tv Watching the Hawks RT July 29, 2020 1:30pm-2:01pm EDT
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has been packaged as a bond and sold into the junk bond market with a longer maturity at a slightly lower rate and they've been doing this now for 40 years to the point where america's indebtedness says. they engineered to the point of an extinction event as have many countries as the globe. shows seem wrong. when old rules just don't hold. any new world yet to shape out these days become agitated and in danger many equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground.
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greetings and sell you take it's boy it was a celebration of political grandstanding partisan hackery and outright lying to the public it was on full display in full swing this week from both democrats and republicans as everybody's favorite befuddled looking presidential bootlicking yes man u.s. attorney general william barr took the stand in front of the u.s. house judiciary committee to answer for a wide range of questionable and possibly political motivated decisions coming out of his office decisions like using chemical weapons to clear out protesters in lafayette square for trump's campaign buyable photo op here in d.c. or sending them to u.s. cities to provoke protesters and inflame hostilities to bolster the president's campaign theme of law and order you know those kind of all american decision making is to come out of an attorney general but while a a.g.
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barr and the politicians questioning emerged definitely wearing their political beliefs and agenda on their sleeves it appears that many u.s. citizens are actually rolling up their sleeves and never to hide their political opinions according to the cato institute a new national survey about 2000 u.s. citizens has found that self-censorship is on the rise in the united states and that nearly 2 thirds 62 percent of americans say the political climate these days prevents them from saying things they believe because others might find them offensive. digging deeper into the institute's findings one discovers that these fears may actually cross party lines with 52 percent of democrats 59 percent of independents and a whopping 77 percent of republicans all agreeing that they are afraid to share in public some of their but most basic political opinions in fact according to cato the only political group where a majority feel unafraid to express their beliefs publicly are hardcore major
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league liberals nearly 6 in 1058 percent of staunch liberals feel they can say what they believe so basically those who believe in free healthcare for all ending systemic racism equality for the l.g.b. t.q. community no more wars for fun and profit destroying the astronomical wealth gap affecting this country and who support the me too movement on afraid to stand by their beliefs and say and louder whether at home on the streets or in the workplace while everyone else appears to be hiding their beliefs while crew quivering quivering quivering in fear of the dreaded cancel culture. seems like a good time to start watching the homes. she wanted list going on a city u. street. letter so let's see this is this joyce state
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symbol is. grace suggests least systemic deception is the late show which i would put the deal as. welcome everybody to watch it harks i am tyrone and i'm sick and joining us today to discuss america's a pair fear to share their political views is newsmax newsmax insider and a cox and hanna thank you so much for joining us to talk a little bit about this kind of crazy council culture and everything else under the sun. when it comes to censorship in america glad to be here thanks for having me so the cato institute polling says that roughly 62 percent of americans say the political climate these days prevents them from saying things they believe because others might find them offensive i don't know is this the worst form of blowback from the evils of quote unquote council culture or is this actually just 62 percent of people i don't know being respectful and not wanting to affirm their friends and
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coworkers were better beliefs put a thought. i wish it was the latter but the people who are offensive seem to be pretty loud and proud of my social media whereas i get a lot of messages from people that are wanting to participate more in civil discourse you know especially around the protests this summer and people who are concerned with issues of racism and social injustice i often heard people say i wish i could say publicly what you're saying and i wish i could be more involved that nervous about this feeling. and standing on this cable also found that 77 percent of conservatives since 2017 have felt afraid to express their political viewpoints in public what do you think this fear comes from considering since 2016 considered by the ology has dominated the white house the traditional system and up until recently both the u.s. house and senate why are conservatives so frightened to express their beliefs when they have dominated most branches of the u.s. government for a few years now. well you know actually i don't think it's limited to
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a party to be honest and i agree with you republicans are often the least courageous on some of these issues and i you know i kind of i'm not a libertarian but i appreciate the cato study because those guys and gals come at it from a real hard core libertarian streak a look i think i think that the media the mainstream media what i call the fake news media and i include fox news in there has been so good at bludgeoning people that they really are in a position where 30 percent of the country thinks that fox news tells 100. some of the true 30 percent say c.n.n. does and the rest of us are like hey wait a 2nd we're not really in the mood to get bludgeoned by them but i look i think that there's a failure of failure in courage a failure of courage for lots of conservatives as well as others i'm not surprised by that at all. coming out of right field is the marker joy and sadness to love all right it's godzilla we see political beliefs pushed and debated constantly on us
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news programs especially on cable news channels like fox c.n.n. amazon b c education mentioned this before do you believe this over saturation of right versus left the base is playing a role in people at home across the country and you know democrats independents and republicans you know being afraid to expose on their political beliefs in you know private sightings are we getting too much of it on t.v. this kind of constant push of the left right paradigm and people shouting about it . well i think we're getting too little of the truth right i think people are parroting positions and you guys know i did a stint at c.n.n. for about 6 months i was a contributor and they flew me up to new york and i saw you know people that say that cable news doesn't make money they make money hand over fist and they use it to study not how to tell the truth but how to influence people and so i lasted about 5 or 6 months and you know they never told me what to say but they were clearly looking for a certain kind of
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a friction right and they weren't interested in the truth you know i would have in the breaks i was on that period of time where i was on for like an hour with anderson cooper in a panel of 5 others during the breaks most of the people would sit there not talk and i try to ask paul begala or ana navarro to do debate they didn't want to debate they were playing roles in a in a in a sort of well scripted if not totally stated play and it wasn't about the troops nobody wanted to fight for the truth they wanted to fight for sort of the the ratings and 1st sort of the play acting thing so that's what we're missing in america is not enough fearless people part. because you get canceled if you're i got in trouble for talking about how they were rates just the people on there were racist in one direction and i got in trouble for that and so a lot of times you lose your job and eventually it weeds out a sort of things i loved about our teeth the 1st times i was on the edge scholtz he let it rip you could go any which way you want to and it was real debate going on in real truth was sought. another place where real debate happens is typically on
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college campuses one set of interesting statistic shows that over 40 percent of republican college graduates and 60 percent of republicans with postgraduate degrees fear that their political views could actually harm their current and future employment hannah why do you think so many republicans with degrees now for your their political beliefs could affect their employment. well i think 1st and foremost if you're educated you know that it actually could affect your employment i've seen many people not get jobs because of their little cult thing and have seen other people not going to move forward in their political careers even i think also that if you look at college campuses much happening across this country we increasingly see them moving further and further to the left conservative speakers or shout it out when they come to speak we often see many of the teachers are pushing leftist views and socialist views and we often see that conservatives don't feel like they have free speech even on their college campuses and that's something that they increasingly feel is under threat so i think that it makes sense that people coming out of those establishments apply what they've learned of what
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they've seen on those college campuses to the real world not consistently being back that we just saw one of the editors of the new york times recently lose their job over publishing a piece by sitting u.s. senator a sitting u.s. senator who i happen to stringently disagree with on many things and whose opinion piece the public eye really didn't care for at all but the fact that a new york times editor was like go over simply publishing an opinion in this way i think shows you where the culture is right now and people are right to be concerned about their employment let me go to this though is it really can still cultural that is causing so much for your desire to be or is it the fact that old outdated cultures of racial and sexual bigotry and intolerance are changing here in the united states and around the world and that many are just too afraid to give up their projects as brazde says and don't want to face any kind of accountability for their actions and their words because remember with freedom of speech you also have to accept and be accountable to that speech just because it's free it doesn't mean that you're not going to be held you know held accountable to all start with you.
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well can be both i think both things that samak simultaneously true i think that you do have a lot of norms change and you do have people who used to be able to air their ignorance while they have proudly and not get pushed back and not have repercussions for that and certainly we see some giant screeches from those people who are upset that they're losing their positions of power and that some of the things that they wish to see in this world are no longer so but we also do think that cancer culture is a real phenomenon and i think it's a dangerous animal and that's increasingly leading to a culture where we can't talk about the problems that we face if we're not talking about the problems that we face we can't come to a happy medium if we can't come to places where we can come together actually effect change and start to fix our problems we're just screaming at each other and we're not actually hearing the other side out so to me it's very unproductive i don't think that you can however a public stand in this kind of climate where people feel like they can't even express their basic views and i don't think they're wrong you know the survey also showed that a majority of people are and 30 percent in each party or so thought that people should lose their jobs for donating to
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a presidential candidate in the opposite party that's really extreme but what are your thoughts on you know is it really just is it really terrible culture or is it or is it really just people afraid to be held accountable for their actions so they're kind of hiding behind the fear of caramel to carl kasell culture. which i'd say it this way i don't want to kind of circle back for one second on the on the young people but if it's together i mean we expect our young people when we're young we make mistakes right that's what we count on i mean you learn from your stake so if we get better one of these about college campuses now and i think young adulthood is there's as you point out where we are held accountable for our mistakes we should be but they're they're sort of more blatantly available to them to the world because of social media because of technology i mean this this program right now to all of us really for parts of the area on the t.v. together here is what i would say as things have changed and i hope we're getting to be a more perfect union every day you know our founding was about being a more perfect union we do have to shed some of the bigotry some of the problems.
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but we also have to have some ability to produce each other right we have to have some ability to say you'll say something stupid whether you're 15 or 50 or $75.00 and it shouldn't be the end of you in fact it especially shouldn't be if you said something stupid 10 years ago i hope you've grown more now maybe grown poorly or something but i do think that the technology makes us incredibly our mistakes are amplified and they're able to be taken advantage of by people who are really unpleasant if you had to confront me and we had to fight it in our face face to face discuss it not fight it out it's different than doing it on twitter and in emails and faxes and things that make it sort of distant but i think it's a little bit of both i suppose but it's also a very big challenge because as you guys said free speech in america is so important and self-censorship might be the worst thing to happen worse than attacks directly on speech because it's hard to break us out of that i could read about are going to agree that soap such as or should ever be so sub-saharan depending on the
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situation where you never are you are in the you're as they're not at all but you should never so such or so. yet i think that's true but i think we're not human beings are human beings and whether it comes to relationships you know social i mean you know i've written 345 books on trump if i go out into a setting in a meeting nice people that are pleasant i don't read with my trunk books i don't talk about that initially until i get a lay of the land that's just a fax alert i tell you a serious story our next door neighbor for 2 years we finally had a meal with them and i found out that one of them was a huge truck supporter i never brought it up i would have brought it up my point here is that there's something about what's going on and let me be clear it's not one party it's not the anti truckers or the never truckers it's all of us that have put us in a position where we're we're uglier towards each other sometimes and that makes us feel like let's not start with that and that's an unfair thing is un-american to me note that tocqueville talk so much about our association for big back. that's when
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he came over i think that's something we're really putting in danger to and i still remember growing up in the ninety's the big push that we had to you know censor 2 live crew we had to censor all these musicians and artists went to me that's the worst thing you can possibly do i want to thank you both hannah cox and ed martin for coming on and illuminating this debate for us today thank you so much. and thank you. all right everybody as we go to break remember that you can also stop watching the hawks on demand through the brand new portable t.v. which is available on all platforms so you have no excuse not to get it it's available everywhere all right coming up legal journalist molly borrows joins us to discuss the current plight appearing 1000000 u.s. citizens now facing a picture you do not want to miss this conversation stay tuned to watch.
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conservative media tell us the political left in the united states become radicalized like the joe biden well sure in an era of socialism profoundly changing the country on the other hand biden in many in his or bridge claim nothing would fundamentally change so we should visit or is it as always just. a dark industry comes to life in los angeles every night. dozens of women sells their bodies on the streets many of them under age. police reveal a taste of their daily challenge you're going to exploit a child here in los angeles that we're going to come out to see officers going undercover as 6 workers and customers to fight the 6 trade.
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the american dream is beautiful eat those stoked in tradition and a common sense of identity and purpose its tenets are simple the opportunity for prosperity and success upward mobility for families and all of these things could be achieved simply through hard work the most formal symbol of this stream is home
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ownership yet in america 43000000 people are renters homeownership remains a dream that evades many people of color and those in poverty and it's steadily slipping out of the hands of the middle class as well the coburg 19 pandemic put all of america's faulty exceptionalism on front street revealing some of the darkest parts of society that are often swept away from the headlines but no more with record unemployment and far too many families living paycheck to paycheck each day is a constant struggle and if you're a winner things are about to get a lot harder a moratorium on rent was issued at the height of the pandemic but this past weekend that moratorium expired those conservatives in congress and the trump white house don't seem to care though they've supported some relief packages that includes forbearance for homeowners renters could be a victim as soon as the 1st week of august the clock is running out the global it buys refer mst out in conjunction with the national coalition for civil right to
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counsel estimates that more than 11000000 households could be start a picture notices within the next 4 months but there are estimates that more than double the shocking number for example the coburg 19 a big project by is that we're approaching 30000000 u.s. renters at risk or a picture. the one reprieve some renters may have is state regulation but sadly many don't know the laws in place to protect them and landlords will surely take advantage of that jobs aren't coming back anytime too soon whole industries have collapsed legal journalist molly barrows shared with america's lawyer joins us now to explain what renters and employees should know about these changes and what if any recourse they may have welcome ali. and let thanks for having me molly runners make up a sizeable portion of american households 43000000 people with their homes why are a priority in the next round of economic relief. you know that's a great question i think it's one that needs to be aimed directly at republicans
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right now because democrats want to extend that moratorium on evictions they want to extend those supplemental unemployment benefits republicans are suggesting in this latest senate bill that you knock those supplemental unemployment benefits down from $600.00 to $200.00 that on top of everything else that you're seeing with the continued filings for unemployment benefits all these renters like you mentioned before that are hanging on by a thread these rent payments have just been deferred they're still going to be expected to pay them so a lot of states have stepped up and they've taken initiatives to pass their own laws to provide resources detroit for example they've set aside an entire area where they're allowing people to come in and talk about what's going on they try to connect them with either legal resources or perhaps some funding that might be available to help them keep their bills because if congress doesn't do something if they don't provide more money whether it's renting assistance whether it's extending this moratorium on addictions you are going to see more people homeless things will only get worse in landlords you want to kick them out that's going to be a problem for them too because who's going to run it with so many people that continue to be out of work they're going to have empty buildings which can bring down
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property values so it's a real problem i think of perception when it comes to cull that you know is that going over the pew research center's. studies that they've done recently on if you identify as republican or democrat how you perceive coal that is impacting your world and republicans by far and large think the worst is behind us whereas democrats might think that a little bit that they really know that perhaps when we're going just began to see what could become a rental apocalypse a housing apocalypse so i think it's this perception that everything's going to be ok in this republican macho we don't you don't need 600 to live on you need a lot less that's actually encouraging people to stay home and and not work and that's just crap really i think i think they just don't want to spend the money you know you know remember all of that they never want to spend the money on the people that all those put on the corporations are using their dollars remember on the going to say well i want to ask you as a as a liberal journalist tomorrow is what types of right. 2 brothers have who might be facing eviction during this pandemic and time of record high unemployment i mean
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i'm already hearing some horror stories come out on coming out of the vix in courts around the country and people just going in biting to stay in their place but not having any understanding of what the law actually says and what rights they may have. right and there are some coalition groups advocacy groups for ranchers rights that are basically saying hey we do need more funding to provide legal counsel to a lot of these people and something that they would actually like to see in the next release that congress passes will see if that makes it in there but there are options available to them and each community and you've got legal with the fence or it's basically free or discounted for people in a certain income range who are going to access because there's a long line or a long list of gas available so you know it's these there's the fair housing act which is available to people that don't fall under this moratorium protection because by the way that moratorium was only for people who were renting in places that had a federally backed mortgage which is only about a 3rd of renters so the majority of renters out there never did have that
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protection to begin with unless it was applied to state regulations or city regulations so the federal fair housing act which covers things like race discrimination that sort of thing that's one recourse that they could take in case the rates rights are being violated they also need to just do some good old fashioned calling their local state and legislative leaders and say hey what are you doing to help meet the rent or i pay as much in property taxes if not more in some communities than actually homeowners do i'm ali we're going to put you in a policy making framework for a 2nd you know that there are housing advocates renner's civil rights groups and other parties that are presenting their plans to congress and state leaders on ways to save the rental community from some of the things you mentioned earlier what do you think the government needs to do to avoid up to 30000000 people facing eviction over the next few months. we simply have to extend this moratorium on evictions and also extend those supplemental unemployment benefits and i know that's less like the republicans go at it i hear it but it's something that needs to be done until we get past this until truly the worst is behind us or things get back to normal or
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there may never be a perceived normal again but something is normal as we can get back to but if you turn your back on the ever shrinking middle class all you're going to be left with is nobody that can really pay the bills i mean all ships rise with the tide. in right now we're making it so that the wealthiest among us and the only ones with an anchor the rest of us are starting to float away i've talked to some financial advisors who think we're only not yet begun to see the floor culture wave that we're going to see coming with the housing and those are for home ownership people with mortgages and that's going to trickle down to the banks renters as well and so i think the government right now with this is that they did provide this can't things are getting a lot worse clearly that a supply of money that will can't be can last forever but there needs to be some more supplemental assistance in place until we get a hold on this until we get a vaccine that's widely accepted enough for people to feel like they're safe to get out and work or also just to patronize this is because this is such a trickle down effect when it comes to our economy and like you mentioned earlier in that lead people have to have
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a place to live in order to support their families and we continue to have a home based and build their lives from mali barros i want to thank you so much for coming on and giving us your incredible intelligence and wit and insight into these issues always a pleasure having you on once again legal analyst more borrowed but your it thank you. while many of us have dreamed about the adventures of space travel rationing the feeling of being on a spacewalk or doing 0 gravity somersaults on the international space station have any of you ever wondered what all that may actually smell like yes what does space smell like well wait no more my friends because a company on kickstarter is about to bring you space in a purple uber cologne yes this space is here originally developed by mass so for the purpose of eliminating any sort of surprises for future astronauts mel the smell of space will soon be coming to a home near you who to your home or amazon there who knows just what does actually
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smell like apparently it smells like some kind of combination of gunpowder rum fruit seared steak and or a barbecue. so space pretty much smells like a typical been turfed family vacation it's wow right i needed something that i definitely want to try so if amazon doesn't have it i'll be the person to get up go to the kickstarter to look at check this out now and blew my mind apparently they're also working on the smell of the moon too so you could actually experience what the moon smells like that's awesome. i love it all right everybody benefits her so for your to very remember everyone in this world we're not told you're loved up so i tell you all i love you tight rope and perfect how many keep on watching all those socks out there and have a great day. danny
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and by north beach so many people because they copied him he's so good that even such a bag can't be sending. i'm not here to tell anybody do you feel the find the next guy. who looked up live again in the you including done d.m. felt something to you had she been done plenty of. the deflection or the c.e.o. actually has a deflection what is happening to say. that is
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they. are to the point of an extinction event as have many countries. legal government by a small group. small group. when you have a tiny people who have all the power you have to have some means to. get together and. lease or sacrifice some. places that capitalism exploited and destroyed for profit and left behind misery poverty environmental devastation and so you see things like voter suppression building more prisons. and. undemocratic practices.
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of the. hello there i'm a military guy watching in question broadcasting from hour to america's national news had to order it in washington d.c. here today's top stories 1st the c.e.o.'s from 4 major tech companies are testifying before congress about their power and dominance in the industry details next in a live report and also speaking of congress lawmakers are now pushing for more sanctions against turkey and russia this time for the variables in libya's civil war we're going to discuss that with our panel and then president trump is headed to the lone star state to discuss energy and war and boil rig and raise money for his reelection we'll get you all up to speed right.
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