tv Documentary RT July 17, 2021 12:30am-1:01am EDT
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a social contract that we all have. but if you feel or i feel the person who is the authority come in and they fix that situation, but the part of the way to the contract when you tell that the industry and it give you talking about how to get, we played your game, your well, the burden and the and it still wouldn't be enough and they are lucky that what black people are looking for a quality and not revenge when they are there please be about it again and by command died under the need of a white release officer. yeah,
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you don't get any gama can be in that moment. they became every black life. they captured on video was every person enslaved. every person in chains. every person who lived under the wit, every person lynched a tree, ordered to the back of the bus. every day, unless the faceless person was told their lives did not matter. the death, george floyd gives his name to those nameless in his cries, we hear the cries of hundreds of years and the unknown dead and a world away. i see all those cries and they sound so from mrs. barr history. sounds like to us why you're not really
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me. my child bery you really know i. * don't care why you watch that video and i dare you not to be angry. the you watch a video of a police officer thumping the life of a man with his knee on his neck for 8 minutes and 46 seconds. and excruciating. and when people see that video, they don't see george floyd's life being snuffed out. you know, they see actually the centuries of brutality and racism in this country in america has been here before the rice riots of the 19 sixty's on the streets of los angeles. in the 1990
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in ferguson, missouri, the added minneapolis today. and the message is the same for black america, the land of the free has never felt truly for it. ah, me. this deep wellspring of anger, of actually goes to a centrally unresolved question in the united states, which is that the core, the foundation of the country, which has been founded on slavery. and jennifer mag, reasons why supremacy censure we believe in white supremacy on to 90 for the black, legal inferior grows press on the bus, sharesa sand mother grabbed that rick color from the rear. why? from the front supremacy of the law,
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the land. and we've had to overcome quite phyllis and pre blood filling inferior g. even the plan figure out who the even was on the fire the we've heard george floyd's words here in australian prisons. they were david dunn, guy junior, his last words in 2015 before he died in the hospital ward of sidney long bay prison. oh, the current found lack of oxygen while he was restrained, was a contributing factor to his death. but it is taken the death of a black man in america to wake us up to what happens here. the black people die here in custody. and that the numbers keep rising and we
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failed to stop us. i i don't believe actually the government have learned anything more than how to hide aboriginal death and cassi from the world. and that's what we're trying to expose here. we need to expose globally what's happening here in australia because we resonate with people like george floyd, we resonate with those families. we resonate with various deaths in custody around the world that are going on. same celebration, love with every stop you. think about it too hard to hear. the slaver who sent free play masses, or part time mass as they became for angry kilo 5000 blacks, and about 70 is from the whole town that tulsa, oklahoma and rosewood, florida, the magistrate flash alive me
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. when i see black america and i see part of myself when i was growing up, black america spoke to me when white astray did not. we are ready. we are fighting. we are down friday night, not only little right, but even human run. totally only way we're going to get some of the pricing right away from our side. so must have come together against the common enemy. the black american told me to dream. i have a dream that one day, this man will rise up and live out the true meaning of its creed. we hold these tools to be self evident, that all men are created. the
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most said black lives matter is a movement we are importing from america. i know nothing of who we are, the ones who came out of the same black churches as jesse jackson and martin luther king. aus was the church of the forsaken and these men were our patron saints. to join him from black america. i learned how to speak back to whiteness, matters the way we could to trade on color or religion or this. there are other ways of connecting. ben, i tell you this when i left this country in 1048, i didn't come here. one reason only one reason where i, when i got the hong kong, i'm added on the timber to end up in paris on the speech,
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paris i was talking on the theory enough thing learned could happen to me that already happened to me here. you talk about making it as write it by yourself. you have to be able then to turn up all the untenable that you live. because once you turn your back on the society, you may dot, you may dot ah, then flashes, sire and stretched out war. and you're not the guy and still you fit the description because there is only one guy who is always a guy fitting the description. ah, i think the white imagination has framed the conception whiteness in a certain direction. and therefore,
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in order to keep itself segregated, superior in its narrative, it had to classify blacks as, as animals. and we see that language being used by presidents like reagan being used by ordinary citizens. being used to talk about michelle obama as 1st lady. so, you know, and i think people have passively taken that in and then believe it as fast, you know, so when we have somebody like president trump saying, you can tell these people anything and they'll believe it. he's not wrong. how quickly this wound steals our innocence. i didn't get to discover the
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world through my eyes. i was the one discovered i was the one captured in the wide gaze and learned at school the ha, listen of life. i lived in a world where white lives mattered. and i was not why me? why i was an old school yard towards me, the laughing pointing the mocking the head turning these little things to stay with you. once our eyes are open to the world around us, we can never see the world in the same way again in i was 15, but i learned another question. no matter how close i got. i could never truly belong. one day i was asking cross to stand up and
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talk about myself to talk about my life. and i told them who i was. i told them where i was from. i told them about my family, about my parents. i told them about our history as a walked out of the class, one of my friends turned to me and said, why do you have to always talk about that at which i back into class after lunch and scrawled across the board. be kind to stan, need love to might seem like just a little thing. it might seem like something you can shrug off sitting here to die . why should that matter? why should that matter to me? but you can never let go of those things. people not just wait a hurt you they know just how to charity what your place in the world is
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ah, you know you don't do it, you know it nice number didn't, but when we in the home i don't, i don't gonna don't good down the limit of all using a 40 almost in there. i guess it's like, i mean it came up with that i think pretty all the finally buddies are most of it on the front of it and then we can just show that went through the middle who was nice with those who
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knew that prolong aplenty. also, initials give us a peculiar use. ah, the aboriginal people here at war every day were at war with the system with the police were at war with statistics. but you want to just move on from. ah, gina again, story like community in australia lives. black pool and in the size of the police. as a young boy, kane and lost his mother and his father. he drew up on the streets in assisted me. like so many others got into trouble when to juvenile detention, and ultimately to prostrate. it may call us statistics.
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we know those numbers. we have 3 percent of the population and the food values behind bars. keenan is not a statistic. he's real and his friends and his family are real and his pain is real. i come back to my community and all i see is pain. all i sees haunt floating memories where i used to play with my friends and my brothers, that i've lost where i used to sleep with now my brothers are in prison serving shifting youth. but we never wanted to grow up to be drug addicts and criminals. we just wanted to be loved. we wanted our mom and dad to be home. we want to have food on the table and we want it to be safe. and we spend the rest of our lives trying
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to pick the pieces up and understand why we never had such a beginning like everybody else. and where do we fit in and how do we pick ourselves up and move on from all of a j. he was 17 when he came off his bike and was impaled on a fence post. died from his injuries. ah, judge family believed he was being pursued by police at the time of the coroner rejected. man. one of the hardest almost 17 at the time and i was with him the night before, the incident happened me
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thomas, he keeps dis set fire to the streets of rates and it looked like a scene from los angeles. ah, to this day that he family and the black community will not accept the car and is finding that t j his death was an accident. ah, they still believe police were pursuing. they still wanted inquiry reopened. he died in the same community that we're playing the kid. same straits, we used to walk as children and hope for better future hope not to be poor web grow up in
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chain and he's haunted by the memory of his friend t j. and he was every day to try to keep young black kids out of jail. i'm more scared, scared that it's going to happen to my boys. i'm scared that my children are going to grow up in the country that think says no racism, but they're more likely to end up in the criminal justice system. then there are other fellow friends in daycare. i see them being case by police. i see them in a still cry. i see them in an i don't prison cell. and having don't want to visit them because they're my children and they're my blood. and that's my experience. i had police driving along side of me on my way,
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walking to high school in year. right? so my understanding of, of surveillance were attached to race. my understandings of police brutality of prisons. really negative terminology attached to the idea of race rather than race being about unity rights being about collective communities, race being about love, my earliest understandings of race. yeah, we're rather set up as violence due to racism. latoya rule never got to say good bye to her brother wayne fell a morrison cctv 40 and she captured his last day in an adelaide police cell where he was facing assault charges. i became unresponsive in a prison van, then died in hospital 3 days later, in september 2016. a corranio in question is ongoing. but like so many
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other deaths in custody for latoya and her family, there are more questions than answers. what happened in the final moment during? when's the last breath? there are so many questions. why in the 1st instance, did they have to detain wine? what happened in the van? why wasn't there surveillance in the van? why is it that the officers actually refused initially? police entrance and investigated entrance to take their statements that were, i believe, not released until months and years later. you know, there's so many questions about what really happened to wayne oh, there was representation in federal parliament for generations. we the 1st nations people has spoken truth to white power. 150 years ago. they every
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oh no stray. and today he demands more than the white man's charity to run the right to lose me still there are no tracy, no voice i. people are often out of sight and out of mind. most australians i places like wished and strategies kimberly region have some of the highest youth suicide rates anywhere in the world. like so many other black communities, paperless, stressed to breaking point violence, drug and alcohol addiction, chronic poverty. these are the sad realities that lives under the weight of our history and powerlessness hopelessness. and it is our people. indigenous people step up when astray area often looks away.
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they're really shoes and i have personal experiences of loss of families through suicide. and we learn to continue to believe in our selves in our strengths, our resilience, our determination for change, and we can change and we can bring others along to assist us to work with us around creating the reforms within the systems and structures that need to be informed by lived realities of people, but to also empower people to lead the change at the community level is a photo pass down in my family. rows of aboriginal girls take him to a home to be trained to be servants, to meet under a sign that red thing,
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white act, white be white. they lost their names and were given a number. there in the middle is a small girl. number 658. my great aunt eunice grant. imagine a few when you were a child or a baby even. and the authorities came in and said you from your mother or your father, your mother, any father and you, siblings. and you were removed and brought up totally separate from, from your family. how would you feel about that? and let them say, what's not too good and be pretty bad here in this me, you've got to try and walk and shoot me. the
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you sorry, this is our last we're really words. nobody you read read very well, you more than your mouth really and either one, you know, we're going to be that, you know, we're doing more about this, whereas your land is for edge really regularly and the oven do cool by rhetoric. validate, read, you know, modeling by reading. i am ready to remain on the scene proudly for rhetoric. these are my parents, my bobbing father, young man, boot them for staying in the house and. and my goodness, my mother, betty, how important is it for us to speak our language important to you? if you, if you don't, if you don't have a language, you're nobody. if we can speak english,
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we won't meet my driver this week. we try to get a good language office and it was the 1st was definitely not the l. a which we didn't lose because my father wilbert. he spoke several different languages. my can be lose it. but what did he say member? he was arrested for c e m, when the truck and go flying and he was only there no one and this man, the other drug this to and i mean, come on and he said barney and barney anna buddy on a quick, quick here. yeah. you know, i mean, you know, come here who really, you know, yeah, i mean, we young to go go to get me in a lease going out and this young quote off the top of the one might
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be 20 thought even abuse. he was abused and certainly this, so the police arrested him to the like, i was leaving, he's locked him up. then every way that put that into jail jail and, and some of the others to what happened the time when the cousin and i got to drink this place, madonna, madam? by with the side car. he came across some hopping bush duncan and he couldn't feature buy a loan. the them out of all, sorry, sorry to johnny east carson. and he had to come back for dad. sorry. and kept that around a tray till he came back for him and kept him to the tray. and then he didn't come back. old i dad was there in the hate. any piddling cell phone was old, vanish translucent and didn't come back to he had no food. no, no,
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nothing. came back. i was and i was lied and said, oh i'm sorry, i forgot you. you know, sometime we go through these peers. but sure, there the night come at the day come at the world and they come with the name of the trip. when this war is the, was the cause, a revolution was alive and do it all. we will keep our hopes alive. we will not run the hope will not through the hope people will live the me me, i
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back guys or financial survival guys? housing bubble. oh, you mean the downside? artificial mortgage right now get carried away, was trying to report she want to hold simply real thing a little bit, a little don't go to school. well, i was going to go and see me when you have a sleep. when you have a meeting in the room, initial pathetic female guy, let me know which one was going to look at me and i'll start with you soon. this new law is looking here. when you finish the mental
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begin complete illusion. actually the script on, on the, on the financial young hoody lose. you lose could you could shoot. yeah. limited the lower, the, with the people, the devastation destruction. a major search and rescue operations underway following torrential rains and fatal loving in germany for a 100 people are dead. more than a 1000 and demick loves the sicilian region of italy into poverty crisis authorities also war and that the changing seasons will be even more challenging for local communities. also coming off in the program, this are the u. s. accuses russia.
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