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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  June 2, 2021 2:30am-3:00am EDT

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for now i wish you a great day. ah, [000:00:00;00] ah, ah ah, ah ah, join me every thursday on the alex silent shore and i'll be speaking to guess in the world, the politics, sport, business and show business. i'll see you then in
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the greetings and salutations. after a 2020 election cycle that brought record turn out largely due to malian boating and the pan demik and voters of color and new voters showing up and drove the republican party has decided to put the kibosh on it all. despite the fact, the republicans picked up some congressional seats maintain leverage and down ballot races and still control the majority of governorship in america. they're calling foul on the electoral process. these calls are driven by former president trump's reluctance to accept that he lost baron square in november, but conservative. they never let backs get in the way of a good lot. a lie that's resulted in inlets recounts, thrown out court cases, no real evidence of widespread voter fraud or even sizable,
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small spread boat abroad. georgia farm jo biden's victory, 3 times after 3 separate count of the ballots. that didn't stop broad conspiracy theorist. i'm saying the system was rig. same thing happened in arizona, pennsylvania, michigan, arizona, nevada, and wisconsin. all states where biden's victory fell among racial lines. heavy turn out in communities of color, specifically the black community paved the way for the buying presidency. but instead of trying to expand their base and appeal to diverse voters, the party of trump has decided to essentially stop people of color from voting altogether or just make it damn hard. on the heels of georgia and florida, republicans passing, sleeping voter restriction bill, texas was next in line. that is until democrats walked off the state house floor late sunday night leading republicans without the court needed to approve the bill . senate bill 7 is effectively
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d. o way and this year's legislative session and the total race, right. it, war applique call the 1921 tulsa rates massacre. if finally getting the coverage, it deserves 100 years later. the massacre took place in tulsa, oklahoma from may 31st to june, 1st 921. when mobs of white residents, given weapons and clearance from city officials attack black residents rated their homes, burned their businesses and destroyed with the nation's most vibrant black business districts. it became known as the single worst incident of racial violence in american history of the story of origins. it's long term impact, and the coordination white for premise has had with the government is largely never even spoken of. on tuesday, us president joe biden visited tulsa to commemorate the massacre and introduce measures his administration is taking to narrow the racial welcome, but will they work? it's time we start watching the hawks. if you want to know what's going on
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a city and you want to rush, plug this, let me show you what you see the rise and we always the roy gross, right? math grade, walk the place, they make the steps manipulate, so it should be so we know you're welcome. everybody to watching the hawks. i'm myisha cross sarielle is on vacation. joining me now is talk radio host and civil rights attorney, robert patillo activists. an attorney for the american immigration lawyers association, allen. org and g o. p strategist really got dual. glad to have you gentlemen. thanks to me. so i am the robert texas senate bill 7 was designed to basically attack black and latino voters at the polls. we know there is no evidence of widespread voter fraud and the bill has problematic provisions like making 1000000 voting a lot more difficult prohibiting after hours and drive through voting options, limiting the time to vote early and making it easier to overturn an election in
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plain term what's happening and why republican so threatened by voters simply exercising their constitutional rights? well, it's a mouthful is a math game. well, let's think about the fact that via are a 17 year old right now. they've never seen a republican when the popular vote in a national election or republican senators of 50 republicans, 50 democratic cinders. but those cit, the republicans hinders weapons about 41000000 fewer voters than those 50 democrats under, if they can not win on the numbers. and as most death, but once you start, you can pay starts with an up tempo as what republicans are doing here in georgia, in florida. and then 43 other states now including texas, they're trying to make it more difficult for people to go. instead of trying to expand their base and go to college campuses, you're not seeing a lot of young republicans running around with mega hats on growth. like margery taylor green, they are not winning the future. they are not winning over more minority voters, they're simply clinging to the small band of trump boaters and they would rather
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hang onto that base and expand their electric and leak as the republican strategist here. why? why do you think this is happening to to roberts point? it doesn't seem like the g o. p is trying to expand its bass and is seemingly threatened by the sheer number of voters of color and younger voters who are flocking to vote. democratic elections. why is this happening? why are republicans kind of digging their heels in and using these tactics? i think part of it is actually in response to this idea that there was this draw in the lab in the lab to the election. we didn't know that there friday every election . the problem is that there wasn't enough fraud to justify overturning the election . i think that's what is driving a lot of it, but the practical effect of the law don't change won't change much as far as even what happens. and what they did was that's 24 hour voting that they have to drive
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the voting implemented in response to the one that they've been doing for years. even the requirements to ad id or have an id for their absentee ballot. they already had a requirement for id when you're in person anyway, so some of it is kind of the practical effect probably really won't change very much because as we that there isn't a lot of fraud well enough for us to really overturn in the election going on out there so they really will do very much from a practical and allen, texas both points following the footsteps of both florida and georgia and passing sweeping voter restrictions. democrats. so essentially, up ended by walking off the floor and that translates to a death in the bill for at least this session. but there's still a window of opportunity that governor abbott plans on taking and bringing this bill up in a special session. what does this say about republicans willingness to extract the basic tenets of democracy? i think the underlying message is what said earlier,
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if it's not really going to change the much the why do we really need to do that? if it's not solving a problem that doesn't exist, then why do you need to change? so that means it's not the something else. and then we know what that is for the russian push, right? it's a strong push through to make it sort of change the rule. in addition to that, we sort of the now that he's talking about the funding, the legislature, and in the past, the concert he's been very upset to get the funding. any parts of the government, but now it's ok to fund the legislature. so basically what he's saying is that all cars, we're going to get this done. but what the democrats did do was make a national issue by walking out the floor. they may not have stopped it, but they definitely want the war. and this is something that we've been saying for a long time. this body is the last civil war we're having. and this is the last stand right now, because if they don't, when they might not win again, very important. and i might let you get in on that one,
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rob. it seems like you were kind of jumping at the bit. there are different or to respond some leach point about not affecting much and the voters oppression is no longer bull connor standing outside with dogs and holes of stopping people from voting. it's about skimming off just enough to swing during lunch and one to 2 percent. one out over $100.00. whenever every 200 voters, for example, donald trump, gave their publican party of georgia mandate funding 12000 votes and recording the call with the secretary or state rep in for, in order to get him those 12000. what you'd only need to change 18 votes in each of the $159.00 counties in the state of georgia. so even though it may not affect many of you are going to fit 80 voters different in the change will be what president, one of the state of georgia can change the balance of power in the united states. you have the constitution majority for republicans in the house, the summit, and everything wide office in the state of georgia. that's a really good point. i think that we do need to pay attention to the numbers here because the reasons why we're seeing a lot of that push it because of these very tight numbers game. and in the face where we saw these major challenges from the trump administration,
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sold to the poll and other get out the boat jail tv advocates. the efforts have been a cornerstone of both the black and latino voter basis for years now. why all of a sudden we see a push against them. texas has a super majority. republican legislator, iron clad, republican leadership, texas went all in for donald trump in 2020. why is texas state they want to end up in boats when they're solidly republican anyway, i'll let take that one, the leak. i actually agree with the idea of, i think what they did, they limited to our that you can vote on that on the i think before the election, we have those and the whole actually work. i don't disagree with that. i mean, i actually don't agree with that, but that didn't happen in georgia, and i don't believe that happened in florida either where they live in the building hours. but there are things that we can criticize about the law. i don't like the idea of where you can return in the election, not,
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not if you found that you had enough vote fraudulent ballot, but you can overturn is a certain number, you know. and i think that that's something that you can criticize. but the other thing that they are actually doing in response to the i don't agree with think that that both depression because now they won't be able to vote for 24 hours out of the day. that's not something that's coming in the way it was done in response to the alan because we are still we're still on the heels of this centennial but told the res master, it's getting a lot of media attention on, on it's 100 year anniversary. but so many americans, including many people who live in tulsa, know very little about the most devastating event of racial violence in american history. why? i think this goes back to the career conversation about critical race theory. and what for history will be taught in the most history book actually come from the state of texas,
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which is sort of made america always wear the white hat and not really show the dark part of our story was the front that i went to, they need to take the good in the bad that america has done and understanding what oklahoma here. the true story of all of oklahoma understanding that it was originally a part of mexico that we push native americans into that land and then we pushed the native americans off of that way and once again. and then we had the horrible master of freed black people who built their own society there many years later. so having a full understanding of exactly what we've done and who we've done into the sort of have a conversation about right sizing what america really is. and robert estimates of the depths whole and the total mass massacre very greatly. you have some historians thing 75. you have more thing that there were 100 dead, they're actually zooming some of the bodies to day. we know that 10000 blacks were left homeless as a result of the siege. more than 8800 were admitted to hospitals. real estate damage amounted to $1500000.00 in the equivalent of $32000000.00 in personal
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property damage. president biden participated in today's full semester anniversary and they'll plans of new measures to address the racial wealth gap. what were you hoping to see or hear from his speech and do you think that it was spot on or where there are some things missing? welding course, there were some things moving has to still be very tampered and often the policy if you push the 4th for the black community, i was happy to see that this is being a knowledge i think for all of us today when we were growing up in the tulsa race mask, or was almost the urban legend in black community. something pass down generation to generation know verification. we have a lot of what i call yada yada, yada periods in american history. where they'll tell you about $776.00 total until about $812.00 and then yada, yada yada until the civil war than godaddy out until world war 2. and during the fear of time is what we see a lot of info. just reconstruct the rise of the clay and jim crow. we talk about tulsa now, but you can go down the list almost every state and the south and west had
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a major race, math mask, or be at atlanta and 19 o sits. or elaine arkansas are rosewood mississippi and so on, so on and so forth, down the line. i think as we start breaking apart and breaking open, what really happened. we're going to have to get through this kind of shiny marvel . busy movie d c. comics and mom apple pie and baseball view of america and viewed the country for what it really was what it really is. and that's how you come to reconciliation . not by high in the past, but acknowledging it and then providing remedies for the dams done at alan with this a few seconds left. what do you think america owes black told them everything. right? they told them everything. that's the story. you owe them everything that's under the law today. another attorney, when you start talking about things and crimes of all level, that it's easy to look around from the many wars that have happened were worldwide to understand that we owe them everything. and those individuals that are living today and actually test about it shouldn't be a conversation about what they're getting it to be
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a conversation about how much they're getting in and how quick we can get to them. and what that, robert ma, lake allen, it was great having you and i hope to see you again think thanks me. so as we go to break, remember that you can also start watching hoc on demand the brand new portable tv app available on all platforms. coming up, we'll discuss new secretary of state antony, blink, and mission to block the central american migration to the us. stay tuned to watch and not ah ah ah letter to my local bank and the number johnny
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w. yes. get me up not because we're not going to the the or up in the kitchen table out them out. i stick to my don't get a get. we'll put it on the show to wait for the meeting. be really lucky then this is me. god by little by now. and then you guys mean i lot of the man why or why not what i mean i is your media
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a reflection of reality the in a world transformed what will make you feel safe heights relation, whole community. are you going the right way? where are you being somewhere which direction? what is truth? what is in a world corrupted, you need to defend the join us in the depths or remain in the shallows. ah, what is the future of the republican party? is that future something donald trump will decide? critics of the g o p say it is no longer a political party, rather, it is called
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a personality called focused on trump. is this a winning strategy for the g o? p? me an entire village in alaska has had to move if another country threaten to wipe out in america, we do everything on our part a project in what an escaping climate change is the same threat right now alaska has seen some of the fastest coastal erosion in the world we lost about 3535 feet of ground in just about 3 months while we were measuring it is fatty. and that means the river is 35 pounds. then learning what were the,
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the the by the administration is under fire from conservative and wings of his own party as the immigration to be continues to heat up where a liberal activists regularly called out children in cages in humane and often derogatory comments and actions. the trump administration undertook for migrants and refugees. many don't believe immigration reform is coming quickly enough under the bite administration. whether it's brains as a crisis or a surge of the nation. southern border fact is migrant. just keep coming for all of its action plans and success in getting cobit vaccines in arms. the solution to american broken immigration system still seemed to evade the bite administration. us secretary of state anthony,
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blinking america's top diplomat is going to costa rica in an effort to build allegiances around reducing corruption, building anti poverty initiative, and improving the economies of northern triangle nation. the areas where most migrants attempt to enter the us illegally. president biden plans to use 4000000000 dollars over the next 4 years across the region, but very little will go directly to the central government as mismanagement, fraud, and other issues are rampant. a to el salvador, for instance, is being diverted to civil society groups. not the government blinking, the hopeful that meeting with foreign ministers could yield positive results. if the us we need their cooperation on immigration, one on one meetings with 4 ministers, guatemala, honduras, and salvador are scheduled link. and we also meet with the president and foreign minister of costa rica. what could all this mean for the migrant crisis? or will anything change at all? joining me once more immigration lawyer and president elect of the american
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immigration lawyers association. eleanor, welcome back, allan. thank you for having me. i think that the visit is really about the push thor extending, migrate to this country. i will start off at the very top of the thing when you talk about that region, the only people who are sort of missing from that table cube which may be understandable, but haiti is not at a table. they're actually meeting with people from the d. r, understand the nation government is not stable, but once again, an exclusion. old bit of the african continent. what is it mixed in the other countries as well, from the conversation about addressing the region and probably also in the funding in so that's a misstep from the very beginning. and in addition, you know, many of the problems that there's sort of a thing in central america were caused by the american government. so we're really . ringback just going to solve problems that we cause, either through some type of military actions that were done there, or this love of action that many americans have a drug, right? and so the concept that people come into the country, the problem is
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a misstep from the very beginning because we need people right now we have a low birth rate and there are tons of job that just aren't being built. and so with the, by the ministration and now the weekend was, they were going to try to streamline, regular, documented immigration to ensure that we get the workforce that we need while at the same time, addressing the concern of people who are showing up the board are asking for silent for conditions that are the people in that region considering everything you just said, alan, do you feel that the by the ministration is facing the do criticism? and as it relates to them, not living up to promises made on the campaign trail around immigration reform because we're hearing these, this conversation, not just among right wing voters and right wing elected officials, but also among some of our more silly voices in the progressive movement. as well, including myself in the organization. i think there are times in which we feel like things need to happen faster. right. we are sort of looking for our miller in this organization to go in and to start changing things. we just,
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people require overnight because we're not talking about things that can weigh. we're talking about human beings and situations that are dire. and that's why i'm just doing the law as it exists in the title, 42, what sort of address some of the greater issues that were sort of set under by the last administration. i think it is fair to criticize. i think there is no, there is no government in which criticism is not fair. and wow, why didn't the many things change the nature? this be many of the remedy that we needed were addressed. there's still more to be done and we're on the ground fighting for a lot. so therefore we're going to say not today. yesterday you could have done these things and much like with the last administration do it. and then later, maybe in some cases, because we're talking about me and as i said over and over again. and that's why the call really is now the civically with unemployment numbers being what they are today in the united states. and so many jobs going to be able to get back on the be that great bright star and development. it's time to make that change. and ellen, secretary of state entity blinking,
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it seems like he has his work cut out for me with northern triangle states having centralized governments, as you mentioned, known for their corruption and abuse. what can we really expect from them? a migrant reduction. and do you believe that their foreign ministers could be key to gaining some leverage in the region? i think if they have the right people, but it's really hard to tell because, you know, as we know today, you're the stable person and then you get the money in your corrupted and you do something that's not. and i think the issue with just keeping people out farther away from our order that is not a minute hearing address issue if the situation is changing, the environment sort of addressing the unstable society or they are dealing with climate change dealing with the lack of many times that many men are recruiting young for the military and the gang are sort of happening on the street. that's one thing. helping those government address issues is one thing. but go to throwing money at the problem may make you feel good, but it might not address the problem. the underlying problem, which is if the table is not a stable situation,
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people are going to go for the life. the bible is always number one. and in addition to that, i think america being what it did, we never say any of our other ports of entry. it's a problem where people coming, you never hear out about the chinese. you never hear that about anybody coming from your. you only hear about it, what is coming from this other board and should ask ourselves why is that the biggest problem was the concern, our neighbors next door on the same block away or shorter. and then we were talking about people who are functions and now the way that's also part of the conversation . and i want, if you were in charge of designing this in regards to reforms that are necessary not only to reduce the influx of migrants from central america, but also to make their native land more, you know, more viable, more, you know, safer for them to actually think they are not feel as though they are their lives are being threatened or their young people's lives are being threatened. what areas do you believe need to be addressed 1st? right, so i think we need to start by being the country that we say we are,
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we need to address the rules that we have within our own country, right. if people weren't buying drugs or drug wouldn't becoming if we had a workload system to allow people to come in and working on that would take many of the migraines off of the go because you only want to come for the season in the summer or whatever season is for snow or whatever they're going to do a job making money to go back home because nobody wants to leave the lane in which they're raised it. and then it's a lot of government building with the non governmental agencies in the countries. and it's a waste of understanding where stability can li, i think our democracy and very young and at this point, really not that table. it's not that hard to think that the january thing for us to be criticizing other countries about what they have going on there. so 1st we need to be the country that we talk about and do the things that are in our constitution . secondly, we can before and immigration just to make it easier for people to come in and out . it hasn't been reformed. the 30 year numbers on appropriate, and we're not addressing the need of our people much less than new people to come in to meet the needs of our people. secondly, then we start working with the government building and understanding exactly what
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the situation did and realizing our liability in causing many of the problem. and alan, we know that vice president comma le harris was initially put in charge of. 5 insuring or trying to reach some level of ability with, with latin american country and central american countries, specific to the immigration issues. a lot of that was focused on diplomatic strategies. do you feel that a diplomatic strategy can work considering long range immigration reform needs? and why are we seeing congressional action or overhaul or the part, the concern that people on the vice president was that they thought she was going to go stand on the border. and that's not our job, right? you can do policy work without actually being standing on the border. and she is equipped with the skills that actually address on the ground at the border per concept is a great, a concept of making all these sports work together consistently and in our society . we keep making what is the best solution and there is no solution. it is a stratosphere illusions that have to work together towards that end goal. so yes, diplomacy, as part of that reason of having your understanding and working with our partner,
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humanitarian aid is also part of addressing that and making sure that the solution isn't deaf to people. that is not a solution, nor separating family, nor certain debt that is not who the united states. so all those things have to work together with understanding. additionally, we're going to start with what we say about human in our constitution. everybody has the same right? everybody because we're not killing people without, you know, we're not sure people period and then move forward with the department. the thing for your country. how do you see yourself right, let those countries develop in some situation of the type of democracy we have not worked with countries until they're more stable and that is all we have for now. so thank you so much for joining me, allen, or thank you, bradley. and that is our show for you today. and remember everyone in this world, we're not, we're not enough. so i tell you all. i love you. i'm nice across. keep on watching those off and have
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a great day and night everyone ah ah, ah ah, ah ah ah ah ah ah ah, ah, i
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the you want to to, to national have done just wednesday morning. the said peter, you can on the forum is back on the financial calendar to come into 1st large scale business event in the world. since the pandemic hit ortiz on the ground there, of course, we'll be covering the whole high profile gathering for you. the event's moto is short, but it makes it absolutely clear what the forms all about together again, economy of the new reality. stigmatizing and fueling racism. a prominent muslim group in austria slams that countries, governments over the unveiling of an issue last month that identifies the location of mosques and muslim associations in the country for

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