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tv   Documentary  RT  September 26, 2018 4:30pm-5:01pm EDT

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in danger of being overturned and i think there's a some very serious implications there is not and i understand the role again general but i your. disagreements and the fear that roe v wade is going to be overturned but again these are more media allegations these are more allegations from from liberal stating that if trump has his people and if conservatives come in that then roe v wade will be overturned and all of this that's simply not due process of the american legal system or of the supreme court they can't just come in and overturn laws there have to be cases there have to be precedent that this is politically motivated against cavanagh has nothing to do with any evidence that's actually been brought forth besides about besides allegations from two women all processes that bring about the interpretation the production of law in any society is inherently political trumps appointment of cabinet is political there is an agenda at play here this is a field of deceit are you mentioned that the legal system in america in america is
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actually contingent on political ideologies but in fact actually the code of judicial conduct itself which all judges and all legal process people are supposed to adhere to is why do you think our founders actually passed these things presumption of innocence there is no presumption of innocence right now in the media there's no presumption of minute innocence right now in the u.s. media what i'm suggesting and what many people are suggesting is that we take this seriously and put forward a real process that hears out these voices and. puts forward the conversation as if you do we want to put this person into this position is that who we want to represent this is that we want to have to have something like that. so the point that you're making was that we need to listen to these voices the question is now going to is this going to be is this the person that we want in the highest office of our judicial system and the supreme court of the united states and so now we're already talking that he's he's guilty i think the fault is more on the media it's more on. and some of the loudest voices against this by automatically without i
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don't think anybody is out of course as i am your voice is that those are voices from u.s. media. and new york times columnist is being mocked for asking social media to remove a clearly photo shopped image for her donald trump really stressed that the image of trump which shows the president supposedly helping victims of the twenty fifteen texas flooding have gone viral and has been shared almost three hundred thousand times on facebook media and political analyst lionel told us that demands to remove such images are to put it mildly a step too far this is is i'm sorry pathetically laughable or by many accounts i don't know if he actually thought he was doing people of favor by this recent listen i don't know how to break it to you but me to change perhaps this might not be an actual legitimate authentic photo just letting you know because after all i am the new york times technical expert here just wanted to let you folks know we can use per chance you thought president trump end of full suit
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wearing a suit was in a rowboat handing out maga hats to flood victims case you might have spot. kevin ross also warned social media giants they could easily have blocked the image of trump however the public has gone to town his claim stating the absurdity of censoring any blake has gone to town his claims noting the absurdity of censoring any altered images. the gold standard of american journalism at one point has been showing fact did by
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this this this anti trump his steria and other versions of anti that they've lost that only their sense of humor my dear sense of fair play and their sense of journalistic correctness it's really it's really a sad story all kidding aside. that's a roundup of the news for now i'll be back at the top of the hour with more but first a lot of international time for a documentary called no limits. so i don't walk into. my own body to have a good body. was found in self in the public mind but then he became this province
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a spokesman for the handicapped children. over the years alvin would make appearances on telephones across the country. going. not better than other people. because i'm not a handicapped person. but people get it wrong. they look at alvin law and they thank god it's tremendous how you can do things with his feet well i suppose if you look at your feet it's tremendous but these are my feet these are my hands too and i have been doing it forever these are not tremendous faith is the only thing that i've got so when i pick up a cup and i have a drink you know. wow what
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a thrill that's what it is and i do thank. i thank you i thought and i was going to have to be a nine. i didn't think that i was going to go on dates i didn't know what was going to happen and that that's not how it happened i had a great high school run i mean you know i had a lot of fun i had my friends i had too much fun and if you're like me and my friends you drive around and look for holes and you go skinny and that's what we did for entertainment. i have a problem with girls i could always get very nice girls beautiful girls intelligent girls but they couldn't get the stupid. and i wanted the stupid. one night stand but that i never achieved she was wearing glasses made me notice.
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that i found my now wife when she was sixteen and. maybe you call it a lack of opportunity but i'm still with her. she was blonde and not stupid. for most the getting behind the wheel of a car was the road to independence and freedom. the ways mason was determined to drive no matter how difficult it was for her just his equally to get behind the wheel and do up or see. what's driving this truck to narrow down his shot tonight to save. somebody.
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but the test. was exactly the same as everyone else there's no difference it came so natural it's not be driving. me most of my life and. my parents they were the most practical people i think i've ever met in my entire life so when it came to learning how to drive. that was just practical that way you can get around on your own you want to have nine people to care about you don't have to worry about people taking a bus or use jam and it was really just about trying to figure it out. i just love driving what i love different things but to do. what people don't consider the power of my mind. and i my mind is a very powerful tool and it get into it interjects all kinds of things into my system so that my feet are literally. my hands so when it comes to driving. i
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get really serious when i have high expose why can't i can drive with one foot on the wheel what is people's excuse they've got both hands and their feet and yet they drive like. this doesn't make any sense to me. in germany. knew from an early age he had to choose a future occupation that would not require the use of. his deformed arms was all troops leaving true for the sick so to meet on the phone from bitches about him and so much for the summa i realized quite soon i'm never will be a conductor or a painter or a dancer i can't sing so i became a director because of him you know i can't do anything else but to pursue his dream nikko went to prestigious film schools and apprenticed under the legendary german director rayner vernon fast binder before making a number of successful feature films but there was one prize job he wanted badly
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directing a big movie unfolded in mind and the head of german t.v. said no you can't have the job but you can make a documentary on. for the to might and i said you know i you know i think that was income and i shouted at him i use the f. word very loudly and very often because i said i apply for the job you know you pay well and not a documentary filmmaker who gets all pate you know and that's all typical you know you give the disabled guy the side job you know and then i went home and my wife said what's the matter and i told her they want me to do a film about the little mite. and what do i know about the little might go. and she looked at me and said they go it's time to look the devil in the. hand i don't know what your lives are like sometimes life can really be rough on people i understand that i get it i've been in real life alvin law is
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a motivational speaker who's influenced audiences in north america and australia with his message of hope is specially to more than two million youngsters who heard his top speaking is the best thing i could have ever cited here you're helping kids and they need to have somebody come in and tell them that it's going to be ok but i get such tremendous joy out of doing it there is nothing in my life that makes you happier than speaking to kids nothing and the next time you're ready to give up or quit or back again well if it helps even a little bit remember the goofy looking guy that played the drums with his feet but remember the words i live by every day. there's no such word as can't. thanks. allen travels over one hundred thousand miles a year on his own but after thirty years on the road his body is starting to where it takes its toll career and that stuff around i mean you know my body may not last
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as long as normal bodies do because of what i'm putting it through i mean as much as i make this look easy i'm still put my body through a lot of stuff just the pain in my back from carrying my luggage scar tissue in my shoulder from carrying a briefcase for thirty five years and you know there's not really a shoulder here so what i'm carrying it with i should be doing this i should have like a sherpa or something. how does a guy without arms function on the road all by himself i can carry my own luggage with straps i check and all tells all on my own i i rent cars i'm at ease there you go oh thank you boston my toes think you are now why do i rent cars and it's just how i prefer to function i don't do cabs because strangely they don't stop when you go. past all traffic around all the airports checking into hotels eat bad food drive in everywhere in the middle of nowhere getting involved in blizzards and swearing at my wife for putting me out yet in another life and death situation and not think about give it up so i mean i can get on
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a rant but at the end of the day she also says this line this is a wonderful line. i mean if you're tired of traveling i'm sure there's a cubicle with your name written out in a windowless office somewhere in the middle of nowhere for a job that you minutes. and then it goes. in germany. had to overcome his lifetime aversion to others the limit is when he decided to make a documentary in which he and eleven other victims would pose nude for a calendar first i went to a disability school and from that moment on i wanted to have nothing to do with the marcus anymore and then because i made this film nobody's perfect i was kind of falls to me. to make this film. i didn't want to look at myself. funny
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come on nobody's perfect changed. it changed how i look at myself. it changed the movement of so that i might it's complete because the first lawyer is not someone else not doctors worth fighting so was really big time we were fighting i think for me for also as a lender miters but also for the public some say. the energy change. legal fund law is all a logical thing nobody's perfect thanks. in two thousand and eight nico received the german equivalent of an oscar for his documentary on climate in. this defining for media and for media to host this i know that i spent time you. really are dealing. with the environs if you go to didn't meet and talk to. keep. us up.
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thank us to get the money. in college eileen cronin fell in love with andy a graduate student in economics i was in love very definitely for sight. although i already had a boyfriend you know i immediately was drugged or you know her very own intelligence. her wit we moved in together. and we got pregnant very quickly. very quickly. i was wracked with worry all my life about having a child because i didn't know for sure that my mother had taken berlin and i i was
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kind of panicked it started just settle in oh my god i'm going to have a baby i don't even know if i can have a baby i don't know if the baby's going to have legs or not have legs or something else but also literally i did not know how i was going to carry a baby in my back and so they did the ultrasound all the alters sound technician zoomed in right away found foot one foot blew it up took a picture and wrote footlights and then other foot hands fingers and. i was crying and all the intern started. we knew that she would be ok. and i only best friends it's not hard to understand why i. took up to be
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a ballet dancer because that's something her mother wanted to be and she was very. humorous to your. the whole thing you know we need to go back and buy more foreign force outs that's . a source of the position of the government that the mission to the self goes in one case even if there is a number of contingency they've got to go back one day to the through the country. when his first wife sandy became pregnant alvin law was terrified about what the
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future held when i saw him from out of there with two arms and. to hands and five little fingers on. i didn't care what brand he was at all care if it was a she or he it didn't matter. it was just the most tremendous feeling my son. throwing back i worried a lot about how i was going to play ball with i was going to maybe try teaching you know what to call a piece from to play frisbee impeachment to throw or you know i mean all those things that you want to have a care if yours do. we don't have to have arms to be a father. you don't need arms to love and. you don't need arms to be there you don't mean arms to listen you don't need arms to be a father at all unfortunately too many fathers that have arms don't realize that. never forget that that's true you just have to be there for him.
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that surprised me. the tears i don't know about sad i'm just. as big he was a little that. yeah i miss that little boy sometimes but that's not how life works right isn't are in no way a person he's got the same regular personalities nothing really wrong about it and he just after just after knowing you can't just judging by the way he looks what he brings and what he gives is much more so than anything else could bring you know he he gives great you know fatherly advice he's a great role model is a great person. and that's all you can ask. louise mason had been a single mother for ten years when she received a christmas card from an old boyfriend i've heard louis haven't been very well and
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kind to a christmas card and come down to get a loan i think the spark reignited if the best way i could describe it he kissed me goodbye and butterflies. i was floating on on a cloud and. and he told his wife he was leaving. she house impact. and then he moved down in the evening to get a sense. to live out of other an understanding with the two of them it's really weird you know the way you cannot at something and you go i wouldn't know what i'm talking or what you don't about right now straight away what's the point in that you know that a lot of the head or a mannerism you pick up you know a little more if you just pick up on it or that it's as though the fix then you know it really is really fascinating where we communicate here we go there without even talking. and i think we all think we were made for it to that we are. i
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remember thinking twenty years all divorced got a kid losing my hair gaining a gut no arm what a package and then i got to thinking you know i've got to change this that's how alan introduce him to out of a future wife. sitting in the audience one day that conference was the first time i heard him speak in it actually believe tonight sounds corny but it was a life changing event for me i was in the process of. considering making a final decision about a rather unhappy marriage. i thought yeah right life is too short i have to make decisions for myself. i mean anybody that sees her for the first time missed that smile and just absolutely and i melt. i have friends who tell me that i smiled more the day of my wedding than they've ever seen me
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smile in my entire life and it was permanently glued there for days that was the beginning of the joy that ended in the ring on the finger and it's still there today. you can't even describe it it's like all these years of anxious and frustration just melted away in five minutes. you still. write. here life is letter she's passed her best before date so she's got no choice you've got to stick with me about there's no option you know me get it there i don't stop traffic. you know you don't really care us are really has. a lot of. lows just like anybody else. can better and out of beijing it's getting better. work there's a lot of credit that i get for doing this but i didn't just do this you know i had
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my parents first i had my teacher second and then i had her and those three elements of my life they've really been what has supplied the fuel for what drives . in australia. with the british company that bought and still has co-defendants in a multi-million dollar class action suit centered on the next row case melbourne woman lynette rowe is suing the drugs manufacturer grin and tell the company wanted the. in germany where it's never successfully but the victorian supreme court today dismissed that application this was an application by the company that might lead him on the worst drug in the history of medicine to have an armless legless woman who has no money and doesn't speak german if she wishes to have it done in court have to move to germany for the next five years so we had. a grin tells
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a defendant's grins how have this never given never admit a thing never considered fought to the bitter end the still was took a much more compassionate sensible way to approach which was once convinced of the strength of the climb i settled with when i couldn't tell didn't post sent we had to get up and fight they'd stay there every day and cope with the incredible damage they grow into adults don't really know now the settlement amount was a multi-billion dollar some it was a sum sufficient to provide lynn with first class care for the rest of off really dramatically transform the rose law grin and refused to pay a cent of the multi-million dollar settlement the two months later held a press conference so it could apologize to its victims for the first time in fifty years the other way no it's because you only surely go this your first chance to
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get a longish two victory in front managed to mention. that doesn't. have to sell out their apologized for some. reach out to us all. they are they never apologized for the suffering they're coaxed. and it pay for that you know for they're wrong it was no eclipse it already comes from the heart. their apology came from that lawyers it is the n.h. was a longish. size and just a message on to the end. by wednesday that f.e.m.a. couldn't have gone into something shocking we had to get up and fight aids day and every day in court with the incredible damage they've grown to or don't do. to me many of them will go to great intel is still a privately owned company the votes family owns it to die just as it did in one hundred sixty it does not have show shareholders demanding returns the vets
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family's tosin a fortune has been variously estimated at between two and three billion euros it would not drive that family into. penury or bankruptcy or poverty to loosen the purse strings and behave in a more generous fashion toward suppose i'd not only want the money i want the revanche. i want the rivera she you know they they kill feist's thousand children yeah they made a lot of five thousand children slice miserable they make the life of ten thousand parents also. they are responsible. paid. no longer makes them in the mind and continue to deny most the little mite is outside germany any compensation no survivors feel they have received an acceptable
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apology. going into our refuse to be interviewed for this film. the original thalidomide drug is easy and cheap to manufacture and continues to be made and distributed by several drug companies and governments to treat letter c. unfortunately it is mostly used in countries that often do not enforce rigorous controls and regulations as a result the little babies are still. tragically there seems to be no limits to the thalidomide disaster. yeah.
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welcome to artie international we're going to go straight into a donald trump where he's a conference where he's holding a news conference which is expected to focus on his two speeches at the u.n. on tuesday and wednesday which sparked criticism and even unwanted laughter from other member states less take a listen just concluded as you know two days ago signed a deal with south korea trade deal tremendous deal with south korea means
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a lot of business for our farmers were opening up for farmers or opening up for a lot of different groups we're going to be able to sell much more than double the number of automobiles that we were allowed under the deal that was totally defective that was there before. and so we're very happy with that that deal is actually concluded. we're very well along the way with mexico the relationship is very good and with canada will see what happens they charge against three hundred percent tariffs on dairy products we can't have that we can't have that with china as you know we put out an announcement today they would like to see me lose an election because they've never been challenge like this but i want to open up china to our farmers and to our industrialists and our companies and china is not open but we're open to them. they charge us twenty five thirty five fifty five percent for things.

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