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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  October 28, 2020 8:30am-9:00am EDT

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information fellow. these are good questions but none of those were asked anyway while the committee batted around ludicrous ideas like flooding q. and on sites with even crazier conspiracies to upset their already crazy conspiracies one of the biggest nods of agreement seemed to come from the idea of forming a new government agency yes this new government agency that essentially would be on behalf of the public making the rules subject to legislative authority as opposed to having the delegate that delegated to tech giants yes we need a new information agency a truth agency if you will because you know we've had so much success with other orwellian title agencies here in the united states like the department of homeland security and you know the national security agency. i think it's time we start watching the ox. what's going on on a city street you want to. see this as this you always
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state. great city this least systemic deception is late show which. so you. are welcome everyone watching the entire row and i'm of the. well you know it's interesting admission when we look at all this because you know when i. i don't think we need another another agency in this time and place realistically i mean come on like we've already seen so many horror shows come out of the n.s.a. and other agencies do we really need now an information agency to fight fake news no i agree with you 100 percent i'm also can use this to the point of an information ever december mation agency. they can use in the context that we've seen from the trump administration and his interesting bedfellows has been news that they just don't agree with so it isn't like there is this. widespread amount
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of. this is it not integrity in terms of journalism that's out there what we're seeing is people dig into the top administration the trump campaign and him be upset about it and then call everything fake news even if we did have let's say in some alternate universe there were just all of the lies the journalists were putting out regularly i'm not convinced that a government agency ways to figure this whole thing out would be helpful considering what you said earlier the lack of actual you know processes in place but the government agencies we currently have specifically many of which that were designed to help investigate certain things and one shot with human rights and other things exactly and you know one of the problems too with that is is whatever you you know it might sound like a good idea oh we can create this government agency and it can it can enforce space books own rules or it can tell twitter who and what is good information in the public at all that the problem that you're into there is what happens if like for the democrats they're all fighting and saying who re we need this we got
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a fight q and on and things like that ok that's great and let's say joe biden wins and then joe biden controls the information out of the government and everything that happens is controlled by them what happens when the republicans then whims 4 years later and then suddenly all that control goes back to the republicans and it's the republicans telling you know appointing the head of that agency and that agency then deciding who and what is or is not real i mean that's where the real danger comes and some of the great quotes to come out of this by the way which i thought were kind of funny was. in the distant from a certain expert which i think is one of the greatest jobs or create jobs one could ever get the world insider told the committee 19 days before voting closes in the 2020 election i believe we are more vulnerable to online distance from ation from both foreign and domestic sources than ever before you know one of the things that gets me about these committees when they talk about fake news and this information is the infantilizing of the us voter the. you get this sense that you're so stupid
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that you can't tell what's truth from fiction so we need to do it for you as your parents i agree with that the other thing is essentially government waste the fact that we can sit around the considerably and always seemed to create these random agencies out of nowhere which are essentially just like just like working groups and you know how whenever something goes wrong people at a working group and a few folks names and the idea is all of us that met wrong gets illuminated and disappears that doesn't work with working groups and it sure as heck doesn't work we add random agencies that we don't need that's a good point and one of the other things they were brought up in this in this kind of compromise hearing was a they were open to the plot to kidnap michigan governor gretchen whitmer by a militia group which pointed out that social media platforms played a huge role in allowing that group to organize it ceded the information that led them to organize and it most likely did and we've seen that over and over again but let's be honest paramilitary we're groups have been hatching violent plots in this country long before facebook and twitter ever existed so you know and plus when you
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talk about how they caught these guys they caught them through social media so you can't have it both ways like you need social media so you can root out these people that will inflict danger and these people that could actually hurt people and do that but at the same time you cannot censor the 1st amendment just because just because people are out there saying things you don't like no i agree with you 100 percent so you know we knew militia groups existed during the prohibition era this is nothing new there are always groups that are designed to protect their own self interest or the self interest of gangs drugs and people who have bad intentions that doesn't necessarily mean that you need to get rid of social media social media has been a tracking mechanism for the f.b.i. in a lot of other law enforcement organizations while at this point and without it you have a pretty hard time trying to track the steps of these individuals as as tragic as this may be to some people to hear always remember the 1st amendment is there to protect unpopular speech not just popular speech. chicago. so is
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a city that has become a punch line for republicans president trump can't keep the dime of the midwest out of his mouth the nation's 3rd largest city is no stranger to headlines about violence black lives matter the city's massive wealth wealth gap or police brutality and chicago has a well documented history of police abuse its and large taxpayer payouts to the tune of $113000000.00 in 2018 alone a community working group was formed as a watchdog to the police as well as a guide to walk community focused policing but sadly that seemed to be more. performant to politics though the community group proposed a total of $155.00 changes designed to update the chicago police department's rules of when to use force only of the changes were excepted. the 34 member group included activists civil rights leaders and politicians who met weekly since june all of that for essentially what the working group members are now calling
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a sham process. a working group member and black lives matter organizer said quote i am in no way satisfied the spirit of what the working group tried to come up with is that police should have a stronger duty in the average chicago and not to hurt people to not shoot people and to not be. part of the issue is c.p.d. use executive steering committee it's made of mostly senior leadership in the police department itself expecting officers to police themselves has proven to fail tactic time and time again and in this case c.p.d. only accepted technical changes in language they ignored every reform on excessive use of force though this is gravely disappointing there is a glimmer of hope on the criminal justice reform front in chicago cook county state's attorney box a democrat who ran on a reformist policy agenda started expunging 1200 hot convictions despite coburn 1000 delays in so doing she delivered one of the most poignant statements quote as
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prosecutors we need to own the role the flip them has played on the failed war on drugs causing disproportionate harm to black and brown communities who are convicted of low level cannabis offenses. while that is a that is a credible statement especially here that from a prosecutor exactly wow that is incredible but i want to get back to what you're talking about what you brought up about the police reforms and all that i mean all we heard was hey we need to let the community and the police and then they'll get together everyone else come up with a new way of policing what a great change is they're all going to turn on it said and what it's not. what we hear is talks and talks with community groups and it's one of the 1st things that is noted when we see you know the protesting in the streets when the 1st things that the conversation point goes to is we need community groups we need more camille. he and form policing and at the end of the day we see these civilian action groups and we see these community work groups form that are supposed to help police to be able to understand and create the types of reforms necessary to reduce
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police brutality we get cases like chicago's where they've developed and they've had conversation they met for hours on hours weekly for months now and you get absolutely nothing out of 155 points of interest of changes you come out with literally by changes of vocabulary wow that's incredible but i mean that's just it just hurts it's like hey we're just going to stick this knife and twisted a little bit older forms you guys are talking about i mean look the consent to grew supposed to be to place a legal burden on the chicago police department not only to work with the community but to actually accomplish these forms clearly with the only get 53430 that's a failure what message is that something it basically says that we don't care about you your reforms do not matter we're just window dressing showcasing something to check off a box the consent decrees whole point was that there would be legal action and repr cautions that force the police department to not only ensure that a group of organized community citizens were elevated to push these reforms but
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also that the police department would actually take these into consideration what we've seen is that none of that actually happened the the actual community group did all the effort they were meeting for 4 to 6 hours a week since june they had you know community activists they have politicians they had pastors they had a wide array of people from the communities that were hit the hardest to actually meet and converse about the changes that needed to be done from a community perspective and yet again top brass because these were chicago police department executive leaders push back against every one of them with the exception of 5 books have a larry changes which you know but the one thing as you mentioned to the is a little bit about lightly at the end of the tunnel was. doing in the that's incredible but it also brings up an interesting issue because a lot you were seeing a lot. reform when it comes to the legality of marijuana on the sales of marijuana in this country but there's a lot of kind of like great will make some money off this all the state governments
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like we can make billions but they're also forgetting about all of those poor souls were busted on pot convictions who are languishing away in prison right now absolutely and that the thing that pressurise me the most being a chicago and being a resident of illinois is that i watched a governor come in you know a change in leadership hour and a half ago at this point who decided that he was going to be a reform when it came to ensuring that everyone had access to really and in so doing and largely to your point a 2nd ago it was because the state is in dire need of a cash flow because they're broke as all get out in so doing he did not pay attention only to the hundreds of thousands of people who've been incarcerated in the state over the past 4 decades on marijuana convictions many of which you have since been released but cannot find a job or housing anywhere in the city because of these convictions that is what's truly truly breaks my heart so it's nice to see in that fox's office you know step forward and expunge these 300 pot convictions so these people could get jobs
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potentially in the industry that they got thrown in jail for in the 1st place because i mean my logical but if you got thrown in you must know some about it let's go work now that it's legal we've still got a low way to go before people who've been convicted on delany it can actually get jobs in a pot and it's called reform it's called reform all right as we go as we go to break remember that you can also start watching the hawks on demand for the brand new portable t.v. which is now available on all platforms would definitely check it out coming up we talk the latest covert treatments on the controversy surrounding the environmental lawyer robert kennedy jr stay tuned to watch.
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the role of the media is to inform the public this mission is now on hold large parts of the media landscape particularly. to. determine what the public can know and from whom has controlled speech. freedom of speach. the maternity town the slums go in and you may never get out some sort of the most
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of. my teenage gang rules here. don't want to move there no let up in my neighborhood good luck you were through with me but. the navy will. kill. you. minus seeing her. i know it was in for the yeah. and melanie when. you know mccain who can use all i see.
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from president donald trump pushing lysol and how drugs are chloroquine into the guy on the corner pushing incense and holy water since the onset of the covert 19 pandemic the now long suffering public has had more american cures fixes and treatments sold to them than we can even begin to count and tragically more bad news came this week after one of the world's biggest trials of covert 19 therapies featuring 4 of the most highly touted potential treatments including said quinn and disappear was finally released to a resoundingly bud science magazine reports that the world health organization study found that none of the 4 treatments in the solidarity trial which unrolled more than $11000.00 patients and $400.00 hospitals around the grow increase are
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viable not even the much touted antiviral drug does best appear and while treatment has gotten somewhat better since the early days of the pandemic especially for the likes of chris christie and donald trump news like this leaves many of us wondering when will medical science and our leaders get a hold of this deadly disease and if we do get a hold of it through a vaccine or breakthrough treatment how do we keep those potential lifesaving drugs drugs from getting bottled up in the greed of the pharmaceutical companies and the partisan politics of washington joining us now to discuss this public health conundrum is the environmentalist and founder and chairman of the children's health defense robert kennedy jr robert thank you so much always a pleasure having me on the show. so robert as a longtime critic of the u.s. government's and big farmers vaccination programs what do you feel people should be on the lookout for as more 'd and more news comes in hyping possible breakthrough treatments and vaccines or cures for covert 19. i
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should. really. read. out of the pandemic i've come from x. and i think vaccines are. the route of treatment for the pharmaceutical and a because $18000000000.00 enterprise. elegy has arranged essentially almost $20000000000.00 maxine and only one point or $6000000000.00 to any or all isn't off the shelf of repurposed drugs and i think that that is where doctors who are frontline doctors who are really you know doing the work treating these patients are fighting really you know encouraging success stories it's on it's surprise to anybody. and watching this process that rem does a fear fell on its face and there is another one of telling kind of vanity
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projects he tried it out and he developed it in his lab. his lab most people understand what the what dr does is a $7600000000.00 annual budget and he uses that money not to research the yeti ology where his autism coming from where our food allergies coming from where i have all these abbott and make some chronic disease 4 percent of our children and he can't office it was 12 percent eat hasn't worked for where they're coming from essentially is funding an incubation and. a facility for the pharmaceutical industry so each paid in with grants of about $13000.00 festa gators across the united states and some other countries.
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experiment on new drugs that are sold the pharmaceutical industry and the royalties from those drugs part of them comes after. individuals with and and i aged and jewett and i age and i ate specifically which for example with moderne own a half a patent will get royalties. as if it is one of those drugs and it's a drug he wants to push because in his lots and lots of money and fame for his group he tried it on design it didn't work he tried it on it a lot it didn't work he tried to sell it to us for a coronavirus and in the middle of the study that he's on search he did something utterly on ethical which is he convinced the i.r.b. . he controls to change the criteria of that study
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originally when they studied it and. looked at why the rendez affair was going to prevent deaths and when they realize it did not prevent any. he said let's change the protocol the site so we're looking at the auctions and all states and they found that on average it did not. read it is about $15.00 to $8.00 hospitals. equal that of success and they started marketing it even arranged not 100 percent. so why. government so this just a racket. at the same time that i think chinese did a. lot with patients. are you a show this week completed it's on you know massive. show there is no benefit there incidentally the cost. product cost for making
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a beer is $10.00. gilliatt was selling with out cheese permission for $3300.00 to us and the reason they justify that is they said well by reducing the hospital stays for 3 days as an out and cause an average 1000 dollars a day we are going to charge medicare which because arrange for f.d.a. to approve it they now have to pay for it. actually airs are now paying $3000.00 as you know is circular rack on it while being locked my drugs for and which is has proven it can and can work not great a treatment you're fat which is obvious in this car in the late age. i declare i dropped the cork when. it doesn't work in the late
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stages you my use of drugs occur when in the 1st 7 days after exposure you have to use it was great and you have to the max has it weenies right you just need any. action and hospitalizations if you use it like that but algae has a limited. drug a drug. with a dozen different people making it there is no profit to the pharmaceutical company and it cost about $15.00 for those at me and i'll prepare took out a large group. erf or his vanity project which is run as fair. and robert may have a question related to back thing to in general so the flu vaccine has existed in america for decades now but in 201829000 the flu season just under 50 percent of
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americans actually took that vaccine and that's well below the 70 percent target because the vaccine is typically only taken by targeted groups older people people with preexisting conditions could we expect to see the same level of vaccinations even if a 1000 vaccine was to hit the market or got about a minute left. really. the question is do flu shots were a reason people don't take on is because the british medical journal cochrane collaboration which of your alternate arbiters for vaccine wrist and have it as simply a flu shot doesn't work or more likely if you get the flu shot you get an on flu upper respiratory infection and there are now 7 studies you can look at our web site and show that if you get it you are much more likely to get coronavirus it's called passage and priming and it primes you to get groggy virus and more and more
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people are reading those studies understanding the science and understandably are a lot of flu shot robert are going to say thank you so much for coming on today and given our audience such a thorough information on this subject it's always a lot of avignon and thank you very much sir for coming on today. actually your car each. charged and. gives server for port their word out there are everybody who want to show what information and that is our show for you today remember in this world we are not told that we are loved enough so i tell you all i love you i am tyrol but interrupt and i will be sick probably keep on watching all those hawks out there and have a great day unlike the others.
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in the 1920 s. and thirty's several 100 african-americans moved to the soviet union and many of their descendants still live in russia. looking at the post because they know no rush but us though i put a stop yes it got lisa cohen things in your bios at their death and evil stuff back home but i can merican suffered from racism and a complete lack of prospects. is that not the smug the deal and i'd be a losing show one by else a store front but by doing. so they decided to leave everything behind and start a new life in a country about which they knew almost nothing at all some of the african americans who were to sylvia here in the 90s period found great the crowd. pleasing moulay a golf you know going to go on clothes. and now almost a 100 years later the history is repeating itself my great grandfather george time
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went to russia. hobbled worst time to go anywhere why not me. why don't i come here. the world is. driven by a dreamer shaped by one person with those but. no dares thinks. we dare to ask.
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the maternity town the slums go in and you may never get out so those are the most of. my teenage gang rules here. no one of you to move there no love in my neighborhood good luck. but. name me will be a very tall. man seeing her. and now it's looking for the yeah well i knew you as soon as me and melanie when i wouldn't. you know mccain who commutes all i see.
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is your media a reflection of reality. in a world transformed. what will make you feel safe. isolation community. are you going the right way or are you being led to. direct. what is true what is faith. in the world corrupted you need to descend. to join us in the depths. or remain in the shallows. an entire village in alaska. another country trying to wipe out an american town. we do everything in our power to protect. water they escaping climate change is the
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same threat right now alaska seems some of the fastest coastal erosion in the world we lost about 35 feet. 35 feet of ground in just about 3 months while we were measuring. it is fast paced the river is $35.00 closer than how. was your or i think we're part of the 1st for. joining me every thursday on the alex i'm i'm sure and i'll be speaking to us of the world of politics sports business i'm show business i'll see of that.
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design go ahead france intensifies muslim country in satirical magazine she adds fuel to the fire by publishing a karting mocking the turkish president ankara has vowed to retaliate. with racial tensions spike in the united states just days before the election there philadelphia is shaken by a 2nd night of violent protests and looting after a black man is show dead by police and russia becomes one of the 1st countries to apply to the world health organization to red states coby jab for emergency use in a bid to retire so you know that is infections in the country saw.

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