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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  March 7, 2019 1:30am-2:01am EST

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everything that goes with it is good business is business it's very good business it's very good business so much so that you've got to stand back with a certain amount of. tragedy and that feeling like you want to throw up in the back of your mouth when you're out of money being spent and yet you know worse is they're making all this money american companies making this ridiculous amount of money selling. and yet where are we seeing any of that money in the taxpayer seeing any of that in taxes from these companies know we're paying to subsidize. most definitely i mean. it's really only break down a few of the wallace and. the top five merchants of war right now at number five. and then they're out of the united states total arms sales twenty two billion dollars profit two billion dollars a year in their products fighter jets b.
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two stealth bomber f. thirty five's. are based systems they're out of the united kingdom arms sales twenty two billion twenty two point nine billion dollars total say one point one billion in profit talk about combat calls fighter jets type thirty five again are good friends. of the u.s. there are total arms sales at twenty three point nine billion dollars they made a two billion dollars profit look at this their main products are. air to surface surface to air air to air surface to surface precision guided missiles bombs and torpedos coming in and number two to have a boeing jet maker boeing's twenty six point nine billion in arms sales an eight point two billion dollars profit for boeing because they also make a lot of money just from selling regular jets and things like that and then number one the biggest arms dealer in the world number one by far lockheed martin out of the u.s. . point nine billion dollars in arms sales two billion dollars profit lockheed is
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a. lockheed is actually the largest defense contractor in the world. and the other thing you know about him is that so in two thousand and seventeen they had close to forty four point nine billion in arms sales. but what's interesting is that lockheed martin profit or revenue from the u.s. government alone is more than the annual budget total annual budgets of the i.r.s. and the environmental protection agency come by and we spend more than we do at the i.r.s. which is one fully under funded yet that's where we can get a lot of money. which i don't know just make sure that we have clean water and things like that. clean water in a clean environment or need to pay your taxes when you're bombing people in your day and the worst part is that was really you know the worst part about from my
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personal you might know them as the people who brought you the bomb that they sold to saudi arabia that was dropped on a school bus full of children in yemen killing forty boys and eleven adults so great work i don't want to i mean i just i want this to be what america is this is what we make war this is our biggest export if you really look at it when you look at these numbers i mean it's hard to deny and when that's all you have the revolving door and who was it that just moved from government to government right into the private sector of the defense industry was former u.s. ambassador to the united made to the united nations. is expected to join the board of directors the board of directors for boeing the weapon system an aircraft maker she goes but the bring it on the twenty ninth just to give you a great example i think you kind of takes the words from. journalist glenn greenwald and here the news about nikki haley tweeted congrats to nikki haley on having her incessant warmongering pay off so quickly. and lucratively and congrats
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to boeing for obtaining her influence much denies it is the build up to that but should that he's going to run for president when trump's done this is really part of that group that you know about building airport airplanes. an estimated eight hundred british and five hundred american nationals joined isis since two thousand and fifteen in the years since few have come home and even fewer have survived but of those who did survive the brutal terrorism and civil war in syria leaving may be more arduous than life in the caliphate britain's defense minister gavin williamson told the daily mail in two thousand and seventeen quote a dead terrorist can't cause any harm in britain when asked if rehabilitating former isis bribes and fighters was possible and here in the united states the state department has made it clear they have no intention of repatriating those who chose to fight with a terrorist group twenty four year old american born hota muthana is facing a future where no place feels like home or to correspondent john how do you have to
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leave it. not so fast so says u.s. district judge reggie walton who denied a request by hotel moved on his lawyer for expedited proceedings in the case to determine her citizenship judge walton ruled that month on his lawyers failed to prove that the twenty four year old and her eighteen month old son are in imminent danger at the refugee camp in syria where they've been living since fleeing from isis earlier this year with ana says isis militants have threatened her life and is asking to return to the united states even if that means facing prosecution in prison which would be likely president trump last month tweeted that he instructed secretary of state mike pompei o not to allow my phone a back into the united states pompei on maintains with ana is not a u.s. citizen nor ever was having been born to a yemeni diplomat in the us and therefore is not afforded the same rights as an american citizen secretary pompei o. quite clear in this regard and that.
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you know we're going to continue to take all lawful measures to ensure. that she does not enter the united states phone as lawyers argue her father's diplomatic status ended before her birth so she was automatically a citizen upon her birth in hackensack new jersey also judge walton during the hearing this week said her lawyers presented a quote good point that rejecting with on his claims to citizenship could set a precedent that would allow foreign countries to abuse diplomatic immunity to commit espionage if madonna is ultimately not allowed to return to the united states she could apply for asylum in another country such as sweden where former isis militants and widows have been allowed to return to the country has taken a harder stance on immigration more recently now his will of human rights watch says move on his case presents an opportunity for countries like the united states in the way the government should really be interested in trying to study much more
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how this happens where the appeal comes from and therefore how they can prevent young people from joining experiments groups going forward saying there's an intrinsic value in bringing back individuals like this not only to investigate and prosecute the crimes they may have committed but also to really understand and address why this was an attractive choice for them to begin with home phone as attorneys say they will continue to monitor how she and her son are being treated in the refugee camp and if their safety is in danger the attorney say they'll file another motion to expedite the case for now though with ana and her son face a long tough road ahead. john honey. wow this is this is this is one of those rare news stories to where i don't even know how i fall my opinion where my opinion is because i see the points both sides make about these leaders. because the question they have to ask yourself you know
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are these people are these young kids who ran off to go play around with isis are they brainwashed or are they guilty of the crimes that they were committing well i mean that's. that's the difficult part but you have to understand because there's two very different disparate ideas there is you know the idea that they should be given a second chance because they were so young and the idea that they're naive obviously in this whole thing but i i i will save that idea that these young women are simply just were just naive and didn't know what they were doing is a dangerous precedent to set it most definitely is and there is a lot of cases that are going to be coming down the play i mean the international center for the study radicalization reports the estimate of forty one thousand foreign nationals was worth fighting for isis over forty seven hundred were women and there's another four thousand children involved with all of this as well. and
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some radical. former isis bride and activist working on counter radicalisation set of the young women trying to come home does not just come to the u.s. u.k. he's basing this problem to a lot of different countries are facing the problem this former activist said look she's still a child and that she's not thinking like an adult and she needs psychiatric help she needs medication and she needs to be brought back to reality because she was so brainwashed over and over by isis so that's the question really is should these women be given a normal chance life should be can we give second chances to this. there is a possibility that some but this is this is what i mean by we have to be really careful about the situation and this is one of those places where yes you should believe women everywhere on this is one of those where we're talking about a different sort of woman and as the person and or it mentioned you know we have to
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look at this and one of the things the u.n. security council's counterterrorism committee had put together for them in doing it for years now they put together a report called the gender dimensions of the response to returning foreign fighters and what they do is sort of posits this idea that the gender assumption that women lack agency that they can have serious security implications by letting dangerous actors slip through the cracks in layman terms what they're saying is that we can't assume that every female who joined our uses was tricked we can assume that they were duped into joining and therefore are not responsible for the actions because we have this tendency in modern society to say that men are more rational women are more emotional which leads to this gender thinking that women aren't as responsible for their actions and their choices because we don't and that we're somehow easy the ideas that were easier to radicalize for so emotional and i'd like to do away with that because there's literally no evidence in all the study of radicalization
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that there is any difference between the radicalization of men and radicalization of women there's no difference in how it happens what happens i think there are a lot of girls who just you know made bad choices but this is not something where they just got on a bus and did it they had to cross country lines they had to you know abuse passports they had to use secret apps there was the knowledge to what they were doing. to storage is going to break or bloggers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered on facebook and twitter to see our pool shows or t.v. dot com or go off the deep water joins us to discuss the latest virtual losers over the tragic use of the store clerk stuff of course. the other walk around that was shot to go by leaves his grandmother's backyard last year stay tuned to watching the hawks.
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exists is a sticker from the water bottle phone in the stomach of a fish the brand is part of the coca-cola company which sells millions of bottles of soda every day the idea was that let's tell consumers there are the bad ones they're the litter bugs are trying this way industry should be blamed for all this waste the company has long promised to reuse the plastic. that's. their classic mistake a costly on my end i need to stay on your. fundamentals it depends. on i knew that that is the end of it for the city but for now the mountains of moist only grow higher. profit on more consider and the more city against india encouraging animosity among
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to its nationals and against any one of its neighbors as opposed skidmore this is right this is where pakistan is very different then. then india right now if they go on this trajectory unfortunately even not being able to be responsible players in this region the speed in the stuff and for far too long because of this ongoing conflict between these two giants in the region. they are. there are. so. please. please yes to all this is all the. cutler solo. play. a little slow but.
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please. cut. cut. cut cut cut cut cut. cut i do think the numbers mean something they've measured the us has over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crime family feel they are located by percent of global wealth he longs to be ultra rich with six percent of the world market those thirty percent some with four hundred to five hundred three first search and first searches and this one rose to twenty thousand dollars. china's building two point one billion dollars a i industrial park but don't let
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the numbers over. the only number you need to remember is one one business show you know bored to miss the one and only one but. led. to. play. with it a few short weeks before the one year anniversary of his killing it appears that there will be no justice for stefan clarke the california attorney general announced this week that the police officers who shot and killed the twenty two year old young black man. and his grandmother's backyard last march will not face charges clark was shot and killed last year on march eighteenth in the meadow view neighborhood in sacramento after police responded to a nine one one call of a man breaking car windows a police helicopter supposedly identify clark as the suspect the killing made national headlines adding yet another name to the long and growing list of unarmed
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black men and women tragically killed by the police charging us today to discuss this latest roadblock on the road to justice is author and speaker thanks for joining us. always a pleasure always under the worst of circumstances. a lot of times you know very. you recently covered this. writing for salon dot com about this decision to prosecute the officers what are some of the unanswered questions here like what are some of the unanswered questions about this shooting and what happened during the shooting that should concern us right off the bat so at the end of the day the biggest problem the biggest problem was the way that the district attorney of sacramento. tried to deem him. who was actually the victim so like there's a lot of holes in the case that we could talk about but the one thing they always
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like makes me look up and say wait a second something's not right is this person was a. police officer shot this person why are we talking about has to report why are we talking about an argument he had with his girlfriend a few days before the shooting would. people have arguments all of the time like this it doesn't justify murder how can you sit back and say that you know you police officers had to make a split second decision when he was running away from them like you know like i mean why be a cop afterwards you have this weird kind of controversy surrounding the body to where the sound was to. offered a body right after the shooting. a long time ago and a lot of people forgot the big thing that made it one of the big things when everybody started following the case talking about what happened. here so that. now law enforcement officials can be held accountable so we can know what's going
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on we want to know what you're talking about we want to know what do you mind when you decided to make that decision command officers breaking the rules is this big have a list of reasons why you can buy the camera and then any of those reasons they just . got to get a story together a clip that will be in those events and saying that the body cameras were supposed to give everyone a little more perspective and at the same time you know they were meant to protect the officers who kept saying that they didn't do anything wrong well now you have or have a situation that says this and i'm glad you brought up the district attorney and marie sternberg because she had said this to we know farts fled from the officers after being told to stop we know that he continued into the backyard and we know what he continued into the backyard he turned around and he was in a shooting stance with his arms extended. when will we take that one will be make you know public officials and public servants. be held responsible and how do we
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make them held responsible for saying things such as that the person. this is not the kind of thing that should be told to the press no matter what happens and all of it seems to be more of the you know let's blame the victim he ran away into the yard into his own yard essentially because he would hear this if it was a white person if it was me running through a street. crew white girl was bashed in windows i don't think i would be treated that way and people act like it's such a strange thing that african-american men run from police officers because you know why anybody doesn't run like going to someone not run from a police officer that i'm shocked when learn o'malley was mayor of baltimore city he implemented giuliani's broken windows. and that led to over seven hundred thousand. illegal. mostly for things like
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jaywalking and things like that because stats policing became a thing so it makes him look like he's tough on crime it makes the cops look like you know they don't want to jump but at the same time you get like zero convictions and you're ruining the lives of people so with that culture. in so many different poorer so many different communities across the country what they're called you created this monster web and we see you get we don't feel like sitting in a box for seventy two hours witnessing the commission if we don't feel like that this. is you know you've got people coming in and who try to get over their addictions drawn up on a floor right next to you people spinup in don't want stuff all over what you don't want that you don't want in there actually walking away because of an open bottle or something ridiculous like you don't even want to spend a few nights if that means you ask what was going to tool that he was breaking the windows with the gun and when it was like oh oh he's holding a white i phone i was wired to kill he was an i phone with a gun i'm sorry its use of statistics i want to read you the statistics that you
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actually talked about your article the national police misconduct reporting project found that some from two thousand and nine to two thousand and ten three thousand two hundred thirty eight criminal cases were brought against officers the conviction rate against these officers over three thousand cases was only thirty three percent of that thirty three percent thirty six percent of those convictions actually wound up with officers serving jail time. i mean we even when you have a victim. a police officer last year was convicted and everybody was like clap and i guess we convicted a cop but he got community service right but guess what he did doesn't he did he planted drugs on a kid and the kid ended up doing a couple of months in jail right sort of kid who had the drugs planted on him actually got more time than the cop who actually had the drugs way to get him from . a lot of it don't try to pass it off as have been like some sharp you know i'm on
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a mission a father now wouldn't you know who some of the drugs was using him and a lot of people sort of top actually got community service a he get he got he got to go home. that's brutal really america is one of the things it is that this is america out of their lifetime it's . not so much because of the things and i want to ask you you know on social media a lot of people called rightfully called it a tragedy but since we've seen it we haven't seen a whole lot of actual change in any policies since mike brown saying you know we've all been through this for years we haven't seen real policy change our politicians and activists now they seem that they're more in love with their own voices than actually doing something about what's happening on the ground is a lot of talk and not a lot of action and you know it's like politicians may love their own voices. pretty. much around
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a long time but. i'm more becoming more familiar with this brand new wave of. activists the self-appointed leader of the whatever oppressed group you're representing so it's interesting to see how it was developing i know that when i think active is about think daisy's going to get out of these people out of jail and stopping twenty once everybody in the poor to light rays like the modern malcolm x. you know what i'm saying when you look at the organization when you look at these organizations that are actually. you know trying to talk about the work and talk about the hash tags when you do that with a number of seats you notice that they've got some big budgets and they've got some people backing them so when you actually put a receipt. you know you see them so you don't you believe me you actually get hold of me accountable before my platform or for the money that i've got to do things and. even guardian do nothing you can actually want to do when you think you're bullying me. own ability i thought that's what we all want
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because to tell you look you can say something that's great and it's great to bring awareness with a certain point we brought enough awareness we all know there is a problem where yeah there's always going to play that everybody is aware of this point what happens next you know that's the question readers start asking and that's what we need to start seeing happen so what in your mind needs like what's number one what is the first thing about the transfer to see through every community who. tries to advocate or solicit people for fun so they can advocate for the betterment of whatever group they're trying to represent but whatever group they're trying to you know. towards i want to know we i want to know if somebody in a check or phone give them a support or phone pulling up whatever you don't i want to know what's happening the same thing we want from the government the same thing we're going to do you are going to thank you so much always a pleasure having some of. the
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movies the day of the sky exploding meteor the calm a deep impact an armageddon all feature asteroids or comets that could destroy earth in the world of film these killer rocks from outer space are defeated by humans blowing them up sadly science says that saving the earth wouldn't be as easy as it is on cell your lawyer researchers with the whiting school of engineering at johns hopkins university in baltimore found that while the impact would break up the asteroid its core would remain and that core would keep it together its gravity meaning its own gravity protects it from destruction. thankfully we've learned this before sending earth miners and orbit to land on an asteroid hurdling very space that twenty five is kilometers per second to plant a bomb and escape all cord what. hot. i still think steve buscemi could do it all right that is a disco for you that you would be he would be able to handle that and you know that
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that is our show prove that they remember everyone in this world we are not told the real love the not so i tell you all i love you i am tired rolled into i'm tapped i'll keep on watching those hawks out there and have a great day and. the maternity town the slums go in and you may never get out so those are the most of. my teenage gang rules here because i didn't want to move then i let the mind of those who were. but. named me will be very. nice seeing her. and now it's looking for
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the yeah. as soon as me and melanie when. i'm looking little communes all i see. with the old maid just manufactured to sentenced him to public wealth. when the ruling classes to protect themselves. in the final merry go round be the one percent. we can all middle of the room sick. room in the real news
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room. my son was doing drugs my nephews were 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 started going after the users in a prison population sewer. we started treating sick people people who are addicted to these drugs like criminals while i was on the hill i increasingly became convinced that the war on drugs was on the stink there are countless numbers of people who are in prison for inconceivably long sentence in this for being a 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 this it's just it doesn't get easier. it.
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was just on the more considered and the most needy against india encouraging on the mostly among to its national against any one of its neighbors as boots did on the right this is where pakistan is very different then then india right now if they go on this trajectory unfortunately even not being able to be responsible players in this region the speed in the stuff and for far too long because of this ongoing conflict between these two giants in the region.
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president donald trump issues an order overturning the requirement of the us military make public data relating to civilian casualties. so the. change. i'm. talking about michael jackson's music michael jackson's music was created through decades of also a lot of suffering every time michael jackson song i know for myself.

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