tv Watching the Hawks RT March 13, 2019 1:30pm-2:01pm EDT
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experiments proposed by two labs that were previously considered so dangerous the federal pigeonholes have imposed an unusual top down moratorium on such research research that is so potentially dangerous and many argue unneeded that hundreds of scientists and researchers signed a letter opposing it all the way back in two thousand and fourteen harvard university epidemiology just mark lips that told science mag quote after a deliberative process that cost a million dollars for consultants external study and consumed countless weeks and months of time for many scientists we are now being asked to trust a completely opaque process where the outcome is to permit the continuation of dangerous experiments. secrecy on top of highly dangerous research what could possibly go wrong. this is why we are watching the whole x.
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. forty. three the. real thing it's like. the plot of. the day like you know i got. to. think. it's because of. the welcome we're going to watch and dogs tyro been turfed and i'm topical and i do not have is one bird flu that's growing start with this rate i might catch it. isn't this one of those things that just freaks you out or it's like oh it's like why are we funding this study like i understand the study but why the study of infectious diseases i understand about this particular study yeah i know the idea that we're focusing on this asian bird flu
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it's a bit odd to me it seems like something most of all these first of all flu this whole like doing most of it instead of focusing on the people that are most and how to make them healthier and do that just sort of it seems that we're on this idea that we're going to find this magical cure all for flu out of this one bird flu which it's not as if it's an epidemic it's not as if where in a place where it's this horrible horrible thing in shutting down travel but it could but when you super charge the virus which is what these scientists are doing to separate places right from parts sides of the world you want to wisconsin with the you know. the when they supercharge the virus they're essentially making this virus into something even worse or more deadlier than it already is which is how what you have to do in order to study at which i think is the n.h.s. is sort of my idea is that we have to do this in order to study how it was. elop and so that we are prepared down the line but as you said that's very dangerous and
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things that we've seen this kind of stuff before us have bad consequences but in response to the controversy of. the director the national institutes of house released a statement online writing the h.h.s. framework formalizes robust oversight for federally funded research with enhanced pathogens of pandemic potential consistent with the h.h.s. framework these proposals were deemed to be scientifically sound i would say once again that we're in a position where much like foreign policy and much like the military industrial complex much so. i think that there is a new generation of people who are saying i don't think those guidelines that you're working off of very very good to begin with i don't think the guidelines yes if you follow the guidance follow up and that's not enough yeah and there are for our thought that's what a lot of people are saying we. share of eros masoud aversive medical center rotterdam but our lives these are one of the that's one of the groups working on this and your cicutto. of the universe in wisconsin i'm out of the university of
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tokyo the other two working on theirs they actually had separately modified the five n one influenza virus back in two thousand and eleven so that it could be spread between ferrets right now it's just spread between birds now and then it's gotten to humans but not the level to be truly concerned up a bit aware of but no talk of mammals and ferrets some you can spread of just with your brother you know and water droplets that's dangerous but as you said top of the claim with these is this kind of game of function technique is what they're using like you give good function is a more function so you can better study it. helps us better understand how viruses might spread and plan for pandemics but there's a lot of argument against that yes and that was one of the things that when you look at it it's a standard idea that we've been working on as a set of trying to study pandemics by making things worse and then saying what they do but bloomberg distinguished. sort of biomedical engineering computer science and
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biostatistics heck of a resume at johns hopkins university steve insult me for that this reacher of research is so potentially harmful and offers such little benefit to society that they fear that and the age is in danger and the trust that congress places in it if the research succeeds and one of the newly designed highly virulent flu strains escapes the damage could be horrific so that is where i think people are why are we doing this why is it such a high risk and it's literally a moment of it could get out of the lab somebody could walk out they're going to have these things. looked at these in the past in the room you know and then we created people feel that's where lyme disease came from things like that you know this is this is not new. a new report from the daily beast found that from two hundred twenty thirteen to twenty thousand emergency services was called to amazon warehouses in the u.s. at least one hundred eighty nine times according to end nine one one call logs it
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was found that suicidal thoughts threats and gestures prompted most of the calls by management one man in ohio told police he was threatening to harm himself at the amazon warehouse because as he told law enforcement quote the company told him they valued his employment and would be treated as if he mattered and not just a number however while amazon has been the focus of the harshest criticism suicide rates among the working class have actually been rising with every successive industrial revolution since the mid seventy's hundreds according to the c.d.c. suicide rates among american workers increased thirty four percent from the year two thousand to twenty sixteen as automation artificial intelligence threaten an already unstable job market coupled that with unrealistic expectations of productivity from c.e.o.'s and management and you have a dangerously miserable working class in fact a two thousand and nine study of factory workers found that of the one hundred seventy three factory workers they interviewed thirty three point five percent. of them have poor mental health with anxiety insomnia at the highest levels at twenty
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nine point five followed by twenty eight point nine percent with somatic or physical symptoms twenty three percent with social dysfunction and a whopping twelve point one percent of factory workers with severe depression that is three times the national average so hop watchers is the problem really amazon or is about america continues to treat workers like me are stepping stones to the coming era of full automation with failing jobs failing wages job insecurity and obsession with wealth rather than work. you know we had we do have that obsession of shiny things here in this country don't worry about we respect wealth we respect you made all this money but if you see somebody who's worked our whole lives and has a decent house we don't think of them a successful no and that's why people of middle class you know you're talking about working class people blue collar they do have higher sustained rates going up a very long time do the you know it's one of those things when you look back and you look at the workforce here in the u.s.
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we have a massive workforce everybody wants to work every i mean there's nobody out there says i don't want to work everybody wants to be proud of something and work five days a week and you know earn a living blood when you when you drive people into the ground mentally physically with the work you're doing you've got to ask that question you know where are our values you know and i think you were is a good point this isn't just an amazon problem in that question you know because i mean look amazon is a monster it's a beast it employs more than six hundred forty seven thousand people around the world one hundred twenty five thousand employees working at the film and centers in just the u.s. and that was in twenty eighteen no they did say that they would raise minimum wage for their workers to fifteen an hour but you know obviously when you see the nine one one calls and if they see things like that conditions are brutal in these warehouses still do to a certain extent. crouch a former employee at a warehouse in lakeland florida had a mental health crisis on the job but i was on. he told the daily beast quote it's
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this isolating colony of the whole were people having breakdowns as a regular occurrence mentally taxing to do the same task supercross protect our ships ships four or five days a week that's what you know that's what he basically says the conditions are there but i don't but i don't think. it is the exception to the norm of the job i mean what do you think of an assembly line was anybody who's worked and factories foundry is making trucks making cars making widgets it doesn't matter you're doing the same thing it's a repetitive job that's what it is and i it made me wonder because at one manager had said to vox last year that amazon never trained us in how to communicate with associates we weren't trained to be understanding of their struggles or communicate with them it was all about mechanics here's my thing though when did your floor manager is at a warehouse become required to have therapist training because it no point in history of we have a carrot and that's the thing we've told people for centuries that this is how it's
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supposed to be you're supposed to work yourself into the ground you're right and now they're saying well if we're going to put all these machines and make it easier for me then why am i still running around doing this and not getting paid decently so but this is a problem from the beginning and that's where you are now i want to you know i want to make sure we get a chance to do it so there is this one thousand nine hundred forty nine cold war era film where they were trying to make sure that everybody sort of understood how valuable the worker and capitalism was to the whole thing and how bad communism was but you get a little glimpse into how the machine age of industrial revolution and patriotism are used to convince american workers that they were lucky to have what they had let's take a listen. you'll have hundreds of war starred in this costly giant ability to multiply your strength in the face and see thousand. this makes it possible for you to learn more than any worker in history.
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and still have leisure time each day to enjoy life. man alive and i wish he keeps all my life as we go to break card watchers but i'm going to let us know where you think about topics from government facebook you tube and twitter see our poll shows that r t dot com coming up it's the first amendment her boss the civil rights attorney in the kima levy powers joins us to discuss the criminalization of hip hop music stay to watching the hawks. whether you're for or against the day his wayward government for or against
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socialism it is obvious the mainstream media are committing a lot of journalistic malpractise once again mainstream media echo the policy preferences of those in power if it comes to still another military intervention will the media be held responsible. i do think the numbers mean something they've mastered us with over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten white collar crime families. eighty five percent of global wealth he longs to be old rich with six percent world market rose thirty percent some with four hundred five hundred three first second per second and the. we rose to twenty thousand dollars. china's building two point one billion dollars a i n dust park but don't let the numbers over. the only number you need to remember one one business show you know for the mid one and only boom but.
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during the great depression which i'm old enough to remember there was most of my family were unemployed working class and it wasn't it was bed you know much worse objective listen today but there was an expectation the things were going to get better. there was a real sense of hopefulness there isn't today today's america was shaped by the ten principles of concentration of wealth and power. reduced democracy attack solo down engineer elections manufacture consent and other prince holds according to no i'm chomsky one set of rules for the rich opposite set of rules for . that's what happens when you put her into the hands of a narrow sector of will switch will is dedicated to increasing power for chills
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just as you'd expect one of the most influential intellectuals of our time speaks about the modern civilization of america. join me every thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics small business i'm show business i'll see that. thanks guys or financial survival. when customers go by the reduced price. in elf well reduceable our. that's undercutting that which there's a market that's not good for the global economy.
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while political news junkies and talking heads on both the right and left have been correctly and sometimes not so correctly losing their collective minds over social media platform censorship these last few years the latest fury over facebook down of alternative news site zero hedge is an example that there has also been a growing real world censorship an attack on hip hop music and culture you see despite being one of the biggest and most moneymaking musical genres in the world here in the united states many claim that the culture of hip hop is now being used as an excuse to surveil and incarcerate black americans in fact one controversial case of hip hop used to incarcerate is now attracting united states supreme court attention back in two thousand and twelve hip hop artist may have a model whose real name is from all knox was arrested by pittsburgh police back in twenty twelve on going to jump start gun charges after his arrest according to the new york times mr knox and a friend recorded a song whose title which included
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a vulgar word directed at the police was partly in no mas to end w a classic with some learned after the song was posted to you tube and facebook law enforcement charged knox with making terroristic threats and intimidating witnesses joining us now to help us better understand this attack on hip hop culture and the first amendment implications evolved is civil rights attorney from minneapolis to keep by pounds thank you so much for joining us. thanks for having me lou came of this is one of those wild situations that i think people really don't understand the scope of it in the sense that this is from what i understand happening quite a bit and in this particular case. the arguments for the prosecution of persecution prosecution of knox over his lyrics are that he called out his the rest of the officers by maimane the saw him and these officers so felt so frightened frightened they couldn't do their jobs and and he wrote and said the cops informant should be killed in his lyrics do any of these arguments justify you know these
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charges they brought against him and the two year prison sentence that he's facing down or are they all do they all fall under the first amendment rights. in my honest opinion i believe that the song that was made by jamal knox should be protected as freedom of speech under the first amendment unfortunately we have over envelops prosecutors and folks who work in the court system like many of our supreme court justices who are out of touch with hip hop culture most of whom are older white men who have not grown up listening to rap and hip hop nor do they typically have experience with life in the inner city and it's out of that context in which jamal knox we courted his song i actually took time to listen to his song and you could clearly hear from the lyrics that jamal knox it's using wordplay
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to articulate what he experienced his frustration with the system and a lot of pent up venom and frustration with the officers in question as well as law enforcement in general now that is not unusual for people who live in communities that have faced unfortunate contacts with police that have faced violent encounters and over christmas. to have a lot of pent up anger and venom that's directed towards law enforcement but the reality is that that anger and frustration in many instances is justified in a should not lead to criminal charges. that's that's the really hard part about this is that it's about expression of your speech expression of your your life experience and the one thing about hip hop is that it opened the world and those of us who didn't grow up in those areas who are from small white crime anomaly white towns but we learned about what was going on it opened our eyes by listening to hip
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hop because it's an art form now courts have ruled that the first amendment does not protect all speech obviously there are some exceptions that's you know libel incitement certain kinds of obscenity what they call fighting words and truths that threat so for those of you for those people who maybe don't get hip hop or don't listen to it why do you believe that hip hop music and especially in this case doesn't fall under those exceptions. well in this instance jamal knox and his lawyers have articulated jamal had actually adopted a persona that is different from his normal person you know beyond that at the time this was a nineteen year old kid using the platform of rap and hip hop to express his frustration and unfortunately the courts to being true and accurate in terms of being issued towards the police officers at hand and just as
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someone who grew up in the inner city of los angeles from my experience if someone were intending to carry out real threats against police officers or to encourage people to do so they're certainly not going to take it to the wrap platform to do it right they're just going to do what they need to do but the reality is that even with all of the frustration that people have in inner city communities and particularly. young black men in their encounters with law enforcement they are not running around shooting and killing officers as par for the course most of the time people tolerate the violence and the abuse that goes on and often people don't even file lawsuits in the face of the abuse that they encounter and so it's important for the supreme court justices to have the cultural context in which jamal knox recorded his they also should listen to ask the police by n.w. way not to gain an understanding of this john or of music you know i couldn't agree
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with you more because again this is this is and this is somebody an artist expressing their life experience they're not asking people to go out in harmony but you reminded me a lot of the attacks after columbine you know back in about what two thousand two thousand i mean i don't know if they were you know into dispraise riots on makes rock n roll is going to make people listen to more subsite and kill the currents and all that kind of insanity but what's interesting is when you look at this particular case it's actually indicated you know is it indicative of what actual larger effort by law enforcement maybe not cord made of but just kind of happening to some sir use hip hop culture to justify the surveillance and prosecution of black americans as i slave or is this happening across the country. i believe that it's happening across the country but in different ways and so if you recall when and in what way brought forward they're hit if the police if there was widespread
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outrage particularly among the government officials and law enforcement officials because of the lyrics and because of the animals that was directed towards law enforcement they tried to ban n.w.a. which only made them stronger in the eyes of the public but in day to day instances in communities of color what we see are police officers pulling people over for playing their music too loud p. when boom cars for example and often times those people are pulled over they may be issued a citation they may be frisked and have their car searched sometimes their cars are towed and sometimes they're actually arrested because of the racial profiling that is couldn't acted to hip hop culture and this notion that folks who ascribe to hip hop culture are engaged in criminal activity so i think that that is the. underlying sentiment that's couldn't ective to the way in which people are treated when they embrace rap and hip hop culture particularly african-americans and other
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people of color and the reason of this one thing while we look at this you know you have a nineteen year old or we talk about when and at which i do remember and that's literally was my introduction and i have back and back in the day as was the n.w.a. and how much of that now i look and i see recently a twelve year old rapper we'll see you know who has performed on ellen de generation's show for featuring for you know spreading positivity and he was arrested and online a mall and charged with get this felony obstruction criminal trespass and disorderly conduct for allegedly selling mix tapes at the mall what this is a twelve year old what kind of message does this send to young black people and young black artists. well it continues to send the message that in american society and culture black lives don't matter and beyond that folks who do not like black people or who do not like rap music who do not like black youth often have the
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power of nine one one at their disposal and they have the power of law enforcement the laws the policies and the courts to back them up this is a part of a longer history of anti-black sentimentality that has occurred throughout american history that continues to manifest in many different ways and rap and hip hop are the newest targets of this anti-black sentiment. ality but let's think about the other implications connected to this why do african-americans in particular use rap and hip hop as a platform it's because in many instances their voices are not being heard in other venues within society not in government typically not in the media not out in the larger community and so rap and hip hop is the perfect vehicle for people to be able to express themselves as jamal knox did in this case at hand and you know it's interesting too is that the amount of money right now being made off of these black
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artists in the world is astronomical like there's a lot of corporations making money off this i would hope that these corporations maybe ellen de generous if she's going to feature someone her so would step up with instances like what we're seeing with jamal knox or this twelve year old and say you know what we're going to pay your lawyer fees we're going to fight this alongside you because you're making us money you're being you know you're expressing your life we shouldn't be seeing the police be badgering you over this i hope that we could see that happen in the future most often with mickey mccann absolutely even economic sanctions against the model law that he was involved in this incident became i want to thank you so much for coming on always a pleasure having you on and your insight thank you so much. thank you. butterfly butterfly where do you go apparently the answer is southern california this week our friends are greeted with a billion with a b yes a million mother flies traveling from mexico to oregon to breed these are cousins
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of the monarch known as painted believe he is and can be found in every continent at some point during the year except for south america where they're very rare they and their yellow green and black caterpillars can be found on over one hundred food plants in something like three hundred plants across the world and they are rarely seen anywhere as pasts mostly subsisting on flowering next. sure and if the honey do they will fly in groups of two to eight in circles to symbolise court trips so if you're on the west coast just look to the skies for this mega migration because there hasn't been one white get since california had record breaking rainfall in two thousand and five total comes together to have this mean that we could be potentially maybe southern california could see some actual rainfall this new year they're almost out of the drought might bring the butterflies probably show that you know when the butterflies come back like this that means the water's coming back things are coming there's like lines that feel better than looking at somebody
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or flies at the end of the barrel and we talk about a lot of dark stuff on the show sometimes you've got to got to have a little bit of lightness so that you have got to have a little smile on your face when you leave them out of our show prove that they remember everyone in this world we are definitely not told but we love to tell you all i love you i am tired and on top of the wall and keep on watching those hawks out there on our great day and night everybody. when you. come up there and i don't
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think i want to. go through because a couple that i have. just got me. there would be ok sonny. but. i think i'll. keep looking. for you think nothing. i know that in a way out of fear from here for this one i feel a little tonight will be so. after the previous stage of my career was over everyone wondered what i was going to do next hope the ball different clubs on one hand it is logical to sort of go from fields where everything is familiar with on the other i wanted a new challenge and a fresh perspective from time used to surprising to most of us old or not if you
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think. i'm going to talk about football not for you or else you think i was going to go. by the way ways of that slide here. what politicians do something to. put themselves on the line to get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president or injury. or somehow want us. to go on to be for us to see what will before three in the morning can't be good that i'm interested always in the waters of our. first signal.
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yes. you can hear me. this is the humiliating defeat of the government receiving prime minister. saying all the trees of briggs it planted by n.p.c. will not vote on whether or not to leave the european union without a do. a new documentary of real supporters of the terrorist group islamic state of infiltrated the greek refugee camp where they rule that said with an iron fist will be speaking to the film's producer coming up this hour. european.
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