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tv   News. Views. Hughes  RT  July 27, 2021 2:30pm-3:01pm EDT

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ah, ah, i use rather driven by general shaped person. those in me who dares
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think we dare to ask me. ah, 15000, heartbreaking jazz from cobit 19. that's what has been recorded in new york nursing homes and adult care facilities. yet the department of justice has decided to drop the probe into whether or not those victims and their families. civil rights were violated by governor comas order were discuss the fairness and the galaxy of this decision. meanwhile, just announced at the white house, the u. s. military combat mission to iraq is over, but it's air strikes are continuing in afghanistan. and another area of conflict with the us was supposed to have been withdrawn from will iraq still c a u. s. president as well. we're going to give you the background of the u. s. involvement in iraq was expert analysis of what to expect past the prescott. and finally,
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shocking video. violent crimes are now becoming less shocking. not because of the nature of the crime committed, but because of how often we are now seeing images like this in the streets of america. many of those same streets which over the last year were filled with chance to defend the police. but as it made me time to start talking about refunding, the police will give you the $360.00 view on the issue. okay, now you, then you're watching news news. hughes right here on our t america. let's get started. ah . the united states has agreed to a formally and it's combat mission in iraq. by the end of the year, though, a sell american forces will remain in the country as part of continue training and advising role r. he's a john had he takes a look at the brief history of a u. s. military involvement and iraq since 2003 with us forces leaving
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afghan stand. the sites are also now set on americas draw down once again in iraq. it has been a violent 18 years since the us invaded the country in march 2003, with more than 4500 us troops killed and hundreds of thousands of civilian dance. despite then president george bush's mission accomplished declaration in may 2003. the fight, as we now know, would re john, even after the fall of saddam hussein. by april 2004, america had 144000 troops on the ground in iraq, and the numbers would fluctuate over the years. as us forces would fight a bloody campaign against the rocky insurgency and arcada. in august 2010, then president obama declared an end to the 7 year combat mission in iraq. and after the 1st major draw down, just over 47000 troops remained by 2011. the number would draw to just a few 100 by to and 14. when the us joined the rocky and kurdish forces in the
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fight against sizes. as of january 20, 212500 us troops remained in iraq. both the u. s. and the rocky government agreed in april to transition to a train and advised mission, meaning some us forces would remain on the ground, as has been the case in the past to help train advise, and equip rocky forces. now the white house reportedly planned to fully end the u. s. as combat mission in the country by the end of the year with president bite and saying the united states needs to quote, fight the battles for the next 20 years. not the last 20 or rule in iraq. b as a dealing with not just to be available to continue to train to assist to help and to deal with isis as is as arrived. but we are not going to be brought in here in a combat. but as history has shown with us interventionism focusing on the future
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and not the past is easier said than done, particularly when it comes to the middle east in iraq. isis, despite being severely weakened, continues to rear its ugly head carrier bombings, and attacks on both security forces and civilians. and both the us and israel continue to view iranian back militias in iraq as a threat to regional stability. so while prison and bite and may be focusing on future wars, passwords in the middle east often come back to haunt the united states for news views. hughes. john hardy. to help us for today's announcement, we are joined by forward putting on official michael miller. michael, thanks for joining me on this. i know you watched the press conference area, which we call a little little lackluster. there was the pomp and circumstance that you would expect with a reader from a foreign country, even iraq. the talent has been set and that's what was now so that, that's what they had said. but one of us to actually be withdrawing. do you believe
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all the military facets from iraq, they're going to withdraw combat? they're not going to withdraw, or they will replace them really with teachers and advisors and intel support, which is, which is what the prime minister wants. and he's reacting frankly to internal pressures, especially from the sheer, the, the, the, the popular mobilization forces that one of all forces out period. however, they've basically agreed that they'll go along with, haven't the type of us a personnel there that can provide the training and the intel. and so we'll see what happens. but the prime minister has a lot of internal problems and he's trying to balance between his, his wanting to support from the us. but he also has to work with iran. so that poses, we're talking about right now. and also talk where you said the ones who got behind the training the in town is it about but he, the actual physical buys are more importantly,
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the resources that come with the money, the aid it comes with the combination of the 2. and they can't, they can't, there are certain types of equipment, for example, that equipment that comes with it. i mean, you get technology that probably you can find that in the desert or inquires us us support and expertise. yeah. and again, they're not combat forces. that's, that was the key and that's what a lot of the internal people really wanted to really objected to at the time. so, but i think people there are realistic enough to know that they need some kind of presence in order to try and maintain that tactical level and fighting level for the, for the iraqi security forces. otherwise, we'll be back the way to where they were back in 2000 right after 2011, where, where isis just swept in. right? and that's what i want to talk about. what is different about it this time you did see how it is packaged. you know, the time we've gone and come back running about what is different,
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what is different this time is that unlike 2011, when we withdrew, there has been this popular mobilization forces that they're sheer. and lot of them are back to not all, but many of them are backed by iran and they, they are committed to fight in isis. and they, they have the experience, they've got the, and fact they're part of the iraqi security forces. they report to the prime minister. so this is an addition, and i think that this could help keep isis a bay to, to a point and not recreate a, a caliphate like they did back in 2014. and so it's a, it's a pretty dicey thing for him. he's, he's walking a tight rope politically, but the united states has got to think about, well, what, what do we want out of all of this? and if we try to maintain some modicum of stability in the middle east, that'll be fine. but they're going to be some other outside forces. they're going to come into play here that iraq will just be one faster. i mean, you got,
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you got 11 and about ready to implode and for example, and, and you and, and you've got israel, who doesn't particularly like the influence of the pop popular movies. and i want to bring in iran, where does ron play and all of this? how are they taking the news save this time? i that americans are getting out of the retail. they'd probably want to 6 years ago, but that's beside. but i, you know, they've got, if, if the popular moses ation forces are okay with it. that means that i think that implies iran is going to go along with it. plus they've got iran has its own issues . it's got to do with internally. so there's isis remains a threat to iran, just as ice. this remains a threat to iraq. that's the reality. and the united states has decided to stay in iraq, principally to deal with isis. and it is a growing threat. they are getting stronger,
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not only and not only longer why the united states backing out. well, we're not launching, we're going to go ahead and allow the security forces to do their job, which is what they've been trained and paid to do. unlike what happened in, in 2014, when they threw up their, threw away their weapons by the thousands and deserted, allowing isis to swoop in like up in mosul area. for example, let's just hope this is not due. another days i've been, we're coming back here to years, going back and in circle, but that's how it's been in its region. it can change, it's gotta be watched, it's gotta be watched carefully. and meantime, the united states is trying to pivot eastward towards toward asia. so how did, how do you, how do you, which i am sure something around? probably welcome distraction for the us course. like always great chatting with you . michael. thanks so much. now after the break, police departments across the country are finding themselves short staffed by dealing with a serious spike. and by the prime, right, we've got a full report ahead. plus our panelists,
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we'll give you the $360.00 view. we'll be right back the what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy foundation, let it be an arms race is on often very dramatic development. only personally, i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very critical. i'm time to sit down and talk for all of you out there that regret not being around the soviet union at the time with their collapse. a lot of people on astrology about that lot of interesting things. math time, was there writing in the journal. anyway, they get to have that experience today right here in the good old us that
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hadn't been in my phone. i didn't, i don't, i just saw up dollar isis fighters and they're now voting a philippine naval ship with john $900.00. just aren't abdulla still don't know, watch waiting for them. can i
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get a hold of me? i advocated a police brutality. a sweat headlines last year, there has been a major effort to defend the police in a some us cities. but it's that decision contributing to a violent crime rates artic restaurant natasha suite takes a look at the violent crime skyrockets. there is a big step back from the funding the police. in fact, some cities are looking to reverse that decision altogether. violent crime is on the rise in many urban cities throughout the us. the baltimore police department is so short on staff with some 600 vacancies, that they're requesting federal police officers assist in fighting crime throughout the city. earlier this month, 2 officers were shot in baltimore at a shopping mall during an arrest. the officers were seriously ill when arriving at
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the hospital, but did survive what we thought a day. exactly. what officers go for these are the most dangerous situation imaginable. but they did their job with bravery, with courage, and with professional for the 7th year in a row, baltimore is on pace to have 300 homicides and 1000 shootings. by the end of the year, maryland governor larry hogan said, we can't defend the police, which is the marriage plan. we have to invest more in our police $190.00 a murder in our city last year. this should be shocking to the conscious of every person that out here where you live, the d. c police chief saying he was quote, mad as hell after a shooting in the local circle neighborhood. he said, the current justice system is ineffective and that criminal shouldn't be coddled. he also explained as a result of the pandemic courts have barely been open leaving many criminals to run free. thursday, shooting comes just
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a week after another shooting occurred just outside the washington national stadium . injury 3 people. the night before the stadium may have a separate shooting and dc left a 6 year old girl dead. and in new york, a reward is being offered to find a suspect in this robbery. a man in a great hoodie is seen punching a victim thrown from his bike, the suspect knocks out the victim by kicking him in the head. he then takes items from his pocket before fleeing, but at least one man still thinks police are the problem, according to a new finally, from the federal election commission. george soros has given $1000000.00 to an activist group working to defend the police. it's all comes as violent crime is clearly surging throughout the country. records indicate soros sent $1000000.00 to his color of change pack on may 14th, the group has called police seen a violent institution that must end. now, in 2018 thorough, spent millions to help elect the current los angeles county district attorney, but murders are up 20 percent along with other violent crime. it's similar to philadelphia, we're sort of spent another $2000000.00 helping
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a lot of their district attorney homicide. there have risen 35 percent this year. we're putting for new hughes and hostile suite r t. to give us the $360.00 view on this issue, we bring in civil rights attorney, robert patello and president of phil shape with eagles. ed martin. thank you, john, for joining me. things got it. you know, i'm going to start with the robert on this one. you know, it's only been a year since we saw a violent protest against the police with much of the violence actually happening. it's the police that were on duty. we remember those videos, please being spit on being, being things thrown at them. they were just, you know, in the streets with their full, full gear on robert were seeing this strong uptick in brazen a violent crime happening the streets of america. do you think there's any to have the correlation? the correlation between the 2 and i think it's kind of ridiculous to draw the conclusion such what we have, however, seeing is that in cities across the country where there have been attempts to hopefully cell which is accountable for the bad apples. and the bonds will seem
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police union to be massive. we've heard of both more. it's police officers down there been mass retirements, new york city and the city of atlanta were, i'm from you. had officers who have refused to respond to any calls is for officer down cold. so police are resistive, informal, police accountability or attempts to hold the whole backups accountable, which is an offer list of the uptake. we also cannot look at the fact that we compare it to 2020, 2020. everybody in the house. if you compare the number year over year with 20192015, multiple growth violated 2900. 2800. 20172016, chicago. another time to rethink the way we do policing the country and stop blaming people who simply want better bullying thing for the uptick ticking crime. okay, and is that how you see it? and i've got to ask, because a year ago this was all a reaction to the george floyd case. and all the events which have followed you think they've had an effect on metro police departments. and it's robert points out there are only responding to officer down calls. why do you think that is like,
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i mean, 1st of all, let me point out something. you show these images. i think it was baltimore new york, other places. do you notice that the, the, the cow, the character or the, the type of law enforcement, african american wide hispanic law enforcement. you know, there's, if there's ever a place where it may make it sound like america's burning over race, our cities are policed by lots of african americans and others. look, here's what we know. george soros funded efforts in the last 5 years to destroy our prosecutorial system. that's not against the law. accept i happen to think that he's not, we shouldn't be an american citizen. we could do another show on that. but you know what? we know, that's what's happened. so we have, as you point out, prosecutors who get into office like in my home city in st. louis and the prosecutor says, i won't let these cops testify there on, i know test the by list or, you know, we wanna work with them. now we have cops, of course, last summer there was quote unquote, protest in most major cities, by the way, i don't think anything was actually resolved, but there is no protest this year. i wonder why it looks like it was 2020 funded.
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so what we know now is our cities are hell holes where people are shot, you mentioned a 6 year old girl killed. that's only one example 70 people shot over the weekend in chicago. the people in charge of those cities are largely white liberal democrat . some blacks, but we didn't say what was happening there, destroying our people. they're letting them die. the connection is clear when you allow lawlessness and say you're going to deep on the police. you know what happens? good cops quit and bad cobs. find other ways to do things that aren't so nice. so, you know, what i would say is in every major city, disband the cops and start again with especially that those the unions and start again, but don't be fund them. just get rid of the mostly the liberal democrats who are in charge. well, and that's also politicians. robert, i'm going to respond to that. but, you know, i want to bring our d. c, please. chief robert contra said and said there was a lack of accountability as a problem. i agree with them on that. now he was not referring to mass car
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incarceration more holding the people in those communities who are making them unsafe. so i want to obviously give your feedback to add on this issue, but who is the actual chief of police talking about robert, and what should be a punishment enough to stop them and get them off the street from causing even more violent crime? all of i've been doing criminal defense for the last 15 years. i've never talked to a criminal talk to my who committed a crime. it's a while i reviewed the municipal code to find out what the punishment was for this crime. prior to going out and knocking this old lady upside the head or holding for an open gunpoint. we have to look at the societal factors, elite and point toward crime. we have to look at an over criminalization of the war war on drugs. was drugs, one rug, one, the war on drugs and it was kind of, we recognize that change or policy can come to. so we have to look at the economic and meet people to decide that is more economic a economically advantageous for them to commit crimes. and robbery than to get jobs in our community. we have to also look at the way to we structure policing. it's
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insane to meet the community to have the most heavy police presence who have the highest crime. also, i think that we will look at suburban community to have less crime, look at what they're doing, they have better schools, better rose, better social services, better access to health care, better housing for those individuals. so we work on building it from the ground up the medieval idea that we think we need to make the punishment works and that will stop crime. we tried that in the ninety's after the crime with the 980000 reagan. it didn't work. we talk a lot about dividing crime build, that was a response and the lawlessness holding quote of the 980, it didn't work is time to reform the way we do things well. and we get in here for the last word. you know, the mayor of those 25 major cities, they're cutting police budgets. however, same time, they're spending a lot more money on their own private security for those who elected office is that fair. and i have to wonder as robert point out, how are these kind of people getting re elected in the cities over and over their heavy with crime, they keep getting reelected? why is there no accountability on their part? well, just to quit 2 or 3 quick things. one is you have that one,
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please chief and african american. so there's no accountability. what he means is you can knock an old lady in the head and let the guy walk. you have to have a system that holds them accountable. just let me say this. there's only one systemic racism problem in this country. my opinion, although i'm not an african american, i just have, i'm observer. and it's, the school system was alluded to by my colleagues, the school systems are trapping, young, african american men, mostly men and boys and girls, i guess, and hispanic, and others. and you know, rooms at the school teachers unions which are more white, democrat liberals, they say they care about poor people. they say they care about african americans. now there be funding charter schools, and they won't fund any kind of school choice. so you say, what can we do better, get the hell out of the cities if you can, and get to a place where you can get a real education instead of these hell holes. and then don't be surprised when the people that work downtown wants somebody to make sure that you're not going to get knocked in the head. like you said, an old lady, so that you can walk to get a bagel. that's not hard to do. the question is joe biden share. i've got
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a teacher's union in the white house in my bedroom, dr. joe biden. so nothing's on the table to say black and brown kids in our failing schools. and it's been a 50 year problem, a sin of white of watt on every democrat who pretends it's okay. it's an outrage is disgusting. it's a crime against humanity. and now we're debating why we want to keep our st shape. it's because the teachers unions have sense our kids, the lives of crime, pregnancy, or early death. oh ad robert, we could get to this conversation education and we will, i promise, and thank you so much for joining us on this one. the justice department has issued a letter saying new york is off the hook. in regards to a governor cuomo is cover up of cobra, death in nursing homes. now this follows a request for the department of justice regarding the march 2020 order from the new york health department requiring nursing homes to admit medically stable cove in 1900 positive patients who are discharged from the hospital. so is this the end of
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for those who are looking to hold governor cuomo, responsible for the resulting desk, an elder care facilities? and what about the investigations into other states? i, pennsylvania, michigan, new jersey, who passed bills mirroring new york. while we bringing our legal analyst in new york president himself line a while i heard the story over the week and i wanted to get on there. i wanted you to be on air. i know this makes you live it. so help me out here. does this mean there are no more federal investigations into whether or not the most fragile of demographics. during the pandemic exposure to cobit 19 could have been prevented. done, finished through everything about him. he's the hunter biden. of the empire state. he's the, he's the n t for the of the empire said this is unbelievable. you know, was reading in new york times in july, 172000 right here. more than 817-2000 resident and a boy of nursing homes have died from complications, is from the new york time,
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the new york alone, 15000. he is the most prolific serial killer in the history of crime by definition. so the question that i have, and many people have, especially when people keep in mind when older americans who went to spend their last days on this planet, oh, completely shut off from family date that many could argue should have died in the 1st place. but what does this man have to do? does he have to shoot somebody live on tv? we also have ethics probes, which really don't matter, sexual harassment probes, which of course, are going nowhere. this go show you yet again, that he gets away with murder. and i don't want to be too too, too heavy with the term murder. but if this is
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a negligent homicide or manslaughter, i don't know what is well, and that's what i have to worry about. why don't we talk about it? whose fault it was? who the buyer is, china, is it the us? is it donald trump's? because he didn't do this, this in this, in this case, you have a direct order from the governor from the state, depart from their, their health department saying, put these people that are positive in our most fragile type of residence. and oh, my gosh chart. it just spread through it. i think governor cuomo responded to this news. oh he, he is medical he, the man is completely devoid of any kind of vengeance in heart empathy. but i got to tell you something right now, i can look out my window and the comfort. remember the comfort that failed up the hudson and people were clapping. people were running across the west side highway. almost guinea run over clapping a welcoming ship. where i see the 2134 people down the street in new york was the javits center where they had 3000. they had they,
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i don't know what they used. the job isn't. for there were so many places to put, coven positive people who what you have to go out of your way to put them and to configure them into nursing homes after president trump. wait a minute. wait a minute, scotty. i think i'm on. is that be? do you know, do you think maybe that if somebody had availed themselves of the comfort and a lot of the programs which were federally based and granted, and made possible by president donald trump, do you think maybe this might have been one of the reasons that might have led them be rather less than enthusiastic over this because i'm telling you, i've got to say this, i don't want to make this political but tough. right now when we're talking about vaccine to vaccine. remember, you're forgetting what was the guy who came up with is. so politics permeates
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everything. right? andrew cuomo can do anything he wants contour buying can do anything you want and t, but go down the list. this is just on country a lot of 15, sorry for the real quick. we legal side of it. we know that 1000 does follow that those orders but it, it fair to hold him accountable for them unless it could be proven that it was just that it was just not just poor judge a bit. he was actually intending to do harm in the i of the law can actually prove for this real quick 10 seconds. it would be virtually impossible for him to do because there were so many layers of excuses and defences that he would be able to avail himself of be virtually impossible criminal. and that's why have you on here line. thanks for your answers. that's all we have for today show. thanks for watching. ah, ah ah,
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no. when i would show the wrong, why don't just don't the yes to shape out the same because the after an engagement equals the trail. when so many find themselves will depart. we choose to look for common ground. oh right now, there are 2000000000 people who are overweight or obese. it's profitable to sell food that is fatty and sugary and healthy and not at the individual level. it's not individual willpower. and if we go on believing that will never change as obesity epidemic,
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that industry has been influencing very deeply. the medical and scientific establishment, ah, what's driving the mac? it's corporate, me. the hours pope headlines are not into national whistleblower. daniel hale is sentenced to 45 months in prison. the leaking classified details about america's drone assassination program. we speak to indignant fellow whistle blowers on the program . it's really a war on truth and i just went to the government. is that war with its own people? and i don't think that the people actually understand what's happening. germany's rock, why a huge explosion that in industrial park housing, chemical companies, environmentalists are concerned about the plume of black smoke that's being created full of potential talks in.

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