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tv   Redacted Tonight  RT  November 27, 2021 9:30pm-10:00pm EST

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that it was being used to target certain people such as those who support wiki leaks and juliana on shore. so as you mentioned, you know, as part of our talk liberation dot com, investigate series. we're covering something called w l dragnet. and we received a document with list of names of people who had been talking about trillion assigned on social media. this was in the 5 days previous to him being expelled from the ecuadorian embassy. and the report was actually run a few minutes after that event, which was very curious to us. so we looked at this report and this report was really detailed. it had a lot of information that you would have to know. tons about wiki leaks a lot about the assigned case a lot about the activists around wiki leaks and julie and sons and supporting him to basically run these reports. these reports are social networking graphs. so this social network analysis software that you mentioned, note excel, it can be used for a variety of things. you know,
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we could research cats with it right and see who's talking about cats. but in this case, it was very clear that someone with a lot of knowledge of the case was very strict network, the activists network around wiki leaks, and really anybody talking about it. so yeah, it sounds like the sophisticated outlines were, groups were doing this investigation. how were you able to to see these charts and these graph? yes, so this church actually published in public view, believe it or not, it's part of a huge cache of documents. approximately 80000 documents that are published on the internet as part of an open source intelligent investigations. and we looked at, you know, thousands of these documents and we found actually that many of them were automated jobs that were being run for the top government contractors for the department of defense in the us. so northrop grumman boeing, you know,
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lockheed martin. these kinds of companies were part of this cache, which again, is something that raised some more suspicion. even though these things are out in the open, it does seem to suggest that there is some sort of relationship going on. and as we talked deeper, we found, of course more relationships with the d d, the cia, it's cetera. and that's basically what we're reporting on. so it sounds like some sort of d o d connected grew possibly the pentagon itself, but it could just be a contractor somewhere is, is running these, these, you know, running the software to create a list of those who are kind of the most important. and for example, spreading information about julian sons and some of the people you targeted, not a lot of people would know at all. they're just average citizens, but others that were targeted are fairly widely known. can you talk about who exactly you found was targeted?
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sure, so you're on there, lee, you know, i'd, i'd like to thank the academy and all those around get me here. but see what's interesting about is why are you part of a report for, you know, northrop grumman. right. and what does that actually mean? and that's sort of what we're looking into, but you know, obviously wiki, leak supporters, as i mentioned, unity for j, which is something that you supported as well. glen greenwald, edward snowden, jimmy door, your co host for government secrets graham ellwood. i'm so a wide variety of folks, a number of media outlets are t, of course, as i mentioned, and some other news outlets too. so yeah, it's pretty sophisticated. it could just be somebody who has a few 1000 and followers who has, you know, sort of in target in the, in these lists. but often it's some pretty big influences as well. and do you have any, i guess you can't know precisely, but do you have any idea how they're using this information and these live so we're
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not sure exactly how the group social media research foundation, which is the nonprofit group that runs these reports or the for profit sort of arm of that group connected action. we're not sure exactly how they use these reports. we do know a lot about their ideology and what they purport to want to do with this information . so the guy named mark smith, who runs those aforementioned groups, he talks about doing social accounting. basically, you know, holding people accountable for the things they say online keeping track of what they're saying online and doing something he calls detect, deflect and deter. and that's really where you get to the meat of it. and as we go through our sort of multi part series, which will be publishing part to pretty shortly. you'll find more about the deflect, and definitely the deter steps. play devil's advocate here,
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but what would you say answer? i'm sure some people would respond this. why would you say that someone who says, well, people put out publicly available information online? if someone chooses to collect that data and put it into a lift, you know, whose fault is that? what's the problem? so li, if i were running automated reports, you know, every few days for rate the on northrop grumman going and so on. you might suspect, for example, that they were clients of mine. so it does, it does a lot at a larger relationship. so that's the 1st thing. the 2nd thing i'll say is that this sort of caching of documents out in the open is actually a dream of the intelligence agencies. they talk internally, for example, about their issues with the data that they have internally starting through and understanding and tools like not excel other social network analysis tools, make it a lot easier to basically identify targets. so we are moving into a world where, you know, hey, if i'm in the say,
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and i can just go to this huge cash documents and somebody's done all the work for me. you know, it's a heck of a lot easier than having to do it myself. and there's been a number of initiatives actually that talk about this very fact. so and you feel this could have this type of research knowing it's being done. knowing people are being targeted could have a chilling effect on, on journalism or activism. of course, who wants to be in the center of one of these clusters of people who are targeted. right. who wants to deal with troll armies coming after them and the type of harassment? i even think, you know, people who are reading our report, who are talking about it, there's a bit of a chilling effect of talking about it. you don't want to necessarily be seen to be, you know, supporting the folks are revealing this information. as you know, you know, investigative journalists are targeted, but folks who are talking about investigative journalists are always targeted to. so yeah, of course there's a showing effect and that's really what the deflect is about. to deter is about
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those parts of the step. the conception of democracy here, the conception of freedom of expression here is certainly one about management and control. well, put, so let's get to a little bit about pan quake, which you guys have been working on for, you know, i think over 18 months, i've been hearing about it and everyone's pretty excited. but you know, what teasing us? well, where's the stand now? okay, well 1st off, i just want to say, you know, the problems of people being censored on the social media in the information system . we knew they were out of control and all the stuff we were talking about with w dragnet and etc. you know, that really reinforced for us on the pancake team, you know, just how bad things are. so it's really great that we can tell you that we're making huge progress on pan quake for the audience that may not know. pan quake is a next generation block chain based social media site. it's
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a sort of micro blogging, micro communication platform. and we care about privacy, freedom of information, and we want you others, you know, anybody who communicates on our platform to not only understand what we're up to have transparency through the block chain to see that we're not manipulating them. we're doing anything terrible. but we want folks to have followers that can't be taken away from you. a lot of this talk about controlling information about, you know, trying to remove people from social media, shadow banning and so on. it's about getting rid of followers. it's about getting rid of your ability to have freedom of expression and that's what we're working on . how would pan quake be different? how would it, how would it be accountable to not have shadow banning? well, 1st off, we have no advertising, so we don't have any advertising based surveillance, right? we don't want to manipulate people, we don't want to be touching people's timelines. we want to have, you know, the,
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what you see is what you should be seeing from the people you're following, right? we're not selling your data, we're not collecting it, et cetera. so there's no manipulation on that end. there's no reason we would want to manipulate your falling. but you know, as i said, we're publishing your post to the pancake block chain publicly. so that will be easy for people to verify that we're doing as we say, and not manipulating, you know, getting rid of followers or any of that nasty sort of treatment. we're also building into the platform a lot of features that will allow you to reach an audience much more organically and much more easily currently than networks. for example, like twitter allow you to do some of the features, which we have pancakes, which is what it's named after, right? that sort of a curation tool. so you can have a really nice thread that you cure 8 and actually send with a simple link to anyone who wants to click on it to all of your followers, etc. and we have thunder quakes, right?
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which allow folks to basically opt into amplifying your content. there's all these cool features we thought about. not just trying to get rid of the nasty stuff right . and replace the twitters in the facebook and so on. but really think about ways that you can reach your followers and reach a much wider audience through pain. so as i said, we're making tons of progress. and i assume that a mainstream media. 3 politician, they must just be thrilled about this because you know, they, they probably want people to be able to communicate online freely and to have open transparency. so i assume you must, they must be doing expos after expos day on in the new york times. right. of course, of course, what i will say is actually, you know, we care about having organic grassroots support. we have lots and lots of people who are supported the project and we're getting very close to finishing phase 2 of our funding around. so we just need, i think approximately 10 k
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t get past that and then move onto the next phase. people can sign up for the beta . we have a proof of concept working peer to peer decentralized network, which is really, really exciting for me as a technologist and we're moving forward. so whatever the corporate mainstream press does, you know they do, eventually they will have to notice us and we want folks to sort of get on board now. you know, sign up for the beta support us, sign up for talk liberation, which all of that money, every dollar goes to support the pancake build. that sort of feedback loop will be difficult to ignore as we keep building moment. so well, thank you so much for being here. shawn. how can people read the next, the next installment of this report on know to excel and the w l dragnet? and can you tease anything that you're getting ready to reveal?
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sure, i'm so go to talk liberation, dot com and please subscribe. now it's not pay wald. so if you want to, of course subscribe and just for $5.00 a month, um you can do that, but you also will be able to read it for free. we want to make sure people can get to the content. i'm teasing, we're going to learn a lot more, as i said about those connections to the cia, to the department of defense, to some other groups. and i think folks you are interested in what's been going on with censorship and so called disinformation will be quite curious about what they find out. so thanks again, sean, i really appreciate it. thank you. we've got a quick break, but if you want exclusive content from us here redacted tonight. every day the we go to portable dot tv and scroll down to the redacted denied play list. also check out my podcast government secrets with gram ellwood. i'll be right back. we're lamore
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the postal service delivers a $155000000000.00 pieces of mail every year. approximately 40 percent of the world's mail. right now the us postal service is in a fight of its life history. that is really bad financial shape. now facing default, the postal service is a cash cow. and there was a way to pull money out of the postal service to put in the federal budget. there was a mandate that you're bringing a $100000.00, new revenue every month. the nature of privatization in the us postal service is very much hidden from public view. it's privatization from the inside out. i am on it. i with about big business in money. it's not about the public giving them a service that they not about quality train warfare. it's about
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with you were told it was bad for your eyes and your post. yeah. that it would stop you from having real friends and finding a girlfriend. but what they fail to mention is that you could make thousands of dollars over the weekend by simply playing video games with a couple of them because we formed the fortune of with georgia leslie. with okay, much more to do except there's no phone of course to make video games a high paying job. you have to be gifted and quick witted. i'm going to open up with a little bit more listening and this sounds good webpage, but here from young booth but even started yet gala. boy, when you mouse told me my video it out or you me, i was at kneels. few are you guy of the order without that vehicle it will still be
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stuck with these it's odd to choose ah, an old hungarian proverb says you can't put everything under one hat. it means that the same rules can't be applied to every one. and yet this is want you to pass, signed up to when it entered the european union in 2004. today hungry is accused of all possible sins against democracy. now does the or by and government feel about its future and place in the european family? i saw a message from an unknown account because it had a self through with my passport as its profile picture. i saw pictures of my documents. it was, they also sent a credit contract. i had just 3 days comply with their demands to see if i
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didn't send money and they sent up an online hate campaign that i was supposed to be very dangerous man. welcome back. i'm still lay camp and here now is anders lay with a weekly offensive delaware. the 1st state, all the charm of new jersey with the culture of maryland. it's home to dozens of lovely rest stops and over 1600000 corporations. make sense when you consider that according to the atlas of the d. c. universe, delaware is also home to the city of metropolis, a sprawling urban landscape where superman fights, evil village. according to some experts, however, metropolis is not real. no wonder all these corporations are so hard to spot. when you dig into the numbers,
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it turns out the delaware's population is just under 974000. meaning they have more corporations than people. although under american law, that census count is discriminatory since the supreme court defines corporations as people delaware should be allowed to elect corporations. don't you love the sound of governor j. p. morgan chase, or sen, astrazeneca, or president? bite it. but when it comes to delaware's human flesh and blood state government, there is a common understanding known as the delaware way in which a small group of economic and political leads decide what's best for the rest of the state. behind closed doors. this leads to decisions like the one to merge dupont with dow chemical, which as delaware ends were told at 1st would keep their state competitive and create jobs. but even though the merged company still incorporates in delaware,
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the vast majority of those high paying jobs migrated to michigan and $1700.00 workers were laid off. this was after delaware had given dupont multimillion dollar grid to keep jobs in the state. if we can't trust dow chemical, how are we going to trust anyone ever again? now, delaware's taxation structure is show friendly. the corporations that in 2017, after the panama papers were released, a group of european union delegates flew all the way there just to plead with the delaware legislature to please strengthen their tax laws. all civil play, right, some laws. to give an idea of just how lax the tax code is in delaware, take fusion reporter the tasha del poorer, who in 2016 went to delaware and shut up. she sells c shells, l l c. a business incorporated in 5 minutes for an anonymous beneficial owner. natasha kat. suki. no id necessary?
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no, that's lack c taxi. i guess that's how they make arista catch. in the united states, ever since a supreme court ruling in 1978 banks that operate across state lines are only subject to the regulations and interest rates of the states that they're officially based. so for 2 thirds of the banks and companies in the fortune $500.00, as well as half of america's credit card industry. that state is delaware. delaware has no limit on interest rates next to no credit card regulations and gives lenders the right to change terms on consumers. anytime they please, all the banks have to do an exchange is employ at least 100 delaware residents. easy bar to clear if you just hire 50 pencil pushers, $48.00 paper shredding specialists and of course to us senators. anytime the subject of reforming delaware's flimsy regulatory framework comes up in the state
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legislature, lawmakers defer the delaware state bar association, which is chock full of corporate lawyers, but not everyone in delaware values. their advice, specifically state representative john walker, a former union machinist whose basically delaware is bernie sanders. i guess every state has one. even in utah, there's gotta be some state senator with dark brown hair shouting in an east coast action about the mormon church. not giving missionaries a living, which there are few years ago. walker introduced a bill that would bar corporations from shutting up l. l sees in delaware. if their owners had been identified by federal agencies as a threat to the united states. it was all about criminality. preventing money laundering, sex trafficking, narcotics, but even that couldn't pass even l. chapo guzman used to have a show company in delaware. he asked me, oh shante bin laden's real mistake was trying to hide in pakistan instead of
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a really big post office box in wilmington. and finally redacted corresponding job for con brings us to mind blowing old news in 1993. the us, canada, and mexico all signed on to the north american free trade agreement. a nafta. this led to high profits for corporations, job loss, and destitution for workers and farmers. a series of improvements on highways, linking mexico to canada, and the arm guerrilla uprising of the indigenous devotees does establishing an economist zone in the southern shop, a state of mexico, which still exists to this day. so today will be talking about those series of improvements on north american highways. the can, a mex corridor was established just getting, we're talking about this app. and he says, she op us is mexico's southernmost state. also it's poorest. and most indigenous,
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the mexican government historically overlooked and abused the indigenous population . there were the poorest of the poor, the most excluded without electricity, without effective education or health care. damn, it sucks to be indigenous. if you want to be happy in north america, the last thing you want to do is be from north america. then in 1910, came the mexican revolution. it was a largely peasant revolution against the mexican government, against largest states, growing crops for global markets, absorbing local farms and causing famine. 2 of the most famous revolutionaries where poncho, via and emilio zapata, the latter being the inspiration for the zapatista named. they can be seen together here via having a great time hanging out with his comrades. and zapata annoyed that he's about to be tagged on instagram by some revolutionary cloud chaser. the revolution was
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eventually defeated, but the mexican government made some big concessions to appease the opposition and attempt to co opt the movement. these concessions included collectively own land minerals and oil all for the use of the people. but this change in the ninety's with nafta, which entail the privatization of mexico's collectively own lands. also nafta opened the mexican market to us corn producers who were subsidized by the u. s. government. so as mexican corn farmers could no longer compete, would subsidize us prices indebted farmers lost their land, which now could be acquired by foreign firms that consolidated fry makers into large plantations. nothing like an old fashion auction of ancestral homeland. we have secret ground, cherish, mind it is people going once going twice. so to mr. monsanto.
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so mexican farmers were left with 3 options. work under slave conditions for a new boss. leave and try to find a better life elsewhere or die. but the indigenous people of chiapas were ready for years. they had been honing a unique ideology. but combine or radical left is thought traditional mind wisdom, catholic liberation, theology. that's right, cool catholicism you can pay for your indulgence. is an index or said tv. and since the eighty's, they had been secretly militarize in an training as a zappa t, the army of national liberation, aka the easy ellen. so on january 1st 1994, the day after went into effect. they rose up in arms. what they did that can we do that? they can't do that. can they do that? for 12 days?
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war between the easy ellen and the mexican army grips chiapas, obviously a group of poor local gorillas. some of them literally holding cardboard cutouts of rifles do not stand a chance against the mexican army. for the zapatista did have was the solidarity of the mexican people for the government stopped their brutal attacks. not to say they weren't pressured from the other side as well. in fact, a leaked memo from the manhattan chase bank shows executives wanted the mexican government to eliminate the zapatista does just a casual suggestion of genocide coming from an american financial institution. no big deal. but ultimately, the mexican government allowed the zapatista does to live a ton of miss lee. this means they have their own collective rotating government, their own legal system, production cooperatives, all free from neo liberal policies of exploitation. they are living proof that it
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is possible to live under a different system, one that is particularly famous for its fierce support of women's rights. the zapatista is uniquely indigenous revolutionary movement, is a symbol of anti colonialism, anti capitalism, and global solidarity. and the u. s. government really doesn't want to know it exists or that we can do that. reporting from chiapas, mexico is a job for con, with redacted tonight. stetsco show. but don't forget to check out free exclusive content every god damn day. affordable dot tv also takes the word redacted to 33777, to get signed up for our free e mail list until next time. okay, friday. ah,
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it really is something that kosh right on police report. it's an all cash in december 2020. a group of anti finishes, fill out a film crew access for 3 months. so like if people organization, if an idea that fascism must be opposed, that channel out the game while they may kill their faces. but they can say what they believe in, we believe in helping our community. we believe that fascism is one of the major threats to the united states has gotten proven. this is a chance to see who and t for really are in order for me to extract my 1st amendment right and say that my life matter, i have to be on to the teacher to that problem is we can't trust the police, we can't trust the government, we can't trust anyone except ourselves to protect ourselves in us dollars reserve currency. the days are numbered there, those even the big client community that held on hope that somehow the u. s. dollar
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well remain on the world stage. but as hillary clinton herself points out, the coin is essentially undermining or destroying the u. s. dollar, because the u. s. dollar can't hold its purchasing power because it's via money and no fee money over the past 300 years has ever escape trading to 0. join me every thursday on the alex salmon. sure. i'll be speaking to guess in the world of politics. sport business. i'm show business. i'll see you then. mm. that postal service delivers a $155000000000.00 pieces of mail every year. approximately 40 percent of the world's mail right now the us postal service is an a flight of its life to say related to this reaction, bad financial shade. now facing default. the postal service is
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a cash cow and there was a way to pull money out of the postal service to put into the federal budget. there was a mandate that you're bringing $100000.00, new revenue every month. and the nature of privatization in the us postal service is very much hidden from public view. it's privatization from the inside out. why that's a big business in money. it's not about the public and given them the service that they deserve. it's not about quality train workers. it's about with
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a new cove. its train is in southern africa, box global permit prompting countries to shut down and travel with the region. the variance is already spreading globally with the u. k. the latest nation to confirm cases developers of food mcvey, a preparing to test, the russian shock against the new mutation. we also heard from the hungarian foreign minister about his own country's vaccine policy and the need to put lives a above politics. there are too many countries. i'm considering the issues will vaccination had a political order or i don't. you know, it's about liable to people to protest as i killed and almost 20 injured by the french military and nisha according to the countries governments, af, after a french military convoy runs into violence large scale.

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