tv Watching the Hawks RT October 4, 2018 7:30am-8:01am EDT
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but what if you treat the place like real with this one. as the plot of. the day like you that i got. with that we. welcome everybody to watching the science i robot and i'm talking wallace and no one has edited my wikipedia page from congress as i don't know what we can expect me i had when they took it down there so that i just wasn't relevant. apparently not how does it make you feel warm and cozy inside when someone says that your life has no relevance. but this is a major problem because we've seen a massive history in recent years of you know people jumping on whether people like
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a p.t.o. or comments on line are submitting comments for regulatory processes just to kind of manipulate what the perception of public interest is meddling meddling in the it's not a thing we do call the meddling i was under we're going to laws we have in place like it would be interesting you know damn want to really talk about what kind of laws are in place to punish someone for going in and misleading the public about information or in this and misleading congress or misleading the government and the public about how the public feels about a certain issue well listen to this history when according the intercept the incidences of comments delivered to the government to boost support for regulatory positions have become. like everybody who i work once you know everyone is this pilot i go we go this work say we can fake anything like that and it's funny to me that they think it worked when they got caught and were mocked about it makes you wonder how many times were big. but every. i mean great
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point about things getting caught was new york attorney generals now currently investigating submitted to the f.c.c. during the push to repeal that neutrality that saw that was what. going to be stolen wall street journal not even alive so with some of the really famous old actresses to yeah they were like why is my mom friend no one would take that my mother was like first of all it was just a bunch of names may pop up and make all the meat puppets in the advertising industry and it's a fake per cent online it's a fake personae used to push some sort of which is what some of us said yeah the wall street journal discovered big comics in the consumer financial protection bureau has proposed rule on payday lending though you're seeing it in bank mergers . there's no words that the public has actually use a payday lender or whatever to go out and put a positive or a video on oh let me just clear about. you know what is going now it and saying like my my experience with
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a payday lender was so great it's not happening and then when you flip it over to like the wiki leaks. side of yeah so sorry julian didn't mean very different sense or a sort of the wake of. which as everyone knows a sort of community at it at an unmoderated while there's web site or a twitter account twitter bot called. what is it called congress at this so congress will automatically tweet whenever anything is whenever a wikipedia entry is edited from an ip address at capitol hill and so what happened here was republican senators lindsey graham mike lee and orrin hatch all had their phone numbers on the home addresses put on wikipedia which we called out then and it's not ok ok like i don't like any of those people anymore i find most of their republican you know most of their politics fairly repugnant and i'm sick of hearing the name on. i've heard his name my whole life and it's always attached to horrible
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things so i hope that i don't want to hear them but you don't put out people you don't do x. people this is things that were done to attack women online they've been done to rape victims and assault victims these are things that are not ok so i'm glad i got caught before anyone got hurt because people do were like let's try to be you know fight violence or fight ignorance with more ignorance and violence so whoever did that i hope it's just one of those like i'm an intern and i made. the tragedy other all but the two is the congress so they get taken off twitter because it just retreats and. they just in general let it appears there's a new master and yes united states president donald trump has worked out a brand new potentially bad trade agreement with mexico and canada darn and in the effort to replace the nine hundred ninety s. bill clinton era bad trade deal imaginatively titled the united states mexico
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canada agreement or us ca which is not to be confused with the us embassy or united states marine corps the deal appears to be quite beneficial for the already immaculately successful corporate giants inhabiting silicon valley here to give us the details on just how these tech giants will benefit from the us and ca is r.t. america correspondent sara montana welcome thank you sir always a pleasure so what are the details of. the two for you know you will see a pic of the protect these big giants what are we talking about so these big tech firms have already been protected by section two thirty of the u.s. communications decency act that was placed in political and placed twenty years ago now facebook founder and c.e.o. mark zuckerberg has been very vocal about it saying that it really has helped them in facebook success but admits that times have now changed the new provisions allow for them to avoid. legal risks what this basically means is that google facebook
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and amazon are not legally held responsible for what's posted on their websites by users so this now extends what the new u.s. m.c.a. will extend to canada and mexico as well but this is especially an interesting time given the recent allegations and accusations that facebook has been facing regarding the russian meddling during the twenty sixteen election but there are some exemptions to the law and these include tech giants can still be sued for incitement of violence protection against online sex trafficking sexual exploitation of children and prostitution so there are some limitations. so it's just very interesting considering there's been this major i mean we had you know people going in front of congress and zuckerberg and all of them talking about how to protect them how to make these things what's interesting to me we keep saying a pattern here and that's you know you're facebook's you're amazon is your google's our u.s. space do you think this is the reason that these provisions were put into this.
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very well could be different countries have different laws protecting its citizens and their privacy the e.u. for example took a law into a place to lie into effect just earlier this year the general data protection regulation and it restricts how personal data from its citizens is being collected and handled what they need to do is be clear and concise about how they treat this information and even if it's in small print it's still not enough so people need to really be told specifically and it needs to be clear to them and seeing what we're doing with your information now. like i said the the small print of the matter with you it has to be straightforward and that's kind of the tragedy as most people always quote. you don't even know no one ever reads it and that's really there's no other countries are saying that things like that have stricter policies protecting the privacy of citizens though facebook which is legally protected from
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a lot of liability here in the united states but there you know they're an international company at this point i mean they have a population of facebook that rivals most first world countries. how is that how is this being used internationally home by these laws affect to users of a platform outside of the u.s. where there are already affecting users like facebook where a lot of european union use them they're actually facing a potential fine of one point six billion dollars this is over a possible breach of the e.u. allowed hackers to access over fifty million accounts of these users and although only ten percent were actually used in the e.u. the irish data protection commission commission which is a a watchdog of the e.u. is still looking into whether or not they're actually going to sue them but top of the entire this isn't the first time that e.u. is finding these big tech giants kugel was actually find for two point seven
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billion dollars after the search engine violated some rules on antitrust for its online shopping retail practices and this was even before g.d.p. our was regulated and put into place so this was just based on antitrust fine. but soon we were looking around the world that year has a very strict laws that is that everything from g.m.o. as to how your data gets years it's interesting how now we live in this global world that we are kind of falling afoul of each other and it's also because i think i think we could use some of those antitrust laws like you're talking about here in the united states because we have far too many companies like google like of facebook that are kind of you know they're the only one real. stickley that everybody uses that could you could make an argument and that's probably why they get these protections for them so they're able to just go over there and he's going to billion dollars it's just the costs of doing. excellent reporting and fascinating and it's going to be interesting to see how this new deal plays out
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because i think we can all agree that nafta did not play out the way anyone promised i would want to see how trump's deal with canada mexico plays out as well cervantes thank you so much for coming on and illustrating yourself with the bill. all right as we go to break card watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered on facebook and twitter see our poll shows at our t.v. dot com coming up while the u.s. congress clutches their pearls of natural or teeth over the kavanaugh testimony and confirmation vote they have accidentally on purpose ignored when they were in the violence against women act journalist jacqueline keeler joins us to discuss that so stay tuned to watch a global. quite
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frankly i think just in the season to have deteriorated and have fragmented and it is extremely important that we have a new digital a seat of a presidency that has the votes of the debian people people who have aspirations like freedom and they do have aspirations like living in dignity it quite frankly to deny them the right to vote with the pretext that oh it's not time it or you don't have bread so you should not be asking for the vote you should vote for people who will provide the bread and who will provide the services. i've been saying the number. i mean something they matter to us is over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crime stamped each. eighty five percent of global wealth you longs to be ultra rich eight point six percent market so thirty percent these last few years some with four hundred to five hundred trade
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per circuit for sure and one rose to twenty thousand dollars. china is building two point one billion dollars a i industrial park but don't let the numbers overwhelm. the only numbers you need remembering what one does not show you know four to miss the one and only. when the lawmakers manufacture consent to the public well. when the ruling class isn't protect themselves. but the final merry go round the sun be that one percent. we can all middle of the room sick. really. mean really really.
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oh i'm going to pull a colony on your folks and not the way you think let me tell you something congress doesn't care about women congress also doesn't care about victims of sexual violence if they didn't care about victims of sexual violence female or male they wouldn't have let the violence against women and acts expire which serves both genders in regard to sexual assault but congress did let it expire and with expiration we lose support for the. federal rape shield law that limits the ability to introduce evidence or cross-examine rape complaints about their rape complaints about their past sexual behavior it protects victims from eviction due to the acts of abuse or stalking on the property funding for rape crisis centers elder abuse prevention programs and legal aid funding for victims of sexual or domestic
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violence and while some eighty percent of reported rape victims are white native american women are much more likely to be a victim of sexual violence than any other race or ethnic group in the us and they are much much less likely to see any kind of justice according to the government accountability office federal courts refused to prosecute up to sixty seven percent of sexual assault cases on reservations against native american women and it's when a sixteen study by the u.s. department of justice it was found that more than four in five american indian and alaskan native alaskan native women eighty four point three percent have experienced violence in their lifetime this includes fifty six point one percent who have experienced sexual violence and forty eight point eight percent who have experienced stalking however the most disturbing thing is that according to the same study ninety percent of native american women have experienced violence at the hands of a non tribal member and the only thing that has allowed victims of violence on
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reservations to get justice is the violence against women's act joining us today from portland oregon to discuss this topic is native writer and award winning journalist jacqueline keeler thank you so much for joining us today jacqueline. thank you for having me thank you so the violence against women act was passed in one nine hundred ninety two which i want to make i want to add was coined the year of the woman because of the impact of anita hill's one thousand nine hundred one testimony and the record number of women that one congressional seats and that momentum helped to get the act passed now we're in the year of blaming women for everything and it's gone from words to actions and they're now now it's just blatantly putting lives at less risk when you see this jacqueline what does the violence against women act do specifically to help native victims of sexual violence and why is that so necessary. yeah there are large swaths united states in which native women are completely vulnerable there are gaps in the justice system
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which were really evolved in the nineteenth century and were made worse with rulings that happened in the twentieth century basically tribes do not have jurisdiction over non-natives so if you are not rolled in a federally recognized tribes the tribe any tribe does not have jurisdiction over you so you have reservations where as you noted the f.b.i. is often the the party that would investigate and they decline to investigate over seventy percent of these cases that are reported in the confusion about jurisdiction means that there is inaction in follow up sheriffs may not know if they have jurisdiction over a certain area or not some reservations like for berthold which is in the middle of the bokken which has a great deal of issues because of the man camps for building the pipelines is you know has five or six i think counties that intersect on the reservation so you're talking about six different sheriffs and so yeah there are huge and you know people
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know this they know that they can go to the reservation and commit murder and rape and not be prosecuted so leaves native who. men in their own homelands incredibly vulnerable to violence. it's interesting because between two thousand and five and two thousand and nine u.s. attorneys declined to prosecute sixty seven percent of matters referred to them involving sexual abuse of native americans with this and other statistics so grim in recent years and getting worse as the united states by the government in violation of the united nations declaration of the rights of indigenous people that's the most important question of the good. will you know it i don't know that the i think the u.s. is kind even i think you can find it but they you know it's i think the issue is that. indigenous communities are very are at risk this certainly
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you know falls under the. geneva conventions on genocide you know making a population so at rest even in our in our particularly in our home communities i mean i'm safer living in off the reservation i am on the reservation because violence against me can actually be prosecuted under the violence against women's act when it was amended the two thousand and thirteen version which passed in two thousand and fifteen and was held up for two years by republicans they did not want to extend tribal jurisdiction over non-natives and so what vowel out the. two thousand and thirteen was to allow tribes to assume jurisdiction over domestic violence cases on the reservation and so over anybody not just federally enrolled people and so so this actually this is what is at stake several tribes have gone through the process of being able to get the training and everything to be able to
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implement. on their reservations but this is definitely at risk with the with the lapse in the author's reauthorization there's been a temporary reactors a. december first and definitely it's something that is. respected in the funding for actually funding these different justice initiatives right and as i said it's it's interesting because the violence against women act actually covers as i said both genders lots of programs everything from elder abuse to you know education in youth programs well one of the things we've noticed we've noticed is that you know during you know when black lives matter came up we looked at the statistics for native american men they were much more at risk of being shot and killed by a on armed by a police officer than even african-american men were and we keep seeing this ignorance like just sort of ignoring violence against native american populations
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in general and. what i wanted to ask you was near the end of twenty seventeen the f.b.i.'s national crime information center had said their database had six hundred thirty three open missing person cases for native american women and i keep seeing it over and over women are missing more native american women western and nothing is happening there doesn't seem to be an alarm bell let me ask you is this another is this a matter of jurisdictions not being clear or is it a lack of communication between non-tribal law enforcement and the tribes or is it something else entirely. yeah i covered the case of the search for a living alone bear i wrote about that. in may and her body was recently found at the bottom of the was from fort berthold reservation north dakota in the bokken and her body was found in. there on her reservation and but yeah i
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talked to the family i interviewed you know tribal police and the police and f.b.i. and there are a number of issues one is definitely nation. and also the lack of data too and i know that that is something that is being addressed by different legislative fixes and funding and initiatives that are being pursued right now. but yeah we don't have a lot of data on it there is not the level you know i talked to travel police they said they had a lot more coordination with state and federal law enforcement regarding the the prevention of meth use on the reservation they did with with sexual violence and they would like to see comparable levels of sort of interagency support so that they could address this more at a and more equitable level you know it's interesting in august of this year of business women's rights advocate susan boyle
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was told the seattle times that it's the legacies the ongoing legacies of color ization and policies that have affected tribal communities intentional policies that have hurt damaged native communities what can we do aside from procedure and pressure in congress to help native indigenous victims of sexual violence and the reverse some of these destructive effects of colonisation that we've seen you know devastating communities across this country. well you know i definitely feel it this is the continuation of the war the indian wars i mean they have not ended you know we are still you know the this is just it's clearly show that native people are incredibly vulnerable to violence we are by far the most vulnerable population in this country and you know whether whether you're looking at six rape suicide of death by police you know i think you're quoting that earlier when i looked at the suspects on that you know native men tween the ages of twenty five and thirty five
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have six times the rate of death by police of african-americans and so it's those are the crime statistics and obviously those are not perfect we definitely need better data but definitely the war against indian people is still the ongoing war in the night. states and i think the solution can only be through a greater recognition of tribal sovereignty the understanding of native people as political as citizens of their nations the attempts to sort of to disappear native nations because of our claims the land has to stop and certainly with the with the rise of trump we are seeing a new what many native people feel is a new term a nation era with the saying that he wants to turn native tribes have them give up their sovereignty to become corporations and and so there is a large movement to sort of eliminate the political nature of native nations need nations preexists united states they continue to person and the treaty process is
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an example of that and last sixteen down iraq the standing rock sioux tribe invoked the treaties they invoked the treaties and treaties are only introduced by sovereign nations the usa does not ratify a treaty with anyone but sovereign nations and under international law you cannot treat your existence so any treaties not make us publicly disappear we still exist the extent to which the united states is willing to recognize that and to deal with us as is the matter hand and the stronger we are politically our status is the less vulnerable we are i believe and so i really feel that we need to address that. we do and that's one of the things that i think we've always talked about on this show and that is i want to keep this conversation go away i want to keep keeping on these stories because what we've seen over the years is that there is this you know being someone of european descent you know my ancestors came here and that land and i think one of the things is finding these intersectional points where we can help
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each other to protect sovereignty and to protect and as a woman to protect women they do you for your work award winning journalist and navajo dakota sioux writer jacqueline killer thank you so much for joining us. thank you for having me here. between one thousand no one and one nine hundred seventy and a mere fifty women were awarded a nobel prize and only two of those women have been awarded the nobel prize in physics during that time until now donna strickland of the university of waterloo bard luke and i was awarded the twenty eighteen nobel prize in physics for her groundbreaking inventions in the field of laser physics it is for her work which she coauthored in one thousand nine hundred five in fact it was her very first public scientific paper the work was the discovery of a way to amplify the power of laser beams and short bursts which is the news in laser eye surgeries and help shift the laser industry into overdrive we're now able to use lasers because of her inventions in applications like cutting drilling data
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storage and surgical procedures all because of strickland's work seven coauthored the study the basis for her doctoral thesis with her ph d. adviser at the time gerard maru who shares credit and will share in the one million dollars prize money when asked what advice would give to her younger self she said hang on for the ride voice you know and for the ride like the other boys look at the smoke and graduation. remember that is our show today is number one in this world we are told you love the love so i tell you all i love you i am a rover driver on top of the wall it's keep on watching those talks of a great britain by the tank thank you thank you. thank. you. thank. you thank you.
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lou. this is. the church secret indeed just like priests accused of sexually abusing children can get away with it quite literally i like to call this the do graphic solution so what the bishop needs to do then he finds out that the priest is is a perpetrator is simply moved to a different spot were the previous standards not the highest ranks of the catholic church conceal the accused priests from the police and justice listen to that a little that's known as the i didn't think that i included used. it felt as.
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though you were going to accept the slow drivers of the stars right to the polls because it's. you know best i. thought of that was i'm somebody that god doesn't know it's a mess you never know what's happening and what they're shooting what it's here. and this left out of that. was. just thinking of that in the i knew what i meant because
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one's claim and for a russian intelligence led cyber attack on the organization for the prevention of chemical weapons. baseless claims hypocritical bodies and unjust prosecution damages the cause of human. the latest in a series of u.s. withdrawals from international justice commitments sees washington take measures to protect itself from being sued at the u.n. . and in france butchers have written to the president amid a wave of attacks on slaughterhouses by animal welfare activists pleading with him to help prevent a possible civil war.
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