tv Watching the Hawks RT October 9, 2018 6:30am-6:57am EDT
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in wide class of everyone in the united states who has a detectable level of p f a s chemicals in their blood the if they store per and poly floral area a class of artificial loud grown chemicals that do not decompose an air or water or of the human body not even for the hoses of years p.f. they are used in fast food wrappers water repellent fabrics nonstick cookware like teflon cosmetics and fire fighting foam according to both the international agency for research on cancer and the us environmental protection agency p f a as are possible kirsan engines to humans this c.d.c. lists the side effects of p.f.a. s chemicals as they can affect the growth learning and behavior of infants and older children they can lower a woman's chance of getting pregnant interfere with the body's natural hormones increased cholesterol levels affect the immune system and crease increase the risk
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for cancer now with cities and towns across the u.s. finding elevated amounts of p.f.a. asked chemicals in their drinking water and considering it could take a decade or more for concentrations of the chemical to leave our body i think it's time to get serious and start watching the hawks. told. the first real that this would be a large part of the arctic to see. what it feels like you are going to. sleep. with a digital. it's a. city on the list and joining me from the t.v. do you find that are sort of headed out. there lesko post. tyrrell venter thank you
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so much for joining me today. it is it is a little rainy and surely up your blood boil boy talk about chile is these p.f.a. yes is good gracious yeah it's sort of amazing how how long they say am i in the body but i want to talk a little bit first is the point of this or that sort of central part of this case is that this lawsuit is different because it asks for action instead of cash why do you think it went this way instead of just asking for the millions or billions of dollars oh. well you know but you know how much i love seeing corporations who poison people pay through the teeth you know in thousands or billions of dollars i love that but what's really interesting about this is the plaintiff the plaintiffs are seeking something fascinating robert below the attorney for the plaintiff she actually told the interests of quote this lawsuit could provide a mechanism for addressing and resolving those concerns through
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a truly comprehensive and independent science based process paid for by those that actually created the problem and not by the american taxpayers they they want a panel they want to they want to study this and they want the corporations who poisoned us to actually pay for this study and then follow the rules that this study but potentially put into place what's really interesting the science panel was actually created to study the effects of p.f. away in the middle valley and found a probable link to six diseases from exposure to chemicals one part of the seagate panel which was created during a lawsuit against upon this has precedence so that the company cannot contest the findings of the panel so that this is what they're seeking actually has a certain precedence and goes to educate us more about the content of the content of it that they put in all of our bodies and apparently across the country of the world and in the end that's amazing i sort of find that fascinating and. it's
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a very interesting way of sort of using litigiousness to force action instead of just getting money back from them now this year a number of fire companies and fire training facilities across the country been replacing their fire fighting foam which was made from the sort of schedule b.p. . chemicals because it's been going to show and to contaminate groundwater and it's been in city after city the environmental working group actually calculated that one hundred ten million americans may be contaminated with these with these chemicals through their groundwater and through these fire fire foam so something that's meant to say about us actually ends up killing us the long run. we need to stop the contamination before it gets worse right how you know how are we doing that it doesn't just affect fire but there you've got to imagine that all new job it's a dangerous job now we've already made it even more dangerous. and there you are
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you know you made one of the tools that for her for her is rely on dangerous to the firefighters i mean it's completely insane. so myra michigan state fire marshal surveyed fire departments in the state six hundred twenty eight fire departments have responded and two hundred eighty of the six hundred twenty six fire departments now have class b. foam which is this form which some of the foam is being kept and because it is the stopping chemical fires but this was actually not for anything that holds. twenty two that they create with this you know it's awfully ironic that the thing that's so rouser to us and full of chemicals is the best thing so if i face chemicals. one of the things we have to remember is about these kind of chemicals is that they're there not just in one place they're in your drinking water they're in things that are supposed to save you they wrap your food. it's
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a version of tough one which one of the offshoots of i believe dupont or tao had put dupont have put together is another chemical that's like to fly on but not teflon but still also very horrible and you know it's like what else out there can get us. but drew is that right i would have slid we can't even get anything right at this point in terms of chemical use. eradicating smallpox is possibly one of the biggest challenges humanity has faced and it took decades and cost billions of dollars but now microbiologists are worried the scourge could possibly come back and say a controversial study is actually to blame artie's turn of the chavez as more on this story. smallpox is considered to be one of the deadliest diseases in history and although it was eradicated in the one nine hundred eighty s.
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a controversial study of a similar virus sparking new concerns earlier this year researchers published a paper in an open access peer review journal and has since generated global concern in the article the scientists describe how they were able to piece together bits of d.n.a. to resurrect horse pox although the virus hasn't been seen in nature for decades the researchers were able to assemble it using genetic material they ordered from a company that sent the sizes d.n.a. while horse pox doesn't harm humans it's a close cousin to smallpox which killed hundreds of millions of people before the world health organization eradicated it in the one nine hundred eighty s. with vaccines only two stocks of smallpox remain one held by russia and the other by the united states for research purposes the new work is raising troubling questions about how terrorists could use modern biotechnology even governments are known to experiment in bio warfare which makes these sort of studies particularly.
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concerning on a global scale critics argue that the paper demonstrates how you can synthesize a deadly pathogen and gives way too much detail information on how to do it and now microbiologist are worried that that same kind of technique can be used to revive smallpox while there's a smallpox vaccine many are worried that the virus strains could be manipulated in a way that the vaccine would not work a move that could put the population at risk of a lethal pandemic if the virus was released as a terrorist bioweapon the study has reignited the long running debate on how science should be regulated reporting in new york trinity chavez our take. because our poisoned water wasn't enough we'd like to bring use small fox i mean you know me i'm not a big one for regulation or getting governments involved in doing things but seriously can we just get rid of the smallpox why are we keeping it why does anyone that goes out to the u.s. and russia this seems terrifying what are your big i know it is you know it is if
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it has if you can weaponize it you know the military industrial complex of the world are going to use it as a weapon but you know what's really sad is a kind of goes along with the first story you talk about again it's are we cutting off our noses to spite our face of the pursuit of you know whether it be better rappers for fast food or you know studying the horse you know pox or whatever you know it's really ridiculous the we would make mistakes like these and allow this kind of information to get out there you always have to be cognizant that look human beings for all of our greatness we also can drop pretty low and if you put something out that people could then later manipulate you've got to be aware of that you can't just trust people not to do something wrong with it because tragically that's kind of human nature. yeah i mean idea of bringing making biological warfare great again is just not something you know it's like we just get past the idea of chemical warfare bats or
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a ball and the idea of biological warfare that's horrible and let's not give bad guys any ideas and let's not make smallpox great and. it's horrifying they make people how they are not thicker. it is but remember we're still talking about societies that use chemical weapons against their people all the time let's not forget the tear gas which our police use on protesters is considered a chemical weapon and you cannot allow in you're not allowed to use it in war zones but we still do protestors of that makes any sense so you know there's a lot in our society that we need to start balancing out especially as we drive forward into the future and and on lock even more potential horrors we have to take that ten seconds and stop and say who is this really smart are we doing the right thing well i'm going to. take this show into the next next half and i have to say good bye to you for today a tyro thank you so much for for coming on today and letting us know what you think
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again we got to be a little more careful with our stuff thank you so much as we go to break off watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics. that are coming out from the a step much. about the disappearance of a prominent saudi journalist from all his might i mean how do you take on and they are how much on stage you know watching on. the way to the united states is dangerous for most of the illegal immigrants. but that's the root of sympathy i want to. go to some just about but many of them
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look for refuge in the so-called sentries on the dresser used to share information about undocumented migrants with federal authorities or the best person as they are . listening to morrow i then read up on i guess i'm in a lot of class and i want to. watch as the options to stay in the country with donald trump in the. movie. the both of you what does he have to be about to be. able to. do with the push to put it both. of you out to the public you know that most of the. i've been saying the numbers. they matter to us is over one trillion dollars and. more than ten light colored orange happy each day. eighty five percent of global wealth you longs to be old for rich eight point six percent market saw
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a thirty percent rise last year some with four hundred to five hundred three per circuit first 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 numbers you need to remember is one one business show you can't afford to miss the one and only boom but. when a loved one is murdered it's natural to seek the death penalty for the murder i would prefer it be known to the death penalty just because i think that's the fair thing the right thing research shows that for every nine executions one convict is found innocent the idea that we were executing innocent people is terrifying there's just no really hasn't been that we want even many of the dems families want the death penalty to be abolished the reason we have to keep the death penalty here
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is because that's what murder victims' families what that's going to give them peace that's going to give them justice and we come in and say. not quite enough we've been through this this isn't the way. thirty nine year old saudi journalists. is missing and even presumed dead after he was at the saudi consulate in istanbul reportedly to obtain documents he needed to marius fiance in turkey and has not been seen sence turkish president oregon is requesting perfect life the opportunity to search this. saudi consulate and access to surveillance footage from the time in question officials in turkey allege that they have information suggesting to show he was murdered in the card slip by
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a team of some fifteen saudis flown in especially to do the job though no evidence to support the claim has come from the turkish government as of our broadcast show he's a writer of a washington post global opinions a column best known for being the first major arab journalist to interview osama bin laden in the one nine hundred eighty s. and is known for being highly critical of crown prince of saudi mohammad and some months reform movement earlier this year to show he told al-jazeera quote as we speak today there are saudi intellectuals and journalists jailed now nobody will dare to speak and criticize the reforms and by the crown prince so as pressure between saudi arabia and the rest of the world heats up over everything yemen to iranian oil for the disappearance of jamal. force the international community to act joining me now to help further explain this mysterious former. thank you for thank you thank you so can you explain to me a little bit exciting one of the hard things for people to understand is how could
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a crime committed inside a foreign consulate be in vesta gated by the country the consulate is in and how can that cause problems will and the other have to do it with the permission of the country whose consulate is in this case saudi arabia or in the worst case they can conclude on the consulate they say we're expelling you we're taking back over this property and they could search it themselves i don't know there were at this point but i have to tell you. my my spidey sense is tingling here there's something strange about all this because when this first happened my thought was why i had been so monk can get away with bloody murder literally and they haven't and i figured this will just be swept under the carpet but actually it's become quite a story now maybe it's because he was with the washington post he's part of the journalistic nobility so to speak his life counts but it is odd to spurn. after trump came out and really criticized saudi arabia so we want more money for you protection you would last two weeks without us i almost have a feeling there's something going on bigger between the united states saudi arabia
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and of course you know bibi netanyahu and and mohammed bin salma and or big buddies the ultimate power couple maybe maybe something's changing room where there's something going on behind the scenes what it what's interesting is the timing of this is that as saudi arabia is sort of trying to modernize it so i think the crown prince has this like vision of modern man like he's so hip look at him he is cool never. sure and essentially the end of the day he still wants to be a dictator he just wants to be dictatorial monarch you know it's it's not really changing how does a free press hurt him and in relation how does not how does this sort of turning your back on a free press going to help them in any way in this i don't i don't it if saudi contacts i don't think free press matters where the otherness goes i don't know i would look at his previous writings or regarding he may be a critic of mohammed bin so mum doesn't mean necessarily he's for freedom and as we
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understand it and is that even viable and so in saudi arabia look the entire rule of the al saud family depends on strict muslim with the al-shaykh clan you know let's remember this is that the third saudi state the first one went belly up in one thousand nine hundred one the first one in eight hundred eighteen with the head of the house of saud actually literally as head hanging from the gate constantinople they they they know they're sitting on a powder keg they have been since the kingdom was established in the one nine hundred twenty s. the idea of liberalizing it i think is a very speculative concept at best one of the things that came up also during that same time is that there is a you know at the same time that there's you know saudi arabia possibly having something to do with killing or disappearing. there is also a female journalist in saudi arabia that you know has attracted but have attracted far less attention there are like when they cut the head off of the shia cleric
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when they take to keep people for sorcery the again they get away with bloody murder all the time the question is this suddenly has got legs and that indicates to me something else is going on one of the big turkey it seems are that it's that it's happening in turkey because they don't have the best press freedom they don't they don't land so on the press freedom and at all in fact that one of the world's biggest jailers of journalists so now with turkey now seemingly defending a journalist is this the sign of change in turkey as far as the press or is this more about we don't like you killing someone on our turf might be needs or maybe simply pot and kettle and that they're using it because it's useful for some bigger game frankly i'm surprised even blamed on putin as we know love to kill girls during was just for fun and it was well it's so early in the we thought we might get out of here i'm sure it'll be to ask jennifer rubin i'm sure she'll get a little bit of that but they were the point is i don't know that it has to do with
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press freedom in turkey at a may not even have to do with the wounded sense of sovereignty on turkey support and may simply be that for other reasons they want to pick a fight with the saudis and they're using this as a pretext so can you kind of explain to me the simple terms of why turkey and saudi arabia are are not on the best terms so there are a number of reasons to some extent we can see it's a struggle for supremacy in the sunni world i mean obviously iran is the leading shiite power but you have a distinction between the gulf monarchies particularly and a more populous base like the muslim brotherhood that they were gone is close information like this one learning and it's like what shall we do what you have to analyze this is a journalist's life is that it does that make it any more or less. of a. an issue does it make does it have more or less power when it's a journalist who's at stake because it seems you know as a journalist watching that it's terrifying that someone can just silence you when
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you go to pick up some documents or something do you think that that has more of a standard or is this new is this surprising that there is actually concern over a journal it's bigger than i would have thought that it really depends on who the journalist. after all we've seen for example russian journalists killed who cares they're not real human beings anyway right exactly you know exactly who it is and you know if you were the situation and anybody cares much about you as i was doing i don't know exactly what movies washington post new york times and then something like that you know then you're going to get some attention because this is part of the you're a stalker see and that's so sad because that's our classes sort of world we live in you know this is the one place we weren't supposed to have like classes and parade and it was like we're going. right out i'm always trying to. positively hoping that this ends up being something that's a lot less horrific than it sounds in the news but we'll keep an eye on it and hopefully things will will and without any more pledge to thank you so much thank
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you so much for helping us make sense of this thank you. because players dressed up as their favorite comic book and movie characters to express their fandom in all sorts of ways but one group who placed third at the marble becoming costly contest at new york comic-con took it to a new whole new stereotype busting plays the team called he job heroes consists of muslim kitab wearing women fans who use their hero job instead we store other pieces of our costume to create the look of their favorite hero the women all modestly a tired and incorporating their traditional how to where included representations of major marvel characters black widow scarlet witch a lack. anther the war spider-man iron man star lord captain america go maura nebula dr strange and even nick perry it really does go to
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show you that no matter your gender your body type your religion your skin color whatever there is a way for you to express how those characters rise up and give you strength and to the members of the cause playgroup heroes. you for taking your fandom and self-expression to the next level and for avenging the harmful stereotypes and showing that together we can all be heroes thank you so much and that that's our show for you today remember everyone in this world are not told or loved enough so i tell you i love you. but the wallet keep on watching the hogs and have a girlie say about everyone. so
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we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy for them to you shouldn't let it be an arms race is also a scary dramatic development the only really i'm going to resist i don't see how that strategy will be successful very critical daryn time to sit down and tom. this is. so they need to actually physically hold it out of the grass he would have well well well well well.
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there's a lot of money with the oil and with that comes. a lot of a lot of people from all over the country. who don't make a hundred thousand dollars a year. as a minimum there is an issue. here maybe. they were all sick you know or that a hard work will work it's not easy work and so they want to relieve their stress of how do they relieve their stress these and then move that out like he's the man that comfort these many. people who've been murdered up here people can raise their massive drug issues up here give a boom you have everything else that comes along with money.
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you know. we're fighting against the group in the union the enemies of europe and those who are entrenched in the brussels. warning to brussels us two of the continent's most controversial and to establishment politicians seem up on brian do you chiefs that enemies of europe. kavanagh's confirmation as the u.s. supreme court judge sees anger a shift towards white women who backed him even though the f.b.i. failed to find any evidence to corroborate sex assault claims also this hour.
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