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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  February 11, 2021 7:30am-8:01am EST

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and because it. 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. by. what is true what is faith. in the world corrupted you need to descend. to join us in the death. or inmate in the shallow. dark industry comes to life in los angeles every night. dozens of women sells their
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bodies on the streets many of them under-age. los angeles police reveal a taste of their daily challenge no if you're going to exploit a child here in los angeles they were going to come as you would see officers going undercover as 6 workers and customers to fight the 6 trade. greetings and salutation all right newly elected president joe biden overturning most of donald trump's most prized executive actions within 48 hours of taking office and the united states senate now locked in a battle to try to impeach mr trump for a 2nd time one would think the bided ministrations and the democratic party as
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a whole would be shunning any and all policies or actions under took by the trumpet ministration on every single level possible. you would think that but that my friends has not been the case when it comes to the persecution of julian a son this week under the pressure of a february 12th appeal deadline the bided ministration announced that they will continue to seek to extradite expounder julian asylums from the united kingdom to the united states to face hacking conspiracy charges this my friends comes after a british judge of unless the bar at barrett serves january 4th ruling where she unequivocal he declared that she had found that the mental condition of mr assad of such that it would be oppressive to extradite him to the united states of america in other words the current conditions of the united states prison and justice systems are so abhorrent so all whole that extraditing mr
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a songe for trial in the us actually puts his life and health in danger regardless of the outcome of the trial. this move by the by did ministration comes up for a coalition of press freedom groups that includes the american civil liberties union amnesty international usa the committee to protect journalists the electronic frontier foundation human rights watch and reporters without borders just to name a few sent a letter to the administration asking the by administration to drop the charges and not appeal the judge's ruling the letter states quote the indictment of mr threatens press freedom because much of the conduct described in the indictment is conduct that journalists and engage in routinely and that they must engage in in order to do the work the public needs them to do. so it appears when it comes to
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attacking press freedoms through the indictment of julian assange is the song remains the same regardless of the elephant or donkey who set up shop in the oval office and start watching those hawks. on a city street. that are so let's see this is joyce state. great city displays systemic deceptions so which were so you'll. welcome everyone to watching the hawks i am a robot and i'm of the goodness gracious the media like wow i didn't i'm not shocked that the by administration decided to follow in the donald trump footsteps but i think there were a lot of people that were kind of hoping against hope that they might change the 2 but they might say you know what trump and them went after him hard we don't want
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to open up this can of worms but i guess the justice department is still going to pursue it so i think i might be someone in the minority here i never thought i think will think will be the biden administration or the. coming by team that julian assad was ever going to be a top priority i think that you know for the justice department they had some very some very serious directives that came from the campaign but also from some of the leaders they've chosen for the department and none of them happened to be him so it's not necessarily surprising i do think that there are advocates who honestly believe that things would change but again it wasn't a top priority issue for them on the campaign trail it wasn't something they promised anyone and it didn't necessarily look like things were going to change for him under this administration yeah i completely agree that's the that's the tragedy of a minute just so people are clear the trumpet ministration indicted on 17 counts of espionage and one count of conspiracy to commit a computer crime if extradited. would face up to 175 years in prison.
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for essentially exposing you know u.s. war crimes releasing all this information they're weak you leaks but 175 years in prison and i can't disagree with the journalist when they say really at the end of the day. he's publishing material talking to sources and getting sources to give you things that they're not supposed to that's part of the journalist's job that's part of investigative journalist it's hard for the u.s. to justify this is especially the by the ministration which i think a benchley they're going to have to because remember this wasn't done under obama obama and his people sudden to not touch on this with a 10 foot pole yeah i think that there are many questions that arise because of that specifically especially because we come off of the a trumpet ministration they treated journalists as well as whistleblowers really really poorly and so to reset that clock i think that the biden administration has a lot of work to do i'm not necessarily sure that they make that noticed by jumping to a songe in this case i think that they are for the most part probably going to stay
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away from it do you think that you know do you think the kind of that animosity within the democratic party still goes back to the idea of the you know what was in on it with the russians and donald trump in a whole kind of russia gate mess. is that really hold that much weight that that's why they just don't want to move on that i think that might be part of it but i think that the greater extent is the the tragedy that came out of the d.n.c. from this the d.n.c. got hit hard you know whether they want to tie it to russia gate or whatever the d.n.c. had a lot of work to build back and it takes a long time for people to forget that we have to remember that the majority of this current administration are stalwarts when it comes to d.n.c. leadership but also d.n.c. funding and i just don't see them pushing that hard to get something that they feel is the albatross that basically created such friction in the d.n.c. and. this is at the time it was always funny to me when all this was breaking and they're going to point fingers every which way it's like well then don't write the emails you know if you didn't if you didn't want people to be offended than them
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why aren't we going back and saying well regardless of how they were they were revealed regardless of who hacked to or regardless of all of that you still have the basic problem of the of the hills to begin with which is pretty funny and you know i think it's sad to see too because i feel like we're. you know right now you don't see as many journalists i mean you did see these organizations these 20 organizations step up but right now you're not seeing a lot of journalists or so-called journalists in the u.s. step up and say hey regardless of how i might feel about julian assange personally the elements of that are at stake you're pretty severe and it's frightening to see how many mainstream journalists are just kind of washing their hands and ignoring this entire extradition and everything going on and i think that's the bigger issue if we saw a mainstream journalist that we solved your you know your cable news talking heads come out and push for this if we saw people from the new york times from the washington post from the tribute if we saw those types step out and say something i think we would be in a different spot without that because they see themselves as entirely different
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journalist than juliana songe we're not going to see any reaction. at all to busy kind of troll in the message boards like proper. you can't talk about georgia without talking about stacy abrams she's credit with organizing political strategy and blasting through decades of voter suppression tactics to get georgia's black population to the polls georgia going for biden and changing the balance of the senate is seen as a miracle but when you dig deeper really wasn't a recent article in the nation outlined for reasons why georgia turned believe in the ingredients other states need to do the same favorable to reign level 5 leaders strong civic engagement organizations and out of the way. georgia's population demographics were right obama lost the peach state in 2008 by 205000 votes and nearly 1000000 eligible people of color never cast a ballot in the 1st place the increase in the number of voters of color casting
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ballots change the trajectory and 2020. and who you won matters. stacy abrams ran a historic campaign for governor and even though she lost her race put georgia in the national spotlight fast forward to 2020 both john office and reverend raphael warnock the 1st jewish senator from georgia and the 1st black senator from the state not only outpace the republican opponents and fundraising but also vision think organizations like fair fight new georgia project and others make community organizing priority number one and it worked lastly funding matters stacie able to 2012 pack georgia next raised $53000.00 in 2020 her organization their fight raised a whopping $90000000.90 more money equals more opportunities more boots on the ground more ads more mailers more calls more impact texas is believed to be the next state in line to quit because the alignment of key ingredients is there but
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republicans aren't letting their territory go without a fight after a record turnout in 2020 state republican parties are making it harder for minority voters to get to the polls a recent analysis by the brennan center for justice found that 106 bills have been filed by republican lawmakers in $28.00 states that would actively restrict voting the group also found $406.00 bills and $35.00 states that would expand voting access. the voter restriction bills would limit votes by mail and new voter id requirements and make it harder to register and easier to purge voters from the rolls. you know i. love my father for many reasons and one of the things that you drilled into my head as a young age was i mean you hear people talk about you know the vote being threatened and people trying to steal the vote usually the people who are you know when the loudest or the ones who are actually are trying to steal a little bit of britain to vote for people and he drilled that into my head of a young age and it's true when you look at the numbers new see that and sort of
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hear that that's what they're trying to do in texas but they're trying to get all these states that they lost last election it does not surprise me no absolutely and it's really frustrating because one of the reasons why the georgia is now top of the mind for democrats particularly across the south which has been a republican stronghold for a very long time is that they're looking at the key ingredient or the things they think may be georgia flip georgia much like texas they are similar in this sense they have demographics that are very strong for minority voters they have a large profits of black voters texas as large opponents of black and latino voters and these demographics typically vote more early more liberal the problem is they don't always turn out in large numbers part of that is because of what we've seen with voter suppression the other part is voter id laws in certain places and honestly in texas we've also seen a lot of threats particularly towards latino voters that keep them away from the polls these demographic trends a relocation have caused a huge spotlight on the south because we've seen places like chicago detroit areas
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across wisconsin new york l.a. these individuals are now moving to the south and they're looking at places like texas which has over the past decade amassed 8 her in the private sector industry an organization so now they can come in and actually find work at a place that has a cheaper cost of living than a lot of these other cities but that also brings in its own problems when it comes to republicans now saying hey these people don't need to vote here because. we're used to our population being what it is that's what's interesting too is that you are seeing flight from the coasts into the you know into lands of the country because it's cheaper to live at the end of the dam and you try to live in new york washington all these the moment you get a little bit of money like i'm going to pay this rent to be more when i can go into places around the country south of the carolinas even you know texas georgia you can find these places where i can find a cheap place to live everything is so wise anyway everything's done over a computer now anyway why would i want to live in a major city so i'm going to bring my boat to the top let me ask you this is one of the big reasons and this speaks to texas to because you know we saw
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a lot of people you know hit the hit the dirt in texas a lot of democrats have you know i'm not make it you know a lot of people are but is it also ultimately dependent on who they're voting against and who the democrats are choosing to run that's really ultimately always going to matter how much money you throw out of them how good canvassing you do that's ultimately what's going to cast votes for exactly you make you make a good point it's actually one of the 4 points that are being looked at in terms of flipping states and a candidate you choose matters you just put anybody up one of the reasons why we saw such a great turnout in georgia was because when you put up the pastor who basically took the mantle from martin king jr he was going to automatically turn out the black vote john also if he turned out a large segment of the vote particular because the conservatives ran a campaign of anti-semitism at the end of the day if you're creating a creating campaign is that extend a man's nose to apparently make him look more jewish and threatening ok this is it
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was 2020 at the time but this is still extremely problematic though all it did was made people come out in stronger number. you know also to i mean look we talked about money you know at the end of the day we know money rules all when it comes to elections how is that going to play because to me every time i hear money while yeah it does like you said it buys you boots on the ground it buys you flyers it buys you your television ads to me though that also says guess what you're not buying people you buy and people. going to strings on you know you're right but to a certain extent you have to georgia did this well they had to nationalize georgia 2 years ago you couldn't have told anyone with the exception of stacy abrams and her organizers that george would have ever turned blue she believed in it she worked on it for 15 years at the end of the day she would start an organization in a pac that raised a paltry amount to turn our entire state but come 2020 after she had you know run a governor campaign she ended up getting a nationalized presence because all of america now want to see her they want to
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know what's going to is that a money going to be there for states like georgia or texas come the midterms or come the next presidential election when you don't have them is running against donald trump that's a really good question i think that they're you know trying to make that happen now texas for instance has the texas organizing project they are extremely underfunded for state as large as texas they're arguing that you know they make it to those 1000000 dollar benchmarks they're going to be able to put more boots on the ground get more people interested in all honesty we know that in america people come out every 4 years that's when you see the largest amount of people come out because the presence of the top of the ticket when you don't have a present at the top of the ticket you're going to have to run very differently and you don't have to be a lot more sure to eat interesting stuff actually all right everybody as we go to break remember you could also start watching the hawks on the equally fascinating brand new portable t.v. ad which is now available on all platforms please check it out coming up we discuss the future of travel and work over covered 19 and what role the actual nation has for centuries we play and that is not one of the states to watch.
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smart individuals are daring and smart corporations are doing and increasingly now countries are dying is stockpiling because by using flaring gas tricks to convert
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it into harvest money ever. that is the big point. new gold rush is underway and gonna thousands of ill equipped workers are flocking to the gold fields hoping to strike it rich. as. children are torn between gold. was very poor i thought i was doing my best to get back to school which side will have the strongest appeal. all right welcome back everyone let's talk a little coded currently here in the united states of america we have over 27000000 cases of covert 90 in the last more than 468000 souls to this pandemic
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worldwide the covert number so that 107000000 cases in over 2300000 doubts whether we like it or not this disease is affected every single aspect of our lives and it is here to stay for the for the foreseeable future despite the incredible breakthroughs we've had in the form of back summations against this virus from our jobs our schools to even our super bowls our lives have changed so now is the time to start looking for better ways we are going to live and deal with life under covert time to look to the future one businessman inventor and former united nations officials isaac daniel and his company world help access hope to help make the future of travel in the age of covidien vaccinations a little easier through their new product vax passport he joins us now to discuss this product thank you mr bennett for joining us. thank you for having me and shouted so i want to ask you 1st what exactly is your company's product is vax
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passport and how is it and how is there anything in it and is there anything else like it in the marketplace today. all are what is more. unique because of the privacy of it. we want to make sure that we would tax the privacy of the use of income so for. have assessed so it what are you administrate of whether you are a gent from the. or it's all a government agency you must have the right to be able to assess whether you are corporates in or. are pretty much up. restaurants or or any companies you also want to make sure that you have the right assists so we think when you know we have on our bus. and who will be up there by us and it an essentially works by allow you know explain a little bit how the passport actually works. right now we are this is
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a we have to. we have to become much and i want to have the messiah like electronics here so this is so much for. it's too crowded inside all 'd the missions almost so we're going after all and. this is a just like a possible so easy for you to recoup or. wanted to point 3 a few measures in the segment is very useful to begin to adopt these things i would have to light up the wall and we need to be able to get every kind of because there is a need for live you have to begin to figure out how we can be to move around and do things to do it with no money this is for. like for somebody about it if you are going to travel from less of washington d.c.
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to dulles you can have to switch you so you have your driver license inside and you can also lose your own recording monologue if you want to sit with the. white dude what are our people our nation. are you to this. gentleman samoa who you are. the information about here it's been there done that we can see. what it will be called. and they can we all your information only again and that's one of the keys. and i think you spoke about this a moment ago you know privacy and security are very important issues in today's world especially when it comes to sensitive information like our medical records what types of assurances can you give folks watching this that your product can protect and keep their information secure and you know what how how how do you made
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a gate any type you know bro. wrongdoing by someone who it may land in the hand that. does that's a good question thank you one thing that i always pride is privacy i believe we all need to put tests whatever we have so what we do here with these particular possibilities of. us impossible that we let you have ownership of it so everything from the time that you register your information into the part of you are in control of it we didn't we didn't even know what and what you are going to get out of it so for example when you are about to get the digital version of it you'll actually celebrity your part up it's what you call it. vice com you go to the pub it gets all your information i say ok i want to know how my digits are down will you get a digital download only you the only time you can get one of a set of that if you don't know is when you open the phone and try to use it in
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never go away from you that is what makes you so we go from one step or another to assure privacy is completely meant it's all. it's going to be one of those legs and yes people are going to need to know whether or not you're vaccinate or not and this is where you know something like your product can come into play what i want to ask you know what do you believe is the reality of a future that demands you know a vaccination verification or to travel 'd or even work and i want to ask you truly what do you believe are the legal dangers and the public safety benefits from having those kind of regulations that i can't get onto it plame with unless i've been vaccinated or i can't go to work unless i've been vaccinated i mean if there's good and there's bad to this is there not. that isn't who i want to be there is good and there is bad and what we are about to do i think the administration is doing their best to ensure a field the the over. the oldest of people to give
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a bit did when the best in assuring that we have everything that they wanted the possum we don't want it out us time is privacy says very paramount's to everyone and we don't so where it is going to do ensure our. information is protected so that's why we also making sure that this information here is something that you're not in control so it now in terms of what i want to go to over see you want to try what i mentioned yet out of point 3 already demanding this type of thing if you noticed it to long for us to be able to demand 72 hours before your texting the complete united states when it went on us people like you know. they don't need them then mike all of them have been we commence in the farm or we are going india also want us to going to live in missions that is so is it them apart from that
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sense of right and yes what what we should our people want us and i would love their lives if i did lead on you know it's going to be a really interesting time moving forward and i want to thank you for coming on the show today and educating our audience of some of the work you're doing to try to you know help them navigate these very confusing and and testing times forward living under this thank you so much sir. he did thank you for having nothing should think you are let's put a shop today with a look at the most ubiquitous of the roaring 2020 most important fashion assessor yes the face mask yes in the time of covert $1000.00 without a doubt the end $95.00 mask in the cloth mass to become the biggest addition to the wardrobe of human beings since well be an issue but what are we going to do with the millions and maybe even billions of discarded masks while a team of researchers in melbourne australia may have found the answer finally turn them all 'd into roads yes there's another scientist at royal melbourne institute of technology in melbourne technical college of creative the new composite material
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that is roughly a mixture of 2 percent shredded mask space mass and recycled concrete aggregate they discovered that there's a new road material not only increases road flexibility in der building but if you pave just one kilometer of a 2 way road with this recycled concrete aggregate mixed with 3000000 shredded base mass it would remove 93 tons of waste from a landfill is great stuff. already ready that is are so few today remember in this world we are not told that we are loved enough so i tell you all i love you i am tight rope and true and i would be so cross keep watching those hawks out there and have a great day and night. a dark industry comes to life in los angeles every night. dozens of women sells their
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bodies on the streets many of them under-age. los angeles police reveal a taste of their daily challenge no if you're going to exploit for a child here in los angeles they were going to come out you see officers going undercover as 6 workers and customers to fight the 6 trades. the reason for doing this study and the reason it's. those controversial and still important is that it demonstrates the power of social situations and playing roles that can lead healthy good ordinary people to do really bad things. knowing through the woods and who didn't walk the dog.
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and i don't buy that in a can matter i can add wa. s. and a bad national. and not. just us but still some miles on a pole on a limb on that one has. an eye on mobile. and the national association. buffalo has said the community. but i bet all small. cannot give those in the south other in the north you know help me get a feel of a good. shot and know if and when i'm. in my name. right.
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in the day's headlines the head of the u.k.'s parliamentary health committee admits mishandling the covert response of prime minister boris johnson reveals the country will need to vaccinate all over again in the fall. the british government threatens to jail people for up to 10 years if they lie about travelling to cope with hotspots we put the issue up for debate. in the big issues that we saw it from these people can we use the united kingdom from countries where the cheap 3 countries know who chose to go. also this hour germany extends its lock down to march as new viral strain sparked fears of a 3rd wave of the pandemic. and donald trump's son.

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