tv Documentary RT August 10, 2021 4:30am-5:00am EDT
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my street ah, you see that tree there? i remember when i could put my fingers around it. we planted the trees so that trees planted in 1945. quite a long time ago, harvey decided to write a book about his father's experiences. as he research the legal case, he began to get a lot of attention. strange things were happening. male was arriving in our house open. there were all these strange clicks on the telephone. then about 2 weeks after that, i'm driving to pick up my kids from a school dance clear night. clear road from behind me comes a car with no headlights on slams into me, pushes me off the road and disappears. something that we really haven't spoken about. and nothing like this of course ever happened again. but it
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does interesting questions with me. sarah has been making about her grandmother since 2009. i'm going to film a video. it's going to be a doctor and my grandmother locked in this dance that never ends. i think of it just as like like a purgatory state or just like you know, never got, never got resolved it. never. she never got better. we thought this was over. we thought this was a bad history. 19 fifties, and early $960.00. it never crossed my mind that the united states would be using methods that cameron used to destroy
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the think i know the wall fairly well traveled to it, but i really didn't know about the twins house. i didn't know that the twins even existed. yeah, i will never will give that the i would, he's falling server for a gentleman, n g o r one of the workers could very want. and then i see that america, and i will see what is in my office, which is and then to me and suddenly the phone started to ring. ah,
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the thing we knew little about all and how that group was able to evolve to a point where you learn later that that 19 dogs with box cutters was able to bring the united states to our knees. the immediate, the mouth was ordered to florida to help drew out the invasion of afghanistan, the i 2001 i made the decision life changing decision. it turned out to be to go to afghanistan. and to do that with my
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wife and my children. the war on terrorism begins, america and britain strike a gun. this done on october, the 7th, 2001. the war on terror began to panic. it's pure panic. this isn't just the united states, bombing, sorties, and campaigns. this is now soldiers on the ground, armed people in the streets, killing people, arresting people, torching people, and on the target. muslim was captured and detained in my grand a year. in february 2003, she was taken to gwin, panama bay detention camp. accused of being a member of al qaeda. he was considered high risk for the next 20 human,
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he was held in solitary confinement. ah . ah, me, after 911, when i received the phone call it was the director of our security. and explain to me that the u. s. government asked him to arrest me. mohammed do with the key to being the leader of an i'll call you to self in both germany and one trail. the indicator president bush signed the secret direct giving the ca, or 30 to kill or capture terrorist anywhere in the years that followed the food doesn't crisscross the clothes,
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making thousands of faced with an onslaught of prisoners. the bushes administration drew up a memorandum known as the torture memos it set out the legal basis using these techniques in the war on terror and cited the hooded men, $978.00 judgment. the within months to ca rolled out these methods with in guantanamo. and all its black sites they called them enhanced interrogation techniques to see a turn to contracts psychologist who had no experience with our cader,
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who had no experience with interrogations, and had no experience in the middle east gym and i went into a cubicle, sat down at a at a he sat down at the typewriter and together we wrote out the list as techniques that we thought had worked well in the series school. well, i had already been told that the geneva conventions didn't apply to the capture detainee did not, did not apply to the capture detainees by the attorneys at the cia. and so i don't think i thought about geneva convention may became what i often refer to as a modern day equivalent, a snake oil salesman. these 2 psychologist were awarded $183000000.00 contract to run a program of torture. ah, you don't. cameron, external sensory deprivation overland along with the cold,
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we'll see a program to create her reflect mix of torture techniques. social change has almost entirely taken place in consequence on something else. it has not been controlled. we need to protect society from those that can bring it once more into kills. the strong must protect others from these people who are not on the or the emergency management association is the world's largest organization of psychologists, and probably has the most influence over the community of psychologists around the world. ah,
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secretly p a. p a and make it high colleges working in the torture program to override that ethical code of home. if the military and ca required it a program of abusive inter and at guantanamo was designed by a psychologist and a psychiatrist after they were trained in the techniques in the program of the ca abuse. and that's when i could basically stand no, oh and so suddenly i went from just being the psychologist in my office to becoming the face of opposition to the a p. s. position war is a strategic business. our planning and our ex q sion
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needs to be really well thought out and it has consequences. for years. i was in conversations with the department of defense and with the white house. and i learned that we had psychiatrist in psychologists who were advising the interrogation teams dan, i learned that they were not just advising that they were involved by. i was stunned . i mean, i take it all this time for me to build the picture of what's been involved here and the secrecy that was behind this torture program. and i make no,
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certainly no borders and the number is emerge. we don't have authority, we go to the back seat, the whole world needs to take action and be ready. people judge 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 challenges for the response has been massive. so many good people are helping us. it makes us feel very proud that we need together in one of the worst ever mass shootings in america was in las vegas in 2017. the
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tragedy a close a little of the real last vegas where many say elected officials are controlled by casino owners. the dangerous shooting revealed what the l v n p d really is. and now it's part of the spin machine to the american public barely remember that it happens that just shows you the power of money and las vegas. the powerful showed that true colors when the pen demik hit the most contagious contagion that we've seen in decades. and then you have a mayor who doesn't care. so here's caroline goodman, offering the lives of the biggest residents to be the control group. to the shiny facades conceal a deep indifference to the people the vice could have been saved if they were to take an action. absolutely keep the registering and keep the slot machines doing. this is a money machine, is a huge cash register that is ran by people who don't care about people's lives being lost. the,
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the news the me in the punishment wing, known as india block, mohammedan, was isolated from all other detainees. we call it the freed because it's very cold. i was the was level so i mean what level? no food, nothing. total isolation, psychological and physical torture. and i was in a 27 american hash
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because of my activism that i was placid in germany, somewhere to go home to listen either to confess crime or we're going to put you in the torture program. and i said go for it very much. i was really stupid here, the bag that i american said. the logic says that without you they wouldn't be $91170.00 mohammed. you was the most prisoner in the role of psychologist in this torture program. astounds me. i saw that we're heading down a road that i knew was going to be disaster in 2002 mark put his neck on the line. one tissue period. that the c i a were using torture.
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i felt like there was an apple and you can see these boulders coming down and you can waive your arms and you try to stop it. but i could not stop what was happen, the blood thirsty torture people who is just great for any one person. stop the peer interrogation rules of engagement go far beyond geneva convention, stress positions, sleep management, dietary manipulation. all of these things go far beyond a standard which says there will be no physical or mental torture nor any other form of coercion. that's the geneva convention. these rules of engagement for interrogation issued by your department are inconsistent with those. my recollection is that any instructions that have been issued or anything that's been authorized by the department, was checked by the lawyers in your shop, in the department, in the office of the secretary of defense and deemed to be consistent with the jan
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. absolutely. and you do a secretary, donald rumsfeld was convinced that mohammedan retreated 3 of the 911 hijackers. he personally authorized a 90 day special project, stated them how to do with her and the consequences 7, the order to abuse prisoners was unlawful. but to build up to that unlawful order, they need a justification. and so what they did was they sent a colonel to guantanamo to look and try to justify what was going on. and he said, going to hannibal be, is america's battle lab. and the moment i heard that evoke memories of nuremberg evoke memories of what the not nazis were doing experiments. the, the 1st thing they started with was live the professional regime. and then it massive guide to the song. it was very dog except for still applied
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and then he stops playing the music lids on the floor all day long. you know, you, i cannot explain to one someone is doing shackle shackles on the floor. and a group of people, 2 women and a guy come and force them on to me. the know that war has a moral imperative. america after $911.00 was shocked. and i think we had been deeply frightened and i think that fear was exploited.
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certainly in the years after that and continued to be exploited, the understanding is you've been more native detainees than any other fashion. i, you know, i've met a number of them. you know, so many, probably more than anyone else. can you tell me whether i can specifically talk about what i've my meetings with them or what i've learned about these i've met colleagues shake. mohammad holly been natasha the ramsey. been she a mar, belushi and her solid. these men were subjected to all these tactics, and there is absolutely no evidence. absolutely not
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a shred of evidence that, that these tactics used on these men really gave us any intelligence that was important or useful to our country the we created to in iraq or torture rock more what we call isis today. die each ice on the same. it's just a manifestation of torture with these are programs that we created and we're living with those results that you think this is watkins. this is absolutely we're crimes. we knew there were crimes or this new substitute is here to rectify 10 years of deceitful and secret pollution to
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n p. the will of the membership into the right. the other protest this battle with the a p a is coming to an end here today to reset our moral compass. we had been trying to, to use to prevent psychologists from being part of national security interrogations . that supposed to be acknowledged and we apologize for it and we changed the stuff to being held. the 3 of them was released without totally so if i got on a plane and come back home to england, what would have happened? would i end up in tunnel? would these would these painful would this playful period ever have happened?
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would i be the person i have today? i called on to those questions, but i do often fate myself. why didn't i just get on a plane and go back or let me know how many of these confessions were found to be the result of taught. he was released without charge after 14 years in guantanamo or i was no match for them. they destroyed and they won. they are broken. and there is nothing i could say to save my face to say or i won. no, i did not. because those people out of professional doctors who studied just for this purpose, to destroy the human spirit and make a dependent b d n, and make them confess to what ever they want them to cautious them.
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in august 2017. the 2 psychologists who created the cia torture program were about to be put on trial. we were soldiers doing what we were instructed to do. we knew it was lawful, we knew it was legal. we knew it had been vetted and approved. do you think it's possible as a psychologist that an individual who was subjected to them suffer to long term visible or psychological rejection? do you think it's possible that actually that probation taken to the extreme could induce severe mental pain or suffering? objection. the c, i a settled out of court for an undisclosed amount. no liability was admitted. world law and government will intensify the problem of the growing anonymity of the common man. what we must is to see our world spread neither
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friendly nor unfriendly around us. and which we must at last take final responsibility for ourselves to ensure that in the fighting isis. and we continued to have all necessary power to detain terrace wherever we chase them down wherever we find them. and in many cases, for them, it will now be guantanamo bay. william program has been known to guantanamo bay, which could be in trouble in population. ah, what makes this issue important? guantanamo has become the calling cry. torture is some sign of american
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power that allows people to think that america will be great. again. the united states right now is one terrorist attacks away from re instituting torture. since the 1950s, we know these techniques have been used in afghanistan, argentina, australia, sonia, present the british guy on the british camry, canada, cuba, great britain. what a 100 iran, iraq, israel, lithuanian morocco, northern pockets. don't. the philippine poland. romania, thailand, turkey euro. why? and
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to talk to someone that could touch base with anybody when me and i got a job when i'm in a position where you may need questions on it for one of our wonderful day join me. i was, i got to know how to choose, you can put an offer me quite a bit as long food. i want to tell you the truth that he can. that's why you need that because that quote
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thanks guys are financial survival guide. when customers go buy, you reduce the bin l, well, reduce the lower the best under cutting, but what's good food market? it's not good for the global economy. oh, yeah. you can, i got a 6 day marathon of creativity, multi cultural festival. and the biggest variety is the competition for a few days, became a russian cultural capital. 28 categories. ahh from violence, piano to be honest, with parenting and data protection. not yours just throwing up a little over. water. sure. you know,
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if you could get some kind of a 3 or for them to be here, they filter when reading or content the delta games only take the very best of the best buy i ah, ah, i think is part of mental health revolution. we increasingly freeze political claims. psychological at the language of mental health became more common. so if you disagree with something i said on this program, you know, just say i just agree with you. i think you're wrong because of the following
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ah, the protesters storm that bbc's old headquarters in london despite the corporation having moved its base from there almost a decade ago. the demonstrators are angered now the vaccination of children on the broadcasters rule, they say in promoting it. coming up this news our, the life of an alleged us intelligence officer implicated in the death of british motorcyclist. hurry, done faces blame. she may have been on her phone, i'm distracted when her car plowed into him. we hear from the families adviser about the new developments in the us government are trying to shut dr. inquiry down the other side or the.
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