tv Documentary RT July 22, 2021 4:30pm-5:01pm EDT
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they just got notified by facebook. the photo used for old walla walla onions the over the sexual and therefore cannot be advertised to be on their platform. can you see it a lot for this i that's avenue. just looking in, i'll tell you we're back again about 15. mm. ah, me one. no, certainly no borders. number t's as emerged. we don't have authority. we go to the back seen the whole world needs to take action and be ready. people are judge, you know,
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crisis we can do better, we should be better. everyone is contributing each in their 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 us feel very proud that we are together in so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have is crazy. plantation, let it be an arms race is often very dramatic. development only personally, i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful at the very critical time. time to sit down and talk.
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oh right now, there are 2000000000 people who are overweight or obese. it's profitable to sell food. that is pricey and sugary and faulty and addicted. not at the individual level. it's not individual willpower. and if we go on believing that will never change as obesity epidemic. that industry has been influencing very deeply. the medical and scientific establishment, ah, what's driving the its corporate me let me . ah
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this area in winter's can be very brutal. summers can be very hard. it's hard work. i we live right on the lake here. so we did a lot of fishing and hunting, and as i got older i realized how incredible this was where most kids growing up didn't get this. i where we wanted to keep it in the name me me. ah. and was really proud of his car and it was his baby. ah, i feel when i'm in here that he's still around me. can kinda field or of
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quick, silent without warning relate when i think he was a bowie college kids party, their smoke pot, they drink beer. i think that he was an easy target for them. you can't tell anybody or more people that know that where it gets all walls i do know is going to work with you. you can't tell anybody you can't tell your parents. you can't tell your friends. you can't talk to an attorney, you just need to come and talk to me the actually, the max is 40 years of prison, 40 years. and that's where, why are you have to go by marijuana for individuals? and then, you know, depending upon how you do and so forth, you know, a lot of this could go away. i was
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scandalous. i was, i never seen anything is bad. it is a good possibility that your, your person present time if you don't. yeah, there just, once you learn more of the background, you can understand why someone who had never really been in trouble and was only 20 and trying to get your college would be scared to death. this is way too dangerous for him to be doing. surely they put him in harm's way, fast. we cleared up faster, you can get this wasn't right, this is corrupt. they believed him. so i'm not going to be there. i know that i rather than me on
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the life on the farm, you learn the circle of life cattle or morn and cattle die and you're always hoping for a good crop. it's very calming and stressful at the same time. me, north dakota, it's a wonderful place to raise kids and we knew that we wanted to be parents at some point. ah. right on capitol hill is where they shook the fireworks off. usually it's on the 5th of july and there's hundreds of boats out there. and it's beautiful
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and we like to take the jet ski and come up the crick here. there's, i don't know a group of 4 or 5 of us that come up here. ah, there's fun. nicholas came to live with us and the situation entailed that we adopt nicholas. then in there, my sister was having a really bad part of her life. it just wasn't good. and then my parents came up with this idea that we should adopt him. so we said, yeah, we would, you know, pay can then so that's how he came to live with us. like else
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he was i'm or a year old. i think when we got him and that was in like 89. so it was pretty early in our, in our marriage, 7 years after we were married, andrew came along. ah, nick, welcome to my little brother. oh, he was such a proud, big brother. even though they were 7 years apart actually, i think that was really a good spread for me. i thought it for you guys. i'm not sure it's not something to write on me. nick, when he was a country boy, a good hard worker. wasn't really all going at all, you know, he was quiet boy,
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the nick was working at the store that day and i left at noon to be in a golf tournament and it was during the summer. so he was working and i'll never forget. as i walked out the door, he was leaning on a carry out, a grocery carry, a cart said, good luck today, marcia tonight. and i said yeah, around midnight and he goes yup, help. oh, he got involved with his local gallagher lived a couple miles from here. just got to there one year anniversary and he was going to make supper for all of us. oh. ready ready on. ready ready ready ready ready ready the
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me, i read years where my son lost his life right here. or i is tabitha in a car together. oh, i don't know exactly what happened to sure. you know, he's got broad sighted by a train on 5060 miles an hour. i don't know if they were moving around or something and you know, their teenage kids. exactly what happened, but it was terrific or
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are we just kind of relied on him up for a lot. so it wasn't just losing my son, like lucian kept my farming operation. i don't use it 3 time. i shut down. i didn't work for 6 months. andrew and i went to grief counseling. just it was because of andrew that i found back. cuz i'm like, somebody's gotta take care of this kid. oh yeah. oh.
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whopping. in small town, people know each other and pretty close knit community. i would say there's not a lot of crime. you know, that was a lot of the cell, you know, to mom and dad bringing their, their, their, their young adults to their campus. this is a brand new experience for a lot of them treating. i president john richmond and i want to welcome you for the north dakota state college of science. we hope that the heart and soul of washington is the north dakota state college of science. it is where north dakota and the region come shopping for trade and tech. it is this melting pot of ranchers, of farmers, you've got nurses, you've got dental, you've got diesel mechanics, you've got electricians. i mean, you can come out and make
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a very good living. right away while it's in there was the 99.8 or some crazy big job placement afterwards, and that really caught my attention. so looks like a good place to go. like wow, as where you meet your friends, you're around forever. this is where you, where you're, everything happens, you're for years that every person gets the lives and it's gonna be the best in your life. oh, i had no idea. what i want to do is have a teacher that says i want to be a truck driver. ironically, the ah, me ah
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fairly casually. we would more often than go out in the car and just go for a little cruise because more times it out there was a top striving around the parking lot for the college. so that's what they're looking for. so we can not very smart just to sit in the car there, so we just go and drive around a bit and come back. nothing didn't hurt anybody. indoors did do us or just put us on the couch, watch movies, the camera blazing will be faster than what you're doing. well, is there individual that you know on campus or tower or whatever they can buy?
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probably if you went about else that would be more reasonable, that'd be more able to say you're trying to make money, a campus here now new more just to people to get the you know, the level. so tell me public enemy number one in the united states. is drug abuse, drugs are menacing, our society substance abuse is a serious challenge for our nation addiction breaks. hearts destroys families and keeps our citizens from fulfilling their god given potential. what's the war on drugs? it's part of the attitude of the nation, not just of, of north dakota war on drugs were on drugs and it got to be something that you
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could get elected with you know, you had to be tough on crime. tough find crime tough. foreign crime will selling marijuana in north dakota is a crime. and so, you know, you start seeing the feds put out more and more money to empower that. and so what happens is, it's like, you know, there's the money, go get the money. we can have another officer too if we have the money. and so therefore we're dealing with this and we're part of the world. ah, we had done a couple of stories about them making drug laws stiffer. they had this enhanced campus related drug lot. so basically if you have a little bit of weed that would maybe be a misdemeanor, if you're on a school campus that could be a felony. and so i think that their thought process in that was ok. let's prosecute people who are selling to students,
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or let's prosecute people that are doing something that is going to impact young kids. rather than just the average adult out on the street. the local law enforcement was able to go onto a campus where they're to have that has its own law enforcement agency. they had essentially unfettered access to the dormitories on the dfcs campus. and they could go into the hallways. and to the end to the dorm rooms, this just seemed like an unconstitutional situation. me moving off in the number of police blew me away. i was the 1st thing i thought was like, there's a car. they get every block. it is kind of gave you used to the imminent danger of the police coming and knocking and find you and you just
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kind of don't care me. i think we had a long night before, and i know we were both sleeping viper off and we had a knock on the door and the heck is not anything. somebody call me if they're coming over or something. but so i got up and i open the door mind whereas 2 policemen, what the heck is going on here? we can search room really? yeah. i guess you're here. so we just, we opened up the door and they came in and sat on my bed and you said when they searched the room for a while and they turned on finding a little tiny grinder. i didn't, you know, isn't there neither sad or i knew when they found that they looked at me and you can go to class. they showed me away right away. it's kind of odd that i went to class and came back from class and i asked him about andrew, what happened? whatever happened about days like oh it's nothing just don't tell anybody about it
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. and you just hushed me right away and i didn't tell me not tell anybody. i did mention something to eric just briefly afterwards because i was in shock that happened of wasn't ready for it for sure me. drew ahead whispered something to me in private with just the 2 of us. something by the cops that came in search to our room. we're did, you know, but that was something i felt like have happened to anybody threw into classes like so i didn't. i didn't know, and i just assumed it was fine. lot of every day was in campus, police force me i
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i gave him a big hug and thanked him for helping me. and he says, and i asked him what he's going to do and he says, i gotta, i gotta go down, gotta date. oh, so hard them and said i told him i loved him and he told me loan me and got his current away. last, last time i seen him ah, in a labyrinth. after class,
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we started heading back to norms and static got a call and he's like a party later nosing now, i guess walked up the stairs and he said, i'll come get you when i'm ready. and i said few later, man, $11.00 flight of stairs, an hour for the end of the night as my cap, it takes out i can. okay. do you want to smoke cigarettes or something? so got me and andrew is up in the room and we went up and married, drew, and andrew had a movie. so he just put it on and kind of bought the movie and sat there and nothing seemed weird at all. like just hanging out like every other day ever. ah, when the movie is over, i remember i was pretty ready for bed. and then eric mayor goes, went back to his room and static was ready for bed. and then he got up and he's like, i had to go sometimes he'd go out and party was the girl i meant he
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asked me even if i wanted to come with i'm already have asleep, man, you gotta do it. i'll be. i'll be here when you get back when he wasn't there, when i woke up and looked over his, i wasn't in better than go see him in class in the morning. so dr. done nothing on me. injury class and static wasn't a class. i mean, he's late, sometimes there was like, you know, so wasn't like alarming. maybe he's, you know, what is some girl or something, you know, no big deal. go to lunch. ah, throughout the day you didn't find any more tags or me and all the friends coverage constantly kind of pestering them all the trans, send them snaps detection and stuff throughout the day. just fission for reply, trying to see where a friend is as a day went on, we got a class where to suffer with paul marsh. and i remember him specifically making more of
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a big deal about it than either of us. it just wasn't like us to not tax back, not answer, snapshots back on the stamps, still have the whole they can, you can see if they open it thing and you, i don't think he was opening anything. were like weird. i think we were just connecting dots like this is not right. the next day we're like, dude. again, all someone goes for lunch or like we'll go see if we can get his mom parents, phone number from the college. so we went over there and we just asked to, can we get sad parents, phone numbers, we can get a hold of them and just see if he's at home or something. so they kind of freaked out right away. they're like, well, you don't know where your friend is. you don't know like what worries out like what was last time you saw me? we were like, do we just got him in so much trouble? ah. friday at noon. the phone rang and they asked for andrew and
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they didn't identify themselves. and i, and i'm like andrew way at school and they're like, this is a school and said that he was missing. and i'm like, when you mean missing his on campus, he lives on campus. how can you be missing? and she said he's missing and i want to put it on the news and i'm like put it on the news if he is missing. oh, word has gotten to us. at the mighty 790 came into our newsroom and a young man named andrew static has gone missing. andrew is a student at the north dakota state college of science. now, if you're wondering how andrew static looks, please go to k of g o dot com for that. let's help find out. oh, i had the feeling who's bad instantly. a news bad
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news and of course we tried calling them and texting. and ah, maybe you skip a class or 2, but the missing for a day without letting us know what's going on. that wasn't, it wasn't andrew. and one of the never happened to me. so then right in there i, i knew that was some, some good. ah, we decided to just drive down there and see what's going on. because we knew it was more serious than jim just taken off. friends gathered on the campus of n. dfcs today baffled why, why would he just do this? so of course graduation, you know, countless searches and still nothing. we've never had a student missed this long term. most of them we find within 24 hours. so it's been very, very frustrating. we're in campus,
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police sergeant halligan's office in jason weber, came in helga and said that jason webber was the one in charge. and that andrew was in a lot of trouble with drugs. and i was like, trouble with drugs andrew the ah financial guy, i don't buy a, i buy futures. that's not an almost friday at the last time i buy x in the future. so for i can watch kaiser and it's like you're walking down a street in a town and in the store, windows are negative in depression, you tend to go into the store and buy those thoughts and take them home as if
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they're years. in mindfulness, you walk down the street, you still see the sort storefront with the negative thoughts, but you don't go in and buy those headlines and chilling effect on media freedom. that's the reaction to a new law proposed by the u. k. government, which could threaten investigative journalist prison if they expose the secrets. meanwhile, report is point volk, receive the u. s. secretary of state claiming the defendant independent journalist worldwide. while doing everything he can't rock up to the songs for the rest of his life and us democratic party. med prioritize flashing police budgets, although at the same time ramp up spending on their own private security. ah.
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