tv Watching the Hawks RT October 26, 2018 8:30am-9:01am EDT
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watching the hawks. you know what nobody sees the street looks like the real thing the truth is when. analyzing the plot of. the day like you i'm not i got. the we. would. lose because i. welcome everyone to watch the harks i am so i robot and i'm tapped and i don't eat cereal ever again right wow this is one of those ones that just hit me i was like i mean. but how much more cereal or how much more derringers and terrible things going to happen to our foods before we wake up and start saying i think we've got a problem but as much carcinogenic as just a little bit of carcinogenic it's the perfect good amount of courage and engines
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right it is what i mean if you ask the breakfast cereal companies apparently oh well so naturally the corporate conglomerates who control what we eat in the morning when immediately and to protect their assets. protect their assets most likely declaring that the. report artificially creates a safe level for glyphosate that is detached from those that have been a stablished by responsible regulatory bodies in an effort to grab headlines. responsibly over a wintery bodies do we have those do we i mean i don't even think we have those anymore i thought we got rid of those a couple years ago. that regulations were that you know the bothers me about their report too was rather than like saying you know their response rather than saying oh wow this could be a concern let us check let us do some tests now it will let us maybe you know why
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do you put some boots in the ground and get some gears turning and see if this is really dangerous and see if kids are people who are cereals or would know it's you know you guys are fudging the numbers and how dare you but this is what we get with everything you say it's this is too many deaths by drone that can't be attributed to an actual military gauge bent it's perfectly within the numbers of except of all acceptable deaths ride around well there's a lot of this really terrible you know awful chemical that can cause cancer and other things on this food that we give to children young children babies practically and they're like. you're just too sensitive you're too sensitive you're too to their kids though but for me kids it's you don't get to mess around has to have people when kids' lives and. and so are the ones who are eating this stuff the most. at a developing age and also don't expect the food and drug administration that i'm going to trust what they say that's a good boy that's a really good point and this isn't even the for this is the second round of tests
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that they are but yes they did one we talked about it in august and they did a round of tests and they found the presence of it in forty five breakfast cereals for quaker quakers kellogg's and general mills so now they've gone through even more of these and we're seeing quite frankly if your kids eating out twice a day which a lot of kids couples. i wouldn't if i kids are you are going i want to let my dog eat things that it's really an incredible you know in this kind of debate of. versus you know this kind of debate right now formed around this well who's levels are better tested and who you know what you know what how much of life was safe can you have in your system in the caps the glide pursuit tolerance level five parts per million right but when you really look at a. health benchmark is much more conservative about saying one hundred sixty parts per billion is not say any level higher than that so obviously they're looking at
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a much smaller mountain because yes in one dose sure five parts per million is probably fine but if you're having it every day there's a cumulative effect you're going to have something of course raises higher risk of true journalists we're going to dig into the door that. there could be some just like a lot of things you see out of the f.d.a. or the e.p.a. and all these organizations what you're seeing is that they're basing a lot of what their standards are whether it's our food param matter whether it's lifesaving our food on old study is that came out in the seventy's and eighty's on the one that is the times reported that after looking at all the available. data and research that had been done on the e.p.a. stuff scientists put a lot of weight into one thousand nine hundred eighty three mouse study that they sort of fudged a lot of what was going on there and had some of the results from because of pressure from men santo what they had said that was carcinogen but interpretation
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was subsequently reversed by e.p.a. upper management advisory boards so what happened was the the mouse study said this is not good and under pressure the e.p.a. reverse that and said now it's fine so you'll excuse me if i'm like now we need better standards and we as a society are allowed to set those standards and. while driving to navigate the war between privacy and security most of us are suddenly finding ourselves caught between the two states the corporate and the police and nowhere does that manifest itself better that in the ongoing battle between apple and law enforcement on the hack ability of the i phone you see it appears that apple's latest version of iowa has reportedly turned law enforcement's greatest tool in hacking i phone metadata the great key into as moto reports quote an expensive doorstop artie's actually banks has more. apple's allayed as
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i phone operating system io was twelve is preventing a law enforcement from cranking up the code not too long ago the green shift firm co-founded by a former apple security engineer created the greek device which is supposed to extract method data files from i phones the company has scored contracts with law enforcement agencies all over the world including the u.s. immigration and customs enforcement and the u.k. police with the purpose of cracking down on crime however apple has crippled the great key program to the point where it can only do a partial extraction of data on a walk to i phone pulling a few up on. encrypted files and some added data that experts say is worthless with i.o.'s twelve apple created the u.s.b. restricted mode that shuts off lightning port access on the i phone if it hasn't been unlocked by a user in the last hour that's allegedly stops law enforcement or any third party
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from hacking and i phone experts say al bull's new security update purged the company wants to protect its consumers privacy and lessen the chances an i phone user becomes a victim of a hacking by any third party person company or bought apple c.e.o. tim cook spoke at a data privacy conference earlier this week and he had this to say hey be ready didn't belong. in the. t.v. you can come home and leave it with. the right to. be. in. the room although it appears that i phones are secure from great key right now experts believe that great shift another company is maybe looking for alternative solutions and washington actually banks are to. look at tim cook up their goal or
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know this is people toward their data belongs to them renewed we're going to security a number of. pretty wild for us is going to say that everybody else is just someone's got to be the voice of reason. and sort of you know what it what did everyone expect it's but i think it's because some you know when you're talking about people over thirty five grow up without having our lives on a small device and when you've grown up with your life. and now texting. i phone and it definitely. but one of the things that police officer captain john chairman of the rochester police department in minnesota actually told forbes that given time and i'm sure a work around will be created will be developed and then the cycle will repeat someone is always building a better mousetrap so i think you're going to see everyone do you think this is just going to be this is going to be their their dance forever and ever it's the
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will get a little bit further away where it will be instead of just sticking to basic laws about you know he search and seizure you know the darn laws and i mean you would think good because there shouldn't be that bans especially between law enforcement corporate you need a warrant to get access to dozens of anything to take you it means that you have to go to school and say hey we have a warrant we would like this person's mother apple can say you know what we have it or our security systems prevent us from our new access to that so go bark up a different tree you know it's interesting because like google said tim's been preaching about this and the question i have is do you think it's kind of tim cook and how board are they just really playing the good p.r. since like snowden and some sold out of they're just trying to do good p.r. move for the or are they really do think they're serious about really wanting to protect their users stop well i think they're very serious that their users are going to care a lot more about it in the coming years than their current users up until this
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point have convenience you know will will trump your personal civil liberties and things like wow my privacy is not that big of a deal but in this situation yeah i think it's a good p.r. move but it was great he's echoing you know. somehow ours military industrial complex we're getting too big we're getting too scary was giving out this speech oh you know we've got to be careful we've got to protect people and we have to go back to basics so that. the data industrial complex does interesting our i was we go to break watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered on facebook and twitter and see our poll shows that are to dot com coming up word take a trip back to the wall for god natives and. i psec the housing issues that has led to this tent city in the heart of the american midwest with the present interim c.e.o. of little earth rest but socio gapless don't want to miss the state to watch.
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the. priest who raped me when i was fourteen years of age was known to be a sexual abuse open he was ordained a priest and the church knew about his offending behavior and they are going to continue to abuse from these ordination right through his entire career as a priest. tracking 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 truck people rush to
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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 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. and it's a tough reality to deal. the end.
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seemed wrong when all the world's just all the best to shape our just a consequence of the band in gain strength because of the trail. when so many find themselves worlds apart. just to look for common ground may. currently the tent city known as the wall of forgotten natives in minneapolis minnesota holds over two hundred homeless members of the american indian community
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and according to what little coverage it has gotten you would think the driving force behind this homelessness is the opioid epidemic but there is much more to the minneapolis tent city and those like it around the country while indigenous american indians constitute only about one percent of minnesota's population twenty percent of homeless youth aged twelve to twenty seventeen in the state are american indian according to the northeast regional project near the half of all american indian homeless adults reported having been physically abused as a child or eight thirteen percent higher than the national average the report also showed that american indians experience homelessness are more likely to experience major depression and post-traumatic stress disorder more than their counterparts with fifty six percent reporting a serious or persistent mental health condition now ever mental illness and of the use of fact all demographics so what is taking an already oppressed and
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marginalized group american indians and shoving them off the cliff well. in a twenty seven thousand u.s. department of housing and urban development surveyed by ramsey county minnesota which included st paul the twin city of minneapolis it was found that quote stagnant wages guy rocketing rents and a lack of affordable housing were the biggest contributors to a rising rate of homeless people in cities across the united states for the residents of a wall of forgotten natives their ability to found a slower affordable housing has become much harder in the last decade see in twenty ten the average rental price in minneapolis was about twelve hundred and ninety dollars a month by twenty fifteen that friday said risen to fourteen hundred fifty thousand dollars a month and by twenty eighteen the average rental price now in minneapolis has jumped to over sixteen hundred dollars a month clyde bell in court one of the founders of the american indian movement told the guardian. it's unfortunate that they have to occupy these urban lands to
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demonstrate the fact that we don't have access to affordable housing anymore and while racism is what is pushing the american indians of minneapolis to the brink it didn't happen by accident see a whole new way of making a profit from the struggles of others as a merged from the ashes of the twenty eight mortgage crisis it turns out the banks are packaging and selling portfolios of one family rental properties and urban and suburban areas even better the federal government is subsidizing loans for those investors to buy into those portfolios one investment group just raked in fifty one point three million dollars and financing for eight hundred twenty four unit portfolio with with locations in jacksonville florida memphis tennessee atlanta georgia birmingham alabama and houston texas all under the freddie mac's single family rental pilot so while these portfolios cash in most of the new housing being developed in cities like minneapolis is not for young people it's not for extended
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families like those at the wall of forgotten natives but for baby boomers flush with cash from selling their homes and downsizing to luxury apartments in the city centers in fact data from the u.s. census bureau indicates that from two thousand and nine to twenty fifteen the percentage of the renting population over fifty five years of age surged twenty eight percent in comparison rentals in the thirty four and under a chaotic category only increased by three percent and finally according to a report this summer from the lincoln institute of land policy vacant homes have increased by more than fifty percent from three point seven million in two thousand and five to five point eight million in two thousand and sixteen so there seems to be fun public funds available for private individuals and corporations to profit from homelessness yet cities like many out bliss have to struggle to find homes for a couple of hundred people which begs the question. why aren't we helping the
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working class like those living on the wall of forgotten natives instead of subsidizing luxury rentals for baby boomers well joining us now to discuss the housing situation in minneapolis for members of the american indian community is julian jones the president and interim c.e.o. c.e.o. of the little earth housing processing complex which by the way is the only section eight rental assistance community in the united states that gives preference to native americans thank you so much for joining us charlie and. thank you for having me so julian tyro here i want to start how how how have these profit driven the housing and rental markets affected members of the american native american community in minneapolis and what do you see that is what is driving this homelessness. i really do feel like it's driving homelessness they could be investing in individuals and family and doing it with the corporate has just made it harder lot of people even at the wall work
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a lot of people. whether native american or not our paycheck away from being homeless the astronaut cole grants there's no such thing as affordable housing. in minneapolis anymore you can't make a living in have housing it's just not done and for american indian people it's even harder we're being pushed out because of our way because of our extended families all kinds of factors there that you hit on. one of the things i noticed was a little earth is is as i said it's a one of a kind situation where you have what is supposed to be affordable housing for those in need but it isn't large enough to take everyone who's they need and what other housing like little earth has been play and what's hindering getting more places like little earth and vailable for people because the market's not going to give them cheaper housing. low earth is one of a kind we only have two hundred twelve units we'd love to house more people we just we don't have the space and no one has has tried to work with us to build other
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housing in other urban areas also a more minneapolis aimed at the american indian population to help them with affordable housing in section eight we fall through the cracks people don't pay attention it's not in tell you're at the wall that you actually get to look and say hey what is going on here what is wrong with this with with the with society that this is happening to our people. you know it's interesting both to myself of the wall and. when you get there and you see you start asking questions that's what it really comes home and you see what's going on here and speaking to people on the ground at the wall for god motives and what we've is that some have been a victim from little or through the drug convictions or all the related drug group you know offenses i want to ask you how do you how does one balance the beads of those who need a whole with those who need help before they can be in
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a place like little earth like how do we how do we help everyone is as much as we can you know. the best we can do is try to find a wraparound service program you talked about mental health you talked about addiction in order in order to have good housing and not be traumatized and when you're dealing with people who have experienced so much trauma and are self medicating with opiates and other drugs we need to find a way to wrap around services around them help them with their mental health help them with their addiction help them with housing so that they can keep that hosing when they get it. that's one of the hard things i think is that you're looking at a lot of stuff that it's very easy to fall through the cracks and one of the things i noticed when i was there when i started looking at the area around the tent city and around the wall is a lot of gentrification seems to be trying to happen housing prices are very high for that area just a couple of blocks a block away an average house is a quarter of a million dollars to purchase and i wonder is there
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a sense of this occasion happening in like minneapolis where there is housing there that should be available to these people it should be fordable to everyone living there but because of banks going in and driving up these rental prices do you feel like the native american and american indian community is a market for this because you guys tend to stay within the same area and also that you're just you fall through the cracks so they can take advantage. yeah we do all tend to stay in the same area i think i think by jacking up brands and doing their forces to homelessness with with our people i think that not only do we fall through the cracks i think we would even be in the area urban area we were promised things that were never followed through you know the relocation that that was all about moving us into urban areas some promises were made housing jobs home ownership none of them came through none of them and now look at where we're at. so
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so this is been a system to to make us we were reached this point now. yeah and i just want to make for our audience members the relocation act and other decisions that were made and things that were promises to reservations and to nato of indigenous people here in the united states is that they were promised low interest loans they were promised on their reservations to create more housing and more homeowners ownership better schools all these things and those never happened and that's why people lose jobs because there is no jobs and they were promised things elsewhere. no i and that they were also providence job training they were there were through a lot of promises made that were filled. that leads to my next question is what are the promises we're hearing i mean what is being done. to not only you know get more affordable housing build but to get the right programs in place to help these people stay in these homes are we seeing everything being done whether officially
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through the city or privately through individuals or private organizations what's up with america you know i know not as working hard i know my goals he's working hard in the moments resources working hard but this is going to have to play out there's a lot of promises being made by the city of minneapolis by some of the reservations we're going to and it's at the point now where it's a wait and see are you going to do something are are you are you going to be a failure to the american indian people. well i'll say that one thing we're not this isn't you know we've been on this story for a week or so now and as i've spoken with everyone on the ground there. a movement and all of that is that we're not leaving this story we're no leaving you guys and this story about what's happening with you guys behind so we're here to keep the keep the voice cue the voice strong go to say thank you so much for coming going to be it's a great pleasure having you joined i do want to. i do want to say you know the fact
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that little earth is still one of a kind in the united states with so many urban indians needing are we seen is outrageous it's outrageous it's unbelievable it's true and it's one of those things that take you so much for coming on today and we will. look forward to talking to you again julian jones the president interim c.e.o. of little worth ports truly are you folks that you. know pressure but how did an entire rock formation move itself over eighty three hundred miles at a time before planes trains and people the rock formations there found a rocky cave national park in tasmania have always seemed a bit out of place but chemical testing by geologists from mohnish university and melbourne has confirmed that the rock formations in tasmania were at some point attached to the united western united states see they were connected at the grand canyon during the age of
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a supercontinent called. our planet you see has been smashing our borders and plates into each other for almost four billion years but for a mode of pangea of all barbara there is one thing first certain that this science has once again proven. whether it's tasmania and the grand canyon we are all neighbors we all came from the same mass of living sustaining earth the grand canyon to the shores of us trail yeah. that's fascinating i couldn't believe it when you told me that story this morning that there was like literally a pink grand canyon in tasmania i had my first thought want to name names of some of first all. those normal and that is our show for you today remember everyone in this world we have not told your loved enough so i tell you all i love you i am tired of. watching those hawks out there and have a great day and night everybody.
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dr almost two years ago office many still question whether donald trump has a coherent foreign policy the same cannot be said about the president's national security adviser john bolton when you think of bolton the word subtlety and diplomacy don't come to mind so is there no bolton dr. zia says holland kentucky. voices people were very funny. a ko money since he was almost no coal mines left. the jobs are gone all the coal was said. that it was a lot of these people the survivors of disappearing before their eyes.
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i remember thinking when i was younger that if anything ever happened to the coal mines here that it would become a ghost town but i never thought in a million years i would see that and it's happened it's happened. six guys just by the natural survival guide. when customers go by to reduce surprise. then elf well reduce a flower. that's undercutting but what's good for market it's not good for the global economy. priest who raped me when i was fourteen years of age was known to be a sexual abuser when he was ordained a priest and the church knew about his offending behavior and they were going to continue to abuse from these ordination right through his entire career as a priest.
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