tv Documentary RT August 23, 2021 1:30pm-2:01pm EDT
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gavin newsome and scott winner and every other enabler who had the largest to happen, views, the feelings of, and the physical safety of incarcerated women at the bottom of that pyramid of needs. when we of course, understand it has to be a top off. he's keeping a close eye on similar developments in the us and for the walt. and we'll have more features on the issues raised to call me when i would show the wrong one, i'll just don't the room yet to fill out. the thing becomes the attitude and engagement equals the trail. when so
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a model in a minute when it is flow. no, no yeah. if you, if you're asking me for my, if i have you coming back in a heavy but the whole thing is puddle only to me. it means freedom strictly. as the moment valuate is world more and more understand that when you don't own anything, you are not, you know, something happens in this world catastrophic. you got to have a police as you can go to say this is my was gone on, i owners and it means so much to me is everything
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from, by myself, i tend to saver it, so peaceful can be walk around him. underwear going to refrigerator. get some apple juice and going out on the porch and smoking a cigarette. you always find a reason to snap out of it. only dangerous. it's not fun when you leave and going back to what they call a trenches from the 30th onward. every single president has spoken of homeownership. almost as the basis of citizenship. your ability to own a home kind of makes us citizen, the most tangible cornerstone that live at the heart of the american dream. and
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that's the chance to own your own home. those of us you've been given positions, have responsibility to do everything we can to spotlight at the dream. make sure the dream shines in all neighborhoods all across the country. i say to millions of young working couple. by the time your children are ready to start the 1st grade, we want you to be able to own your own home in to be in their home and people need to make sure that america ah ah, i me
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i am jim the realtor here are some tips for homebuyers. number one work with a great realtor, a good realtor sells at least one house a month. check their sales history on zillow. americans love buying homes in southern california, especially we dig real estate and we forgot about the bubble and all the other trouble, the financing and everything else. and here we are right back at it. frenzied up 51015 buyers for every house. like none of that ever happened. on the 800 video document, the real estate market on youtube. i got almost 1500 youtube and it gives people
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real good sense of what's happening. i'm a show of this today. for 1.61.1000000 to 1.4. 5. i don't know what to say either. i don't know what they're good as dollhouse. pool in the front yard. slightly unfinished fire pit. why is feeling the trim piece? me all the other appliances all stolen could have been so nice about those pillars that they had to steal from. i'm not sure. there's 15. how the mystery. i think it was at least 8 of them had loans way over me. and well,
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if you're sitting on a 1.2 or 1.4 loan and you see how that listed for 585, how they're going to make you feel about making that next name and and general. ah, so what we saw in 2008 was the unwinding of housing finance system. what most people understand as a financial crisis or a problem of our housing stock actually is unwinding of a social contract that was built in 1940. and so understanding that and how the american home was the basis of how we organize the economy and how we organized social stability is an important part of understanding why we are where we are now in
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the still pretty nice neighbor. i don't know if any of these places used to be a whole fire house many years ago. i just don't want to buy a house. you know, this was an old hole fire years ago when i bought it. i was, i did one of the yoga or the attorney. well, no, i was born here many years ago. and they used to be an old farm house around here someplace were you know, where would have been might have been here and i was converted or there used to be a tiny, tiny fire house. let me just check up a little bit with my mother punch and then write your face over there. when i was 6 months old,
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we moved from little italy in manhattan to this area right here. it was a housing project one night. my uncle frank was all what his wife and a mob of guys came down. his path was canyon badge and felt sticks. stay on the way to fight a bunch of black ice and they walk past us. and my uncle frank said to my father, get this kid, get him out of this neighborhood and move. and it was not that when we have to that we moved over town. i still get a big mistake. tell me how could you leave new york tribal bridge really got to be able to support those. you got a great job and a great place to agree with picket fence the mm
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america fights it was, it's people like us who go in by the town was the 1st community which kind of felt like this nation. but everybody thought it was going to fail because he built 10000 houses like that. coming out of the 2nd world war, the idea of mass production became something that was truly a reality. hey, kids love our whole new world to build the idea that came to a man named bill limit was this. why not mass produce the elements that go to make up a house? just as the auto industry does, what the parts that go into a new car. i, when i was living there, it was at a very particular moment and that was coming out of postwar trajectory that created the need for that type of housing. ah,
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returning g i you could buy a house for as little as a $100.00 down and about $99.00 a month. and that was currently a federal government was ensuring your mortgage. we had the g i bill encouraging construction of new home. so the whole idea is your government wants you to have a home. so this was an easy way to sort of jumpstart housing industry and make home ownership possible without those subsidies, lower middle class families did never been able to afford to massive movement to the suburbs that we saw in the late 19th. for these 250960 i was a police officer here in national county, and we were the swat team as well as people i went to and you noticed story about
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sticking her tongue on a plate. both a little went to i did. why don't netflix? i swear to god, i didn't. if you couldn't afford to put a down payment on the scholars, it would let you read was the option to buy. so he was just this is william rather the progress on building firm in the world fell all as much as an awful lot of doing. we had to start from scratch with absolutely no. everything had to be done at once. if you go back to william levitt, he said no man who owns his own home and lot can be a communist because he has too much to do the. this was a fundamental part of how our political leadership and our country large understood the bargain. you get a home right and you have to work or 30 year jobs that go along with it to match
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the 30 year mortgage. and then you'll rebel, right as the things you don't revolt if you have a stake in the system. ah, join me every 1st day on the alex salmon show. when i was speaking to guess in the world, the politic sport business. i'm show business. i'll see you then in hi matt, kaiser, what more of my guys do financial survival? this is a hedge fund. it's a device used by professional value eggs to earn money. that's right. these hedge funds are completely not accountable. and we're just adding more more to them. totally, the stabilize the global economy. you need to protect yourself and get inform. watch because we would book me
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ah, now presents a special report on one of the most unusual diplomatic events in recent history. one of them with famous moments in the history post warehousing and basically nixon saying to chris that the strength of the american economy is the post or home and the ability of the american to purchase consumer durable to fill it. so let's see
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about the system that will give people more good will be the better system in this one particular moment, nixon was right. ah, this was the strength in the american economy. i can remember, even as a kid, looking at house magazine and seen the incredible vision of the future, the house represented in those pages was something that you could aspire to. and that was starting to become a reality, was me imagine how wonderful it would be to live in a house like that. a future big companies in the house of the future warehouse of 999 will be virtually maintenance free. 3 3 yes, life will be richard,
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me. me hello. hey buddy. give me like 45 minutes. all right, buddy. boy, i only say that 11. did that was wrong with the the only thing that did that was wrong, and i'll be the 1st one to admit this note. blacks and blacks allowed and that is disgraceful. ah, as i'm fighting alongside a black man who is willing to die and he can't buy
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a house next to me and live again. simon, don't make a nuisance. i why did you select led to believe we were looking for a place to buy a home? we love to live in town. we like to share. we like the advantages of counting them offer in comparison to other cities and we understood that it was going to be all right, we're very happy to buy a home here. ah, when you come to this neighborhood, you know immediately it's different and launch one together.
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it gives you a feeling park like setting ah the news i was struck by how familiar it felt. it was a connection to leopard town that they both developed as post for a suburbs. i believe, i believe. and he built these houses. he really built dude houses for the veterans coming home from the war. it was hard for him to get financing for these houses. because they were so different, the whole social part was partner his design and probably shouldn't even say and said don't. i'm not even going to open it. he was
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a socialist. and i think a lot of the people that moved in here were i'm gonna get 12 percent. oh, my father is greg green, fairly well known california architect from the forties and fifties. so these are the letter that i just came into my hotel room from an interesting and an expected visit through the day from drafting rooms at yale are one and a half days of philip johnson's jewel, new canaan. here's the real fascist intellectual. i started rummaging through some old papers and then i came across this here, 200 page or 10200 page filed the f b. i kept on him and they were watching everything he did from the mid forties to the mid fifty's. gregory. believe that decent housing should be the right
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of everyone, not just the privilege of the very wealthy people. 12 percent of the population is black. there should be a lot of black families living out here. yeah, this is only a beginning, but i think it's wonderful. well, let's see how wonderful it is when i was mel and ryans come, fry them up. oh, i, i turned out the neighborhood was supposed to be twice as large to plants was for $100.00 homes. and only $52.00 were built. the f ha at the time, didn't think that inter graded neighborhoods would be practice to the general public and they're providing mortgage insurance and in their minds that would bring
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down the value of the home you know, most people in america, the value of those homes and parents passing that on to their children that made the biggest difference african americans were left down and that that inability to participate in what created american middle class has a lot to do with the problems we have. now. the really interesting dial back and think about the longer deeper history of what housings meant in the united states. not just that old question of the american dream, but the bigger question of who the dream has been for ah,
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beautiful, but golden outside house stuff is tough. oh. as a kid, i didn't really understand how segregated to city was because i never left my areas . one time. my dad got his house for a week is like little outside the city. and he had a nice apartment complex tool every day. brilliant people had a decent car. it wasn't allowed at night, it was fun. but when i got back to the city, they got evicted. my dad sent us somewhere for a week just to get the house together. i've moved too many times to count. i've lived in so many neighborhoods. it doesn't allow you to gauge what is normal
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this neighborhood. so pretty much the same. a lot of these houses vacant, we used to go all behind them and up in them almost like it's ready to go in and find everything that are left before they got evicted. you know, a jackpot, some phone over like the community didn't feel it doesn't. and when you say lease, because we're kids is just having fun. baltimore is a microcosm of many urban areas in america. and it is like dickens would say the tale of 2 cities. you have great investments in certain parts of town in other investments looking like a ghost town. baltimore in many ways is the ground 0
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for racial apartheid in america is where racial voting was invented in 1910 and then racially restrictive covenants were also created. here. we have a miss in this country that the reason neighborhoods are segregated is because people like to live with one another who are of the same race. or because african americans have too little income to move into white neighborhoods. or because there's private prejudice that prevents african americans from buying homes and white neighborhoods. and that's all true. but it's a tiny, tiny part of the truth. there's intentionality with the capital decisions that were made around housing in the forty's and in the fifty's. and i think people are law to sleep thinking that certain things happen by default rather than by design. you have the f, a, j, the, the federal housing administration of veterans administration. they subsidize home building and suburbs, and then they say is racially exclusive. it means white people can move out to
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these areas. but what is probably a surprise for a lot of people is that red lighting is created by federal government. that's when the white bank is drawn red lines around black areas and don't give up, no grain. ah, a military mission against them will conclude on august 31st one phone for who did a good to us all the quote unquote, a young girl. who and i really the proof for my you got to be subtle. company the cut, the cut over the whatever the month i think that i'm going to get a quote things alicia. very good. this was the right weapon
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the headlines, it's the white hi, supposedly denies us guns, access to people airport and prioritize is evacuating nato citizens. and us green card holders, the un wanted a growing humanitarian catastrophe. needs that are in, on new to population or needles, coming to the board and seeing right now use them for y, good weekend or why partial systems people time stuff. earliest americans employed by foreign states did manage to flee, but their relatives, the remaining, the country, fearing retribution from the taliban. we spoke to one translator on condition of complete anonymity because of the risk. i believe that americans are responsible
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