising the transport of the utilities simply because those p. . are in such a costly spot and they can't afford it particularly pensioners what do you do about that and that's just a transition from one type of system to another it's a very costly system change this effect is one that i don't think is from the discussion yesterday people were saying this is something we need to look at more closely now you mentioned that there haven't been in quite some time and i'm sure you've noticed they must have put a lot of thought a lot of resources and various beautification. projects they have really trying now to make the city environment the little bit more hospitable but i think an interesting phenomenon here is that. many of the residents are not actually excited about that kind of innovation and what it also reveals as they.
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scale of community cation on the part of the authorities or perhaps on the part of the population is that. a particular russian phenomenon known as is this something that you see in other cities as well. i'm not sure i guess i should say the city. center here but it's quite lovely and it's really it's not what it was when i was here when the transition was going on it's no it it's a european city it feels a little if you see incredibly russian but it just it's delightful. so to me as an external observer in the person who goes to lots of cities. it's great to come back and the people are very warm and it's very it's just the delightful experience here speaking on that first of all and i guess my question is more professional and. leads to more off your profit professional expertise i think the idea that they
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have is that if you crave the right kind of environment that they'll how to bring. more people into the city not only tourist but. someone business as i don't know also how keep the most agitated within the city do you think that. rationale is going to work especially given the. kind of times that male even so what i think. this is. a fascinating historical moment and it reminds me of. new york when there was a man named robert moses who they say that he's the only man in the twentieth century who you can see from the moon see his creations on earth and he really carved up new york city and he built a lot of it he built lincoln center he did a lot with the central park but he also destroyed a lot and he destroyed it cuts through neighborhoods particularly poor
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neighborhoods and avoided the rich neighborhoods and so his movement restructuring a city. you know for better or worse must goes in a point where it needs to restructure and so how do you do those things when you have all the millions and millions of people who have different ideas you have to listen to them and i think the. robert moses was a woman named jane jacobson very much getting community participation but that slows things down a lot and you can understand when there's a need for change what people don't want to engage the community but nevertheless if you don't it doesn't work and so i think it's a very difficult i don't begin to second guess the things that have been. but i wish them well well mr barclay thank you very much farai this conversation has been delightful i appreciate your time and i also encourage our very sticky pedal going on our social media pages as funny same place same time here i don't apart.
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it was you know provision on my back when i wanted to. ask but i. just saw your height oh i lost his bus because i just got then you just gotta go with us you know just like anybody on a month on those in person but the pressure on us i don't mean that if any of them feel. so not as you know part of us you're not. you're not just i mean most important i'm already but it was sped up out of me just
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a lot of the media and even i mean it was a lot we're going to. give it up and i must admit that it heals i just don't get it i'm getting worse but those were the old they speeded tucson's those people are going to respect i'm one of those but i was just this well is part of this i'm with . my family fussy about my just but that's already yes it will be and he thought a good thing out there called i think with you you're simply meant to carry out my thought aloud problem you just got to go he'd. leave me. alone and not enough they would see. evil acts of violence from somewhere you know. i came back to the community and people we all be standing on the road lookouts me oh look at us all bible going towards him.
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it's. like. she's going. to see me down in that song. if you don't. know we're going to this. what does this. mean in my life. gave americans a lot of job opportunities i needed to come up here to make some money twenty five thousand dollars as a teacher fifty thousand dollars a year. truck people rush to
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a small town in north dakota was an unemployment rate of zero percent gold rush is very very similar to. this beautiful story ended with pollution and devastation a lot of people have left here i don't know too many people here in. the last jobs that laid off. that's not what it used to be.
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capable of producing chemical weapons syria's u.n. envoy gives a warning about extremists in the country but russia's fear of a false flag attack is brushed aside. i'm going to see in that for when they try to put the blame they try to put the onus on other groups and we don't buy into . a video. a young palestinian girl scaling an israeli built fence to get home simply the west bank goes viral we speak to the activist who filmed what was going on there. the struggles to report undocumented migrants has been investigated more than five hundred times over five hundred offenses the issue of illegal migration overshadows chancellor merkel's current tour of africa. and ahead as well we meet outspoken british rock star roger waters who's currently on tour here in russia
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he's got plenty to say about the world's biggest issues and way he gets this news from. the guy producing the record producer of this record and started telling me about how far t.v. how hard she was. just pure propaganda nothing could pack applies for what i want to see. glad you do too thanks for joining us five pm thursday afternoon in moscow my name is kevin owen this is r.t. international first in the headlines on the big news this hour a crucial battle is looming it seems in the last rebel stronghold of the syrian province of idlib the u.n. special envoy for syria says around ten thousand retire arrests there and that the group is capable of producing chemical weapons moreover however regarding the last bit of information the us state department dismissed the idea of
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a pending false flag attack by terrorists which could of course much further escalate the conflict there. the issue of avoiding the potential use of chemical weapons is indeed crucial and would be totally unacceptable we all are aware that both the government and have the ability to produce weaponized chlorine the russians are claiming now and this one other groups are stockpiling chemical weapons and planning an attack so you know and i think that's more false flag type reporting interaction to be as a seen now for when you try to play the blame they try to put the onus on other groups and we don't buy into that while russia says it has information on the delivery of toxic substances to admit problems he claims he got there with the help of the self-styled rescue group the white helmet and is to be used is the worry as a false flag attack russia's foreign minister sergei lavrov explain the motivation
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behind the plot. the chemical weapons prevarication which is being prepared is aimed at keeping al nusra counting on using it against the so-called regime as they called it following the alleged goot a chemical attack russia's warning that rebels will try to stage as similar incident in the evening to draw the u.s. france and britain in get them to hit sad again russia says an incident is imminent especially after the u.s. and the allies jointly stated that they would act if it looks like as had launched another chemical attack that's almost an invitation to do so says moscow it was. now when the u.s. is steering the situation around we want to know how can damascus have chemical weapons if the u.s. france and great britain destroyed them last year you know what the u.s. answer is we never said that france did it's do or die for the jihad ists rebels
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nowhere left to run nothing left to lose and their sponsors the west the gulf which have pumped billions upon billions of dollars into a cause that's on its last legs the mascot's and moscow a trying to work out a deal to reduce perhaps avoid the bloodshed but the job for it syria russia adamant the swamp of terror and zealotry has no future. group which are this is the last place for the terrorists so from all points of view this abscess should be removed of course what everybody's fearful of is escalation given the us russian military buildup in the region everyone has a gun pointed at each other and given that this is it the final act of the syrian war the urge to shoot might just be overwhelming the united states doesn't believe that the rebels have that capability whereas there. tremendous documentation to
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show that they do have the capability they've probably been storing it for months if not years in the province and they have used it in the past they have that capability and it is a last ditch hold for them so it cannot be ruled out and it's not it's not beyond the realm of possibility that the u.s. is trying to get assad out they're going to continue trying and and even though donald trump wants to. get the u.s. out of syria there are elements within the u.s. government that don't want that to happen well back to the concerns about the white helmets for a minute the groups being accused of assisting the delivery of a large supply of chemicals to a liberal vids they've been linked with terrorists several times before political activist an outspoken british rock musician roger waters from pink floyd who's long
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been a vocal critic of the syrian organization shared at length is thoughts with r.t. he's currently in russia on two he spoke to sophie shevardnadze. if there is a grassroots body called the way of foreign tears. separate for the people who actually started to stumble it was it didn't start it was started by an english soldier. in a sort of book that if that body exists. and they and they go and help people of. all 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
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have you ever seen anything so obviously scripted and carefully shot. now for this book and google when you choose but whatever the way that most people get their news and they use those. social media you know or in order to educate themselves or find out what's going on earth but it's being it is being the content is being censored by the corporations that earn it. so so so it 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.
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when i was making this this record i just made this 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 said that you can't see a documentary about fracking on american television because they were interested in it in time in telling you anything about anything i've seen some up there on the scene it's really good watch not only a quite yet the full interview if you want to calculate can tell you the full chart with roger waters is going to be showed on stuff in co only on this channel out international on september the seventh. video of a young palestinian girl climbing an israeli security fence in the west bank has provoked outrage online she's simply trying to get back to how the i.d.f. closed it off. campaigners say this is happening all too frequently for
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palestinians we spoke to is amro from the hebron freedom fund filmed what was going on there. never the army closes the gates to you know do that every day. restrictions are there if the students from their neighborhood used to mean. you know it's only you know three school we have a gives a school a boy to school only you know two three minutes from that neighborhood but a solution for the city and the separation policy or of the really cute creation makes them you know you know. walk around and sometimes climb. the gates and climb fences. let's bring this home a bit a bit more detail to show you where it happened is down here in the west bank in hebron old city israeli authorities put up one hundred fifty meter long fence we've
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highlighted that in blue on the graphic here is a key palestinians living there we got two ways basically to reach their homes the first is the main entry exit checkpoint to the fence and the second is the gate you saw being scaled by the girl in the video we asked the i.d.f. why they felt closing off those routes were at all necessary anyway they replied quote that the fence was for security reasons the closure of it after israeli man was stabbed to death in the area last year but last thursday that specific gate was again locked for several hours israel claims that it was for repairs after palestinian sabotaged it the i.d.f. also stressed residents were still able to pass anyway through the main security checkpoint but said it's not the first time this gate has been a flash point back in may israeli forces kept it close for six days as a punishment for stone throwing as they put it. that. was.
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right. there was. against his palestinian families are facing segregation and inequality in their daily lives because of this fence. the fans. neighborhood around seventy seven families from the schools from the. from the universities from their neighbors we call their gate and they're all. unequal because that road is a little afternoons from the main street is really. close they walk on the i mean. living they walk on the side of that old you know we have twenty two checkpoints one hundred movement in one kilometer square in the city center of people on.
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the president of france has described some of his own citizens as being stuck in the past and backward metal mccrum said so-called french goals were preventing positive change these days while praising the danish economic model when i visited copenhagen. these looser and people who have lived through the transformations of recent years not exactly who are resistant to change. let's go live to charlotte dubinsky in paris for a. while those comments by president mike gone after not gone down well here in france with opposition politicians from across the political spectrum telling him exactly what they thought saying that he was showing contempt for the french people and they took to twitter to show their angry reaction. as usual he despises the french from abroad the girls will be happy to respond to his arrogance and contempt. the contempt for mccraw for the
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french is unbearable and reveals his disconnect with the people of france we're in twenty eighteen a d. there are many on yielding goals who are attached to social progress who still fight against regression it is inadmissible to hear the president of the republican caricature and despise the french from abroad. well many everyday citizens in france also took the hump over those comments unhappy that yet again while president michael was abroad he took. to join the french people and their resistance as he sees it to change let's not forget while he was abroad last year he said that he would see this as when he was talking about working with forms he in france but while many people saw it as a draw i joined us contempt for the french people missed a month on saw it completely differently this is how he defended his comments.
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but you need please could you issues it's not school to tell the truth i've always said i think our people and me in the first place don't like change permanent adjustments to them but we are a country that in the serious moments of history can be transformed because we rise to the challenge was for me. what present my corn had been praising in denmark the danish system which means that it's easier to fire people from a job and it also means people that quit their jobs can have a social security as a bit of a buoyancy aid and those are things that he says that he wants to emulate take in france with his reforms reforms which over the last year and a half have seen roof resistance over and over with many protests of people coming out to the streets to say they don't want my calls for foreigners to proceed.
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well it gets again president not calling has provoked fierce street action with his comments i told him while he's made them abroad and many people just can't simply believe the cool of the president. thanks for bringing us up to date on the life of a stray sions in france that in paris thank you thank you for the stupid scored five moscow time come up to sixty minutes past five so head off to the break paid to protest i don't released al jazeera documentary reportedly exposes low b. is footing the bill for ninety palestine rally tell you about that and more ahead.
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what politicians do you should. put themselves on the line to get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president. or somehow want to be preached. to the right to be this is what before three of the people. i'm interested always in the last. question.
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and trump you know it's all about detente getting along with the greatest ally friend russia there is to you know play good for the kids and you know if you open up there's other things in there so while we proceed here in the first half i'll just see what let's go let's. give thanks for watching today an israeli lobby groups allegedly staged an anti palestinian protest in the united states a leaked extract from an unreleased al-jazeera documentary is said to show people who are paid to take part of the demonstration we spoke to the investigative journalist who tied the video is what happened. if you happen to speak with any reporters just stay on message what is that message
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that's t.p. it's a secret that all i want to mention is the best interests. of the terrorism. the protesters are on a fellowship program run by a conservative think tank called the things that you should just ignore paul i'm going to be out there these charities these suicide bombing because you have to stop searching the shit out of here no polic 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 the hoover institution to basically pay fake protesters to make it look like people are coming out and protesting palestine activity in washington my worst fear is. just a photo of the gathered. they were just like early identifiable what i call words
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for traders and it was clear to her body because it's two thousand dollars plus this way of putting out a house like asteroids no no no no this is out of this exactly there's a box 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 has goals when they really don't want to be. great resistance. killers cease fire that killed children they don't care about at any rate. i'm distressed to
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find that all investigation into america's approach is really may represent the most important to us yes over al-jazeera as independents whether on network still has space to thrive admits the unjust blockade against uk atari. well for now with a footnote to this i can tell you we can talk to dell just zero to us while the full list of a brawl customer also approached the emergency committee for israel and the hoover institution for their reactions when we heard of him but of course on this story. the issue of illegal migration is shaping chancellor angela merkel's current tour of africa germany sheltered a vast amount of migrants of course and is now struggling to resolve the problem of failed asylum seekers because many of them like basic id papers europe correspondent peter all of the latest poll less than today. migration policy in
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germany is firmly in focus right now but what to do when it's been decided that the person doesn't have the right to be here and should be deported well at the bizarre end of the spectrum is the case of one man in frankfurt who the city's office of public order confirmed to r.t. is how a whopping five hundred and forty two criminal investigations against him the man who doesn't have a passport can't be deported because the authorities can't prove which nation he originally comes from oh and by the way this has been going on since ninety ninety eight over the last twenty years most of his offenses have involved drug charges driving offenses driving without a license and violations of the residency act but who year is remains a mystery we have a loose biography that suggests that he was born in one nine hundred fifty nine in north africa in the past he said that he was from morocco and also from algeria it
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could be that he is from one of those two countries or he could be from somewhere entirely different opposition figures say that this case shows the flaws in the current system in germany but i'm not surprised this is the most extraordinary case the most ridiculous case so to speak it's a failure of a system it's a failure of the government i think if the government really wanted to extradite people they could do it but they don't dare to do it because they're afraid of the left wing media. would protest and they're n.g.o.s so-called human rights organisations they protest against of even try to prevent physically the extradition of people the most recent statistics for this year show that more than half of deportation orders were carried out the most common reason for this is that when authorities turn up at the door address where somebody was supposed to live.
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if they're not there and they can't be found however disappear 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 of merkel the chancellor makes her current tour around the hooka we have a situation now we're not all problems have been solved especially the british and are still a big problem but what the chancellor has left behind the violent scenes in the city of chemist'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 was peter all over r.t. the in. us military drills with south korea which donald trump surprisingly canceled
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following the north korea summit in singapore a back on the table. 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 as you know we took the step to suspend several of the largest exercises as a good faith measure coming out of the singapore summit we have no plans at this time to suspend any more exercises. the last large scale drills in the region were in august twenty seventh c. they involve a huge number of people at ten days of exercises fifty thousand south korean troops seventeen and a half thousand u.s. military personnel now north korea's repeatedly said it's being targeted by these military game states call them a provocation the u.s. maintains that it's acting within the previous agreements we should spend did
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several of the largest exercises but we did not suspend the rest so there are ongoing extras all the time on the peninsula the region you've not heard much about the mid north korea could not in any way misinterpret those as somehow breaking faith with the. we spoke to analysts but i difficult the situation could once again become them. mr pugh julian has made it very clear. the publication of drew will continue to reactivate me so a nuclear test and i don't think peace is good direction at least from the point of view all for south korea and i think the best interests of south korea to stop the eve situation continue to escalate and if there's a conflict 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
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he's also a sense putting pressure on south korea because of course south korean president is due to meet. in september south korea wants to open a liaison office on the border once in 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 trungpa 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. so that says trump has been moved to the pentagon position rather than the pentagon to really be happy with transportation that's the route for now so much more from us at r.t.
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dot com. they gave us national camera. roughly once they showed some loose leaf for them. uncool videos and someone with a broken string at. t.v. cranking gave americans a lot of job opportunities i needed to come up here to make some money i could make twenty five thousand dollars as a teacher or i could make fifty thousand dollars a year truck so i chose to drive trucks people rush to a small town in north dakota was an unemployment rate of zero percent like gold
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rush is very very similar. but this beautiful story ended with pollution and devastation a lot of people have left here i don't know too many people here and the slow down so much they lost their jobs that laid off the american dream is changing that's not what it used to be. and that's a tough reality to. keyser this is the kaiser report even just rummaging around the studio here you find all kinds of interesting things this is a toy. that was popular a while ago to teach kids how to hijack airplanes says obama kind of funny and then
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here we have a russian listing go. through a patricia much much roast a rogue abortion and. putin and trump you know it's all about a thompson getting along with our greatest ally and friend russia here is you know playing to good for the kids and you know open up but there's other things in there so wildly proceed here in the first half i'll just see what go what comes because you clearly cannot speak russian even though you russian double agent you must also call it nesting dollars that i was thinking about russia i learned from watching boris and natasha on the bullwinkle show that's the same with most of our commentators are russian experts on the ball went a little rocky yeah moral you know how many squirrels make it to cartoon stardom but there it is rocky the squirrel the flying squirrel and bullwinkle the moose great show this is how russia experts learn all their information about russia and the united states yeah but i want to turn to this headline about education i'm
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talking about are experts on the news here you know they learn from cartoons but in fact perhaps us the best way to learn because the knowledge economy is a myth we don't need more universities to feed it governments around the world believe that to remain competitive in a global economy they must become smarter in an attempt to boost its knowledge intensiveness the u.k. government has just launched a plan to overhaul the university sector it is to transform universities by creating many more of them the hope is that this will increase the number of people with degrees and the u.k. will be a more competitive cars. i mean that's a job yeah that's as close because there's only cambridge and oxford and those are the only two universities where you can go to and then get a job that pays more than minimum wage or you're working for delivery room so this is just virtue signalling by the people in the bureaucracy trying to make pretend that there is some kind of egalitarianism in the u.k. that allows for advancement of people willing to work hard that's false it's a rigid class structure it's almost as bad as the indian untouchables when it's
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living up in the caste system if you're too slow smen cuny and you're not going to end up workin for the b.b.c. that's never going to happen so let's see what's under this one ok underneath here oh this is. clinton and you also ok this was a very famous period in the collapse of the soviet union when america rigged that election to put their man in yeltsin who then gave away the country to frickin oligarchs which pretty much destroyed everything for a while before putin kamal i know that you were educated at n.y.u. in our university system here and i could say that i'm sure pretty sure that after that when you will not know who any of the presidents you know i'm i'm i'm a bit frightened now because the next i'm going to digging deeper into history when you know nobody really cared about the. really at all because you know we were all much more innocent in those days obviously in the united kingdom they want to expand the university system they want to offer more degrees of course. in the
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united kingdom actually even though they just started to introduce university tuition fees versus the us where we've had them for decades they actually graduate in the united kingdom with even more debt than americans do but we do have the american system to look at and they fact they found that the majority of jobs being created today do not require degree level qualifications in the u.s. and twenty ten twenty percent of jobs required a bachelor's degree forty three percent required a high school education and twenty six percent did not even require a high school. agree meanwhile forty percent of young people study for degrees this means over half of the people gaining degrees today will find themselves working in jobs that don't require a degree you know a degree to work at chipotle and get into projectile vomiting i don't even think that you know what do your summers and when you work they're smart enough not to eat the food i got that all mixed up but it's amazing but also you see what happens
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in the united states is and as they point out is that those who just get a college high school degree i say you're really afraid you definitely are afraid of is it before it will raise enough of an who was the american next nixon a ford they can afford and then have a crew stephanie kennedy the answer is. so they went backwards and forwards there's no timeline is now accurate timeline here and in reagan's america we don't cave and figure out what that they were and that's not a good. oh that's a row you. don't really get this was done you know yeah yeah even i well jealous you know he's the only man in america that actually knows anything about russia and he says this is to be emulated the trump is emulating the reagan gorbachev of detente era where they met for hours on end in closed door sessions to talk about denuclearization a very pressing political agenda we didn't have twenty four hour news cycle the
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time and we did have the equivalent of russia gate but it was the republican the right wing that was pushing that they were saying that i reagan was russia's dupe and they were his like their puppet and so yeah so now the next in line i bet you just killing first of these or even delivering on their core purpose one recent study tracked thousands of students during their time at university it uncovered a rather disturbing picture after two years at university forty five percent of the students showed no significant improvement in their cognitive skills. after four years thirty six percent of students had not improved in their ability to think and analyze problems in some courses such as business administration students' cognitive abilities actually declined and the first few years so your cognitive ability declines in the first few years as
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a business administration student somebody like donald trump he studied business at university of pennsylvania so. these are the people that are running our economy by the way you go to business school and apparently you actually become dumber when you go there well there's a reason for that because wall street hiring people with no empathy if you have already well rounded liberal education you would by definition improve your empathy toward other peoples other cultures ideas you'd be able to think cognitively if you will use that term about a multiplicity of ideas but a wall street wants people that are without empathy they want people that are on the spectrum the autism spectrum and suffering severe autism because they want them to look coldly at the numbers and to harvest gains like you would harvest organs on a kidney you know from whole most people and that's what they want so makes sense that cognitive abilities are on the wane because the common is becoming financial ised and that's being paid in this economy the people the time not being paid to
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think you're being paid to steal you know you mention the caste system in india they do have the brahman class and they're not expected to work they're just expected to think you're expected to just be a scholar and think about things we used to have that back in ancient greece and stuff you had a lot of friends is understandably like you and he just thinks he says he's working somewhere in the city of london but actually i've never actually seen him in the cambridge that's just because he's westernized he has to pretend to be a working hotel he's also the i don't know but our ages yeah the fact is that we use that thinkers and philosophers we no longer value that and therefore in fact you're the highest value in the us economy is to go to business school and apparently that you're being. you know you profit from thinking less so that's actually proven here but this is a system as you said financial eyes and it's all really a debt racket and they they they you know cloak it with these high falutin words
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like we're just trying to educate the population it's a knowledge economy we're all just going to be smart and. well full well there were not enough writers you know in august some are bombing children in yemen you know that you don't want empathy ok so who's in the open up now don't put it out go ahead and listen to this opening up there. in it's. looks like i think that's i think that's cruz jeff smisek christian if that's that's that's that's a bad record i think that's actually jimmy carter right and brezhnev jimmy carter and and. yes british. jimmy carter on or in there and brazil so what happened during the president carter era cold war was pretty hot at that time the cold war was hot and that was the days when a lympics used to be great now it's the opposite in cold war to point out the olympics it's all like you know it's not like oh boy caught in something like that
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back then we used to be like it was like professional wrestling are professional wrestling which isn't really professional it's just fake it's all entertainment. with the bad guy during this period you had the famous hockey summit canada versus russia during this era you would know better than know this was when the philadelphia flyers started beating up russians on i want to ask putin when i interview him later this year about that series you hope yeah i heard this that i'm going to be interviewing putin about hockey detente ice hockey detente later this year again i'm going to quickly move to this final headline because you know an education might not be necessary it is certainly not necessary really for a soldier more than tariffs china sees trade war as a new u.s. containment tactic it's about time of course much of what the u.s. has actually done over the past two decades i would say since two thousand since two thousand and one the invasion of iraq that russia gate stuff is actually all i
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believe about containment of china and china as he says they don't see the trade war as actually being about the trade war the. it's about containment of china they don't want china to grow anymore and this this opinion piece over is in asia and a hong kong newspaper is saying that basically they're both underestimating each other and their willingness to resort to military means america china america china that they both could start a hot war. america and case to go to war china russia that's the point of this new doll. exercise you see america has always been you know some degrees. you know bodies like frenemies i say american russia from the me where frenemies right but let's because we only have forty seconds left i'd like to see actually is in the final. seeming it's kennedy and christian as they get smaller their representation of these presidents really good or for worse this is the worst one
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and you can't. hard to see. it's yes kennedy and. khrushchev not a good likeness of it yeah it's not a good likeness so that we have say that it actually looks like gorbachev but i'm thirty three so i think the chinese people who made this their orders wrong and they put gorbachev in kennedy put him twice as here's what christopher impression or the cold war there the bay of pigs cuba it all goes back to cuba and the cuban bay of pigs see that's the kind of poetry i don't see on mainstream media they only see here on the cars report why because we are in love well we got to go to the second half don't go away much more coming your way.
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join me every first week on the alex simon short and i'll be speaking to get a feel of the world of politics sports business i'm show business i'll see you then . and out i'm going to look at how dumb are better than our beloved audience but not a lot of them out of the money they're living nightmare as you might. guess was a good time to. try to move there i. know
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not that i want to get my little money not for not. for x. chanting in the hall people we believe just a little bit here. the. bottom of my kids i don't want the marble so john what are the other moment i thought oh my god how do it all the kids are there a lot of them on the way to my building the school at the pump i don't want to put out a look to my work party without all the muslim brotherhood. welcome
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back to the kaiser report i'm max kaiser welcome to the show the one and only the crypto genius sinclair welcome thanks but i feel you know the first name now like madonna is just sinclair when they're done with whatever you call them claire skinner of bit mari is also at the black block chain summit the black bloc change summit and is coming up. look we're trying to take this amazing technology and solve some long existing problems in the black communities and we think this is a great way to do it so we're going to have some experts in some of these particular topics be an education dealing with energy as well as having folks who are well versed in black chain technology we're going to put them together discuss these issues try to come up with some you know. actions you know that we can take from there and it will have a hackathon from that point in till november and then we're going to take all that energy from the hack a thons and hopefully next year we would have done something better and we're not
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going to have a meeting after meeting to meet we're going to actually do like they did with the declaration independence they went out and start shooting folks so after we do our meeting what we're going to outshoot people going on doing kind of the what this is a conference on don't other state. governors it finishes it up in the city probably in. the declaration of independence is a huge deal not because of the meeting but because of what they did after they declared independence they went out there is to get it i mean if you like shooting a film well not like actually shooting people's guns so we're not go shooting by were used technology we think is better than politics with things but in protesting we even think it's better to philanthropy it was ok this is an element of my focus on this president to sell the black struggle in america east think and you're position is that technology is another rail that offers emancipation. not to be too you know fine a point on it is that a fair statement absolutely it could be an underground railroad or just another
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radio absolutely that's in dire need in a racism let me tell me if i'm wrong racism is as prevalent in american society today as it's ever been rice is systemic it is actually something is a part of fabric and we need to do something to change it i think technology wait for someone to come save us is not going to work so i sometime a nation jim crow is gone but the president does your complex is amazing is here and is our generation's actually felt the most like coming of age in eighty's you think about it you know prior to that it was a lot of prison population but we have all these other things and next thing you know we're in an even worse situation so i think it's it's time for us to use technology to wait for you know the cult of personality of people that we love as political office like obama or people that people hate like a tribe that's not a political strategy we need to use technology and not get caught up in these distractions and messing pounce is a distraction but when you ok so she is black that's yes yes and that
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so talk a little bit about that. we talk about marriage was your idea who put the lovenox marry. so i want to be this new i don't know what you want to ask me that question what is this about what is so black about my ex tell up tell you i think it's about i think it's about you know liberation and the fact that this technology of blah chain and because i'm is is offering a way forward from our constrictions in our restrictions and in our chains in a lot of ways you know racism hurts everybody go nuts as the victims of racism that are outright to them but it hurts everybody and this country as either ban it you know built on a cemetery of indigenous population and then made whole made possible through slavery you know that was the economic innovation of previous centuries was slavery
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that was the block chain there on the chain gang there was a fricken chain of people you know that's how america got wealthy right. and now you know we're all black in that sense when they bring in censorship now and when they bring in wholesale kind of sensory center ship on the internet that that's intolerable we're back all fighting the same fight now you know i think you're i think it was a grid near she talked about when you look at victims of racism as canaries and they. it was occurring in a coal mine so because of this racial environment it's not the kineret is a fault but there respiratory system is more sensitive because of the things going on but they gas to kill everybody so i think what you do say does directly relates to the fact that many of the things we've seen from drugs being put in communities and the military industrial complex it may start off with one population but as
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a let me ask you this question you know i was familiar with the crack head and the nodder not not in the and there isn't janner it they get that man he's on he's on heroin ok now in the white community they say oh we have an opiate crisis. you know some of my brother is a couple years older than me he's been on drugs for moses adult life and he's talked about how to prison changes that we first got in early late eighty's if it was very punitive he said now they've got some little programs for folks to kind of like do good of others think of like why people have an opiate crisis and they're micro dosing right. black people are strung out on terra and they're cracking animals that so and so that's the same again there's a way you practice on one population now it leads to the other problem in the meantime by slavery you know it's hard to compete for fair wages when you've got
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one population they could be owned by one and yet you're over here trying to figure out how do i get regular farms little companies are responsible for the o.b. crisis they ran out of people in the ghetto to mess up you know they had to go jump over to the white population to make money because they already messed up the black population pretty bad so they got to jump over to the white population that's why we're all in the hood we're all blacks actually suppose he is black now talk about technology let's talk about this the technology added at is there's two schools of thought one is we heard safety in talk about his book to the bitcoin standard and it's a very western approach to money hard money and why bitcoin is a better source of money but in when i talk to you you know you come to it from a slightly different angle of there's a spiritual element to this that goes back way back way back before america way before western cultures it goes back thousands of years you know maybe even half a million years that there's something more critical at stake here there's an
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essence here there's a spiritual quality to it ok speak on that yeah i think what we've seen a lot of these economists even in the blotching space their context of what civilization starts in the very late stage and even when you're on must first principles we're looking at the conditions in the world to start. just one hundred years ago or two hundred years ago in america rufe five hundred years ago those were still very recent i mean we've been civilized people for thousands of years and what existed before that you know european the so-called western culture is very late very young so there's been cultures in africa we still can't build pyramids so even when people talk about technical innovation we still can build a pyramid and have them in mexico and have them after so if a blotch in a big clay is the perfect money we all say it is and if it disenfranchises such will banks and banks and it puts family out of business and it takes us back as a culture as a civilization to one before we had that western notion of money all where are we
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all a gone back to our african roots essentially like they call in to take us back to africa all of us the entire species of humanity of humans back to something that is primordial now in for a moment so there's more humane more humane and that whole humanity comes out of a spiritual space is not the other way around and i think that the spiritual space allows us to exchange value in a way that is more than just transactional there's something else there's an energy there there's something more to it you see many of these analysis they leave that energy out as if these all it is a series of transaction there's more to how we got where we are now than just saying that which runs a cousin listen to say fifteen and he talks about economics starting with scarcity but. yeah and others who take it back spiritually thousands and thousands of years actually the economics was defined by abundance absolutely abundance so you again
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the people who talk about the people is an ice people but it in a day you look at many parts of the world people didn't have to worry about winter coming and run around being afraid to somehow something was going to be there if you look at your been some of these other cultures there was a real sense of scarcity that made people baby more confrontational if we look at many parts of the world if you were to say love the motherland. right i mean they felt they left africa which was abundant to go search for something else outside of the garden of eden not only did they lose a color but they started thinking about everything in terms of scarcity and they were already living in the garden of eden right sosa toshi is black they're here he's successful we'll go back to eat and which is second africa thank you and i think if we all start changing that mindset we can create that space no matter where we are and i think that's where because we're amazing about the the global power of this technology it doesn't have a jurisdiction we all can start creating community beyond these artificial fake
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borders that never were very helpful anyway and if you think about it we start talking about you know decentralization and africa rio they still are two thousand languages and it was already decentralized it was it went to the colonize it came in carved up spaces they had nothing to do with actually create a better space but it was actually done to that subdue people so i think we can get to that space now now just with the internet with actually with this next layer would transactions and being exchange value in a very powerful way through the blood letting network do it again we're laying second layer second layer we're doing lightning right now we did it yes we did our first remittance transaction from a node in nigeria to a node in zimbabwe back in march so tell people a bit mari is so big mari is a pan african blood chain we hold big korean big corning cash and we're going to be coming up some additional services in one of the big things that we've been doing
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is are allowing people to cash out of crypto in zimbabwe we have a bank particle agra bank that we've been working with that allows people to cash out and we're now expanding to other african countries one of the big things is dealing with regulators you know one area might not be is warm is the other but if we have an expansive offering we can be in mo. african countries and our target is trying to decolonized they did it today you know barclays and a lot of these banks made their money off exploiting us we don't need them anyway we actually can exchange value peer to peer and uses amazing technology the blocks in technology and the peer to peer applications are exploding in africa much probably the most adoptive place in the world is it probably because there's just already a natural tendency to think in this way yeah things that are sensitive the problem with most of these developing countries those not the local people most of these african countries as well as latin america are still you know neo colonial states
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where they still look to the west for approval so if you're a banker in africa and you're trying to do business in europe you're still going to fortunately be manipulated by the swift bank or the other systems that are out there so i think this is a great opportunity though to use technology to change it up ok so it's a black block changed some it still makes the tenth and eleventh why howard university historic our university historically black college amazing place in d.c. i'm speaking a thank you max we speak again we got it thank you for us it's so she is black then of thanks for being on the kaiser part yet let our life out of. our. own for the guy we were really just thinking would play and i got to say i am still oh i've got to start off sinclair ok calm down or let me get down to get through with this like this that hey we've got to go and that's going to do it for this edition of the cast reportedly nice guys are safe here and i think our guest claire
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skinner. if you want to like i just on twitter it's guys report and so next time. i. when lawmakers manufacture consent to stick to the public will. when the running closest to protect themselves. in the final round the sun be the one person. in the middle of the room sick. to. be released so.
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it does you no provision on my back when i wanted to. ask but i. think oh. you're so your height oh i lost his boss because i left for bagel got any of the. resources you know doesn't have any problem on a month although she doesn't but that's honest i don't know if it is for any of them. so not as you know part of us you're not. you're not just on the most wanted i'm already whatever sped up out of me just go to the media. i mean it was a lot we're going to. give it up as well i must admit that it heals i just don't get it i'm getting worse but those were the oh so they're just beautiful sounds though if we're going to spend on one of this but i was just this brother's part of this i will ask him i want my family fussy credible but just but that's already yes it will be and he thought if i think of it i think with you you're simply meant to carry out my thought aloud problem you just gotta go you.
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leave. me not a witch it's real. viable from somewhere you. i came back to the community. people we obvious time. you know he wrote. me all about his own bible going towards him. that's. like. saying. she's going. to save money doesn't that give us all that. we don't. know we're going to this. does but does it
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also touch me in my life. i see him on have to die. for men are sitting in a car when the fifth gets shot in the head. all four different versions of what. one of them is on the death row there's no way he could have done it there's no possible way because they did not shoot around a corner. capable of producing chemical weapons syria's u.n. envoy gives a warning about extremists in the country but russia's fear of a false flag attack has been brushed aside in washington. you know because the scene that before when you try to put the blame they try to put the onus on other
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groups and we don't buy that. in the headlines this thursday a video of a young palestinian girl scaling an israeli built fence to get home simply in the west bank goes viral we speak to the activist to. describe what's going on that germany struggles to deport undocumented migrants we've been investigated for more than five hundred offenses as the issue of illegal migration overshadows chancellor merkel's tour of africa. that stay with us if you can too because with meeting outspoken british rock star roger war.

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