tv Watching the Hawks RT November 12, 2020 1:30am-2:00am EST
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they're mobilizing the production or at least part of the production to hungary., there is a company operating here in ungar e.u., which has been producing back scenes for other viruses and diseases of course. but they seem to be able to transfer their capacity in a way that they would be able to be involved in the kind of production cycle. let me just write up today. thanks for joining me this morning. about 90 international updates for you in half an hour. so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy confrontation, let it be an arms. race is often scary, dramatic development, only closely. i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very critical time time to sit down and talk
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themselves to the ability to buy damn near anything your imagination desires from the comfort of your own home. in just a click or 2, we must truly, truly be living in a brand new gilded age of prosperity. yeah, not so much new. not at all. apart from all of our gadgets, of convenience and entertainment, at our fingertips, the meat hook reality is that according to the u.s. labor department, u.s. jobless claims of risen over 800000 since august. we've had more than $75000000.00 claims for unemployment insurance. since the start of the pandemic all the way back in march, in fact the number of u.s. citizens living in poverty has jumped from 9 percent back in june to over 11 percent in september. and that number is still rising, showing no signs of future decline. but things things aren't all bad for some u.s. citizens. you see while main street crumbles from disease oppression and degradation. wall street in our billionaire class. well my friends,
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they have been thriving. you see, while millions upon millions of us have lost their jobs and health insurance all across this country, u.s. billionaire saw their combined net worth surge by more than 930000000000 dollars bringing it the collective wealth of just $644.00 people to a staggering $3.00 trillion $1.03 trillion dollars in just $644.00 people a that's according to a new, an analysis recently released by americans for tax fairness, the institute for public studies, who have been tracking wealth inequality in america since the start of the cold 19 pandemic. yes, according to their numbers, these greedy few saw their wealth rise by more than 33 percent during this crisis and pain. and just to give you some perspective that $940000000000.00 gain is roughly 3 times bigger than the paltry $300000000000.00 the corporate job
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themselves. mitch mcconnell put into his now abandoned september pandemic relief bill. my friends, this massive wealth stock is not the american dream at work. it's far from it. it's an american mare. and as it is why we will always be watching the hawks. if you want to go on a city street, you want to see this is this joyce state. i'll see rolls royce graves. see this lady's systemic deception is late show which i will. so we will all right, well, we're going to watch in the dark side. and i'm obese, across a range of there's a massive amount of wealth to be bestowed upon the $644.00 people, especially seeing all that wealth raised up while the rest of us have been suffering for the last 9 months. 8 months. oh absolutely,
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and i think i've told you this before, it seems like whenever there is pestilence, whenever there is extreme poverty or degradation across america, there are always an elite group of people that tend to make more and more money off of other people's if they manage and that's what we're seeing, the likes of jeff based and others. oh yeah. let's look at the likes of these others, or you would just, jeff bezos, mark zuckerberg, ben gilbert, chairman, a quick look at what they've made. i mean, jeff bezos wrote, grew from 113000000000 in march 18th 203000000000 by october increase 80 percent zuckerberg 54700000000 in march 18th to 101000000000 by october 30th, 85 percent increase. the law must 24600000000 march 18th, now close to $100000000000.00. and ben gilbert, chairman of quicken loans, saw his world rocket by 656 percent 49000000000 at the start of the year from $6000000000.00 at the start of the year to $49000000000.00. now at the end of the year, that's massive wealth heading their way. now i get it for a jet basis,
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for instance, because the majority of us are still using amazon, especially when you know all of this, the words were raided and everything at the start of 1000. a lot of people are turning to online shopping. i get it for face, we're talking about mark zuckerberg because of the ad buys that campaigns are using and as well as you know, different political groups right now in a campaign election cycle. i don't get it. and i didn't know it. i look at it like this and i'll actually go the opposite. i don't get it for any of them. and here's why i wondered, i understand logically, but i will say this, we always talk about a minimum wage. and my father actually brought this up in our group that we need to have a maximum wage. because when you have people making this much money, that gives them more power and control over so many different aspects of this country that it's ungodly. what do you need that much money for at the end of the day? no, i agree with you there. and what we know about amazon is that the majority of their workers are full time workers. these are contractors. so you know,
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when coburn 1000 hit, it meant that a lot of people were either laid off or they already didn't have health insurance. and we also know that they weren't given the proper p.p.a. to protect them while they were working in these warehouses. so there's a lot going on at the back story there as well. i mean, look like there's just brought a brand new $165000000.00 homes here that goes along with 80000000 dollars worth of new york apartments. meanwhile, nearly 62000000, people lost work between march 21st and september 19th, 98000 businesses, small businesses closed. that is not how a country or economy could possibly survive when you have that much money flowing to the top. and so little going to the rest of us if there wasn't enough going on in the lead up to the 2020 alexion here in the u.s. . a stunning revelation is sending shock waves across the country. lawyers say president trump's border policy has left over $500.00 migrant children without their parents. that's right. somewhere in the shuffle of cool detention policies and family separations,
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hundreds of kids are now left without their parents at all. and the u.s. government doesn't seem to know where those parents are and aren't providing much information on exactly how they banished. according to court filings obtained by n.b.c. news, lawyers appointed to represent minors say that $545.00 parents can't be found. the attorneys believe that 2 thirds of the parents were deported to central america before they could be reunited with their young ones. joining us now to shed light on this is immigration attorney alan or jr. welcome, alan. thank you for having me. well, and i know that you have talked about this a lot in social media in other circles as well. let's start with the basics. how can the u.s. government lose 545 parents? and what happens now to these orphan kids? so i think a little bit of this branding of the parent is losing the conversation because we should be talking about how many kids in the last 545 kids, as well as the parent. the last shift the conversation they had 545,
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of their kids that are here. that are now orphaned or that have been abandoned in the united states because of us. and the way it happened is by design, because we're able to keep up with anything that we want to but with people with luggage, with people, with the military. we can keep up with anything we were people going to the moon. so really this is by design that they didn't care enough to sort of track the parents to these kids. and so the problem of this is it started in 2017. so these kids have been separated for 2 years or more, basically, or more. and the concept is that many of these kids have more separated from their parents and they have with their parents. and that's the biggest problem that we're sort of facing here. that was the us, all that is clearly against international law. and now we're trying to write that drugs border policies. we been scrutinizing him for a long time, especially on this show. and in other places. do you think at all that there's a new revelation is going to affect him at the polls and you know, will this play a role in the election and what can be done to rectify the damage? you talk about kids been away from their parents for more than 2 years now,
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longer than they were with their parents. can this ever be rectified and fixed? so the rectification of it probably i don't really know how you think that, that issue when you take away the someone as a toddler and someone is a kid at that age frame, they are forever damaged in the only way we can sort of right size that is the sort of give them some sort of green card and the parents just sort of say we need to move forward. and the best way we can, or regards to the policy suburban women are really impacted by kids. and this is really been a good talking point for people, but i think at this point, all the christian, all the pro-life people, everyone says they're out there about the kids and kids in school. and in coven need to now rise up and ask their congressperson is running for office. what about the 545 kids? i think would have been really bad. but 545, that's a really horrible. and that's out of the 2000 that they had already separated in the very beginning. and the real issue of this is, why were they separated the 1st point today? you see d.h. as coming back and saying, are you saying, well, the parents don't want them back?
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well, back into the cart, and those are very complex conversations that we can have with each individual case by case, depending on where the fairness, if you can. in fact, on that, because 283 of them, they don't even know what the parents are, but you can't really have a conversation thing. the parents don't want them back because they should have never been separated in the 1st place. much less can you claim that as our 1st lady did, that these kids are better off now than they were of their parents because they have and they have to pay. that's really not a conversation i want to have with anyone. it's irrational. it's also one has been proven false because we know a lot of those kids were found sleeping on floors and didn't have anything to clean their bodies much less their teeth. but alan, i have another question for you. we know about the family separations and this, you know, bombshell story. but amid these i miss him from and there's also the devastating news that trump is ratcheting up calls to continue those immigrant raids across cities in america just a few days out of election day. what are your thoughts there, and why do you think the president is targeting sanctuary cities right now, some of which are also in battleground states. so it's a circus,
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and it's really not about enforcement because you've been in charge for 30 years. you have not deported as many people as the former president who you clearly said you had a storm coverage of the and he did it. and today you went after 13000 individuals that came in and said they had a job when they didn't have a job. therefore, they weren't taking away jobs for american workers, but you use our resources during code that to go up to 13 students falsely claim that they were working. right. i think there should be adjusting our expectation for that. but at this point in time, do i think those 13 students or national security harm are more important than cobra, or really don't think that shows a lack of direction and control. and what we all know right now is that really isn't when people in the whole thing, you're doing this big around the butt, deportation when in fact you have a judge after a judge saying you see these private prison that we're paying for. and i think right now with the deficit being absorbed, is it americans need to start asking, why are we paying so much for prison? that's a great question as to why we're paying so much for prisons and why is american tax dollars being used to pay for what i've called them this before and you've agreed
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with you are sentient concentration camps for these poor people who have come across our border that then we've now thrown in jail, you know, separated them from their kids now essentially lost 500, some odd, broken up families, and then lost where to send these children. i want to ask just one final question before we go. what is, what possibly is their excuse at this point? when confronted with these numbers, do they have any, any way, excuse whatsoever to how you lose someone's family? know, and they're running away from it. there is no excuse because it's by design. and i think at the end, when they sort of meet themselves, an international court of reports reconciliation of our own congress that they're going to happen, come up with an answer because now there are, there's twitter. there's a policy inside that were sort of shown from n.b.c. that they did it on purpose. yes. the action behind the developments. even miller, so people need to be held accountable for this because it was underdog. at people would be raging in the streets. it isn't happening in another country. remember when, without being on the continent of africa, people were outraged when the operator girls went missing. and the problem of all
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this, that you haven't, any of them, you don't know any of their names. you don't know when you know a case of a government this many people and they don't have any boy how many girls and what their ages are because their narrative. i couldn't agree with you more. this is absolute. people should be outraged by this. we should be heartbroken by this and we should be demanding accountability for this because again, these are children, as you so eloquently pointed out. thank you for your hard work and getting the truth about this out there and all the work that you're doing now. and always a pleasure having you on sir. thank you for having me. all right, as we go to break, remember that you can also start watching marks on the man's with a brand new portable t.v.'s which is available on all platforms coming up. more than 4000 people have died in u.s. jails before their day in court. a former u.s. trial attorney are the reserve joins us to discuss that shocking number of states who are watching the whole
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women with troubled histories and complex court cases. you know, some leave out there is the person that cheesiness and they are considered the most dangerous of criminals. she's in a still above the law for 23 hours of the day. tell me that it's not enough and it will do the women on death row. the way criminal justice reform calls have largely landed on the prison system whose
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conviction were talking mandatory minimum sentencing. 3 strikes laws agree just sentencing mandates that place people of color in prison for much longer terms than their white counterparts. but not getting as much attention or the calls for reforms in the pretrial stage. this stage comes before an accused person ever faces a trial or jury, or a judge. thousands of american sit in jails across this country for months, sometimes years without being found guilty of anything. i know the story will too will, because my old mother languished in jail, never having a day in court. her crime. she couldn't afford bail and had a mental illness. and she wasn't alone, while essentially serving time without a conviction. folks often end up facing severe human rights violations up to and including death. in fact, a recent special report released just last week revealed 4900 $98.00 people died in u.s. jails, many under brutal circumstances. in one case harvey,
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a mentally ill man, was charged with trespassing after he was found standing in the morning rain and left at the sky. the man who called 911 alerted the arriving officer, that hill needed a mental evaluation, but he never got them. instead, he will wish to charge with trespassing jailed and incurred a $500.00 fine. but things only got worse from there. the next day hill flew into a rage at the madison county detention center. in canton, mississippi. 3 guards tackled him, pepper sprayed him, kicked him in the hit. after he was handcuffed, who was slammed against a concrete wall. the officers then lured him away from camera shot and continued to beat the handcuffed man in a subsequent investigation. the guards said hill was so combative and showed superman force that they were required to spawn a respond aggressively. hill was then sent into solitary confinement where guard pinned him to the floor, beat him, then removed his handcuffs. the poor man died just 46 minutes later.
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agree just disgusting, imagining. but hill's case, it isn't unique. he is one of 7571 inmate deaths. reuters documented in the u.s. jails from 20182008 to 2019. joining us now is the riser, the director for the justice and civil liberties institute. welcome arthur. thank you for having me, appreciate it. the deaths in the jails continue to mount across the country and being mindful that these people have never been convicted of anything. why do you think stories like harvey hill's aren't worth even more widespread attention? the criminal justice reform standard bearers tend to focus on. they tend not to focus on jails at all outside of baylor for they're not really looking at cases like this. i think very sadly, the answer is kind of within itself. the reason these individuals are. busy in jail pretrial most the time is because they're too poor to get out and that right there,
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exactly what you described. but your mom that's heartbreaking. i'm sorry to hear that is exactly why these individuals die in jail because they have the smallest voice. and when you have a small voice, you really fall to the very bottom, the list. and i think a really important that just again or stand is that number 7571 from 2000 h. 1800. that's only looking at 500 jails. that's only 16 percent of the jails across the united states. you know, we, there's 3100 jails. so that number is probably much higher. i think what truly breaks my heart about this story is the fact that these are people who are still technically not guilty if you know we still go by that old adage of innocent till proven guilty. i know that's kind of a rarity these days, but you know, that's what really makes this sad. and reports are showing, as you mentioned, that the fatality data in jails has become more and more secretive to on top of not getting all of it, especially of the troubled ministration. traditionally aggregated statistics were
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published every 2 years. we haven't seen that since 2016. a justice department spokesman said there are no plans to issue to report some inmate deaths. how does this hamper advocacy for these people and what problems does this lack of reporting? cause data is everything, it's impossible to create a new policy systems. it's impossible to understand what is happening without truly understanding the actual numbers. because without it, you're just, you're just talking about stories and you know, harvey hill story is tragic, but it's just a vanity outside of this report. and the most important thing to kind of understand about this is that b.d.s. has said that we're not going to go forward. this is not one of those situations where you have the government saying we're giving it, we're gathering it, the bureau of justice. it isn't saying, no, we're not going to turn it over. so how do you ever really advocate for a new set of polls he's done when you don't understand what is happening?
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i mean, we know more about deaths of civilians in iraq that we know about deaths of our own civilians within our jails. and that is outrageous. and are there couldn't, i couldn't put it better. we know that these deaths, many of them are preventable 1st, off with better protocols against abuse, health assessments, corrective action from the work that you do. have you written or supported any model, legislation or policy framework around this issue. and what are your thoughts on things that we can change? well 1st, yes, i do sort of pay or with tracing mirrors and you know, law school that basically argues that nobody should be incarcerated in jail without severe due process. just because they can't afford bail, and even this idea that all we're going to keep people in jail because there are risks to the community. most that kind of bold to be part of my, my, my, my, my language. because who defines what is, what is a public safety risk?
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you know, listen, i'm a center right guy. i care about public safety in a really is a bedrock to me, but this isn't actually make us safer. let me talk about a few statistics. we know that 2 or 3 days in jail for low risk individuals. so these are individuals who do not pose a risk. are 40 percent more likely to commit new crimes than the individuals were held for 24 hours or less. and that numbers only magnify the longer you hold these individuals. low risk individuals or help are $31.00 days or longer, or 71 percent more likely to re-offend. and now when you talk about high risk individuals dollars, no correlation between time in jail, in the likelihood new crimes. what that tells us is that we are actually making ourselves less safe by holding individuals in jail longer than we need to. and why is that? well, of course, it is actually self-explanatory when you were in jail, you lose your job. i mean listen, if you guys didn't come to work for a date, you probably wouldn't lose your job. i would lose my job. i mean, hell, i haven't been to work going to europe because it go good. and still,
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you literally, we do, but if you work at wal-mart, you don't get don't think privileges. you were good wal-mart, you're gone for a day or conversion. you're caught for a day or got your job is gone and you lose your home and you lose your family, you news all your stability. and the last thing i'll point out that you made a very valid point about is jail, is the absolute worst place for individuals who are having mental health issues. i mean, britain is better for god, at least prison. we have reentry programs. you have actual medical care, but individuals who or going to a mental health arts is a worst place you can put him, is jail. and most these individuals are out there for misdemeanors. it is crazy what we're doing. we're making ourselves and say, these are citizens of the united states of america who are not yet of our constitution. and it's very sad. what's happening in the last thing i'll say is the remedy for most these individuals are still remedy. well, i mean,
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one can't afford to get out of jail if you can afford to get a lawyer to add that you were to get out of jail. that's crazy under one of the minute sporting event which or who would protect you know, if you were going to standards, the standards of the 40 of them is fair. what's fair mean for 80 minute crew, unusual? it says serious medical care, but there is no standard of what serious medicare is actually a 6 minute process. no one defines what it, what a speedy process is. all the cards are stacked against these individuals. and if someone like me who is on the right, who believes in limited government, we should be the one standing up against this. this is our job. let's was one thing that's going to cut as my eye are going to catch is why you're with what you're saying is it boggles my mind. the we don't see this kind of reform taking place, especially from the conservative side of the political spectrum because they are for smaller government. and this is the very definition of government overreach,
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but i want to ask you, why is our system now so built to favor the prosecution and the government as opposed to the innocent individual in the civilian? because we've baked it in, we baked into the system, we're doing it for years. i mean we, the politicians have been pounding their, their fists on podiums and yelling about the danger of the boogeyman that's coming to get us. and that gets them elected. and because it's gotten elected, they've kept doing it and i'll tell you, you cannot point to one thing in the united states where beer has driven policy. and we ended up in a better place every single time we've ended up going to worst place. and that is exactly what's going on with jail. now, there is some light on the horizon. there are some reforms happening. there are many jurisdictions around this country in red areas that have actually made a difference. i mean, new orleans actually has decreased its jail population. chicago has releases jail population, so there are some good things happening. but we're still talking about by 1000 people who have died in jail and the vast majority are people who have committed
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misdemeanors. who have mental health issues with drug issues. we should be protecting these people. but by our constitution exactly, says that we should be protecting these people, as you so eloquently pointed out earlier, that's the 5000 that we know of. at this point, arthur reserve, the director, criminal justice and civil liberties on our street. thank you so much for coming on and educating our guests. our audience today. always a pleasure, i really appreciate it. thank you. yes sir. thank you man. a lot of that's just breaks my heart when i see that because it is, it's innocent till proven guilty. and our system tells us everything other than that by their actions and that they have money like you said, oh, you're innocent. if you have lots of money and then you're innocent, i guess is how that works. all right, everybody, that is our show for you today. remember in this world we are definitely not told that we are loved and up. so i tell you all, i love you, i roll them, throw up on the beach across, keep on watching all those hawks out there and have a great day and that everybody
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you need to descend to join us in the depths or remain in the shallows. because there's a survival guide. book station, just eyeball to start simply at the surface. be sure you don't get it back. oh, heck, no. repatriations. look at the rest of 7 years. philippa separate. kaiser for the world is driven by a dream shaped by one person. those with
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no dares thinks we dare to ask for little flashes on the rest. in the armenian capitalist crowds that demand the prime minister, resigned no peace till they see as a complete, should like to azerbaijan in the war over the door of the car about creature haiti . because of the century or the one tree or viewed all of these long freighter with no right. nothing to see here. pro-democrat media trying to eliminate all traces of doubt about the integrity of the 2020 us election proud to .
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