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tv   Watching the Hawks  RT  June 29, 2021 10:30am-11:00am EDT

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of all my present already. yes, i don't think i was calling with you and your team, samantha katie. yeah. my thought allow me just go out to me. good evening. hot water just when americans thought it was time to celebrate freedom from mask and talking for good, the world health organization said not so fast. fully vaccinated people are urged to continue wearing mass as the delta variance spread, making cobit elastic threat. people cannot feel safe just because they had the 2 doses. they still need to protect themselves, said dr. mary angela from low. the assistant director general for access to medicines and health products. at the cnbc reporting, she went to say,
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vaccine alone won't stop community transmission. people need to continue to use math consistently, be in ventilated spaces here, hygiene the physical distance away. crowding felt like the new normal is back to the old standard. but this is all over correction, fear mongering or the cobra, just stubborn and dangerous visitors that won't leave. if the u. s. has officially reopened workers are slowly returning to their office space as many are asking, did we go back to soon? after all, israel has more fully vaccinated people than the us. israel essentially reach, heard immunity months ago, a manager cobit risk well from the very start. but israel is now wrapper grappling with rising covey cases in the spread of the delta buried among its fully vaccinated population. brett of the delta barrier is still highest among unvaccinated groups, but that should make the vaccinated rest easy or get lack of protecting. about 50
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percent of the delta barrett cases in israel are among the fully vaccinated, 50 percent, and on another front for those who took the johnson and johnson vaccine, a booster maybe need it sooner rather than later to combat the contagious delta buried. some people have already taken matters into their own hands. mixing the vaccine one shot, the j n. j into shot to the pfizer. but is it safe or even effective? after all, both m r n a vaccine showed up because the rate around 95 percent enlarge us trials, while changing vaccine was 66 percent effective in preventing moderate to severe. cobit 19 globally experience began to emerge. it looks like despite our best efforts, cobit 19 here to the day. it's time we start watching the hawks. if you want to know what's going on, a city street, you want to rush. let me show you what. we always. the roy throw right. math grade was the slave. they make the steps manipulate so much with
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these weapons. so hope we know you're welcome, everybody to watching the hawks. i'm myisha cross. joining me now is infectious disease expert dr. bob barnett. welcome dr. bob board. dr. bob, it's always great to have you, and i know you're always going to give us a straight fax, but dr. people are confused. you know, the cdc said math didn't need to be warned if you were fully vaccinated after that announcement the fully backs the partially vax, the anti vax. there's basically everybody gave a sigh of relief and thought where math with the exception of public transit flight in the like mass were basically tossed out because capacity restrictions have been lifted. and now in walks the world health organization, the who they're telling vaccinated people to mask up again is a delta variance that big of a threat. and why don't we thing so many mixed messages?
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you know, that's a great question about mixed messages. as you know, you and i on your air probably 2 months ago, said it is not time to get rid of a mass. it's not time to unsociable yet. since this may be intermission, they're still really looking why? so if you have a population that has a low number of vaccinations you should expect 5.6 cases, 400000 would take 60 percent that way. you're still getting the $2.00 cases a 3rd less but still you have those cases. then you have to go to the mix, a, j, j vaccine, or asters, and come back seem to be factors shows. it's not quite effective. you have older individuals who said it might be 80 percent of the most important things is that when you take a look at the ability of the vaccines to work for percent of the population, you compromise the take steroids. you may be on
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a combined drugs or some kind of a transplant your kidney or are trying to call them low. well, we should, one of the solutions i've embraced is getting in the test for the lack of a general major medical center. i had the test reports that showed high number of era, you don't know how well the war, unless you have the money jackson, i would certainly encourage people over the age of 60 and encourage those individuals who may be compromised for who are disease to see what their antibody level is that, well, what i consider 3rd or 3rd shot should say good studies out today showing if you had a pfizer to astrazeneca vice person that is more ongoing to look at whether not if you add to the job to job to vaccine pfizer that could work, and there are lots of patients to be clear who had those low antibody levels who
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are getting a 3rd axis, even though all the trials are not completed and all the eyes are dotted and t's are all good information. dr. bob, i might look into getting that test myself. the risk for death and severe complication. probate 19 is still relatively low among the vaccinate population. but america have a large swap in the country, particularly in the south, and among certain minority groups that remain on vaccinated. we know that the by the administration has taken vaccine marketing on the road. do you think that's helping i think a very hard time is a great article out today. the read a see if you look at alabama, arkansas, mississippi's example. so states that are very low vaccination, like i said, review the last couple of months, we can expect to have green jones, like you remind 80 percent actually you look in california, some of the towns that are very county where they they see the extinguished of iris
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you know, vaccination with level 7090 percent. they've extinguish that, but as you pointed out, you're fine. there still is the case of injury, injury, visor, vaccine, land some others there. there probably was fully vaccine place in the delta, very starting to break through. so you don't have a question about the ventilation in about an hour. i always deleted those measures in terms of virus and never really understood why they're mixed messages. i'm part of it was lower. that is to say, hey, come on and get back to me. you were a match, was allure for public lives, and dr. bob ko, it's still poses a much greater threat abroad. so let's move out of the u. s. for minute we know that cobit spread in places like india has been massive, particularly as the delta barrier explode, vaccine sharing programs were announced just a few weeks ago. do you think that's going to help in slowing the spread effectively since there are still so many countries that didn't have access to the
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vaccine to begin with? i think it easily is a real shot in the after all, they're the number one is actually manufactured. the world's is a catch up to better. it's a great question because i think that tracking we faced many years and then much developed, well, you know, very few vaccines. e was 10 meter 20 need here and there against a party of why you've 7 days. it is, it's not that much. and the real risk is the scene changes every 2 weeks. every 2 weeks is going to be a new many more disease or more infectious. what others do? what means the longer you allow these values to grow in these relations, whether it's in the rest of the united states or parts of africa or south america, asia, the greater risk there is going to be worldwide to these various indian, you know, much go. we started to look at this delta very month ago, and then 2 weeks ago. and now they think maybe the dominant are in here in united
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states, already becoming a dominant grade in united kingdom. whether see, you know, a huge increase in cases and israel as well. so it's a real problem. you have long really in terms of public health. it's not just because you're breaking that cherry and you want to pay attention to disease in africa. and in 6 because it also poses a national security threat to your country's entity, united states, if we don't care, take some sensors in those countries. so very and dr. bob, a lot of this isn't necessarily surprising as you smoke up on this show before and basically every find his doctor or expert be the variance were coming. we might not have known the name of them, but we knew that they were coming. the public knew a bit months ago, you guys had cautioned to everyone over and over again. what actions do we need to take now to further protect against the spread of the buyers knowing that various like the, the delta are already here, but others might be coming as well,
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especially what message you have for those who already been vaccinated. so i think the interesting thing is that we know the tactic village, if you know your c o 2 low level is low, 600 is very likelihood you they have virus. so look for great and remember the n 95 equivalent 6. can you still be like 96 to 99 percent protection against the virus? so why not where you're outside of fine for if you're going to go to an indoor space one, i wouldn't really what we strangers and you really love it. if you had a really, really great because you know, we know that these mass can be 99 percent. they are the really good, high filtration mass and not all pieces of cloth. the people will probably give you 2 or 3 percent projection. and i last question dr. bob boosters, and we talked about that a little bit at the top, the j and j vaccine. many people are saying if you got it and you need a, you need
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a booster. do you think it's smart to mix vaccine? the cdc isn't necessarily recommending it, but we're seeing some study that you mentioned that show that it can be effective. the other just wouldn't be out today looking at the 5 actually with the present, which of course is not in the united states. if you need to do it 10 times higher antibody levels, if you just have the answers. and so he's very smart. the question is, what do you do as an individual? i think the best answer is if you're concerned and compromise all areas, we're going to be very a dangerous situation. consider having anabolic test slow. i would definitely consider having, you know, i would get myself. i was all lined up to go and get another vaccine material level so, so i didn't get a lot of attention. you are not signed off on yet. but if you are, you got a lot of you had a trace plan if you're older,
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you concerning. consider the tests and slow low having a 3rd vaccine. i think it's a great idea, especially as you pointed out, you've had the johnson johnson actually well, thanks so much for joining us and providing much needed information. always great to have you, dr. bob. one of the questions and he said, thank you so much. johnson and johnson and has agreed to a multimillion dollar settlement with the state of new york. the announcement comes just days before trial against several companies, including j and j. with that to begin, that trial focuses on pharmaceutical companies role in fueling the open to a crisis with moral news story. here's trendy chavez, reporting from new york. pharmaceutical giant johnson and johnson has agreed to pay a $230000000.00 pay out to the state of new york, settling claims that fueled an overweight addiction crisis. still, though the company admits no liability or wrong doing as a part of the settlement, the company will start processing opioid related claims and begin allocating
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payments to victims and their families. new york state attorney general lateesha james saying in a statement the epa demick has wreaked havoc on countless communities across new york state and the rest of the nation, leaving millions still addicted to dangerous and deadly opioids. johnson and johnson helped fuel the fire, but today they're committing to leaving the opium business not only in new york, but across the entire country. the settlement bars, the company from promoting opioids and it confirmed it has ended distribution of such products within the us. johnson and johnson playing down the agreement saying in a statement, the settlement is not an emission of liability or wrong doing. the company remains committed to providing certainty for involved parties and critical assistance for communities and need as a part of the $230000000.00 settlement. the company will allocate payments over 9 years, which will go toward opiate education prevention and treatment, j and j. could also be responsible for another $30000000.00. if new york passes
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a law that created an opioid settlement fund, approximately 800000 americans have died in the last 20 years because of opioid abuse. meantime, the new york case against the makers and distributors of opioids goes to trial this week. johnson and johnson will not be a part of that suit since it just settled, but it says that will continue to defend itself against any other lawsuits. if the final suit does not resolve reporting for watching the hawks trinity job as r t s, we go to break. remember that you can also start watching the hawks on demand through the brand new portable tv app available on all platforms. coming up, i'll be joined by a panel to discuss vice president comma la harris's recent trip to el paso. and why florida governor rhonda santa is requiring college students a faculty to disclose their political belief they to, to watch in the hall. ah ah
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ah me one, i make no, no borders and the blind number please. as emerge. we don't have authority, we don't, the whole world needs to take action and be ready. people are judge. 2 crisis we can do better, we should be better. everyone is contributing each in your own way, but we also know that this crisis will not go on forever. the challenge is paid for the response has been massive. so many good people are helping us. it makes it feel very proud that we need together
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in i don't think they can't ride on police reports in december 2020 a group of anti finishes. fill out a film crew access for 3 months. there's no like if people organization, it's an idea that must be opposed to channel out the game ground. they make their faces. but they can say what they believe and we believe in helping our community. we believe that fascism is one of the major threats to the united states has gotten grooven. this is a chance to see who and teeth are really are. in order for me. my 1st amendment right and say that my life matter, i have to be onto the teeth that that's all america. we can't trust the police. we can't trust the government. we can't trust anyone except or so to protect ourselves in driven by adrian shaped by those with
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the in me the dares thing. we dare to ask or imagine picking up a future textbook on the early years of the 21st century water, the chapters called gun violence school shootings, homelessness 1st, it was my job and it was my name was my siblings. i have nothing. i have nothing and it's not like i don't try. i look for resources, i look for jobs, i look for everything i can to make this pass. and all i end up doing is passing
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the road to the american dream, paved with dead refugees as buried, idealized image of the older america, native americans look past the death that happen every single day. this is a modern history of the usa, america on r t i me nativism populism racism. and oftentimes just plain ignorance has filled a war against migrants and asylum seekers across the develop world in the u. k. brakes it was fuel by a push to eradicate immigrants in the us cries for border wall, a conservative lead marketing campaign shouting out migrants as american job thieves rapist, murderers and free loaders took shape that near the game were seen as former
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president trump use the same tropes regularly to demonize, migrant and spearhead human rights violation. the bite administration is now charged with fixing a decades long broken immigration system. president joe, by an appointed vice president, common harris to find the root causes of the migrant crisis. with particular focus on the northern triangle countries. harris is essentially the diplomatic and strategic form of developing solutions for the causes of migrant movement. that roll breast harris in the spotlight and made her a target among conservatives and liberals for conservative, harris was not equipped to handle the migrant crisis. but harris also took fire from liberals, represented alexandria. kathy cortez called out the b. p, after harris told migrants, do not com. and on friday, v, p harris visited el paso, texas to tor migrant processing center. the v p spoke with young girls at the facility held a walking tour and met with advocates, a faith based and g o,
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as well as legal service group. and on the heels of b, p. harris's trip, florida governor, and forever trump are run to fantasy. announce he'd be sending 50 state law enforcement officers to texas to help enforce more protections the st. it's also now requiring students and faculty, florida public university to disclose their political really belief under the guise of viewpoint diversity. this seems like a way to bully ideologically different students and faculty. it opens the door to discrimination. joining me now to unpack all of this is an all star panel featuring ned ryan feel america majority and former presidential writer for george w bush. rob richardson hope that the disruption now podcast and alan or junior president elect of the american immigration lawyers association. welcome gentlemen . thank you. thank you alan. i'm going to start with you. what is the impact that b p harris is having an immigration reform? she's taking criticism from both sides, but as an immigration expert in
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a filing law expert, where do you see harris's greatest impact and how did they pass the trip shaping? wasn't a fan of are going to the board because i think that was the political stuff and i don't think they actually used it to sort of maximize potential at the border by either pulling out the family that was separated or pulling in the dock at children who are on the verge of losing their doctors status. so i'm just really not focus on that right now because the route problem progression is congress. and it's always been that for the last 25 years. so regardless of what the vice president does or does not do, he's not going to be successful in that. now we're getting entire to the board because even though some adult pads, so people want to go to another part of the border. so no matter what move she makes, she's always gonna be criticized in most of the time society. and in this case, they expect her to be a magic woman and go and solve a problem. for many, many decades. she's not searching for the root cause because they are aware, and in some cases they call them the problem right now moving forward in all we
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need to do in the past embrace reform. congress can change the way that margaret come to the country. i like that you pointed out congress as role in this because i think that that's often lost in that conversation and had to piggyback off of that knit. what do conservatives want to see on the immigration reform front? it seems to get lost in the rhetoric about the border wall, laboring my labeling, migrants, it's criminals. do you foresee any immigration reform policy that could actually get bipartisan support and what would have to be in it or conservatives to vow their support? no, i don't actually being completely honest. this is kind of an unholy are broken immigration system if we're being completely honest is an unholy alliance between certain sectors inside the democratic party, but also inside the republican party. some want for political power and others want to for cheap labor. and i think until the chamber of commerce has the undo, its undue influence is mitigated among the republican party. i don't think you're going to see reform on any level at any time in the next few years. it's just not going to happen. you know, my, my overall theme with, with immigration,
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let's have it fixed. let's have an actual standardize approach. let's decide what we should have in regards to legal immigration. and the thing that troubles me about all of this, our system has been broken out for us, pointed out for decades. and none of it benefits the american people. and i keep on going back to the fact that we should actually have a system that benefits the american people on all fronts. and if you talk with conservatives like me, we don't have a problem with people coming in legally through a standardized fixed immigration system. we aren't even close to that right now, and i don't think we're going to get to that point anytime soon. ned, i stick with you on this when i've always labeled you with one of those conscious conservative when it, when it comes to the we're forms that are necessary during the george w bush administration. we know immigration reform was one of his top issues and he wasn't able to get it through with republicans either. what do you think it is actually going to take again, we know what the root causes are. that's not necessarily some, something that we have to go and discover at this point, but we still don't necessarily see the type of movement towards getting an
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immigration reform policy across the aisle that we need. and of course, there's a partisanship and bickering going on there. but essentially this has been going on for a really long time and as close as we could have gotten years ago during the george w bush administration, that didn't work out either. no, it didn't. and i know i hate to be a negative nancy on this if you will, but again, it's not going to happen anytime soon at the chamber of commerce doesn't want this fixed. and democrats, i'm sorry, i don't want to be cynical, but they want to, for political power. i don't see anybody wanting to, in the short term wanting to fix it because there's too many political incentives to not have it fixed. and at some point until the american people fully wake up and demand accountability, both from democrats and republicans and make it one of their top issues in, in the mid term. and then again in the presidential and 2024. all we're looking at is political theater. that there's not going to be any movement in any direction towards actually successfully solving or immigration problem. it's just not gonna happen, rob,
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i want to get you in on this as well. florida governor rhonda faintest, obviously threw himself in the mix. he's looking to run in positioning himself with a top republican contender for the white house in 2024. he recently announced florida, sending 50 law enforcement officers to texas to enforce the us mexico border. no one know the specifics of that mission or what those law enforcement officials would actually be tasked with doing or even where the funding is going to come from . what is his play here? well, his play is, is the same play. he makes all the time is to figure out how he can get attention in a 24 hour media cycle and he's great at it. he knows what he's doing. he doesn't care about the solution. and the goal here is a really spark of motion. so as we really talk about his net talk about, i agree with something that net that has a completely different places. well, though, i will say that a lot of what happens with immigration is it's an emotionally triggering issue for a lot of reasons for race, for class. all type of thing that all comes in and it's awful at all. all of those dog whistles are played. and so even when you get everybody at the table, you got a lot of people at the table before. the issue is just so volatile. so many people
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that people automatically see that this is somebody take away my job, which is not always true. but there is some truth to that, and they have to do something to enforce this and they don't want to, you can easily saw. you can easily solve immigrate if you want to do you put a protest in place, you make sure that these are held accountable company. they accountable for hiring undocumented workers. and then you have a process for bringing in for bringing in legal immigrants. and you have to do something with a backlog of all of, all of the, all the chaos we created last 3 years that can be solved. but people don't want it to be solved. that's true. and i think i think chamber commerce has a big world. i actually don't disagree with that. just very hard. but there are people like the standards and others that want to display the emotional trigger of it. they know what they're doing, they know that people will get route up this and those people try to take my job. those people are coming after those people are calling diseases, whatever they'll, they'll figure out whatever they can to get there based, motivated and not trying to solve the problem one bit. we only have a few seconds left, but alan, i do want to drop this one on you thinking with florida governor to fantasy. he
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just signed a controversial law that is going to take effect by july, 1st h, b 2 to 233. it requires public universities to survey the students and staff and report their political belief. it's market and viewpoint diversity. but it could also lead to budget cuts in an imminent threat to students and faculty who he assumes are indoctrinating. what are your thoughts on this legislation? and constitutional summary, i doubt it actually goes into effect if anyone has just been here for a lawsuit, then like you said, he's getting a 20 minutes in the light. you need to be inspecting buildings. i'm worried about floridians and their welfare rather than think i'm in texas and also we really need to focus on what it means to be a governor and not what it means to sort of be everything documation, by asking people what their political fees are because it should matter, the best policy should be, should win today. and that's the problem with immigration. everybody agrees on which back to the dreamer or doc, everybody agree, but they just won't have the bill. and that's the problem. and that's really in the
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senate, and it's really just political play and rob allan net that is all the time we have for today. thank you all for joining me. and that is a chauffeur to day. and remember, i love you all. i'm nice across, thanks for watching those talk. you next time. i me. ah, is your media a reflection of reality? in a world transformed? what will make you feel safer? tyson lation, whole community. are you going the right way or are you being somewhere direct? what is true? what is faith?
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in a world corrupted, you need to defend the join us in the depths or remain in the shallows. ah! when i will show the wrong when all just don't the room. yes, to see out the thing because the after an engagement, it was the trail. when so many find themselves worlds apart and we choose to look for common ground as we do at the end of almost every quarter, we got to like, look back, look forward. where are we and all that crazy world. we live in
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the lines. this are here on our teeth, the highest court in texas rules. facebook is liable for knowingly benefiting from sex traffickers. it comes as several victims to the company for failing to protect them from abuses, claiming they were forced into prostitution via the network. drug make a johnson and johnson avoid a huge court trial. now under way over the opioid crisis in america. that's after reaching a $230000000.00 settlement, which critics blocked as being way too small. and the easiest pledge to go green by 2050 is branded a foss by experts of the european environment bureau. same block members will just end up doing their own thing. the.

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