tv Watching the Hawks RT October 23, 2019 12:30pm-1:00pm EDT
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values and beliefs play on a smaller scale yes if we just had facebook during the run up to the iraq war there might not have banned an iraq war crime according to mr separate work facebook was partly born out of his beliefs that people need to be heard except this this doesn't my friends actually vibe with what we actually know about the founding of base book just ask the winklevoss twins or n.b.c.'s brian williams i'm sure he will tell you he was there right alongside them in creating it . so they want to dive into the red conning of history by our leaders and cultural figures as we start watching the whole us. wonder what if you treat it like a real thing it's like. the plot of. what they like you know that i got. with that we. would. be.
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welcome on the watching the harks robot and them to have it though. it is so easy to retcon the history of these days like anyone can do it anyone can say well i mean what i originally did something a long time ago i meant it to be this not what it actually was or you know we see politicians we see it everything from what hip hop artists to presidents yet it's a little odd to say that might go back and say oh well you know why when i was there and this is what was going through my mind i mean it's it's about as ludicrous as saying that when i went to the carousel and i asked them from burnett didn't happen that didn't happen you can tell the thetan happened and anybody who's head of facebook. since the mid 2000 or any time knows that this is a ludicrous story we didn't even have news feeds at the beginning it wasn't made to
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be putting things together you know putting community isn't talking about none of this was even part of their plan but i think it's interesting when you mention this politicians everyone sort of lies and they make up stories and we weak skews it. oh well you've got your facts they're just alternative fags or whatever so it was interesting is when you look back the probably the most famous was hillary clinton lying about. in the 8 election infamously told the story about lending under sniper fire in bosnia alaska turned out to be untrue and then of course. and b c brian williams was suspended for 6 months without pay after claiming he came under rocket fire while traveling on a u.s. military helicopter during the 2nd iraq war so there's always the. i did this for some reason i look back looking back to my journals and i said how deep it was or it was much more dangerous than i thought it was to make yourself say more and more
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just what this week would double trouble george washington you know he had a business. it's amazing how it's like no one actually wants to talk about what happened in history but it's interesting when you get into the facebook history of what actually happened look you can hide behind you can't hide behind making just making up stories 2003 wasn't altruistic in 2003 students mark zuckerberg created an online program called face mash it basically allows users to objectify fellow students by comparing photos of their faces and selecting who the deemed as hot or it was really much more sophisticated version of hot or not except that an ivy league school so privileged ivy leaguer is deciding who is. totally lame i don't know if that's exactly. having a discussion how that really relates to. you know the older of the iraq war you
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know that you know i'm sure i'm trying to understand iraq or come back saying well you know it be when you look at we've all seen the what the social network the david fincher film and you know we can so we kind of have the basic idea of what it really was i mean yeah it was they wanted to create a social networking site but according to the actual origin of facebook was darker board being asked to essentially work on the coding that was sold about working website by 3 classmates the big boss twins being 2 of them between 2003 and february 2004 zuckerberg reportedly told the classmates about delays with coding of intervention he launched his own site facebook. there was lawsuits involved and hundreds of the 3 people who came up with you know kind of have this other alternative idea that he was supposed to be cold and coding and sued him eventually that was settled you know basically they accepted a settlement in the 1200000 shares a piece of facebook and was eventually because the castle is out now and just kept their cash and put it in something else because i don't know if it's because well i want to be and it's interesting because when you dig into it you know yeah you know
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from all accounts they say you know he did come up with the new speed idea but this was further down the line like you mentioned i was this wasn't right away. but it is it's like everybody wants to twist their own histories and twisted use to me it wasn't even about new and about news to me you know it was just news was water other people eating yeah. has eaten and that was your news that was it wasn't our attitude about facebook was started to save the world it was clear the real. after an extremely neck and neck race for prime minister in canada that featured a campaign trail skit that featured campaign trail after a campaign trail scandal the votes are finally end and current pm justin trudeau will retain his position as canadian prime minister but says the marrow of us of margins so narrow that triggers liberal party will not have a parliamentary majority joining us now from. toronto to break down the race and find out who will be calling the shots in canada moving forward i say america
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correspondent alex milo that's how you do on. that great there you go. pretty good so i'll accept us despite trudeau waiting he actually lost the majority in parliament this stab at the mention what does that mean for his next his next term as prime minister was this going play out. well i like to call this trudeau on a leash because he can't do what he wants to do anymore with the majority government you can make all the decisions you have enough m.p. sitting there you know we have 338 seats out of the 330 to 170 hold that your party needs to hold that he had won 77 before but that was down to 156 which means he needs a buddy in parliament and that body is most likely going to be jag me saying and the n.d.p. which is a left leaning party here in canada the thing what about 20 seats that's what trudeau 156 and they can make decisions in parliament now trudeau is probably going to have to change his policy thoughts a little bit because the n.d.p.
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will have a say in what's going down there a party that wants housing for everybody they're a 4th party that wants pharmacare and like the liberals they're also very keen on climate change action so there are places where these 2 parties meet but trudeau will not be able to do what he used to do we also lost a few ministers here because they lost their writings so that means that basically these people are not members of parliament anymore so he has to find new people to take their place he also has to get through a vote of confidence so i vote of confidence coming from the parliament say here is our idea for the next 4 years and enough people have to say yes you can be prime minister but with the n.d.p. that's likely to happen but anything to do with policy he has to go through somebody else it's not just going to be the liberals ruling the roost this time well what's interesting is that trudeau really as i said has been dogged by scandal after scandal during his previous term. a lot of people have accused of
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a sort of being fellow lever all progressive because you know his actions during the trans mountain pipeline protest pictures of him wearing blackface when he was younger do you think that these scandals a fact of the race despite him say mainly overcoming them do you think it had an effect on on the amount of support he has. it must have had an effect you know a lot of people thought that people would move towards the conservative direction with this you know his big loss didn't necessarily happen in conservative candidate what you probably look at the west the print the prairie provinces what happened in quebec but i mean the in the west i mean it was basically a shadow for ford the liberals in the prairie provinces which is a huge thing so but these people are conservative i don't think they really care about black face but they do care about s n c's scandals where there's these issues of ethics and they do care about other things like his talk about pipelines which he's always saying he's in oil but buying pipelines of liberals are defending this
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a. 1000 different ways saying you know what this was a conservative government before trudeau that made this happen they signed a deal with the chinese so trudel had to buy that pipeline now how much truth is there are i'm not quite sure because there's all kinds of rumors out there but any way you turn it look he and he squeeze through these somehow squeeze through and it was more about the thing of just choosing the lesser evil when you talk to most comedians because the conservatives to many people especially here in the eastern part of canada seem like a really bad choice especially when you talk about social conservatism because this country is not socially conservative like i can't imagine that us citizens down here would know anything about choosing the lesser of 2 evils when it comes to our election results that's a shocking even think about the lesser usa we'll have to travel next i have that very quickly to finish up here what what was was there any other real surprises that came out of this election. well massive surprise that
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a callback block which is a separatist party a jump from 10 to 32 seats these guys are basically off the map for the past decade or so but this is a good thing for canada lot of people to feel separate is how could that be good because the block is that party that is really concerned about the environment and they say if it's good for callback they will vote with the rest of the government which means that will be good for canada as long as it's good for their province they're really a voice for the province also another thing that shocked eastern canada was alberta when you're looking at 33 out of 34 seats going to the conservatives right next door to scratch on all 14 went to the conservatives there's a big blue bloc right in the middle of canada which is the conservative block and you know you're now starting to hear people talking about alberta separatism well you know let's toss that aside to let us come down to the fact that different parts of canada have different needs and whoever is running the government right now will have to address all those needs from coast to coast if they want to last because
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trudeau if he doesn't do a good job as it is there's a good chance that we might see an election popping up within the next 18 months and a 2 year budget lot to chew on up there after those elections in canada not only all of which thank you so much for coming on and informing our audience today. thank you all right as we go to break rock watchers don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we've covered on our social media and be sure to check out the watching the hawks podcast which is now available on spotify apple music and everywhere you listen your favorite pod cast coming up we delve into the future of space travel and finding peace through space science that's going to leave the founder and executive chairperson of the space before we go thought you knew everything about life on earth i want you to take a quick gander at the law but yes this is a unique cellular organism of unknown nature currently on display at those with a logical part of paris not only has it stumped biologists as to whether it is a plant mushroom or animal but apparently it has no brain and is classified as having almost $700.00. different sexes and can solve riddles like finding its way
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but shortest way to get out of a labyrinth thank god it only be the read what you're. going. to facebook and google started with a great idea and great ideals unfortunately it was also a very dark so. they are constructing a profile of you and that profile is real it's detailed and it never goes away turns out that google is manipulating your opinions from the very 1st character that you type into the search bar it will always favor one dog food over another
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one comparative shopping service over another and one candidate over another they can suppress certain types of results based on what they think you should be see if they have this kind of power then democracy is an illusion the free and fair election doesn't exist for the more we give them the sooner we are all. it seems the breaks that psagot will never end the electorate voted to leave the european union but the political class in media are resistant does the people's voice mean anything anymore what is the legacy of breaks it on institutions competence and leads and the democratic process. seems wrong when all rolls just don't hold. any new belief yet to shape
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was thinking i was saying. i was. this month history was made about 250 miles above our heads here on earth when all when the 1st all female spacewalk was successfully achieved by nasa astronauts christine koch and jessica marin here's how to get me or after that space walk speaking about the experience of making history that actually i wrote this in my high school yearbook it's in under future plans i said to go for a spacewalk so i finally check that box and i've lived that dream and now what's next i'm not sure there is still so much ahead. so what is next what's ahead for space exploration commercialization and as an instrument of peace on earth this week here in washington d.c. the 70th international astronautical congress took place bringing together some of the greatest minds in space science and the people who find ways to fund and sustain that research and development needed to bring us truly into a space age one of the people at the 70th i.a.c.
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was the founder and executive chair person of the space trust a nonpartisan social enterprise that champions world peace through novel space themed initiatives and as one of the earliest founders of so richard branson's virgin galactic commercial space program and mary doesn't just set on boards and watch others experience the adventurous though she was the 1st pakistani one. and to reach the north pole in 2007 in 2008 she was the 1st pakistani woman to reach the south pole and the 1st asian woman to tandem skydive over mount everest numero who holds a master of international affairs from columbia university was also named notter ambassador tourism for backstab in 2007 is a successful artist to whose works have been seen an exhibition at the united nations and joining us now somehow she found time to discuss the future of space and its possibilities for peace on earth is future astronaut space diplomat and founder of space trust in america selene thing you're telling us thank you so much that's the longest mission there there's so much surgery about half of the things
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you've accomplished. one of the things that you state in your view which really struck me was that you said that space is a new frontier for peace or that's an interesting statement it's a beautiful statement what do you mean by that and how can we make peace on earth through space in the study of well actually you know astronauts have been saying that for the last 60 years and i guess it was hard to understand because space was very exclusive it was for the privileged few who went to space with agencies but now that space is opening to all sectors and to all. kinds of you know consumers in the commercial industry in the private industry in government with governments with new space nations emerging space missions we need to bring this mindset that the astronauts experienced a paradigm shift in space to the common person or everyone who's going up in space and the way it works is that with human you believe or to the earth's orbit and you look back on the earth it's actually like a black marble or
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a blue marble and it's where all the borders and boundaries dissolve and you know from where you are you realize that you know you're really one little planet in a big universe so that experience is called an overview effect and it's always made a profound you know emotional impact on anyone who's going to space in the past and now i think everyone can experience. i. think if you ever meet astronauts or anybody you know anybody has been in that there's this look at their i bet you know you can always tell and they will say that that idea of looking back is so profound i said it just shifts everything and going back to your question how it becomes the new frontier for peace is because everybody will experience it and that is the real paradigm shift that i you know incorporated into my nonprofit space trust in engaging and inspiring anyone and everyone i speak to i talk about the overview effect my my local really has on the web site under it the black marble earth which
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is the new image of you from the sun captured from space of the earth the next night which is very beautiful so in my event you know i actually have a replica of god which is 12 feet high and you can actually see the earth in my events how it looks through space and then we talk about how you know it creates this whole paradigm shift in wired because of you know a new frontier for peace because not only does it bring this humanity into us when we leave the earth's orbit the space is you know a means to peace on earth because of what's happening on the international space station at the moment all these peaceful applications of space science and technology on earth is words you know making it more flexible for different spin off technologies different medical experiments that can be applied to you know the benefit of mankind the human spirit on earth so that's why it's really all very very up with them and to these day and age which is a new species one of the things that's interesting. obviously virgin galactic and that. other companies this week of also made major blue ridge of marriage made
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there are these private firms are making these be big steps into commercialization and making things available they've built virgin galactic gateways to space complex in new mexico they've got successfully tested the v.f.s. unity which eventually carries sort of paying customers in the space and that's why i think the area that most people look at is these $200300000.00 or more tickets to go up in these aircraft and one of the things is how do we keep something like this something. likes this idea of getting this sea of space how do we keep that from being just sort of a joyride of the rich and. how do we how do we do that and how is it how does it make it so it's this applicable thing for everyone to get that experience the best impression because even the 1st people who are like a more select group but eventually it's opening the market and it's supposed to be commercially viable and it's supposed to open up to more and more people it's right
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now open to all sectors it's open to like i said new new space nations emerging space countries so you know it will bring opportunities to the entire world to grow up and on a more to his own level these flights will actually become much more cost effective over time to give an example that was in all of these chords is that you know the 1st transatlantic flight probably cost around $50000.00 and then you see how the price came down now you can take it to get across to london like in a few $100.00 so it's the same model like with time these prices these flights will become more and more commercially accessible and at a very low cost and for access to on so the price will come down and it's interesting too because even if you do even if it does start off where you know you're only seeing a very select few were able to pay that ticket those are also the select few that are influencing policy in a real way and things like that so hopefully about trickle down of seeing the earth and how fragile it is will help kind of open some minds up does it raise
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a large amount of jobs your imaginary sector we're actually laying the foundation for what would become accessible to was at a low cost or so fantastic i would also want to touch because we had you know sadly we don't we haven't in history seen a lot of women at the top of space related companies and agencies does it surprise you that it took until 2019 to finally have 2 women do a spacewalk at the same time and what have you learned from your experience and kind of for basing this tory asli all male dominated industry for many years you know it's quite interesting because coming from originally from pakistan. and even like with my parents based in dubai since 1901 i was the 1st woman from the by to be launched to go to space by richard branson himself and from pakistan at the same time as the 1st pakistani astronaut record i've still been to and to be you know even though the government now says they'll send somebody up and it will be through the government program like some military pilot but my space flight he launched me
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in 2006 as a future astronaut and in all these years it's been a while but it's created so much of inspiration for vim and youth of my region and i represent so many different countries because i'm from bogota i live partly in the by and in monaco in the south of france and i've been the 1st from all these places not only to go to space potentially but also to have been to the bulls you know like the 1st woman in some cases but the 1st pakistani so i think that. my role as a very strong little individual in the space industry has created inspiration in a very different way in a different very diverse kind of a jew graphical situation and even when i come here like it's the u.s. hundreds we've had a lot of astronauts go up from the u.s. to space but then i'm just going to be a commercial astronaut as a space tourist but i get so much of you know receptivity welcome and warmth for this that i'm doing because honestly this is like doing it by ourselves all by
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yourself with your own funds you don't have a government behind you to fund it to support it and you know i think that it's great finally to see these women walk in space it's amazing but nasa has done a lot more than that you know they've had the 1st female commander of the international space station peggy whitson they've had like all kinds of things i mean like the 1st woman to space walk they've had the 1st woman in space the 1st woman of color in space so they have not made the giant leap from like sending mail astronauts on to this female space walk it's actually been a step by step process so now. also has been great at doing that the russians were the 1st ones to send a woman to space for that and she was still around and she was very active in politics who is amazing i think that's one of the things that we sort of forget a space sort of equalizes everything we see a lot of things that we may not look at a country like russia and think oh whoa gender equality but the truth is actually did women come to do it they were going to engineering and that thank you so much i
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could sit here and talk if we can have you on again as things go there and you know i think everyone at this table is also wants to check that box of going and this phase or you move it will come and i mean the time i really enjoyed being here and thank you for the warm welcome vision. and the merest aleem from space trust. thank you so much. many have said that their design was nonsense that planes just don't work that way this 2 state german aviation company william proved them wrong announcing that their 5 seat flying car can actually well fly the jet which is pivoted remotely has 2 parallel wings and $36.00 electric engines that allow it to take off vertically and then fly horizontally yet even though the lilium has no tail propellers writers or even a gearbox it was labeled a it speeds of over 100 kilometers an hour about 62 miles per hour that means as the company plans that you could take the little e.-m. from manhattan to j.f.k. airport for $70.00 and i only take 6 minutes early in commercial office arema
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gerber told tech crunch that the landing pad for the 0 emissions jet would have no negative impact on the communities they end up in and they would work to make sure they serve the public good they plan to launch commercial flights in 2025. i'm ok with this electric planes. and even the goods off the oil spigot i'm all for nice quiet and 6 minutes. all right fascinating show today. is the end of the show so remember everyone. in this world we are told that will open up so i tell you all i love i am tyrol the girl on top of a lot of people watching all those hawks up there are great but.
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there are no official statistics in india concerning children who have been lost all separated from their parents some are to estimate that everything 8 minutes in the country the child goes missing. a lot of nothing. but you look it up. on. the national human rights commission stated that $44000.00 minors go missing every year while the police quoted. the united nations children's fund has described the situation as genocide and various sources suggest that in india there are several 1000000 missing women and children.
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what politicians do. they put themselves on the line and they get accepted or rejected. so when you want to be president. somehow i want to. have to go right to be close as like them before we in the morning can't be good. i'm interested always in the waters of our. city. the world is driven by dreamers shaped by the curse of those with.
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no dares thinks. we dare to ask. this 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 there the litter bugs are throwing us away industry should be blamed for all this waste the company has long promised to reuse the plastic. it's tickle capsules excuse. that seems cool set their plastic classic a costly on my end i need to stay on your phones at a special projects funding me tell the difference i'm. on the line your best bet is the end of a footy team but for now the mountains of moist only grow higher. trump
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orders the lifting of sanctions on turkey after the cease fire in syria was extended to america pulls troops ounce of the country although only moving them to neighboring iraq much to baghdad's anger. the pool of international chemical weapons watchdog on last year's alleged chemical attack can see. ignored key evidence to favor a preordained conclusion with the verdict of an independent expert panel that's been scrutinizing b o p c w findings. the 1st ever rush africa's summit is now underway in the result city of sochi with a host of leaders in attendance.
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