tv News. Views. Hughes RT September 22, 2021 8:30pm-9:01pm EDT
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but that's actually really done thing because the great thing about it being available to everybody think more like a public news via this is our work advantage and anybody in the world can view for free ah, it did not take long the drug trade from afghanistan to start flowing indian official sees a multi $1000000000.00 shipment of harold. we will bring you the details and what the countries in the area are doing to try and stop. also from afghanistan, the taliban has appointed a un wrapped united nation, but should they actually be allowed to join the body? more importantly, address the general assembly. in that the i showed us domestic terrorism investigation by the organization have more than double. exactly sure. they investigated, our expert shed, some light on who can be considered a domestic terrorist these day. and boeing has announced their intention to build
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the 1st facility outside of the united states. we will tell you where and if this has anything to do with the continued camry, the company is getting from us investigators. i'm going to hear the stories and more on today's news views right here on our america. let's get started. ah, member countries of the russian organized collective security treaty organization have agreed to deploy troops along the tajikistan and afghan. a stan border all to help the threats from terrorism, illegal immigration, and to stop drug trafficking. and this is all on the heels of india's biggest drug bus. to date seizing a 3 tons of heroin value to be around $2700000000.00, which originated, i can't stand following the taliban take over just
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a few weeks ago. the directorate of revenue intelligence, which is india, the top anti smuggling agency, received intelligent thing. 2 containers at the month report and the western estate of charlotte had c received the containers, which had been declared as semi process of talk stones from afghanistan. we're going to work seeds on september 15th, 2 people have been arrested in the drugs were set, were supposed to be headed to new delhi. to discuss this latest side effect of the chaos that i can stand. and what is being done about it. we ran on norton some more veteran and president of the michigan conservative union. thank you so much for joining me tom. these rooms on on are ok. so this is no surprise, but let's kind of just bring it to the perspective. how big was the drug trade in afghanistan? prior to the us withdrawal, compared to where we see a just a few weeks later? well, the piano stand, withdraw, scan drug trade, the united states military. its been a lot of time making sure that they weren't shipping rugs outside of the country. i mean, 2700000000 speaks for itself. that's
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a failure that happened with the piano stand withdrawal. and as that goes to ship across the border and everything else kinda leads into how why the taliban is going to continue. actually funneling drugs across into other countries. but this is a really big, it's a really big failure by the united states of the draw not actually taken care of those poppy fields reserve there because that's one of their biggest revenue streams. well that's, that was kind of the world's biggest elicit open supplier. so you knew going into this, that you were already dealing with a major industry, but the television had come back, come out and said, actually they plan to stop it right now. but to believe them when they say that they want to regulate and that they don't want to support the trade and they have actually strict rules against drug use themselves within their organization. i don't believe it for a minute, and i'm going to actually tell you exactly why the within islam, infidels can be lied to, in fidelity, can be mistreated and everything else for them that drug trade benefits the taliban
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funds. it's something that can actually fund their military. so shipping it out to actually poison people in india, the united states, europe, they are poisoning the emperor. that that is radical is one that is the basis of the television. so for them to ship it out and somebody to die from an overdose, that's them, committing a drug jihad essentially. so they are going to actually regulated and that's a complete not or why, but it's not a problem to why to the input, let's right within the grand, that's a korean that they believe. so when they come out and say this, they don't have a problem with whatever they say the crane is explicit about not lying, but it's ok to lie to the input on the brand. so because of that, whatever they say is find it because they're not looking to a much another muslim country and saying that they're going to do something that they have no intention of actually doing. so for them, it's not even a problem for them to waste their own of other drugs and ship and other countries for the, for the all the die. they actually believe that. so i don't believe for one second
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. neither should anybody that they're going to address their here when going across into another country. well, and i don't want to blind, i'm sure there are addicts within the country, but it is strict. i do believe them when they say that they don't actually encourage youth amongst a very strict rules against the use amongst their own population. i believe that to be true and where they go with it next. but also i want to look at what these other governments of the surrounding countries are doing. you know, on the surface government officials say they want to eliminate the drug trade. but don't they also find it too profitable to pass up when it comes to the reality of what's going on in the ground? well, let's look at the countries borders, pakistan. iran, the 2nd stand use back to standard the north couple. those countries are actual allies to northern countries, sense they're deploying groups, they're addressing the problem. they're trying to make sure they can address and security of their own country. but does anybody believe that iran has a problem with the drug trade going out? the taliban being funded? so that they can help destroy the enemies of iran. i don't think so. and pakistan
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is one of those countries is a little bit trickier when you look at their government is spread away to the united states. but the northern portion of pakistan, especially soon which makes up the majority of the taliban. it was where the ban safe haven was for over 20 years. in northern pakistan, it was never truly addressed by the pakistani government. so i don't see them actually doing anything. that's why i was able to make it all the way to india before it was actually busted. well, it will be interesting to see where this, because i do believe there are countries that are very much worried about as, as i've mentioned, russia called together all the countries alignment to make sure the terrorism doesn't come from can attend, that you don't have the drug trade continued, i don't think this is a surprise. i think everybody predicted this to be the question is, is, will the united states ultimately be held responsible in the global scale saying, guess what, you created this problem. and will this be a way that the us says, well, maybe we need to get back involved? i hope not. tom, thanks chatting with you. thanks for chatting with me. now the taliban has
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appointed an afghan delegate to the united nations even though the u. n. still has one in place from the previous government. now the group movement says it has alerted the un secretary general of the change that remains to be seen, what governments will actually recognize the taliban. r d correspond to your guys to have reports from all. the united nations now faces an incredibly difficult decision because any choice that they make is fraught with political risk. the taliban argument essentially is the person that is the un representative of, of, of gamma has no credibility because the person who appointed him, the former president of a kind of thought fled the country, resigned his government collapse. he's no longer recognized as the legitimate president of, of got to started. any appointment that he made is now now and boil, nevertheless, recognizing the taliban now might send all the ro messages because the international
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community had come together in their appeal to the taliban to make any government that they form that they announced to be inclusive. the taliban chose to chose to ignore those appeals. the guns that they announced was packed with terror released individuals and hotline islamist. no women in it, hardly any representatives of minorities. there is also the fact that if the, if the taliban is representative, is announced to quickly, barely a month since they took over again, i thought it may send the wrong message to the other millicent, fractions of the world. but if you take over a country with violence, law, violence said that international recognition is sure to follow, which is something perhaps that the un and its members states don't want a message. they don't want to send out that there is also the flip side that refusing to engage with the taliban will side live the taliban from international
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markets from international politics, international funding, as well as humanitarian assistance. it may force them to continue with exporting hair. when an opium and with the majority of which worldwide is, is sourced here in canada stock, it may also encourage the taliban to, to go back and it's promises to the international community to make sure that no terrorist make of guy just on their home. again, they may allow our car to back in, they may radicalize even further, but it may also work the humanitarian situation here and i've got to start because if no one talks to the chat about, it would be incredibly difficult to organize humanitarian assistance, which is desperately needed here, and i've got to start as for which way or when the united nations will decide, well, they have a special committee, the credentials committee, which, which decides on the sorts of dispute it is made up of russia, china,
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the united. why sweden as well as 5 other nation, and it is doubtful whether they'll meet before the 27th of september, when the african representative is supposed to speak before the us. usually they, they put the, they put the decision to the un general assembly for a public vote on the issue, but we will have to wait and see where the person speaking for a dentist on will be the relic of the pos regime with, with little influence and affairs or in of galveston on the ground or whether it will be a taliban representative. the representative of a movement that is still considered a terrorist organization by many countries in the world. now the director of the f . b, i justified the growth of its personnel by over 260 percent. talk about an increase to a u. s. senate panel saying the case load for domestic violent extremist has more than doubled. we call home growing violent extreme is which is
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a reference to people here radicalized by foreign terrorist organizations and ideologies and then domestic violence streamers, who are radicalized more by everything from racial animals all the way over to anti government anti authority. the domestic bombing stream is bucket, has been going up quite significantly over the last few years, which is why we're now at 2700 domestic terrorism investigations. one, if you went back 2 and a half years ago, we're probably more about a 1000 other discuss the seriousness of the current situation here at home. we bring in former counterterrorism off sir andrew berkeley, his true thanks for joining me. i have, i'm sorry, i have to laugh at this because it's no laughing matter because this is actually deals with national security. but as we've learned these past few weeks, unfortunately, the real trouble, the real harm being done, our country has been completely ignored in most cases. so let's go back to where we're starting with on this one. did the number of domestic terrorist actually increase or did the f b, i just expand what it means to be
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a domestic terrorist or considered to be a part of the action? yeah, well, i mean, thanks for how may i may look. this is pretty laughable and i don't have access, nor does anyone in the public to the exact case load and the number of patients they're dealing with. but they also know that the f b, i know that people don't have access to see that information. and this is being using the tool, they're absolutely expanding what it means and thanks ok. well we can't fit them in this pot. so let's expand what it means and then we can get the opposition and people who don't align with our values in our beliefs. and we can put them squarely in the domestic terrorism or domestic extreme as pot. and we can proceed with our investigations from there. well, and here's the thing to be, and i think this is the question, what is justifying that? is it based on just social media post or re posting? do we add to people understand if they're in the f b i looking at if they're being looked at by the f b i that they're actually looking into them at this point. i don't know that they do, but i think that people are growing more and more concerned with what we've seen over this past year and a half. and how did they've kind of changed and look,
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this has been something that's been happening for a long, long time. but certainly these agencies and the democrats and the government writ largest become more bold and, and how they politicize think they used to say no, no, no, no, no, we're not doing that. now they essentially without saying it are putting it out there and showing the world, and you, do you see people getting cracked down? like, how did you know this was happening there? they're tracking social media, they're tracking people who essentially, when you boil it down, our opposition are people who are more fundamentally american and want to stick to the constitution. the core values that we've always had were not perfect, but they want to stick to that. and they see a problem with that and we should all see a problem with them and what they're doing. and then the question is, what can you do about? i mean, this is our national security. they have access to everything and they're really r drew as you know there's, there actually are real threats to, to american center around the world as a bad people that want to hurt others for a political purpose. so who do you feel like when you watch the headlines? everything going on in the world today? who even here at home? who should american fear currently as being the most likely to cause
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a terrorist event in their community? well, i think it's absolutely still radical. extreme, it's from, from overseas who maybe don't 10 people over but inspire people here at home who come from the same ideology, the same faith and who do not like the west do not like american that is still the biggest threat that we face. 100 percent and when it's quiet and when you don't hear a lot of pub about what's going on on that front at home, that's when you need to be concerned. when you created a situation in afghanistan, that's more dangerous. and even bolden and empower the taliban and their, their partners and friends and crime and, and nice of k. and now connie's and, and i'll be all kinds of those groups. you should be concerned. that's absolutely the biggest threat that we still face. and then if you look at home and domestically the threat we face is frankly not the militias that have been around for a while. and that's not to justify their existence or their stance. but it's, it's, you know, look at, you know, n t, phone black lives matter to those people who have literally burned down, building, killed people and done lots of horrible things over the past near 2 years at this
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point. and they seem to not get any attention, but i think that the remains squarely on the shoulders of a radical extremist. and those proxy groups that i just mentioned, or do you know and scares me about the headlines of the passage, you know, what causes people to hate america and hate everything about the american lifestyle when you kill their children. and i have to think about those parents of the 7 children, they were innocently married as well as the families of the 10 that were how angry they have to be in america right now. i mean, they're asking them, i've been told you get, there's reports of some sort of financial retribution, but you know that, that, that's what i think cause terrorist right there. when you see innocent, people that are in the things that are killed, that's what makes them hate us and have no problem justifying coming after our country. that being said, what about the faith and trust in the f. b i? it used to somewhat be there. i think over the years, but you look at the past couple events and you look at this recent story of the young lady that was in domestic violence and she was actually murdered and the f. b, i didn't even find her body. it was actually bloggers that helped find what is
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going to be, how do you restore that faith and trust in the people that are supposed to protect us? well, you know, unfortunately i think it's really difficult and i've always said, look we've, we've got to look at the leadership and the in the upper upper levels of these organizations differently than the people on the ground. because whether you're talking about, if the whatever, the military for that matter, you've got great people who are patriotic love, this country signed up with the right beliefs, right? intention doing the job. the problem is though, is it becomes so politicized that you now you're seeing it with the military, with the max back the mandate. and we've got feel operators leaving that people leaving in droves because of his purge. that's happening. and what happened is the good people leave, so it's hard to restore credibility when you can't any longer say, well, don't worry though, the people on the ground are doing it in the right way and they're doing the right think it's gotten hard to say that now because again, a lot of the people at west end, or they've been marginalized, either way that investors think so. all that they, i don't know how you restore credibility to any of those organizations, the f
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b i in particular, well, and i'm going to give them a little bit of credit. sometimes there's the one, the organizations that when they're not when there's not a big breaking news story, they've actually done their job and they've kept that from happening. unfortunately, same time and time again that it is coming to the head. it's not usually working out well for the people through always great to chat with you. thanks so much ram. and after our break, we count on this to help protect us. if ever in a car crash, what if it doesn't work and you don't realize until it's too late, we will bring you the details and what is being done when we return? ah, ah right now, there are 2000000000 people who are overweight or obese. is profitable to sell food that is fancy and sugary and healthy and addicted. not at the individual level. it's not individual willpower. and if we go on believing that will never
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change, that industry has been influencing very deeply. the medical and scientific establishment, ah, what's driving the its corporate, me ah, the, the dark mode for the american aeroplane manufacturer. boeing announces the construction of the 1st advanced manufacturing facility, located outside of the u. s. in queensland, australia. so to give us some insight on which type of plane will be built and why we bringing former n t s b official. jamie finch, jamie, you're going to put it half by half aeronautical expert segment. so i mean,
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on your james bond expertise on this one, this new plan will not actually be for domestic airliners, not clearly. what plan exactly. it will be built and tell us a little bit about it. it's basically the autonomy, unmanned vehicles or aircraft. in other words, it's a drone, so it's not a little draw. these are the very large drones, right? this is getting almost the size of a commercial aircraft. and now, and they obviously can carry bombs and other kinds of weapons by serial tours. but these are very advancement to advance machines that are going to be assembling in australia. the final assembly. ok. so as boeing known for having military aircraft besides just you know, planes that can be also for passengers. there's this a new kind of area that they're branching into defense and defense. whether it's one of their biggest areas of income technology, though they did it because boeing is not just but building commercial aircraft. it's been building defense aircraft in machinery. it's building
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a space ships and so they're very, very diversified when it comes comes to this. but this is a small. busy assembly plant, it's only going to employ about 300 people, but boeing already has a very large presence in australia with a plant that has about 3000 people, or they work other where they manufacture other parts for other commercial aircraft . okay, so i've already got that. okay, so that is that the reason why you think the boeing picked australia because they already are familiar with the officials and the laws of the land? i think that's part of the, but i think that the main reason in this particular case is because australia is the one that's buying these drums well. and you have to look at the conflicts are going on in the region right now. it's china and you know, this is i play a little bit into it. i see. i think that there's, it's kind of interesting the same timing, exactly the timing of what's going on with the u. s. in china, but also with what just happened just last week. with australia buying the u. s. submarines versus the french submarines which sent france sent france into
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a tailspin but the u. s. in the anglo file. countries, if you will, are really kind of locking up in unifying and locking arms for this new world that we're in, was almost like australia. want to make sure that they're good both land and say, i have to think of all the issues of boeing's had over this past few years with passengers and aircraft that have gone down as boeing possibly looking to start moving more into the hits. because guess what? you crash your crash machine or you don't necessarily have to deal with all everything that we're finding, growing skiing in trouble. it is unmanned. no people on it but, but they are, are weapons that are going to be destroying a lot of things. so you know, the trade off there, but i think that in this particular case, boeing not tried to avoid anything. but what they are doing is i would look, this is a new something else besides chinese. i don't pay attention to all the stuff that we've been going on. so let's talk about something positive about jamie make a good james bond. thanks for joining. i think that is a tool that is the product of
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a growing industry whose work is under the radar and capital public. the software called a shadow dragon allows please to monitor your data from social media without a warrant right now there's just a handful police departments that are using it, but more are buying in are to turn funds. actually this how shadow dragon works. now even one government entity already been using it for the past 2 years. so that one little bread crown led to an email the next day coming to me that said, hey, we got the guy. it's a new software investigators from your local police to the f b i have at their fingertips. it's a suite of tools that automates lots of different parts of the investigation process. that makes it quicker, easier, more reliable, and all in a way that forensically sam shadow dragon software that searches public information from at least a 100 social media networks. using digital clues to identify the human behind
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online accounts. and to visualize networks of suspected bad actors. that could soon commit a crime. you can pop in and e mail, an alias, name, phone number, a variety of different things. you can immediately have information on your target . we can see interest as we can see. friends are, we can see pictures, videos, what is available on the platform that we find a big reason why investigators love it. when the f b, i started using it, they did an evaluation and there how much backward, what used to take us 2 months and a background check or an investigation is now taking the way in 5 to 15. an investigator would typically go and interview a bunch of people and collect information within a very specific geographical location. crimes, now with the internet are spanning multiple countries. but shadow dragon is gaining attention. thanks to local and state police, massachusetts state police purchase the rights to the software using $150000.00
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worth of grant money. from there they extend a training to 6 different cities, massachusetts state police say they're using the software, but didn't divulge when they use it. well, now more police forces are buying in like michigan state police. while there is no law either for or against police using the surveillance local governments like in boston or working on one to put it in writing to both police and the people. so they know when the software will be used, what the protections are, who will be involved, and who has the thought ready to push back for news? use hughes. i'm fair in france, back from the economic hyundai, the electric tests i to a luxurious jaguar land rover problems with airbag safety is causing a federal safety agency to open an investigation or to correspond. natasha suite has more on what has officials concerned after dozens of death, the national highway traffic safety administration is conducting an investigation
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surrounding some $30000000.00 to cut airbags so far. we know the crackdown is looking at more than 15 different automakers from ferrari. nissan subaru forward to tesla, you would safety investigators want to take a closer look at some $30000000.00 vehicles, which could reportedly have faulty takata airbag inflator, according to a government document, the national highway traffic safety administration thought for an engineering analysis friday. and i want to inspect some 30000000 new with vehicles made in the years 2001 through 2019. now this is the 1st time to cut airbags have been the center of an investigation. over the last decade, more than 67000000 to cut an airbag inflator have been recalled in the u. s. and more than 100000000 globally. now the issue has been inflator is pending, dangerous metal fragments flying to kind of airbags have resulted in 28 thus worldwide and 19 in the us. more than 400 injuries have been reported in the engineering analysis. the an h t s. a said further study is needed to assess the
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long term safety up. desiccated inflator of the official is referring to the drying agent. these inflator is, are equipped with. according to friday's documents, so far, none of the 3000000 cars in question have reported any ruptures in their airbags, according to b and h t s a earlier in the year, roughly 50000000 of the 67000000 recalled insulators were fixed agency also say their current investigation will require extensive information on to cut or production processes and surveys of inflator in the field, reporting for new shoes and hot suites r t. and that's all the time we have are today show, but i promise this is a conversation which will continue. so follow me on twitter at scott and hughes hash tag team, n b a. and for the show more down on the part to be for apple or android device. it's free. i always thanks for watching the later. ah,
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ah, we're told the new strategic alliance comprising the united states, the united kingdom, and australia is not directed against china. but of course it is. washington is about numerous alliances against paging, but arcos as a new killer dimension tensions arising in the pacific. and no doubt china will react the i don't know, i mean there are some steps in there were rescuing the food they were scavenging or were rescuing resources that are still good. this is best buy march 21st, which is in 2 days. all of these potatoes, holler panels, onions, all of these came from waste round sources. this is great for me
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because i'm always looking for a way to give things away. dr. because the tax laws, you know, definitely do benefit the wealthier people and our society. so it makes sense for them to throw it out right off, rather than give it to somebody who could use it, because then that person is not going to buy it. it's a topsy turvy, globalized world, as we said, one of the themes for 2021, to be dig level station. the de dollarization dollarization is not happening right now. people are flocking to the dollar. as all these countries began to get more belligerent in their rhetoric and their saber rattling as we to say, and they are getting on a war footing. right. and china is obviously setting themselves up for
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a move on taiwan. i think that's going to be the big story 2020 the, the ah, the french defense ministry says nato barton will revise the concept of the alliance following a dispute over a recently signed security deal between the u. s. u. k. and australia. left from frozen out also, despite record e u energy prices and a huge shortfall and supplied the block a slap and find on poland for using coal and is also blaming russia for the crisis . the rubber bullets and hundreds of red toyota melvin's will.
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