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tv   News. Views. Hughes  RT  October 13, 2021 2:30am-3:01am EDT

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were you thinking just because there was no more american troops, afghanistan taxpayer dollars, that would no longer be available as well? where you were wrong in the united nations is already saying the only answer to the problems in the region is more aid from other countries. we will tell you how much money america is committed and the chances those taxpayer dollars have of actually getting to the people and not straight into the hands of the taliban. and know a fighting chance against china. a warning coming from the former software chief at the pentagon, we will tell you why nicholas chilion quit and why he feels the united states. we dominated almost every public aspect by the chinese in just 15 to 20 years. and here in washington dc, you are more likely to die from a gunshot wound in the corner virus and the president. so why is there still a state of emergency in this city which is forcing up multiple mandates on businesses, visitors and residence? well, one reason and sadly it has nothing to do with public health,
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we will bring you at the 360 view and a standing video from a plane crash in california. but this has not been the 1st time. the neighborhood has seen a plane crash in the area. so why does this keep happening and what are officials doing to help prevent? it actually brings us the story from california. i'm getting a huge bringing you and the 360 view on these stories on today's news news news right here on our t america. ah, thanks for joining me. it was anyone actually expecting united states to be done with giving money to afghanistan? now in economic ada loan since 2130 percent of the total foreign aid given by the united states to the world. busy was actually designated to afghanistan, totaling around $39000000000.00. now we definitely cannot forget the estimate as
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high as $85000000000.00 worth of military equipment which was left behind and the region is now controlled by the taliban. however, falling direct talks between the taliban and the united states, u. s. has agreed to provide more humanitarian aid to the desperately poor afghanistan, people who are on the breed. if not already, and mits, an economic disaster. their exact numbers are not known of how much the u. s. has committed, but we do know that the e u has pledged 1150000000 and aid during the g. 20 virtual meeting in the united nations is coming on more countries to send age afghanistan, banks are closing, and the social services such as l, scared and been suspended. in many places. we need to find ways to make the economy, but again, i urge the world to take action and the inject liquidity into the african economy, to avoid collapse, to discuss the brand data, mcadams,
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executive director of the ron paul institute. thanks for joining me. daniel ross got it, i mean, come on. now when we were withdrawing our troops, the chaos that was going on. do you think anybody actually expected the us to just stop ones are true for gone, that we were not an informed going to be giving taxpayer dollars in afghanistan for a very long time? well, the thing is that aid is power and control. it really has very little to do with humanitarian concerns. the u. s. is desperate to get back into afghanistan in one way or another. and in fact, over the weekend, the talks in doha were attended by u. s. government officials, including the us intelligence community, the cia is desperate to get back into the dentist and in a big way. so aid is one way that you can work your way in work your way back in with 8 of course comes administrators and others. so it really is an attempt to regain power that's been lost. now the us is less again a stamp. and so i might even say that actually is more powerful than actual
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manpower on the ground. but here's the thing with this. it is going around just talking about pencils and bottles of water. there's actually a, comes in a wide variety of forms. also can come in cash can also be an option. and yet time and time again, we find daniel, that america does not put any checks and balances into where this aid is going to just disappears. so is there actually anything that could be in place to make sure that the aid was put in the hands of people as what had been promised and not just use exclusively by the taliban? and in some cases, we found back against the united states. well, as doctor paul has always said, a is taking money from 4 people in rich countries and giving it to rich people in poor countries. and while the taliban may not be rich, they certainly have their hands on plenty of access to the states. riches. what little there may be less, but you know, all money is fungible, all 8 is fungible. the money that the us will give the column on to for humanitarian aid is money. they don't have to spend doing other things. so again,
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it really is not as related to humanitarian concerns as is to the us desire to somehow somehow get back in control. and that is a do that kind of under the cover that we find that so many times it's allocated by congress, a part of the part, a part of the budget, maybe and make them sleep better. but we know that it's actually going right back in the hands of contractors and large companies that have ties back to the states. it's kind of like a hamster will a fine, you know, here's my thought in this. when are we already going to see that already starting to see once a chunk of the pie? is there other groups right now that are already counted on this aid happening? and maybe that's why they were so quick to withdraw the way they did. that's really a great point that you makes guardian that a, the us spends overseas military, you monitoring a, whatever it may be, is that you just welfare for, well connected companies here in the us. it's welfare for the big defense manufacturers for humanitarianism, inc. and all sorts of companies and n g o is like this. so you are absolutely right. the,
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the money doesn't really go to the people who need it most. if the us really care about the well being of the average, ask any person it would simply stay the hell away from the country forever. because we've done enough to screw up the country over the past 20 years, given the money back that we have frozen in their accounts. let them deal with their own way. let them get about rebuilding their country on their own and just leave them be well and in these debates change us say look, wasted strong. we're not actually relinquishing their bank accounts. we're not on freezing them. we're not actually taking away any of the, the rules and that we've put on them to this point. so as the u. s. actually standing strong as of now and you expect to continue. i think the us believes it has more insulin stuff can ascend. that actually does worst case scenario for the taliban running. it's going to stand right now is he says, hey, if you don't have a more diverse government, you know, get your money back. in which case the tolerance is okay, that's fine. we'll make a deal with china. it's not going to be free money like it might be, quote, unquote, from the us. but they know that the chinese, for example,
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aren't supporting terrorism and goodness in the u. s. does have ties to some of the scripts, the weaker is the week of the fellow who just bombed a couple of days ago. his group was taken off. the terrorists lists why the trump administration. so they'll know that they're dealing with a partner in china, for example, that wants to do business rather than wants to control. so i think the total of on or holding a lot more cards in their hand in the us right now. and here's what's amazing talking about a you look at, i've seen one of the reasons why we were there in the 1st place is because it had so much money and had so much natural resources as minerals are so valuable. and yet they're looking to us for money when they might even have it in their own back yard. daniel, always great to chat with you. thanks. got it. okay. so when the battle looks lost, is it better to just give up, walk away, or stay and fight, hoping for something to improve. ideally, if anyone is going to stay and fight a lost cause, i would hope it would be someone who works. maybe at the pentagon, especially if they were insecurity and technology on guy who does stay and work
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hard, even when it gets tough. my schedule has been squandered, joins us now with a story that sound like say this man as a hero, while others might look at him as kind of a coward. yeah, absolutely. so who is nicholas challenge chilly in and out? why did he quit? so he was the pentagon's chief software guy, right? he's in charge of all the software at the pentagon, their 1st software chief, and he's now quit essentially saying look, the u. s. a so far behind china in terms of a development that will never catch up. we're a kindergarten level, they're playing in the big leagues and so he's angry. he says that the u. s. didn't do enough to invest in a i spent too much time investing in bureaucracy. i would actually agree with that point, but i don't agree with the point that he's making, which is that he says essentially the u. s. should a more a i technology develop that out with the pentagon more and now we're behind. and so we're going to lose, we've already lost, he says the battle to check here. we need, sorry, i technologies any more monitoring more things or robots actually can see what everybody's doing. it's the control of information. so i system,
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so he refers to it as you know, media. he says in the future, all media is going to be dominated by china, because they'll be able to control ai, which there's, there's some truth to this idea, right? that ai is able to do this, but here's one thing i take huge exception too. is that what, what this guy is essentially saying is that the us should have spent more time doing this. instead of debating the ethics of his words. he says the u. s. been too much time worrying about the ethics of a i that is absolutely not true. ethics of ai is so critically important and i'm gonna tell you there are 2 groups. cuz one thing that he's not telling us the truth about is that in the united states, it's not the pentagon that's making the investments into a i, that's true. but someone is silicon valley is right. so google and microsoft and amazon massive companies that are split out, spinning the pentagon, by the way, on the development of ai that is taking place every single day. the pentagon hasn't spent the money on it because depending on doesn't want to develop it. instead, they want to go contract with companies like amazon and companies like microsoft and google, who will then utilize their ai services on behalf of the pentagon. and then you
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don't have this kind of sticky ethical issue. so he completely ignores that part of it as if there's only 2 entities, china and the united states government, it's not, it's china and silicon valley that are battling as well. and is it more scary t though to have private corporations going to that sort of research or the government? neither one is necessarily welcome per se, but do one of them that you know, is someone that controls your daily life? so i would say both, right? i would say the problem is the actually the unholy alliance of what we have right now is the worst possible combination, which is all of the vast power of silicon valley coupled with the authority of the u. s. government. but there's no accountability on the side of silicon valley. the accountability that's on the government. well, they don't have folks. they say we're not developing any of this, right? that some private company that's doing it. we have, we have created a leviathan. we've created a monster that is able to run a muck and do whatever it wants to do. we have no control over it. so while, while this pentagon chief, he's getting a lot of this, you know, security software guy, seen a lot of attention today. never though, look,
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here's the problem. china is more advanced than we are. china, maybe more advanced. i'm not sure they're more advanced and silicon valley, are they more advanced than the pentagon? yes. but what he's not talking about is there has to be in this cold war, nuclear race, excuse, excuse me, 44, running for a technology, right? at some point we have to sit down and say, where are the ethical lines that have to be drawn? what are the rights of people in this? china is never going to have that discussion. we should be having that discussion here. not rushing to create a i as fast as we can. but that's the question. if we have it here in the united states, but not the rest of the world, does it put the people, does it make the usb even weaker? that's our own government find we were for our own government, but what about foreign enemies might come in? well yeah i listen, i'm not sure a necessarily protects us against that. i'm not sure. a, i protects us in any ways. you know, think about this, that the creation of the i phone, right. and in what? 2007. right. when the iphone comes along, all of a sudden the world changed forever like,
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vastly changed because the smartphone came along and it transferred everything. and the problem is, is that we didn't spend much time as a society debating. is it good? now there are a lot of good things that come out of a smartphone, but we also know there's a lot of bad things that have come smartphones. and so we don't have that debate. i think what is lacking in this a i discussion is just because you can create this technology and just because the technology can be used for lots of good things, should we have it. and what are the restraints that we put on it? this is a sorely lacking discussion. when it comes to a i and ultimately, you know, you watch every movie about this, right? it always turns out badly. you give a and i think that's where we're head is. i don't think we're necessarily headed to we're a terminator conclusion, but we are headed down a very rough road. if we believe it's okay to just push ai on the boundaries as far as we can without also wayne, the moral and ethical obligations. and the difference between public versus private and you're actually has that power in that access information would be real interesting to see who this guy goes to actually next employer. i think that might
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be more behind and it's always money is always come behind money. it's always good, it's actually been greatest. even studio, he's got to the point of savannah and georgia is overwhelmed with shipping containers. as the supply chain crisis continues. there are tens of thousands of containers stacked up on the dock and other side of possible supply chain crisis coming in the next few months. tre. chavez has this story. when coven 19 forced to many businesses and operations to shut down the supply chain shut down to. and after falling shipping demand in the 1st half of 2020, a search at the end of that year lead to delays port traffic jams and blockages across the supply chain. the port of savannah, like other ports around the u. s. as approaching a crisis point to day and the port of savannah at full capacity, overwhelmed with nearly $80000.00 shipping containers stacked up on the docks, that's 50 percent more than normal. according to the new york times, about $700.00 containers have been left there for a month or more. in september,
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4500 containers sat in the port for weeks waiting to be collected by the trucks or boats that take them to their next destination. and in california officials, they're say, up to a half a 1000000 shipping containers are thought to be stranded off the los angeles coast, delaying supply of various goods into the us. drone footage filmed on wednesday shows the harbor zone around san pedro being paralyzed from both land and sea, with dozens of cargo ships waiting to be a loaded and long queues of trucks lining up to receive containers in quarters or waiting to pick up their cargo longer. than ever before, containers are sitting on board for an average of 6 days, compared to 2 days wait in more normal touch. this wall across the country dozens of ships were forced to anchor off the coast of new york last month as they waited to dock in the nation 2nd busiest port behind los angeles. as of september 27th, there were 9 container ships sitting at anchor outside of the new york, new jersey port, waiting to birth. and during august and most of september,
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typically between 4 to 5 container ships were at anchor on any given day. an increase from the $1.00 to $2.00 ships usually at anchor in prior months, america's port crisis now impacting major companies and consumers just ahead of the holiday season. nike doesn't have enough sneakers to sell for the holidays at costco is re imposing limits on toilet paper, paper towels, and bottled water purchases and prices for artificial christmas. trees have also jumped a whopping 25 percent. while fedex announced that about a quarter of its packages. going into shipping. hubs are being diverted for news use, use trinity chop as are to new york. now after the break, does it feel like city leaders are not make incense in regards to crime virus restrictions, but we will tell you the reason why and give you the 360 view when we return. ah,
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it's open oklahoma, so it's a good price. you back believe go, he did. who bought? i bought the dial them all a couple of these on your way. but i know from politicians to athletes and movies don't to musicals, does it seems every big name in the world has been here last year? copa bazooka corpus christi school. oh, i wish there wasn't any difficult but i need to national booklet does not give me a glover new sport but nice. you said basil makes dreams come true. but every one who falls in love with it, close to one of the was the vitamins in a board that people look like. mm no. when i was sure seemed wrong when i just don't know. i mean, you won't have to shave out disdain becomes the advocate,
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an engagement equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart, we choose to look so common ground. ah, stories are investigating a swapping crash and a southern california on monday. the large, at least 2 people dead, are to correspond at natasha suite has more on the tragic accident. ah devastated scene left in a scene ego supper monday. a twin engine sesna went down around midday and c and t just 20 miles northeast of downtown san diego. authority say at least 2 people were killed, including a u. p. s. driver, the pilot, an owner of the plane, a cardiologist from arizona is reportedly one of the victims. officials say to others were injured. so pretty rural,
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same for our guys and were driving home. good security cameras catching the smoke and flames in real time after the cessna took a nose, dive into u. p. s. van linear by holmes destroying 10 others. wolf structures are required. we have here one of them. what are those homes belong to? local newly weds who just finished remodeling days ago. the couple identified as courtney and cody were not at home at the time of the accident. their dog was reportedly away with a family member, according to the federal aviation administration. the plane was a twin engine, cessna c $340.00. the crash happened about 3 blocks from santana high school and the city of about 50000 residents. all students were unharmed. the plane are poorly departed from yuma, arizona, who was expected to land at san diego montgomery airport. the national transportation safety board is investigating the crash authorities here. the pilot had received multiple warnings that he was flying to low,
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and according to documents, this is the 3rd fatal plane crash. and santi in the last 6 years, reporting for news. hughes and hush suites. our t. washington d. c. mayor mariel bows or has just extended the sea state of emergency into 2022, making it mandatory mask inside public buildings and restrictions on businesses stay in place. but with the city which boast a 70 percent vaccination rate of either partially or fully. busy vaccine residents and a 7 day average rate of 20 new cases daily or 100000 people. some are wondering why the mayor is not hosting of the amazing record and granting more freedom to our constituents. so let's get the $360.00 to you and bring it to dc. residents. brief everson attorney and founder of the blood project. and conservative commentator malik abdul, thanks for joining me. i read, you know, at this point i'm bringing you on, on that bring you on for political views. but this is actually just about everyday life. and i think this is what a lot of people and major cities,
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not only in the united states but around the world are having to do with their scratching their heads. going great numbers. you're seeing these cova desco down. you're seeing the coven numbers go back. the nation rates go high, and yet restrictions are still in place. moleed, let me start with you. less than a dozen desk by cover $900.00 record in the last month there was actually more shootings in the street. people injured and actually killed by drive by shootings in the streets. then what died of cove it. so why is the mayor not only praising herself and her city more importantly, lifting the restrictions? if so, i think a lot of it has to do with politics and performative politics. i bet i think the mayor and maybe mayors and governors around the country. they've kind of offs themselves in because we were told that, you know, the only thing that we had to do is get double trunk out of office. and once we got a bed somehow cope, it was miraculously disappear. what we're seeing now, even with a nicer joe biden and a joe biden who doesn't have those meet tweets. our numbers haven't gotten better.
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we were also told that if we could get to that 70 percent number, then things would actually be better. we would also, so that the idea of beauty, you know, we're not even discussing her if you the be any more, but i think that may or it is boxed in because she's actually told so closely to the line that somehow formative politics should replace science and i'm here in for business owners all across the city are jim definitely are suffering respect to areas like maryland in virginia. our business is actually are suffering. and so there is no scientific reason why the mayor is continuing with these restrictions outside of the politics. and there may be, you know, financial institutes as well, and that's what i wanna talk about that financial incentive. but also for small business, reese, you walk around downtown d, c after 7 pm. it is a ghost town. businesses are closed, you have to order and food from outside of downtown. when you want to do that,
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do you think the business community will have enough power at some point to say listen, we need to open up and get this action back down here it is totally a ghost town from where the thriving place that it was 2 years ago, what i do know for a fact is that it is very interesting times in downtown d. c. especially during the colder months having to, you know, order out or even sit outside in 20 degrees, wearing a cold under a heat lamp. and trying to cut your food wearing a coat. so that's a very uncomfortable situation to not be able to do into our dining. at the same time, we do have to consider the fact that last year we were, you know, contemplating what things would half what things would be like during flu season. and so knowing that we're gearing up for flu season. again, i think that's just an added precaution. that the mayor is trying to take and then also realizing that it's not just about the economics of the business community, but also the people, the people have been hit hard by this devastation. people have lost their jobs or
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not been able to get back to work had issues with child care. and so there are things that they're funding with this when you talk about the economic incentives such as programs like stay d. c, which help people with rent or grants that help small micro businesses who are trying to catch up due to what ko it's done to their businesses. and so there are programs that extend beyond just the, you know, day to day business owners at you can see the business owners that you can't see in a lot of people are taking in economic hit. and so it's not just the the cove it in the pandemic. it's also the financial incentives because people have been financially hurt by this crisis. well, and how much is the government helping? are they hurting downtown business malay on these issue when it comes to this at the present? well, if you look at the numbers, i think the spring maybe about 3 and entrepreneur. so business is $200.00 of which are permanently closed cuz there were another 100 or so there were temporarily. now
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that is something that we're not just dealing with in dc. we're dealing with it all around the country. but as far as our schools, particularly here on my side of the river river anacostia area, there has huge concern about what has this city done leading up to this recent school year. because we have schools that were essentially closed for most of their school year. but now they're dealing with the same problems with co infections, worst schools, literally around of order for me, where i volunteered those schools were having to close down because this the school district itself, the city did not do enough with the funds that they were given by the federal government to really beat up the operations at the school. so reese is actually right. it actually goes beyond just how it affects the business community. we're seeing it real time that the schools are still being affected by this. so i do it, you know, many and the community are really asking the question, what is it that the city did to prepare our schools in areas like warranty,
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dc and board 7, dc? what did the city do with that number in preparing our schools? it's a big concern and i know that across the board in a, in a city that hasn't with democrat, this is like this residence up, the city are really concerned about and, and race. i just want to give you this last word on this. because if you look at it, yes, the numbers are looking really good. the vaccination numbers are looking good. unfortunately, we're still hearing rumors of possibly another way that might come through another very it might come through. do you think with our numbers being good and still being, having to be under this that people are, might ignore in the future. it's kind of like them. and i say wolf because there was definitely a problem in there. do you think this could actually have a negative effect in the future if there is another round of this? fantastic. not really. and here's the reason. yes, people are tired of being in the house. we're tired of wearing mass. people are tired of taking precautions, but at the same time, people are still losing loved ones. and that's a very real concern. people are still finding, you know, going to the hospital and, and being intubated because of this desire virus. so the truth of the matter is,
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is still deadly, and that more importantly, we know that there are other strains that are coming, lambda and other things that are, you know, in the pipeline and hitting other places in the world. and so we keep our eyes open, we're only prudent if we take precaution knowing what's coming down the pipeline. and so if that's the case, we had to start figuring how to prepare ourselves. we, we can't be too cautious at this point. recycling, we're going to have to kind of bearing a little longer where i race, mike, always a great conversation and we'll see. i said 2020 to the mayor just extended thanks for joining me. and that's all the time we are for today show. but i promise is a conversation which we will continue to follow me on twitter at study and use hash tag team and vh over the share, more dell or the portable doubt to be at for your ab or and or device. thanks for watching. ah lou.
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ah, in these people learn from their own experience, how vulnerable of business is to the bank. so you push my business over the pushes me right to the bankruptcy. now i realize we will go. this isn't just the bank that may be involved in this is the concept. see, funds is, is the lawyers. these people have gotten a lot of stories. ottawa kind of whistle blower tell people's have broken up, has lost their family homes. it is spectacularly devastating for people's lives. they have committed suicide, but left behind, nor the explicitly state that it was the constant intimidation and billing by bank
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officers. that late them to i took the spear, it's obscene. these people have no soul. l look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings except where such order is it conflict with the 1st law, show your identification. we should be very careful about artificial intelligence at the point, obviously is to create trust rather than fear a very job with artificial intelligence, real summoning with a robot most protective phone existence with
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oh, beautiful, chilled ocean was time what it was i'm. it was a initial yoke, annoies to also with a 6 but something you would prevent them with a will got that's much 4 percent live of your properties was for what fin the but only the filled with nice seems some of them when he's gathering westwood. when macklin solution was the booklet keeps them from the, from the news or what does that still the same ones? the media has global olga slippery music to new to one wonderful,
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scared little school to live junker, which if it what are one, why do you think that us them? i mean, on, i be certain that we still live b o and i vans it's wednesday morning. a british parliamentary inquiry found the government thought, the early stages of the co, good pandemic response leading to thousands of preventable decks. we've got a stock blessing these born to rule straight out of privacy, leave me run things, they don't understand. why is it that we allow a prime minister binocs that no common sense to run as serious on then it german city hello gives the green lights broadcasting muslim coals to prayer move, which has divided opinion.

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