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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  November 12, 2019 6:30am-7:01am EST

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mr barak has on his mind his new effort to stop mass shooters but given the u.s. government's controversial history when it comes to stopping terrorism i think it's time we start watching the whole. to wonder what it. looks like real that this would. be the plot of. the day like you said i got. was that we. would. be. pretty. well the world watching the hawks i am tired over and happen and f.b.i. director christopher ray actually told lawmakers in the 1st 3 quarters of the 21901st goal year that the bureau had logged more than 100 domestic terror related arrests and i bet many of those were kind of white power things go in there
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a little i'm going to say was more domestic terrorism and there was and it was probably because an f.b.i. guy came from an instructor. so. i'm just. also the memorandum does differentiate so there's this between suspected terrorists. terrorists terrorists from suspected mass shooters just to clarify one round and once not oh i'm not. going to go the memorandum doesn't go far right but unlike many historic terrorism cases quote many of today's public safety threats appear abruptly and with sometimes only ambiguous indications of intent and that many of these individuals quote exhibit symptoms of mental illness and or have substance abuse problems i also think that probably
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qualifies for a lot of people on capitol hill a little bit lower not running around shouting out their rights. i mean doesn't that just kind of make it a little nervous when you hear things like this like oh we're going to get them with pre-crime and then we're going to. the things that we learned in the war on terror to now take home to our shores and try to use them to capture people before they commit a crime somehow. what they get through the backlog of rape and actually put white collar criminals steal from every working class family in this country away and then you can come cry to me about how you're going to figure out how little timmy in the high school 'd is going to be a mass shooter in 5 years i mean it is i don't buy it i don't buy that there at a level i don't believe they have the competence level to understand what they're doing and i think their whole terrorism versus mass shooter lone gunman but they do have. you have a dark and hard combine to make something worse not that far off as we've talked
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about on this show i think back in august or the help advanced research projects agency if green lit was pitched to the white house it kind of falls into what bars talking about what he's been alluding to kind of reintroducing mass surveillance and the judge agreed. because it went away with. exactly. harpo would be tested come up with out of the box ways to handle problems much like darpa the defense advanced research projects agency does for the military one of those proposed is something called say oh oh yes for stopping bear apparent fatal of bends by help in helping overcome mental extremes a lot of these calls for exploring whether technology including phones and smart watches can be used to detect when mentally ill people are about to turn violent you know. this is all.
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right. i mean well we all really love to know when we're going to have a bad moment or when. we're talking about teenagers or people outside of a certain social norm or a certain social subset in which they're getting a regular mental health screenings or they're getting regular mental health care here's an idea how about you just provide more health care and mental health care to the communities in which we keep seeing a rise in domestic terrorism and then when we see these things happening why not i don't know provide the services that we pay our taxes for because that's the hard long road easier just to throw law enforcement in every problem it's easier just to throw you know law enforcement goons and say go grab people we might think maybe blows that opens the door i mean look and that's the thing that bothers me about this look at how we abuse the patriot act in the past and how we abuse surveillance
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and we took the war on terror and turned it in police state mentality in terms of terms of fighting it. i just can't trust that they're going to do the same they're not going to do the same playbook when it comes to stopping mass shooters are so negative. i should just trust the good right but negative. shares in microsoft had a record high on monday when they landed the $10000000000.00 contract to provide cloud computing for the pentagon's joint enterprise defense infrastructure or jeddah the system is meant to store and process the large amount of data mostly classified needed to bulk up the united states future in artificial intelligence however many are none too happy with the deal including amazon who lost out on the contract and then founder jeff bezos. posed has gone toe to toe with trump since he took office and many contend. that it was bay's oza for bill johnston with the
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president that last amazon the chance to build the death machine is that the future joining us now for more on the microsoft war machine gun tracked is our corresponding america correspondent. well look i'm you know i have to say if you go home tonight if you even have an alexa ask her hey alexa did you get that 10000000000 dollar bed now she's going to have to say no right. so they're feeling a little bit surprised because it is one of these things that there's 30 king over the world basically i mean they're taking over everything with amazon and this is a huge blow to their ego because they didn't get it and microsoft around you know they're still there actually are july report found that amazon they have 50 percent of the market cloud sharing 50 percent of the cloud computing market microsoft has a whopping 16 percent so by microsoft getting this it's going to make up for that last time it but you know there was other companies in there as well we had microsoft amazon oracle and i.b.m.
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all pitted against each other microsoft is the winner so i don't know what it is exactly to be contracted and what is the jet i program please i'm assuming it's what korea advertising for the upcoming star wars movie like a p.r. campaign right which we all know that those are i think i think are going to be living and tested as well. but the joint enterprise defense infrastructure is what i stands for and what it is is it stores and processes vast amounts of classified data and now i want to bring up this quote because dan gray of real clear defense he'd put it bluntly and like in just plain jane words it says the jet i could jet i will be able to support the rapid development and deployment of virtually any application store movement protect the most sensitive national intelligence information and support real time decision making so pentagon leaders envision as and as including mobile even miniaturized backpack portable servers that will provide. units with highly classified mission critical and actionable intelligence
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ultimately it's hoping the job is going to change the department of defense itself transforming how it captures processes understands and exploits data so basically this is like god 2.0 i guess i don't know and it's also interesting to note too that our government has 500 cloud. cloud computing capabilities other countries out there 810 we have 500 so just when you thought you needed more . i mean to us are you worried about. veges using a very huge threat that many the idea of like a backpack and a server i mean i know it all sounds super great in theory i just don't know that it quite works and also anybody who's ever used windows knows. so you had did mention. like i.b.m. and oracle going out of days that anything about not winning on this contract was
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so the problem was is that they actually said that this whole deal was gift wrap for amazon so that's why you had oracle and i.b.m. coming out and actually oracle took this to the court systems because again gift wrapped for amazon the national defense authorization act is what they cited which is basically saying there's a conflict of interest here it was deep who worked for amazon he both worked for amazon both before and after his time at the department of defense this federal judge then was like oh ok so we'll put a hold on this fast forward to august of this year weeks before the winter was expected to be announced trump ordered the contract to be placed on hold again for the defense secretary mark esper to investigate complaints of favoritism towards amazon also saying everything against jeff bezos under the sun either on twitter or in person and then he came out early obviously monday saying that trump had asked for he wanted this decision to be made. asap so that's where microsoft
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that comes into play again it's really not an evil amazon. but then i've got the other one that's still going through because there's another there's the other big dog that we haven't talked about the room with this is google and you know i want to get this in real quick is that you know let's not forget amazon also owns the cloud computing techniques for the intelligence community so that's going to be really interesting but we're going to google for them all this because they've got their super computers and all that going on right so actually last year google. google employees came out and said that they don't want anything to do with government contracts google listen to their employees and was like ok that's fine we'll take a step back microsoft employees at the same time said the same exact thing but microsoft was like well we can have a long standing history with the military so we're going to keep doing it so that's where that falls into play work google had no hand in this whatsoever not even to make you know thank you so much fair and. watching.
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thanks for bringing us. already a birdy as we go to break don't forget to let us know what you think of the topics we cover at our social media and be sure to check out watching the hawks the podcast is now available on spotify apple music and everywhere listen to podcasts coming up we dig into the controversy surrounding law enforcement's use of d.n.a. testing websites like family tree d.n.a. legal media analyst lion-el line only but before we go check out this new style of art or taking pharmaceutical school to school by storm painting with bacteria yes these students from the pharmaceutical university in china are creating works of art using different color forms of bacteria. just yummy.
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come. to my hardest you are dashboards to care but it's. dollars. to design human to be. better laden or we keep. the same country because keep myself busy i can make us tell. suddenly come one
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thing my mother did a 100 a bunch who. sent. him on the hook include the whole thing as a bozo but was unable to put it in the things you just said since. you know so you don't know me on the young is there. i see so much smoke the soup. still so not to sin on. me something good. is jewelry be a reflection of reality. there
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in the world transformed. what will make you feel safe. isolation thank you that you. are you going the right way or are you being led. down to. what is true what is right. in the world corrupted you need to descend. to join us in the debt. or remain in the shadows. from murderers to rapists to serial killers like the infamous golden state killer for years many of society's most heinous monsters have remained free and large but
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then thanks to a new tool in law enforcement's repertoire investigative genealogy and free public d.n.a. databases like match and family tree d.n.a. cold cases were suddenly becoming hot again find a sample of the perpetrators d.n.a. a crime scene or an old case files and to match a boat you might get a match to their cousin father grandma or even unknownst the suspect themselves but there's a catch as buzz feed's reports nearly 70 people suspected of murder or rape about identified across the country using a revolutionary investigative technique but law enforcement say use of public d.n.a. databases also quickly raise privacy concerns as michael melendez and connor boy observe and desert numers our d.n.a. inherently reveals not only our personal medical information and ethnic heritage but connections to a family tree of relatives it's not just an identity match of a single individual it's a coerced geneological disrobing of a person's entire family try to guess the. now to dive into the strands and layers
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of this ongoing debate surrounding law enforcement's use of investigative genealogy is legal and media and leslye know of libel media a veritable double helix of information yes so i want it in your opinion should police will get this word out the way it should police be able to use public d.n.a. testing sites like sure you know family tree d.n.a. to help them solve current and historical crimes let me tell you how to answer any legal question that anybody ask you i'm telling you it works every time it depends for the most part yes 1st question. does the person who provides a sample. woman who is this did the golden state kill or provide a sample. but let's talk about the person who does do they have a reasonable expectation of privacy in fact they volunteered of this it please i my mitochondria as soon as i was going to go so so they had no problem so right off
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the bat lionel's law also was the law always lags behind technology this doesn't work so they do we reverse family trees so what they're doing is they're looking for these you know empire state or golden state killer and they never intruded upon the his privacy rights or anything they found somebody who might have matched so the answer is do your there's nothing wrong with it there would be no 4th amendment problem no. violation of anything the police never did anything it was voluntary just like if you had pictures if you love to go outside take pictures of crowds and i walk outside and you say you know there's a bank robbery right around here and you say it was funny i've got here's my pictures today oh look they're so i really so to answer that no problem. but that's just part of the issue here. one of this is the other thing that you know we're looking at it and these obviously the ones we're talking about that they're
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using are the somewhat free open database says meant for people who like we have talked about are looking for a parent that may whether you were adopted or why that for you end up trying to find somebody and that's the sort of open databases are for and then there's the ones that pay for it and you you know have some semblance of privacy although they're probably selling it off to make clones somewhere so if you see more me running around. but this is the interesting thing is just the mass of a number of cases that they found through this and like you said it's you know no one wants to be affected because of the gold. killer but if you get someone off the street there's a misunderstanding the new york times reported that this technique could be used to revive cold cases including at least 100000 unsolved major violent crimes and 40008 on it by body what about those who argue that. who cares about the privacy who cares that the information will carry out whatever you
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sad it's more important that we put now also a way add to this the number of rape cases where jurisdictions or states have stopped funding altogether where there are evidence rooms just teeming with evidence because they can get to them so it's murder it's that it's now the issue is this were let me twitch a little bit let's say the f.b.i. says look. we've got this guy and there's nobody else i want to go directly to this company and say look can we just run this i'm not looking for any kind of relative i want to go do you have this person there now that's the issue is just like with your information as far as your phone what are your expectation of privacy kid can the government go to apple can you go to microsoft go to google whatever and say we won this did you give up this right or by virtue of you submitting this information
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to a clown and signing god knows how many terms it isn't and when you downloaded the new form of this did you waive your right we don't know that's the issue that i want is when somebody when the government says listen g.d. match whatever it is we want to go directly to your database for get the men and women to go and we just better yet can we just kind of interface with you can we just if you don't mind it might get a nice government matching fund if we can just connect so any time you get a new one thing being these little red lights go up and we say cut cold case cold case. it does raise another interesting thing because it's like i think it's that idea of what we're right now ridge and we hear about the government taking d.n.a. from the people from the migrants who are coming over the border right here and a lot of people are saying hey the government shouldn't be having databases of our of what we do in fact many cases like new york have been doing this already but we also taser begin this is to all the all the youngsters out there and all the people
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who say hey haifa i'm part scandinavian. barky what you're doing is when you do that spit kid thing and you send it up one of these days we're going to find out from your genome who's gay who has a propensity for alzheimer's who has perhaps is going to be diabetic no insurance you know who has a mental health problem who is transgender who is bipolar we're going to find everything and guess what you just. provided that when you want to find out your lineage so be careful d.n.a. is not a fingerprint it's you and that's where it's sort of wonder if the where there is this change of mindset about certain things that our privacy is that because that is you you understand that when you're giving that swab and saying i want to do that find a parent or what ever figure out why i have blue eyes because i'm way very way
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that's what the d.n.a. is to us the reason we're going through all this is there a certain point that we are just not really understanding or we're not getting paid and not to understand the difference between giving your medical information yes to a doctor where it's protected and to these companies where it's not under the same like have laws especially hipaa is a great point especially with the younger generations who are born in captivity who don't understand what $184.00 is who don't understand a thing about privacy is because what we're doing right now is this is going to be a time capsule they're going to save these people were worried about come on man with when there was no privacy what do you what do i have made that sort of the but it's so cool and when you see these great part that's my favorite and for your part everything i think i mean you're probably part of are going to lose the us a little bit because after going to that's the way it is and you just they do you and also who owns these companies and what are you can you get them back kid can you this is the part that nobody understands and by the way when you do this and
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you're always doing biometrics you look at me look at my face look at my boys look at me this because i figure brits are going to them prince where's that going eventually we're going to be 247 pan applicant everything about to tap into everything your voice your figures where you go your d.n.a. you genome your hair you're like you're breaking your friends your likelihood you can have social. tora board chinese story about the social credit scores and nobody broke in the your house to get. you gave them his that was cool maybe i could sell it and then they could be me and i wouldn't have to come i would have to do i just send my deep thinking and then here forever it is interesting because i think you brought up a great point both of them that idea that we're just we're not thinking this through yet it's the shiny new toy syndrome everything's so cool and everything's so shiny that we're not thinking about a long term employee exactly were we going to clone one of these days we're going to figure out in your birth certificate your clone is not your son or your daughter
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it's you and there's no check mark on the birth certificate for you giving birth to you it's so again the law like to know is always late and always a pleasure thank you is for coming on sir thank you. 8.3000000000 metric tons of plastic has been created since its invention in the 1950 s. and that somehow in 70 years since we don't have a new exciting clean way to reuse and recycle that plastic on a large scale and i'm now fresh face start up carby is takes pulverize pet peeve t. plastic the kind used in your one use water bottles in certain kinds of plastic clothing and breaks it down with enzymes those enzymes then break down the plastic to its components monomers the monomers are then cleaned and made into new plastic that is just as good as the original and making it even better this bio recycled plastic can be bio recycled over and over and over again without ever
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losing strength or quality and the company hardy is expects their 1st processing plant open by 2021 hears to the beginning of the end of new petroleum based plastics wow that is cool and we think a lot of a lot of areas over the over the years about how to break down plastic will break it and then the micro plastics but we know micro plastics are bad oh we'll do this and it's always been the recycling is like they told us for 20 years serie a cycle but they didn't actually know how to do that. it's interesting how we keep doing that right look up we just talked about with the d.n.a. thing we don't like others is so cool that we didn't really think about the back side of this issue when the doubler sort through our garbage but then do nothing with having nothing down to the corner right but this is what i love about this is that it also from what i understand it prevents new plastic from being made and we could just stop i mean that's i was saying is you know you have 8000008000000000 whatever metric tons you don't have to make any more plastic we can still have it
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but this is a cleaner process it doesn't use things like solvents and it's a close one of those closed loop process that we talk about 8 so you don't have a bunch of runoff or chemical processes it's bio and you get these little pellets like you saw just like regular plastic that you would get it and you can use it over and over and over again and illustrate that is fantastic well everybody that is our show for you today the number one in the world you're not told we're loved enough so i tell you all i love you i am tyrone and topical i keep on watching all those hawks out there and have a great day and night everybody. so
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what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have it's crazy going from day shouldn't let it be an arms race is often spearing dramatic to follow only mostly i'm going to resist i don't see how that strategy will be successful very critical time to sit down and talk. without the president constant director. of the free money. we would have a day of reckoning and prices would revert back to reflect supply and demand. and there would be a catastrophic trapdoor opening underneath the u.s.
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economy because the u.s. won't do it for itself china will do it for the in the form of announcing as a surprise $20000.00 tons of gold and the introduction of a gold backed cryptocurrency this will kill the u.s. dollar better than a doornail. the world is driven by shaped by. thinks. we dare to ask. time after time called parisian to repeat the same mantra sustainability it's very
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important it's accelerate the transition to sustainable prize board sustainability stay number man at a more equitable and sustainable well. they claim that production is completely harmless dissolute. kakadu to congress number articles and got it done this on the prison companies want us to feel good about buying their products while the damage is being done far away and this is something all of this must be going to mean and i mean look. this is the moves of news limited window nieminen einstein theme that may be best understood with superman and. what politicians do. they put themselves on the line they get accepted or rejected . so when you want to be president or injury. or somehow want to be rich. have to go right to be close to survival before 3 of them or can't be good that i'm
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interested always in the waters in the. west sydney. the russian foreign minister sergey lavrov field questions at the paris peace forum where he was asked about geo political finger pointing. is pretty much. everything. we'll look for just. also this hour mexico granted political asylum to bolivia the former president. resigned from his position and fled his country following weeks of turmoil we speak to a former leader of. libya has seen in. the commander asked him to resign. to avoid more bloodshed and violence just leave.

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