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tv   News  RT  July 2, 2021 6:00am-6:30am EDT

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the me ah, the riley has statues toppled canada than vented tank or at the discovery of the remains of over a 1000 children at former indigenous residential school run by the catholic church . the microsoft admits the u. s. law enforcement secretly been requesting the data of its customers up to 10 times a day. the french president voice his his concern it woke left his culture coming from the u. s. and rather closing his country says the parents of teenage motorcyclist, hurry, done not to testify in a u. s. cause against their sons alleged killer, the families folks person hoping that the criminal justice system will eventually
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prevail. so we know that to just be clear to speed up the process, the suffering is really intensifying, and it's time to get this all done. i good afternoon for the 2nd of july. for moscow, this is art international with me, kevin in person, this mounting fury and canada for the discovery the remains of over a 1000 children and former indigenous residential schools. several cities even canceled canada day celebrations on thursday because of it in winnipeg state. so of statues, rather queen victoria and queen elizabeth the 2nd with toppled and defaced outside the provincial legislature. the
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roles was seen as representative of the country's colonial past. red paint seen that the fallen statue ortiz alex, my college, looking at where the story started. discovery after discovery, the latest one was on one's day 182 bodies founded cranbrook british columbia. this is close to a residential school. they use basically a radar that looks underground. and that's where they found these people in unmarked graves that adds to the initial finding, which happened on may 27th. and we can loops british columbia at another residential school of 215 people, as young as 3 years old in mon, mark grace. and then of course the sketch one which was the biggest find so far, $751.00 people. so you add all these numbers up over a 1000 people found, but we have over 130 schools like this across canada. ah,
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you learn not trying. you just get harder. and yeah, you learn to shut down every day was you were in constant fear that your hope was that it wasn't you today that was going to be the target, the victim. the program started in the late 18 hundreds and lasted all the way up to 1996. when the last school was close, that 150000 native children ripped out of their families, arms and put into the schools. they were forced to go to the schools, the royal canadian mounted police were complicit in that they were the ones that would take the children from their families to the schools that were run primarily by the catholic church at about 60 percent, but also anglican and protest and other smaller churches across the country, the levels of abuse that we found at these schools was absolutely mind blowing. i just have to read something for you quickly. this is at 1900. 7 report from the department of indian affairs is called the bryce report, documented 40 to 60 percent mortality rate in these schools,
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mostly of tuberculosis and then a 90 to 100 percent of these children. this is unbelievable suffered either from physical, emotional, or sexual abuse. we will have rates of 80 percent abuse on these 1st nations because of this legacy left behind by these churches at the canadian government, which funded all of these programs. so canadians are demanding that the government do something about this. we did have a back in 2015 a commission that, that said that this was a cultural genocide. they did very little about it up to now. now people are demanding the prime minister. do something about it and the prime minister, as well as indigenous communities, are demanding an apology from the catholic church. i really hope that this time it will lead towards the pope coming onto the canadian soil and apologizing apologizing directly for the responsibility that the catholic church shares in this part of our history now. and what is believed to be
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a reaction to what has happened in the past month or so is the churches are being burned down on native communities and close to residential schools. we've heard of 5 in british columbia to and berta at one all the way at the other side of the country. it nova scotia. ah, ah, the prime minister has said that destroying places of worship is not the way to go, obviously. but at the same time, canadians are looking at the situation in a much broader perspective. this is candidate here. there is a movement not to celebrate. hopefully, canada will do more. and that's exactly what canadians are demanding. at this point . at least 6 churches across west and canada, recently been left badly damaged or destroyed by fire, police and treating instances suspicious to say,
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couldn't be awesome. that the catholic church pope francis's previously apologized for the suffering that had been inflicted elsewhere during a visit to ireland in 2018. he asked for forgiveness for the church, his abusive power for praying on children. activist david greenwood told us rome hasn't showed itself to be cooperative when going this and similar investigations in the past. i'm not sure whether i an apology from the pope really goes very far. i think there is still a lot of anger within the population of island that haven't had a, a proper investigation into the activities of, of parish priests. and what has happened at the parish level, the culture of the catholic church is to keep everything hidden, to keep everything in house. i've very much, doubtless, the diocese in canada, and we'll call f, right and help with provide the documentation unless it helps solute before it was
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the state in the 1st place, the place children. but it was almost child care on an industrial scale. i think the time has come for the states and canada. lloyd forestman agencies were to get hold of this documentation. it seems as though crimes have been committed. why can't law enforcement in canada court orders to seize this type of documentation? microsoft has revealed the u. s. law enforcement secretly asking for the data of its customers up to 10 times a day. the tech giant senior executive complaining that the procedures become a routine source of information for authorities. at the 20 chavez reports. many americans are shocked to find out that federal prosecutors have requested data on thousands of americans. the news comes just weeks after justice department, prosecutors obtained phone records belonging to not only journalists, but also members of congress and staffers,
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the 21st century. federal prosecutors no longer need to show up to your office. they just need to raid your virtual office. they do not have to subpoena journalist directly, they just need to go to the cloud today. u. s. federal law enforcement agencies facing fierce backlash for secretly pursuing personal data up americans across the country with so called secrecy orders, orders that are designed to prevent disclosure of new inventions and technologies that in the opinion of selected federal agencies present a possible threat to national security of the united states most shocking is just how routine secrecy orders have become when law enforcement targets and americans e mail text messages or other sensitive data stored in the cloud. speaking to members of sherry house committee on wednesday, microsoft corporate vice president for customer security and trust to tom. bert said that in recent years, federal law enforcement officials have presented the company with 24023500 secrecy
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orders in a year or about 7 a day. secrecy orders are too often used for routine investigations based on a cursory assertion that the government has met a statutory burden. the justice department's own template does not even require facts justifying the need for secrecy. instead, the template merely asserts that any disclosure would seriously jeopardize the investigation for a variety of boilerplate reasons. this, as the relationship with some major tech companies in law enforcement agencies in the u. s. have garnered fear scrutiny and recent weeks following news justice department, prosecutors obtain phone records belonging to not only journalists, but also members of congress and staffers as a part of leak investigation, rather than providing americans as meaningful notice that their private electronic records are being accessed in a criminal investigation department hides behind its ability to as 3rd party provided directly. they deny american citizens as companies and institutions their
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basic day in court, and instead they gather their evidence entirely in secret. meantime, some lawmakers are calling for reforms to guard against future overreached by justice department, prosecutors, and idea that was expressed both by democrats and republicans on the house judiciary committee reporting in new york. trinity chavez, our t investigative journalist, now to husband swung comparing store personal data to private letters, which he said shouldn't be accessed unless there's a police warrant to do so. i think the biggest thing is, is that the cloud computing and cloud storage services, data storage for messaging, text messages for the on social networks as well as your email cloud services all need to be treated like it's in your home. so if you walk into someone's home as a federal agent, you can just go through all the stuff that they have in their drawers and open up their desk and read whatever they've written down, right? you have to have a warrant to do that. when all of these cases there should be required under the
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law, a warrant from a judge that is issued because there is evidence of wrongdoing in some way. what's been happening here for several years now is what we're seeing. take place is all these law enforcement agencies are literally acting as if they could just with a blanket power go in and search through all of your private communications because they're on these cloud services. they don't have to access you directly. they go straight to microsoft, they go straight to amazon, and a w s. they go straight to apple and they say, show us what's being stored on the cloud. we have a right to see it. and then the judge also goes along with that by saying you as an individual don't have the right to know. so we'll put it under a gag order. that's what you need to change, treat cloud services, treat data storage as if it is the property of the user, not the property of big tech is a shocker. french integrity is at risk, says president micron, who's blaming left is american ideology for dividing society. he thinks to us is winding the clock back and issues like race agenda,
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cello depends game parents picks up a story don't the 1st time that he's talked about the threat of american ideology, this wookey isn't coming through and infecting hearing problems, but now we're getting a real sense of how much of an issue he really believes to be. do you think giving a wide range entity to elle magazine here in front. and he talked about a number of issues, but he also touched on these issues with this idea ology. this work is him, the left isn't being imported to fall from the usa. and he said that the left wing ideology was holding people back and splitting society. i am seeing society becoming progressively more racial. we had freed ourselves from this approach. and now we are once more categorizing people according to their race. and by doing that, we're totally placing them under house arrest. he was then asked about what role race, skin color and gender play and holding people back. and he responded to that question
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by saying that he could think of many young white people from his home town in northern france who are also being held back young white men who immensely frustrated at being held back. so for him, he was saying problem is more about social inequality, and he always pretty much blamed movement like black lives matter, like me to seeking to divide people by issues of gender, by issues of skin color. and he also had this posting short for american feminism. my feminism is a humanism, i'm on the side of universalism. i don't subscribe to fight that defines everyone according to their own identity, or their own particularity. there has been a huge from some quarters have fallen, so this idea of american work is infecting levels of society in france. there's also been exasperation for ministers in macro and government. talking about this
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ideology being prevalent now, when you diversities across bronson. describing that you see sometimes this being, this is law, move left isn't as something that a corrupt or society. so this are real concern from some quarters here about these ideas coming from the united states. it also comes at a time when there is this new generation of young activists. she was taking these ideas and trying to point out the issues that they see as being problematic came from such as racism as a result of frances colonial talk. and of course, black floods masses need to have had their own versions that they've movements haven false, which has gone it widespread support from other sections of the. so i see many see this as being him pushing himself back towards the center of politics to try and regain the mainstream voters head of next to the presidential election.
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the parents of a teenager allegedly killed in the u. k. by the wife of an american diplomat. at a testified hearing on the case in the u. s. 19 year old henry dunn was killed almost 2 years ago and a fatal car crash outside the us military base in britain. since then his family have tried to bring the dr. answer coolers to justice. she was caught, charged, rather with causing death by dangerous driving, but as the wife of an american intelligence officer shoes to promote the community, to flee the country. here's what the boys mother said about traveling to the u. s. now, our whole family are suffering and townsley, but to be honest, we would try to the end of the earth and back if that is what it takes our case all along. as you don't get to kill somebody and walk away, she's a knowledge that she killed harry, but she's innocent of the charges that she say she's charged because they are dangerous. right. and you know, we just want her to get to the starting blog of the english justice system. what happens after that bill of the crime?
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we have very little influence in and we will simply just be proud of the work that we did together to the starting bar and 2 others. the lawyers, the judges, the jury to then determine the outcome or is parents and now to travel to the us because next tradition request was rejected by the state departments. nonetheless, they say the grateful to the court in virginia for allowing the civil claim to proceed. the family spokesperson saying they're paving the way to justice must be accountability and i know they did. the crown prosecution service in london are busy working through the various options at the moment. so we know the path to justice has been cleared since were incredibly grateful for that. i would just issue another appeal to the authorities about london, washington. you know, let's speed up the process. the suffering is only intensifying and it's time to get this all done in this case, continues to be extraordinary and all senses of the word. but as always, you know, they will tell the truth and it's talking about harry is talking about the
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consequences that they suffered under their mental illness. that they're all suffering terribly from. and, you know, that's what it's about. so it's about the truth and it's simple and you know, i think they've been incredible just getting here and i'm sure they will put it in front of the other. i have always done and, and overcome this hard like they've done for almost the last 2 years. new financial this friday, still ahead. the u. s. political system is drowning and mistrust. many americans say they don't issues like the migrant crisis, for instance. but we sell that anytime soon, because too many politicians pickering, too much life from our will these h q. moscow? were on it after the break. oh, i use, i
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mean ah ah, i use join me every thursday on the alex salmon show and i'll be speaking to guess in the world, the politics sport. business. i'm show business. i'll see you then. me the. the
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news. ah, i give, let him uprooted step to russia's commitment to reducing greenhouse gas emissions. this is new in by introducing laws to limit the worst polluting enterprises in the country across from egos, done office across it. that was a good, i mean, this new law for russia or ego. well, kevin, indeed it is the 1st law over its kind in russia's history. and essentially it's the country's contribution to a global effort to reduce emission within the framework of the paris climate accord . now according to this law, just generally speaking, what it does is a, it makes companies report on their emissions and reduce their emissions as it also sets target levels for them. speaking of this levels, by the end of this decade, all ready, russia is expecting to see
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a 30 percent drop in greenhouse gas emissions compared to the level that the absorb that it had back in the 19 ninety's. but on top of that businessmen and interpret knows that they will be incentivized and encouraged to take part in in projects that help fight climate change. like for example, reforestation or recycling for taking part in these projects. they will be getting so called carbon units, which will later transpire into something more feasible, as the louis says, they will be able to sell these carbon units and well make a profit by all of these measures. russia is hoping to put itself on the so called carbon neutrality track. so what is this carbon neutrality essentially means that a country and it's enterprise as they emit as many gases as much greenhouse house gases as its forests and oceans can absorb without any hum,
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no more than that. so this law is the 1st step that is expected to put russia on the green track. while rushes a massive player, there's just a 1st step. keep us posted to get more reactions for the day goes down for corresponding one. a better political system in a future with more unity, no less americans apparently don't believe those promises anymore. a recent survey suggests that less than a quarter in the us of hope of those patients becoming a reality. instead of solving pressing issues like the migrant crisis, they're worried. policy makers simply busy squabbling amongst themselves too much we're guilty of explains with scott years to go until america's 250th anniversary. spirits on soar in the political system of the us. once the pride and joy of the nation, envy of the world is no longer that less than half of americans pulled recently,
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hold out hope for a better future, even less in a better political system. that's telling isn't that men a former president drives to the border just a mock, how badly his successor has bugged the job. because what they're doing is opening their prisons and prisoners murderers, human traffickers, all of these people, drug dealers are coming back into our country. if you remember the c n n reporter, what did you do? murder and she goes, what? murder. and they immediately turned off the camera. that's exactly why texas stepping up and doing a job. that is truly the federal government's job. a job that you did, but the job that the by the ministration is completely failing us on these mockery is the republicans heating back at the vice president. carmella has this trip to the border where she tried to blame the immigration crisis, which is now a level of unseen and decades. on trump, we inherited
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a tough situation. we have looked at a system where people have been in house, in human condition, many years in a silent system might have been broken and that needs to be reconstructed and done in 5 months. we've made progress, but there's still much more work to be done. which flies in the face of fact, the button administration has arrested more migrants which the heaped praise on during the elections than trump didn't any month of his presidency, almost 200000 arrested. it may alone biden. at one point hadn't heard more kids in detention camp. 22000. then trump ever did. i think they should go back to their home countries. why, why everybody else? what's happening right now is this a lot in the face of those people who are following the law. the crime shows that people can go to sleep at night. and bill cycle care, but with
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a lot of illegals coming across the border. this is not just a whole lot of the animals that are close in their gaping, we have good people come in and we have that. but i'll tell you what some of them are. they are going to wind up and you're jordan. the border situation these the p to meet the crisis at the heart of america, 2 sides, 2 completely different visions and the complete disregard for the views of others. and with every year the divide running through america and americans grows. the president's and congressmen deficient that governors and sponsors all shouts over each other loudly and repeatedly that only they can heal america, which americans evidently don't by the same. so thanks for watching calabrese in the coming, i'll take you through any developing headlines as they happen and check out our t dot com as well. but for now, kevin,
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one of the team signing off me the pairing and found introducing and found to, to a family when a new mother is going through that process. yet there's certainly tremendous cause for great joy. but because it's an event that causes so many different changes, it's stressful at many levels, that survival guide is going to start at a federal reserve. so there you don't get it back. no refrigeration came to look at the rest the 7 years separately or what kind of report ah
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you don't to leave, you will move a toy, knew he would fit with she who it's ready to love me as soon as she to a little girl for i was in the study. i took me to teach julia category. she was, she's a really pushing issue. the one you need from me was over. she said for me to in the last with, with metro. okay. she yeah, she felt that i love this deal and that is what i mean, you know,
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in the new new new which isn't about what if the new i see executable couple was quite up when i got to pull it up on that got me provision on my back on what state are i like? how is that going? okay. your trucking. yeah. so you'll have to, i lost his boss cuz i just got to the bottom. you just gotta read, you were going to be, i'm on my cell, my dog up as well. so i know you know what it was, you know, so my pull up, i got, you know, to some your math almost. what did i'm already whatever spits up i really just got me. i mean, we had a lot, we can think when we went up and i might really here,
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so i just don't get on to getting letters to the dentist needed to cancel that. i'm one of this, but i was like, i was i just started looking for my family to go to kind of one where you're just part of yes, i don't think i was calling with you and your team, samantha, katie. yeah. my thought, a lot of problem, you just gotta go ah, the unique thing about large for our lives is that the adults are afraid of us. quite frankly. members of congress are very afraid of us. and that's something we know, and we definitely use to our advantage. we're able to get meetings with people who quite literally will never vote in favor of any gun violence prevention bill. but they're afraid to not be with us because we don't want to see what would happen if
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we were to call them out for not taking our meeting, but a $187.00 total instances. 38 death 93 injuries. and then 15 teenagers killed or injured 3 children. the are 2 of them not offended. we go entities and rooms with the center and with the house members. and they'd be surprised because we were these young faces who had experienced gum myself, my friends on bring them into those rooms. suddenly these senators didn't have the same kind of talking points which they normally had. they couldn't just shout us down. to meet you in emilia, so i don't know foreign talk to our and seeing that and seeing that young people can really affect that room just showed me that across issues across spaces,
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across the nation. we need young people to be able to stand up and actually make the voices because they have an impact and they have a real measurable and we got a really good in um i.

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