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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  February 28, 2019 7:30am-8:01am EST

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if you like but the day like you know i got. the police. with. the. world we're going to watching the harks i am sorry robot and i'm top of the wild ass and i am not shocked not shocked i wish i was that i'm not i'm not shocked at all that the police. don't police themselves yeah and you know i know kind of what we talk about on the show are. yeah i don't i'm not entirely surprised to say here that. i think it's the number or savage of people who were involved and some of that issues that i thought was disturbing part of it is i mean we're going over the report earlier today and you know when you see numbers like that on average the age of those being trafficked is just fourteen years old all
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together you know sixty eight point two percent of reported child welfare child protective services involvement as a minor sixty two report that they were involved in that and then ended up being dr a good victim sixty three percent were placed in foster care during their childhoods forty four percent reported being seen by medical providers during their sex trafficking experience and then only one cases all in hawaii and only one case where they had bene fired by medical personnel as being a victim of trafficking so it's not just not fear that you know nothing about as a doctor as a policeman that these are people who are you know it's just stress it just it truly hurts and then when you know what this report shows and look i don't think hawaii is the outlier in there so i think we don't normally just seeing how the law enforcement those are the people you expect to they should be there for victims of trafficking may should be there for process oh my god this man is trying to kill me not abuse them not to take advantage of the situation or act and when you look at
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what i what. what happened and what we're talking about here because i have a lot of people go oh well if you're arresting a prostitute money pays like there's there's a lot of questions about what it is and i think most of them end up taking you to a place where they're blaming the victim in order to make what they did ok. carlos with the hawaii state commission on the status of women explain this actually said this range from cops asking for sexual favors to more coercive situations like i'll let you go if you do x. y. or z. for me bring customers after earning hours in exchange for cigarettes or gas money so all of this happens despite her y. e ending the legal exemption that allowed undercover cops let's be clear about that there was a rule that allows undercover cops to solicit prostitutes but that even the rules changed back in twenty fourteen to make it more clear so would still have been
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taking advantage of someone who is not protected by the law who is in a very unprotected very oppressed class and taking someone who's at risk and instead of helping them taking advantage of them getting advantage of them and you know this is one of those things we've talked about it i've been before on this show no we've talked about it just when we see there's some of these are really good some skin is like ok great they've changed the laws now to work undercover cop can't have sex with a prostitute that he's trying to bust or if she's trying to bust great yeah but a buzz feed in the house is a buffalo news database problem that there is such a terrible thing as the consent defense and back twenty six out of the least one hundred fifty law enforcement officers charged since two thousand and six with sexual assault sexual battery or unlawful sexual contact with a person in custody have been acquitted or had charges dropped against them after using the consent deeper meaning that if you're in custody the police and they have sex with you and let's say you know you can send it out of whatever reason fear
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whatever they can use that as the. this person even though they're handcuffed in the back of my car well there it's consensual sex i you know consent to do anything when you are in handcuffs in police you can't even breathe the wrong way while you look like me but if you are going everywhere you can you know the idea of the you know the idea of what when consent is possible and when it is impossible is something that i think people need to understand children cannot consent ok we have laws for this and when you have someone in custody someone who they breathe the wrong way or do something is going to get a resisting arrest charge and everything else they don't they're not in a position to give consent willingly. that's just costing and i mean what he has like well they're sad it's ok so you're a scumbag. and you know the sob cut through of the cop shouldn't be having sex while on duty most people when they go to their jobs are in
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a lot of their jobs first sex workers and which should be illegal to have sex at their jobs the rest of us we don't get to have the loophole of well you know if the guy shows up and. i go to a disco yes fact is it's mind blowing you know is there anywhere we can protect women not even from cops just taking advantage of them like like we're just meat oh well ok that's not shooting us they're trying to have sex with us to what for cigarettes that's what this comes about and that's what this comes down to is just the abuse of women and i'm sure these are by people in power abuse the power so are more awful. on february fourteenth of this year. member of the pakistan based armed terrorist group mohammed or army of army of mohammad rammed a bus carrying indian state security personnel with
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a vehicle carrying over six hundred fifty pounds of explosives killing forty including. himself the suicide bombing is the latest in a series of attacks between india and pakistan based groups since one nine hundred forty seven the crux of the argument is which countries should control the region known as shamu and cush mir since the suicide bombing india conducted air strikes in pakistan they claim killed three hundred militants in pakistan then shot down two indian warplanes on wednesday after which they captured one of the pilots who are still being held as these two nuclear powers battle among civilians the civilians of both countries are taking a much more peaceful approach to the crisis starting the hash tag saying no to war . kumara president of the all india professionals congress tweeted the only war india and pakistan should fight is illiteracy poverty and violence driving us now from miami with the latest on the crisis of kashmir as r.t. america is john had a welcome john. thanks tabitha good to be here with you john i've got i got to
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start is it possible this could lead to an all out war between these two countries something that many people are fearing because they're both new nuclear powers. tyrrell it's a good question it is possible though it appears at this point that pakistan really doesn't want this to escalate any further one because of what the pakistani prime minister said earlier today basically raising the question to his country and india look we are nuclear powers do we want this to go any further do we want to miscalculation to lead to war and then to because of the fact that pakistan while attacking indian targets did so without actually crossing into the country's airspace that so-called line of control leading into india so there really has been a certain level of restraint involved and also keep in mind no one has actually declared war so that's an important point as well. john what did the u.s. take as we've heard a lot from other countries out
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a lot of them are saying please sit down please have diplomacy but what are we hearing from the e.u. lath about this there fani. yeah well u.s. secretary of state might pompei o has talked to both foreign ministers of both countries urging them to avoid an escalation and to prioritize direct communication to try and essential to temper the overall situation and deescalate it but you know keep in mind the trumpet ministration has been more politically aligned really with india in fact last year as you probably know the white house cut one point three billion dollars in military aid to pakistan because of what president called the country support of terrorist groups and obviously pakistan the nies those allegations from both the white house and also from india you know it is it's such a complex situation and a lot of times it's easy to kind of give law you know a lot of the people you know directly affected it gets lost without the soldiers civilians things like that so that when the first questions i think
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a lot of people have is you know what is the word on the fate of the capture to be a pilot i don't know they have the exchange but you know ships are allowed to go to airplanes cut shot down and now there is this indian pilot what what what is the state of him or do we know what's happening with. well pakistan says that they're treating him well and there was various videos today released by the pakistani military first of all one of the pilot on the ground being kind of roughed up by villagers before the pakistani military intervened and you know him and took him into custody then there was another video that was removed that has since been removed showing the pilot with what appears to be bandages being questioned and then a third video with him drinking a cup of tea being asked some questions only very politely kind of appalled back and forth exchange so at this point he remains in pakistani custody but india is as you can imagine demanding his release and safe return to the country and i think it's safe to say tyrone tab if that were to happen there would likely be
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a deescalation in the overall tensions remember both countries almost went to war back in two thousand and two so this is definitely you know as close as it's coming now with both sides going in gauging this arab battle but again no one has declared war and i think everybody is hoping that it remains that remains the case and it doesn't go to that next level because again these are both nuclear powers. so the better of it we're open about thank you very much for the great report strong how do your two murders on how to go about it i mean thank you so much. as we go to break or watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered on facebook you tube twitter and see our poll shows at our t.v. dot com coming up author and speaker joins us to discuss the seventh anniversary of the murder of trayvon martin don't want to miss this they are watching the hawks.
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i'm max kaiser one more of my guide to financial survival this is a hedge fund and a device used by professional scallywags to earn money. that's right these has flaws are simply not accountable and we're just adding more and more to the. totally destabilize the global economy you need to protect yourself and get in for what's kaiser for. my son doing drugs my nephew was still in drugs my sister just with doing drugs it was like an epidemic of drug abuse america's public enemy number one in the united states is drug abuse he started going after the
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users in the prison population sewer we started treating sick people people who are addicted to these drugs like criminals while i was on the hill. the war on drugs. there are countless numbers of people who are in prison for. this for our own or minor offenders in the drug trade it's a lot watching your children grow up and miss you in waves and say by daddy as you're walking out of a business it's just it doesn't get easier. i do think the numbers mean something they've matter to us as over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crime happens. eighty five percent of global wealth he longs to be rich eight point six percent of the world market rose thirty percent somewhat four hundred to five hundred three per second per second and when
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he rose to twenty thousand dollars. china's building two point one billion dollars a mark but don't let the numbers overrule. the only number you need. i remember one one do you know bored to miss one only room but. you know we're number one and two capitals in united states we also number one get her way to do you. tell me also so much you shall before. solution most. able you so incredibly wrong or you got a wicked jump shot in order to exclaim good. job you
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got it like a lying in a most other one. of these so this is somebody that is at the root for. this manufactured sentence to public will. when they're moving close to some project over themselves. with the final merry go round lifts and be the one percent. of the time we can all middle of the room sick. room.
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on february twenty sixth seven years ago a murder took place inside a gated community in sanford florida that uncover the long ugly history about the state of race relations in the united states of america. event it was the tragic shooting death of seventeen year old trayvon martin by then twenty nine year old george zimmerman superman claim the shooting was a legitimate use in florida's controversial stand your ground laws as his defense for killing the black teenager a jury later found him not guilty however the circumstances and actions by zimmerman on that fateful night the handling of the case by the u.s. justice system and mainstream media would showcase the racial bias many us institutions of white americans still have today despite the great leaps forward in civil rights fought for by black americans in the one nine hundred sixty s. and seventy's today let's look back on trayvon martin george zimmerman and the tragic events that would lead to the rise of the black lives matter movement as we examine the seventh anniversary of the killing of trayvon martin with author and
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speaker the watkins. welcome. thanks for having me yeah this is you know seven years of it's kind of surprising it's actually a few it's like yesterday you know. looking back now seven years later you know what stands out to you. about the killing of trayvon martin you don't know that it's but you know that's a seventy or. seventy years i can i can say historic hypocrisy you know because you know we see what we saw what happened marissa alexander who fired a warning shot and now because her husband was abusing her and she was just trying to protect herself for her child she actually went to jail and there you have george zimmerman this clown. who murdered innocent kid who police actually told him to not pursue. be in jail or continue to go to jail over the past seven years this guy is
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a brett she you know it's robert downey jr jr so that is great he's a real criminal he's a real criminal and you know the fact that he's still able to function and nobody is able to bring up this case is just. well that's one of the things when you look at the two people involved in this directly involved in this case of trayvon martin and george zimmerman on one side trayvon and his death has inspired black lives matter movement has shown us it showed congressman it showed politicians just how scary it is to be a young black teenager in this country. he became a civil rights icon while as you said george zimmerman's life has spiraled out of control he's had health issues run ins with the pulley stocking assaultive point a gun at somebody obviously got to have it out but he also is apparently two million two point five million dollars in debt with zero income so he should be
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rich iraqi army. you know people have paid him to speak places he's made appearances. he read up when he was on c.n.n. one of the first big interviews he ran up a ten thousand dollar bill at a hold tell him his brother and then he started treating people who recognized was so it was like he should have money like this just this is horrible person trayvon did more with his life and try to even in death trayvon martin seem to have done more with his life and more with you know who he was and what he brought to the world and george zimmerman has revealed every day things that i said at a table i said across with his parents at a table last year they were doing a promo for a documentary about the life that is the life and death of this son and just you know to sit in the look. in there just feel that pain that he has to know that this person is still walking around in a system stead are put in place to protect all of us is not going to do anything is
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was one of the most i know it was her feel for him but it was hurtful for me too because i felt like you know you want to be rational you want to do the right thing but this guy was allowed to be rational this guy was allowed to do the wrong thing and if you retaliate against him you're a bad person and all he does is best stuff over and over and over again he's a stocker what else you know and one of the things that really got to me too when you look at this case is the media coverage of speaking to one of the great institutions of the united states and how they failed this case because it's like if you remember early on in this case he got shot everyone was like this is a tragedy i think even bill o'reilly called it a tragedy early on and then suddenly like the media switched and suddenly became the victim that is george zimmerman and everyone suddenly started piling on trayvon yeah. like it was a white man you know and so i have to ask you know. have those mistakes i mean
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maybe have those mistakes been fixed at all and you. as the media learned anything from the mistakes they made in that coverage and picking the sides choosing to pick sides and is going to go smart people like you but you have you are ready with making the right decisions anyway smart people smart people always wait for the facts smart people always consider everything and in come up with that mentality to say stupid people in media say oh the conservatives in the races we're going to be behind them in a way is even is even why well you know we got around him and then people on the other side you know sometimes do the same things and i'm saying like at the end of the day you know at some point somebody needs to stand up and say look we need this stuff put in the victims on trial of trayvon martin was the victim term omar and wasn't being charged with anything but if we talk about somebody like freddie gray or michael brown they didn't get
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a day in court so they can't be the bad guy we can't demonize them we can't pick their record apart because they were in a. virtual virtual no. as you said that the death of trayvon martin was absolutely politicized highly politicized but both the left and the right how do you feel that that hindered civil rights that that hinder and that that set us back because it felt that way watching at where you were watching the left and the right just jump on everything on either side and sort of miss the tragedy of i think a lot of people you know like i said i feel so bad for his family but a lot of people. or use this viral experience to promote themselves even. before all this or against this. or both and i think we missed the point and the point is someone. just is me giving
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a speech to a bunch of people who get excited about speeches but not excited about actually contribute in some type of way to fix some of these issues. dozens of anything and this is why every so often you know every couple of these shootings happen every day but every couple of months one picks up steam. it gets a lot of attention and people rally around their cause into the next thing comes and then they bounce from the goal to next and it's unfortunate when we really should be we really should be addressing the issues we should be you know telling people young kids like trayvon to not wear a hoodie in a pool your parents should be telling close leg zimmerman to not be of reeses and not follow people when you're not even a cop you know what i mean like we need to be doing things to solve problems instead of just demonizing victims or creating you know creating creating demons out of the victims that exists and it was the thing you have to remember about this and the thing that always bothered me was anybody trying to excuse and zimmerman's
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actions and try to make trayvon martin out to be some kind of you know that was the thing he was and he was this he was all he was a child. he's a seventeen year old child he's not legally allowed to do much of anything at seventeen years old we don't let them buy cigarettes we don't buy booze but somehow we make them responsible for the fact that they scare a grown man twenty nine year old man that's something that never got me with that connector how are you going to have the sense that you are scared of a seventeen year old boy you're a twenty nine year old man in a same breath cry about freedom talk about freedom yeah he had the freedom to go to school go to the store and buy skittles he had the freedom to walk and he doesn't have to stop and put his hands up because. stupid learning challenge one of the little security guard god told you to stop freedom sort of people care about his country deserves freedom i'm afraid of my freedom where he only took this young man's freedom but he took his life in the affected the lives of
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a lot of people by you know as a kind of wrap up i want to ask you know looking back seven years what's the most important lesson we have learned in that we still need to learn from this. the most important lesson i've learned is that you came to kill a black person and live a quality life so as a black person i need to move in a way where i know that's the reality that's what i took from it. a lot of people came together again when the when the march is when the peace rallies want to send you to go home but. anymore we've got to go back to living in this world. the world has not changed he has not apologized he's not sorry and the people who supported him follow suit they don't do anything book until you to push the same b.s. stroup you never see that really you don't see somebody saying i learn from my mistakes and i mean you very rarely listen you have a lot of second amendment people and quite frankly the second amendment is there to
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protect you and me from people like george zimmerman. the idea that we're all you know that that somehow trayvon martin wasn't allowed to protect and. if that george zimmerman is allowed to make that decision then i think that's the sound part is that we're all looking at each other like how are you going to hurt me. and i know that doesn't get us anywhere it doesn't it doesn't and you know you're the one thing i look at this that i say i wish it didn't have to happen but i'm glad it did not the death of trayvon and i wish that never happened but i'm glad that it was part of a catalyst that got us to black gloves about brought these things back into the forefront again because i think this country far too quickly it's like oh well the sixty's happened civil rights happened over the expected this showed it was a de thank you so much for coming on always a pleasure having you on thank you know. in july of one thousand nine hundred seventy two rushes of america eight space probe became the second known
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manmade scrap to land on the surface of the planet venus but it's crap the cosmos for eighty two venus probe that launched on march thirty first nineteen seventy two didn't even get out of the parking lot see a bomb watch it suffered engine failure was forced to jettison parts of the craft which ended up landing on a farm in new zealand the rest has remained in earth's orbit for nearly half a century until now seems it's picked up speed in its orbit of the earth it now orbits the earth every one hundred twelve minutes a pretty fast thing and scientists say to speed up means the cosmos forty two payload and engineering it will probably fall to earth this year probably in a place say that and scientists are excited to study whatever survives to better understand not only effects of space but all the junk we leave out there comes right back with former new zealand alternatives and some coming out of the sky. and jam and it's us on the our russia don't worry you're not being invaded it's going
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to be ok space deserves over there remember everyone in the world record holder of the sword so you all i love i am able to i'm top of. watching the hawks over and over great. need. for my dough for sixteen months on a city denoted. by the. isis fighters and boarding a philippine naval ship. but
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not for me ned being now ninety five. dollars still don't know what's waiting for them. because it will. be new and i am not taking. the picket out on. my money. my son was doing drugs my nephews were still in drugs my sisters with doing drugs it was like an epidemic of drug abuse america's public enemy number one in the united states is drug abuse which is sort of going after the users in the prison
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population who are we started treating sick people people who are addicted to these drugs like criminals while i was on the hill. the war on drugs was a mistake there are countless number of people who are in prison for conceivably. for minor minor offenders in the drug trade it's a lot watching your children grow up and miss you in waves and say by daddy as you're walking out of the abyss it's just it doesn't get easy. nothing. nothing nothing. nothing but i got up. out of you know you're not.
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open it's one of the issues they will have. the second trump came to ends or promptly with no deal reached neither side could find common ground over sanctions on the denuclearized korean peninsula. culture coming up on the facebook is accused of centering conservative voices as a whistleblower reveals how the social network suppresses content on limits exposure. it would see it appear on several different conservative pages like maybe this is an independent person is mainstream thing maybe independent figures on the left are experiencing the same kind of deep blue state. but i didn't see. french sporting goods.

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