tv Watching the Hawks RT July 10, 2019 7:30am-8:01am EDT
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american adults since the early part of the 20th century a graver threat to graver threat than communism far more dangerous than terrorism i'm speaking of course about the dreaded american teenager yes the united states fear of the teenage mind as a long history in this country from the 1950 s. fear of juvenile delinquency to the 1960 s. brutal teenage uprising of growing long hair and singing songs of peace and love of course we can't forget about those dangerous morose teenage slackers from the 1990 s. and today's self-indulgent self-righteous aba kotto speeding social media obsessed generation z. and their socialist millennial brethren but thankfully thankfully the city of philadelphia may have finally found a way to keep the public safe from these dangerous teenagers roaming our streets and that is sonic weaponry yes you heard me correctly according to a.b.c. news the parks and recreation department in the city of philadelphia has since 2014
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installed a device called the mosquito in parks around the city and that the device goes off from 10 pm to 6 am blaring a high pitched sound that anyone over the age of 25 should not be able to hear it's currently installed at 31 city run locations in philadelphia the devices are meant to prevent vandalism and loitering by teens and young people at these public parks naturally this is led to some pushback from the community with philadelphia city council member helen jim telling the news media quote i don't think that this project is going to going to go any further until it meets with the full scrutiny to the public and that we have some serious attention paid to whether this is the best use of our money. you know my friends i think it's time we to ask ourselves just what are the values of our society that the sides to treat its young people like pests at
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a barbecue rather than well i don't know human beings now let's start watching the hawks. to. get the. real that this would be. as good a part of it. but like you i got. the police. there. welcome everybody to watch it happen to wiley and joining me from minnesota today is my co-host tyrol's and tara. my goodness the kids have gone crazy we need to blast them with some energy no. i think the u.n. had a thing about the bees are bad for people. i believe you're right looking at these
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numbers so there's it's produced by the vancouver based moving sound technologies and it's this little the as you were talking about the machine called the mosquito and it emits this what they call violently discomforting sound that is in a range of 17 and a half to 18 and a half killer her its which is supposedly was older people because we have apparently listened to too much. rock music too loudly in our ears we can't hear this because a damage but anyone around you know in and around 25 years of age can still hear that and its length as the sound is then supposed to be so bad that it would disperse young people 130 feet around but cause there's no damage to their ears or anybody else's that's. what yeah you know what's really if this is true if like you know adults can hear this what happens to like let's say
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a mother who's like pushing her toddler through a park and there's things on the toddler goes nuts and she can't even hear that she has no idea you know why why her child's you know this is being attacked by this sound and i mean this is absolutely nuts that we would actually do this and inflict this kind of like let's say the harm or discomfort on kids for hanging out in the park after 10 pm goodness gracious because kids are also the you can do graffiti or have crime that's only teenagers as we've learned from movies like i think younger games and battle royale teenagers are the enemy thank you teenagers and rush out pretty much. apparently apparently in cities across the country and but you know it's an old story parents are always afraid of the young why because the young will eventually become them and then the old people eventually die right but.
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right philadelphia councilman helen gen-y. mentioned earlier she described the device is literally the culls women so they're sonic weapons and told the morning edition philadelphia in a city that is trying to address gun violence and safe spaces for young people how dare we come up with ideas that are funded by taxpayer dollars to turn young people away from the very places that were created for the. other stuff brings up on the credibly great point to ask you know what message are we sending our youth what it's like hey if you hang out in the park after 10 we're going to blast you with a sound weapon for being there right and what does it say to you know obviously they have not thought about those teenagers who may live in and around the park that could still be affected by these sounds they're not thinking about teens who are homeless who may be homeless to to you know anything from domestic violence to drug abuse at home they can even go to a park at night to feel safe because they would have this 17 year old west philly
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resident lamar reed actually told one of the papers that while they must really hate teenagers it does feel a little discriminatory against teenagers and makes us feel like animals so back in 2010 interesting enough the council of europe a human rights monitoring organization that oversees all of the european court of human rights declared the mosquito this exact device violated international law and they banned it because they considered it a humane and degrading treatment. so maybe we'll never hear. i mean look we all know because we all were teenagers we all know the teenagers are borderline sociopaths we get it. but i guess you don't want to have i guess we shouldn't be surprised because when we have governor when we when we're dealing with the u.s. government the bills fine with putting families in cages along the border i guess you know hey what's with shooting the sonic sound weapon at kids after dark i guess
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that's ok in the new united states that we live in today of course i mean that's the strange thing is that you know we're always sort of it's always us like we're trying to keep graffiti away we're trying to you know lower gun violence and all they can think of to get rid of violence is more weapons and more violent things i don't know i think it's i think it's a little silly we got to live about 30 seconds left what do you do any last thoughts or. well you know i just think that we need to really i mean it's kind of goofy and it's funny but let's remember at the end of the day these are kids that we're doing this to and we're saying we're sorry as a government as a city government we're saying sorry kids rather than ask your parents to be good parents and keep in the house after 10 or no where you are no we're going to unleash weapons on you and make you uncomfortable and discomforted because hey we can you know that that's the message this is sending and i think it's a very dangerous precedent at the end of the day that we're willing to you know
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fire sonic weapons at our children just because they're out after dark when really parents should be parenting we should allow the government to do anything like this to us in the 1st place you're absolutely right thank you so much for joining me today from minnesota can't wait to have you back here in the studio tyrrel ventura coast watching. you. weapons seem to be one of the only recession proof industries these days multi-billion dollar arms deals around the world are in the works this week sparking fears that could signal increased tensions between world powers like china russia and the united states it's also putting strain on those the u.s. considers allies has control of the arms industry slips away from the good ole usa our team error to america's rachel blevins has the story. china has sharply criticized a proposed $2200000000.00 deal between the u.s. and taiwan and has called for it to be cancelled immediately beijing has also
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claimed that it sees this deal as a direct national security threat from the u.s. now the location here is notable because taiwan is a small island nation around 1300 miles off the coast of china but china considers taiwan to be one of its territory's the controversy over whether taiwan is part of china has been ongoing following the country's split into the people's republic of china in 1949 while the us recognizes taiwan as an independent nation china still claims ownership and it is now claiming the us is intentionally interfering by proposing the latest arms deal with taiwan the united states is the main arms supplier to child one and it has a history of working with the island nation but in terms of arms cells with the u.s. taiwan falls behind countries like saudi arabia australia the u.a.e. and south korea meanwhile the united states issued its own warning to india following news that the country plans to purchase russia's s 400 air defense system
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and it is arguing that india moves forward with the deal it could have serious consequences but instead of backing down the latest reports claim russia is offering india even more cutting edge technology which includes advanced submarines and the latest generation of fighter jets that would be produced locally in india as part of the deal the u. . yes has previously offered to sell india weaponized drones and there is speculation that the u.s. could offer access to its latest generation of fighter jets if india refrained from working with russia now russia has announced that it is now in the process of delivering its 400 air defense system to charity this has occurred despite continued protests from the u.s. claiming there russia's system poses a direct risk to nato as a department official was quoted as saying we underscore that turkey will face very real and negative consequences if it completes its $400.00 delivery now it's not clear exactly what those consequences will be but it could have
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a major impact if the u.s. decides to retaliate against its nato ally in washington rachel blevins r t. as we go to break watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered on face the huge the twitter and make sure to check out watching the hawks the podcast now available on spotify apple music and everywhere you list the podcast see our poll shows at r.t. dot com coming up are the new sanctions on cuba any different than a blockade of the past and a new test for cancer for all. the one. that countries for that's part of it's a for a while the country a sum of all that you've got. stock markets that are owned by that's called
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10 percent of the population most of the stuff. and there are what else is for. it's a condition that for americans don't want to cop to it's hard for me but the fact is. now you 150000000 people america. if you will not obey the voice of the lord your god will be careful to do all these months and. then all these curses shall come upon you and overtake you. and the people. and. the. only problems will go away. the.
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us. department of foreign assets control announced the elimination of group of people to people educational travel to cuba by u.s. citizens in addition they ended license x. exceptions for passenger via the souls such as cruise ships this is all of course a reactionary measure to the failed coup in venezuela which is being blamed in part on cuban involvement according to the us department of foreign assets control these actions those putting on more sanctions will help to keep u.s. dollars out of the hands of cuban military intelligence and security services the hope by interventionist hawks like u.s. national security advisor john bolton was that by crippling cuba's tourist industry
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they would force yet another coup busy in the island nation which despite u.s. government media is best efforts to paint cuba as a broken economic disaster and its people as begging the us for freedom from socialism it isn't quite that simple or accurate in june of this year the director of foreign investments for the cuban foreign trade ministry deborah rivest of address told the washington post that the u.s. wants to attack the cuban government and destroy the revolution and make socialism fall but the one being affected are those business people that the united states supposedly wants to see benefit so it's cuba failing or we only getting half the picture joining me now today to discuss sanctions in their old world effect are 2 people who have recently traveled to cuba has spoken to actual cubans and are here to help us learn more watching the social media producer devon springer and co coordinator for the black alliance for peace not to friedman thank you both for joining me today thank you for having me. so last week we had all of these you know
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they've added to the state run oil company the key boil union to the sanctions left trying to sort of drive this wedge between venezuela and cuba because according to them you know the cuban military is so brilliant they've outsmarted all of us way and all of the u.s. military only one. if you wrote that when you were just in cuba how can you explain kind of the restrictions of travel and how that works yes so i was there for about 2 weeks as a trip as i've made many over the years and what this new is things specifically 1st on their oil company does is they're attempting to stop venezuela from sending oil to cuba flat out this is an attempt to make the island a dark island and cut it off from the rest of the world by you know oil is what you need to run a country essentially nowadays right on top of that there as you said trying to drive a wedge between venezuela and cuba you know the 2 countries have a longstanding material solidarity where they have doctors medicine internet
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infrastructure back and forth so this is another sort of longer in that long list of actions there and it's coupled with the sanctions and restrictions on travel to there's new restrictions on travel that you mentioned a little bit essential a group of people to people travel is the way that most people. went to cuba to engage in torture resume under the guise of it being people to people which is a sort of relatively vague term right so by ending that 1st and foremost it puts out the perception american citizens that they can't go to cuba and then for people who do a little bit more research they say oh i still can go to cuba it's just a lot more difficult now so it's it stops an immediate cash flow into the tourism industry and sector which is really a huge part of the cuban economy and that's just to understand it's us had a sense traveling there so if someone has you know has said it's been shipped in one country obviously if you're not a u.s. citizen and canadians are still traveling there there's
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a chinese market of people who are traveling there and that's nothing new that's always that yes so what nestle will probably tell you as well as you know it's americans who pretend they don't know anything about cuba and all the rest of the world travels there on holiday on vacations during the summer. and so this isn't more so. it's a rollback of just a few years of easing of tensions and so they're trying to sort of make us not know anything about the island again because i say do you keep people from going out and they don't know the true. what is there how are you how are cubans how to commence react to that. to the new sanctions and these things keep going on it seems that they sort of used to it by now. i mean i think the sanctions and also what we refer to as the multi-faceted own protracted war against a country is 60 years old and so most of the cubans have had to withstand this for a long time so it actually only fortifies their resolve they've gone through at the
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end of the eighty's into the ninety's what they called referred to as a special period because of the dissolution the dissolving of the soviet union and the tightening of the blockade under the helms burton act interests and so they've gone through hardships and also the cubans are very politically most people around the world are very politically astute and understand what it really means to capitulate things they won't get better because you give in to the united. designs forehead to money when nothing came up an interesting talking to you when you came back and just looking into this story is this idea that there seems to still be this idea that they don't have social media that there is no fighting back this idea that we have to go in there and save their democracy and their freedom that they don't have social media or social media campaigns that they don't have the internet that they don't have these things and that they don't communicate to their government and it doesn't affect any change is that true this is on its face all right you'll hear you often hear stories that i read
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a headline earlier today that compared the cuban government to the chinese government during internet which in both cases there's a wild and a layer of propaganda the truth is they have internet they have 3 g. they even have 4 g. and a lot of areas there on social media just this past month there was a sort of campaign launched. to engage in dialogue with local government authorities about getting faster. rather than having direct communication with their local elected officials and authorities are campaigning for change and they're getting other going to communication they're going to more than we get here and you think that if i misread it at your local congressman that you would get a response and i don't think i will. probably not. so the changes to these policies a lot of these policies were changed when there was that. tax on it attack that turned out to be one of 2 things either cricket or the u.s. where interacting with other electronics there they were spent no proof sonic in
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fact it was sort of used as a precursor of saying oh they're going after our people and closing these embassies how does that affect travel both for us citizens coming in but more importantly for cuban citizens trying to travel out how does. was made it very difficult in fact a lot of the cubans trying to go to come here they have to go through a 3rd country and also incurs an extra cost for them to do so to get a visa through a 3rd country to come here and then also has to be approved by somebody in the united states and so they're very a lot of scrutiny in order to be able to come into the united states for things that are really innocent reasons and also which affect people here we have to realize that we live in the world depends on cooperation and global in the interaction and so while the powers that be may benefit from some sort of controlling of the country particularly in this case being cuba we don't benefit we
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don't get the opportunity for scientific exchange in exploration which actually cuba has done a lot of breakthroughs when it comes to medicine and vaccines and those kind of things the science is here and medical technicians here and professionals actually talk about how this is how they've been able to learn. in these kind of exchanges cultural exchanges educational pedagogy and developing those kind of things so while there's a lot of expertise at least in cuba dealing with things under the most hardships of things things that we have problems with in united states education and health care and other things that we actually have problems with we could learn a lot regular people if those exchanges are listening and i want people to really understand the details of that right like if you're a foreigner who wants to come to the job they get a visa from us embassy and if there's no in the sea in your country. because of cricket attacking u.s.
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workers around you have to go and pay lots of money to go to a 3rd country and get a hotel and now because of the new hostility towards cuba the acceptance rates are visas have been dropping and dropping and dropping so people are paying all that money and then getting denied because they're cuban spies allegedly. the news areas and now everybody oh it's the entire i love it like the cuban spies has been one that i think we should look out for because that's going to be the new narrative. is an old narrative that's being brought back and right. exactly which is you know we're even seeing that being made fun of in a way in our in our in our creative content like stranger things sort of making fun on it flipping out and had this eighty's cold where scary propaganda about russia and then you know our wolverine in cuba is coming to like putting on its head and kind of rolling their eyes that it was a really big thing that so you could tell how how palpable it is and how people actually know now i want to ask you real quick this is to me a forum to
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a lot of people a form of warfare you're taking food away from people and you know there's iran cuba north korea they're in the sanctions crosshairs in the of trying to mexico and canada and everybody else under these terrorists do you think if it was any i'll start with you know if you think it was any other country that could get away with tell. foreign governments what they can do where they can do and how they can spend their money could any other country besides united states get away with it no i mean the united states is the strongest country in the world in common terms of leveraging that kind of political power internationally they dominate the. the the security council of the united nations and a lot of ways that international financial institutions which allow them to leverage their power in terms of sanctions it's a it's a completely empty i think people really need to understand that sanctions are really another form of warfare without guns and the fact that countries like the united states or you know the superpowers of the western superpowers can leverage
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them and not be subject to them and also be under the guise of that which they leverage them against other countries it's really a more i think is really partially hello mark time why have you want to get married so you came on with so i sort of got about it thank you so much devin springer watching our social media here tradition and after 3 men they do so much for walking us through this to say thank you thank you. early detection is the key to the treatment of breast cancer by creating technology that can do that has been a challenge until now r.t. america's natasha suite has the story. researchers at mit are using artificial intelligence to predict breast cancer as early as 5 years before develops and according to research this model is far more accurate than what health care providers have been using in the past according to the centers for disease control and prevention more than $41000.00 women died from breast cancer in 2016 and that same year there were more than $245000.00 new cases and all scientists at mit's
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computer science and artificial intelligence want to help put a stop to the climbing numbers the team has developed a deep learning prediction model instead of using information like family history in breast density model is able to detect patterns too subtle for the human eye to detect the city consisted of using them for. mation for more than 90000 mammograms and 60000 people the model was able to place 31 percent of all cancer patients in its highest risk category more than a traditional models 18 percent and the study looked to help bridge the gap between the health of white and black women according to the study black women were 42 percent more likely to die from breast cancer reasons included detection and also access to health care researchers say they want to make this part of routine care and instead of getting mammograms at a particular age they want to vary those standards according to individual needs and los angeles and how to sweets are to. us astronaut stuart resist art out as
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a smoke jumper fighting fires with the forest service which is why when he went into space on the apollo 14 mission in 1971 he brought something special in his personal kit seeds that's right in a joint program with nasa in the u.s. forest service brought seeds to spaced on only raise awareness for protection of our forest but to see what would happen to seeds in a gravity free environment now were 40 years later nasa scientist dave williams has tracked down and mapped all of the moon tree that were grown from those very seeds some 450 seedlings to be exact which grew into at least 70 full sized trees that can be found still thriving across the country from the white house to the state capitol building in oregon and beyond go find a moon tree folks the fun that's our show for you today remember everyone as my co-host harold and for always says in this world we're not for a lot of the outside tell you all of that on top of the wall excuse on watching those dots and have a great day and that everyone. agrees
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the great depression which remember there was most. people there wasn't it was bad you know much worse objectives that day but there was an expectation that things were going. better. there was a real sense of hopefulness there isn't today today's america was shaped by the 10 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 jones to 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 simon show and i'll be speaking to guests of the world of politics small business i'm show business i'll see that. just up to you hope will come with not a moment's through but in your circles want to tune. into. the new much for the call of with a total of 3 minutes to get in there when they're. quite in good order to produce your order in the sims but you never know maybe it's time to trace. t.v. . that.
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the british ambassador to the us resigning. e-mails exposed a far from glowing review. ministration. meanwhile comes under fire from u.s. democrats for links to. multiple cases of child sexual abuse despite his close ties to both camps of washington's political elite. states terrorists involved in the 2015 horris terror attacks received 500. for a legal term the tension in his prison cell with. surveillance.
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