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tv   News  RT  September 9, 2021 4:00am-4:30am EDT

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i me, the, the, the, the, the ahead of the 911 anniversary all t commemorating the ensuring impact of the us led war on terror. today we'll be hearing from a british army veteran on the devastating toll of the 20 year african last to many people for situations which we just gave appointment. also had a ton of on sales as new government. so i can install on including a terrorist on the f. b i most wanted list, but washington's left with no option but to co operate would be incoming leadership . and a doctor in florida was outraged by refusing to treat patients who haven't had to
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cope with vaccine. we hear the different sides of the argument can understand where this doctor is getting to the street and she wants to help people. and they haven't even bothered to have the bags. i think we need to respect the people who, who are so far, refusing the vaccine and trying to lure them into persuading them, making them comfortable in receiving the vaccine. ah, sunlight from the rushing capital. this is you get it r t international who is good to have you with us. hello and a very welcome. well, getting started almost 2 decades. how past since the horace of $911.00, the event that triggered america's war on terror. here it all t were investigating the ensuring impact those conflicts of hard on the lives of millions. in our special project on hud voices,
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the will use all tools at our disposal. killed our children to united states will bring people to your site. it was a pointless exercise among those who paid the highest price for the ass down invasion where the $450.00 southern british personnel killed inaction. but even many of those who did make at home were left with lasting. former we've heard from trevor colt. he saw didn't show me for 20 years, including 4 tours and after honest on i tried to take my life last year and i was in a wheel. by the way, my mind ended. i nearly lost my son, and i didn't know what to do. a lot of the guys i was with don't really talk to each other any more. i mean, there, i don't try to delete it and move away small. but quite a few people lives in the last 4 or 5 years. most recent is only a few months ago and
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i few been through hell and you're still living it. you just get a feeling of fear she wouldn't understand, you know, and given the order to kill someone and stuff you, people get upset of it. things today that don't need it. i want so i can my coffee, i really just drink the coffee. when i 1st went to college, we were told that we were going to burn the puppy feels to the plumbers to work and
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not pon, changed them out. we landed and gone on our troops in a way that they haven't for many years are going to be fighting alongside other countries and situations of great danger. soonish are very good at taking orders and just getting on with it. i'm not questioning orders, but as you go to the years and you mature and you start to sort of have to bring the thing yourself and realize why we here. what are we doing? we're not looking at gast, i don't think it was a pointless exercise. what's happening in the south of afghanistan, the residence about tight and the taliban trying to get back power the water way back. and the taliban had already got id in the grind that we'd already cleared. my friend, my really was just a couple, stood on one and died instantly lost his arms and legs. i believe it's 17
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casualties all from, from our group out of each of those casualties. you've got quite a few guys affected by what they've seen. it's trauma, public trauma, as a constant heights about over a weeks and weeks, and most the u. k. troops and officials of work round the clock to a remorseless deadline. it, thanks to the colossal exertions this country has not been processed or checked, vetted, and ended on more than 15000 people to safety in less than 2 weeks. i mean, it's been a complete mess. hard by ins and ministration worked with the rational of his allies. it would have been, we were going to leave anyway. but we could have done up a systematic approach. for instance. you do even the top middle of the mindset,
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the understand that if you're going to extract from a country, you bring back all your citizens from the embassy, put them into secure bias, and then fly them or what you don't use flyers, your military and angle. what about the one with the civilians? tama and i got shinnecock stuck at home, be $600.00 version m. 16 weapon systems, 3 stars and bombs left behind. so munitions that can use for id like last night i was watching last night i watched a video of telephone draft as us special forces moving in behind her to take control of fortune x, which, you know, it's just unbelievable. we've lost too many people for situation which we just give up and over the coming days will be speaking with more people, soldiers and civilians, alike whose lives were overturned by america. war 2 more, in fact, will be hearing the testimonies of a 911 widow and a u. s. war veteran and all special coverage on had voices fulfilled to come on the program. saudi arabia discusses long running allegations on its role in the $911.00,
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played hijackings, and welcomes washington's decision to release classified files more not in just a few minutes. 9 days after the rushed us pull out from afghanistan, the country has a new government in waiting. it consists mostly of hard line taliban militants on the us says it's a no rush to recognize the new regime. not said to the wash white house added that it has no option, but to work with the terror group that they went to war against 20 years ago. their new acting interior minister is tying network care if you want it for a bombing that killed 6 people, including americans believed to have participated in cross border attack against us troops. there's a $10000000.00 bounty on his head. why are we engaging? should we not, should we not talk to the people who are overseeing ganna, stan and just leave it and not get the rest of the american citizens out with the international community is watching. the united states is watching. its whether
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they let people depart the country who want to depart, whether they treat women across the country as they have committed to treat them and how they behave and operate. and therefore we're not moving toward recognition . at the same time, we're dealing with a reality world here we have to engage in order to get american citizens and others out of the country on the taliban unveiled at all mailing to him government. on wednesday the military will be led by the son of a ton upon founder and the interior ministers. a militant wanted in the us to some dead bombings, including a 2017 truck blasting cobble that killed a 150 people. now the taliban leadership will also include members of a us designated tara group on former one, panama inmates. the offshore prison has been operating as us military base and cuba to 19 years. and in that time with a 100 people had been held back without charge on trial, many subjected to water boarding stress positions,
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and st deprivation. we spoke with john carrier who a former sci unless to lift the lid on abusive interrogations in guantanamo. and he says he still stands by his decision to speak out. i have 0 regrets. i will never have any regrets. somebody had to tell the american people that the government was committing crimes in their name. you know, when we try to convince the world that we are a shining beacon of human rights and respect for civil rights and civil liberties. and then they see us carrying out a torture program at secret prisons around the world. it just makes us look so hypocritical, i can understand why any country would want to emulate the united states in a situation like that. the end of this 20 year military campaign by the united states in afghanistan. did you ever imagine that it would and so quickly, so frantically. no, i didn't imagine so, and i don't think any americans did just like no american assumed in september or
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october of 2001 that 20 years later we would be having this conversation. you know, president biden said just about a month ago that he believed that the african government could hold out for 6 more months. in fact, they held out for 6 days. and i think that that he gave that 6 month time because that's what he was told by the cia. and it just goes to show you that this was another intelligence failure in a long line of intelligence failures. i think the after, at the afghan people rightly resent united states for 20 years of occupation and then in the end, nothing to show for it, but death and destruction. we made this terrible, terrible mistake called nation building, where we decided that it was, it was incumbent upon us to impose a western style democracy on a country that never had any history of western style democracy. and then we
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couldn't understand why it didn't stick. what we have to have is true and robust, congressional oversight, which we have not had in decades. what you see general is a group of congressional cheerleaders for the cia, the f, b i, the defense department, and the state department. and that has to stop. there has to be legitimate, true oversight, where members of congress tell the government to stop crimes are being committed and then we have to see those crime prosecuted and see the people who carried out those crimes punished. we haven't seen that in many, many years. meanwhile, the united nations human rights party has worn and i've kind of started facing a total collapse in basic services with food and life saving age about to run out. and what estimates that at least $600000000.00 and $8.00 will be need to buy the annual fee to prevent a catastrophe here and also reports nearly half of down strong population. 13000000,
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meet humanitarian aid. among them, a 3 and a half 1000000 in tell me displaced by conflict. the red cross president pizza marez in afghanistan has been visiting medical facilities, a meeting with the new african government. he spoke to asi on the one side, you see all the deserted remnants of war. you see these camps resorted vehicles, military vehicles. you see this traction where fighting has taken place, including in some of the cities like blush and others. and on the other hand, you see an normality of life and normal life. you see that this country is and has been affected by 40 years of war and by poverty. and the 2 together create enormous you. many period need. we had
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a long conversation with marla, about the deputy of now we're now in government, a very substantial conversation with him self and with some of his closer ates and collaborators in order to ensure that the humanitarian space, which is needed for a good, impactful, and usually human terry and assistance are guaranteed, i think we got a lot of understanding and also good sense that we need for it or dialogues as we move forward. a doctor in miami is making headlines off pronouncement. she won't treat anyone in person who hasn't, how to code that vaccine, dr. linda markeen and claims that she's been forced to to read line by her concerns for public health. we will no longer subject our patients and stuff,
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so unnecessary risk when it comes to safety of others. when it comes to the fact that it's a global health problem and community health problem. at this point, i really say that this is where it draws the line and the said for me, the doctor says her decision doesn't fall off the school standards because she's still offering a phone appointment on exempting people who can't get vaccination on medical grounds with the highly contagious delta, very private taking hold around the while. dr. martini joins the global chorus of those cooling for a great to vaccination. push. my colleague, neal harvey, put this issue up for debate. she's obviously set out a standard in her practice, and everybody knows about that. then all of our patients know, and she's using, i'm sure, computer based telemedicine. however, if they require in person care, she'll have to refer them elsewhere. here in my own medical center,
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the vanderbilt university medical center. we're not doing that. we're using good infection control precautions to take care of all patients infected with coded and not vaccinated or not. can understand where this doctor's getting frustrated because there she is. she wants to deal with people. she wants to help people, but she's got people who are present in themselves who wanted to present themselves, her medical center, and they haven't even bothered to have the vac. look, i believe is everybody's duty. no man is an island and everybody should be getting vaccinated through a few high profile cases that gets picked by the media. i think there was a b, b. c presenter who got a blood clot from a vaccination and died me. so he's got a lot of attention. can you understand people reading something like that and thinking, i don't want to die. i don't want to be one of the lucky ones. he gets a blood clot and dies from this, and it probably statistically isn't going to kill me any way. cobit,
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i'm going to take my chances. can you sympathize with that mentality? the average person has a background in science and they're fearful fearful of the vaccine. and fearful of the virus, and that gets them in the middle, and they don't act at all. certainly not receiving the vaccine. we've given this vaccine to more people in a short period of time. but before we know, have the best experience. not only in our own country, but around the world with this fact, we know how it works. it's not perfect, but it sure is very, very good. and if we all took it, you could really on board the further this virus, the internet is a great place to spread conspiracies. and i think elsewhere is coming from will i from the wild conspiracies that bill gangs, he put a chip next. what he's to the, this is an experimental vaccine. he's not an experimental vaccine mister vaccine
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that's being tested. what about the societal in but couldn't wind up with a situation where you've got, you know, for example, almost half of the population in america who haven't been vaccinated? you could have a lot of people saying we will refuse this mandatory vaccination. could you end up with a real societal split and a kind of to tear society where you've got people who actually have a lot less freedom because they refuse vaccination versus mandation. i don't really want to be mandatory. there shouldn't be a need for that. people should be selfless, not selfish. the creation, our country, you know, they're talking all if you have enough vaccination, it's like in apartheid state. it isn't a part we combs. and that these people who got the stupid ideas. well, this so called hesitance, i think we need to respect the people who, who are so far, refusing the vaccine and trying to lure them into persuading them, making them comfortable in receiving the vaccine fill ahead on our
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tv messaging service. what happens again on defiance or punny ditching a pledge to protect these is private data more not on the break. oh i i what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy foundation, 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, very political time, time to sit down and talk having alternate realities to experience or even live in like say world war does my idea, you know, especially during the and damage where you can go anywhere in the game world,
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you know, everywhere, choose the game that you want. any open roll game, choose it, and you are now on a vacation in a place where you're like flying helicopters or you're, you're on beaches, you're, you're in a city drive, you know, what are the car you want, you know, your name and these, these are getaways ah ah ah, welcome back. as we approached the 20th on about 3 old $911.00, the saudi embassy in washington says it was classified documents relating to the terrorist attack to be released, claiming del, prove the country was in no way involved. no evidence is ever emerged to indicate that the saudi government or its officials had previous knowledge of the terrorist
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attack, or were in any way involved in its planning or execution. its already been a long standing aspect of suspicion on saudi arabia due to the fact that a number of the hijackers were from saudi arabia, those who hijacked the aeroplanes. however, the united states has long been basically downplaying any investigation or talk of such involvement by the saudis in 911 because saudi arabia is a key ally of the united states in the region. now the relatives of victims of $911.00 have attempted to sue saudi arabia in court, alleging that it was involved or complicit somehow in the attacks. however, under a 1976 law, basically they're unable to do to take that action. this is because the 976 law gives foreign governments immunity from such lawsuits. now, will recall that there were the $28.00 pages from the $911.00 commission that were
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released. and those were, you know, long classified pages about saudi arabia as possible connections and f, b, i investigations into saudi arabia following the 911 attacks. now the, the panel, basically they use the language that they said they did not discover any role by a quote, senior high level, saudi government official in the $911.00 attacks. but many of looked at what they referred to as the commissions, narrow wording, and basically said that it's possible that less senior officials on the part of the saudi government could have played a role. now. so far, washington has claimed that there was no direct role by saudi arabia in the 911 attacks. here's what we've heard. our investigation has covered no credible evidence that any person in the united states gave the hijackers substantial financial assistance. now, there are a lot of americans who have looked at what was in the 28 pages previously released style and have looked at some of the information surrounding the 911 attacks. and do one answer is about the kingdom of saudi arabia and perhaps nefarious activities
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or what role it could have played. people want new information about what went on and the attacks that took place 20 years ago and certainly left a big scar on the u. s. public, but it's unclear if joe biden will go ahead and take this move if he will make such information public or not. joe biden will have the final say as the president of the united states. the messaging service what's up prides itself on advanced encryption technology, which supposedly keeps your messages private. but it turns out that most uses had to have a formal day to the parent company. facebook, the never realized on teams to meet your park investigates. everyone likes their privacy and when you use a messenger like what's up that keeps hammering on and on about how secure it is, you're inclined to believe that your private data stays well private. well shocker, that's apparently not the case. what's up turns out to be, well,
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not that private and it's owner. facebook keeps paying hundreds of millions in fines for privacy violations. and that's after numerous promises from zocker berg about insuring a truly secure experience on their platforms. i believe the future of communication will increasingly shift to private encrypted services where people can be confident, what they say to each other, stay secure. this is the future i hope will help bring about that was back in 2019 and what was supposed to be the messenger to bring about a part of that private future. but come on, this is facebook we're talking about, according to a recent investigation by the pro public a platform, it turns out facebook actively undermined its security assurances. the only encrypted data available for scrutiny is extensive. its includes the names and profile images of the uses. what's up groups, as well as the phone number, profile, photo status, message phone, but your level language and time zone unique mobile phone id and ip address. and
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that's not all. other unencrypted data reportedly includes access to the user's entire list of electronic devices. any related facebook or instagram accounts the last time they use the app and even a history of any previous violations, not exactly what you would call complete privacy. although a spokesperson for what did reiterate that users messages are still encrypted and are only seen when they are forwarded to the user submitted report system. the decisions we make around how we build out app. our focus around the privacy of our users, maintaining a high degree of reliability and prevention abuse. but the company doesn't just stop at batting accounts, which have been reported by users. they've also allegedly share all the information they have with the justice department. apparently what's up, metadata played an important role in the arrest of a former senior advisory at the us treasury. natalie may edwards, who had been sent to prison for leaking sensitive information to the media,
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describing how dirty money flows through us. banks edwards has maintained. she leaked the documents in a bid to expose corruption. notice was accountability, and the american people had the right to know what was occurring within treasury. and that it was a national security issue and the american lives were in jeopardy instead of the government doing their job, they decided to come after a whistleblower with the increasing rate at which the u. s. government requests information from all facebook affiliated platforms. it's plausible to assume there will be more arrests based on may the data in the near future. and while facebook promises but it cares about security and privacy, if it's users at the end of the day, it doesn't seem to have an issue collecting and giving out information to those who ask for it seems the company is more concerned with stopping the spread of what they call disinformation, and with trying to assert their influence in politics, instead of actually remembering that they started as a social media site,
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it's true to say that nothing is really private nowadays, but that doesn't change the fact that when a company assures and promises its users that something will be encrypted and they, they will not be able to review the content of their messages. when that trust is broke. i think that they should be entitled to, at least, frankly, at this point, some sort of compensation. there are different protections for consumers in every industry, but for some reason, tech companies seem to be the only ones out there that can once again reg, they're on terms of service and for their customers trust with no consequences, largely. and i think it's about time that the actual elected officials in the world start asserting their power against these tech james and reminding the silicon valley billionaires that know they are not our rulers, and that nobody elected them. they are not above the law and find some news in brief, a fire has killed me 10 people and into many more a makeshift coast hospital in wolf, donia the prime minister, deprived huge tragedies for the whole commission fire for some se,
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structural flamel plastics that allow the same to spread and also classes have dropped it in the west bank at riley's in support of palestinian prisoners. this was the scene and he had overnight. it comes off to fix in macon state for magellan moves and his ro, using an underground tunnel, a large scale man hunt is on. and finally, i was hoping to solitary rallies, have swept madrid off to an elected knife attack on a gay man. punish, please have launched a hate crime prob, off the 8 man reported me around the 20 year old on sunday, pointing and stopping him, proud to the streets who found to now to him. yeah, and to me on the not is your global news update for this up, but it's got you can always had to our website. i want you to come to the details on one of those stories and have
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a great me the ah, ah, the ah, ah, the war on drugs started as a way to come back? a great problem. what's the one?
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it's part of the attitude of the nation, not just of north dakota, and it got to be something that you could get elected. this time, the fight against drugs took a check and told us that andrew was competent. sean form. this is way too dangerous for him to be doing. clearly they put him in harm's way. a rural college student does interest get shot in the head and found in a river like that. something else had to be happening. ah ah i b, b, c was us less iraq. america continues to maintain high prices in the
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country with us to see in the world situation. and again, this isn't a crucial thing. international troops under control which forces the security situation remains critical in the country. we are now supply in the long minus so yeah, like how about if i just keep on? if i already move our friends most of these again, some of them they have ordered and left off. i'm going to de enough i don't. right now i'm making my way my mission didn't.

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