tv News RT December 14, 2021 7:00pm-7:31pm EST
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i'm eddie with when ah, facebook admits in courts that it's 3rd party fact checks are nothing more than opinions fueling further allegations of bias and censorship on social media. also had i bangor mounts in the u. k. over new restrictions being brought in to combat the fast spreading omicron cove at variance one m p even compared the proposals to nazi germany. and the pentagon says it won't hold any one liable for a botched drone strike in afghanistan that killed 10 civilians, including 7 children. ah,
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oh, road casting live from moscow, russia. this is art international. i am your host donald quarter. welcome to the program. now 1st in our program today is a developing story. the suspicious package was reportedly found in the compound of the russian embassy in washington, d. c. it appears to have been thrown over the fence and police of court and off the street near the building. we will keep you updated as we get more information on the story. in the landmark a court case, facebook has admitted that it's 3rd parks. a 3rd party fact checks are just opinions. the revelations came during a legal battle that journalists are bringing against the social media giant. they're accusing it of defamation, after posts related to their work were flagged as false or t. saskia taylor takes up the story. well, facebook might have put itself a new name matter, but it seems that it's up to its old trick. the age old question of whether it's a free, an open platform or in fact, a giant tech company that is just censoring anyone. it does like, has yet to again,
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re and merge. now the latest revelations transpired from a neural suit filed against facebook by john list, and that's because one of his posts from about last year's california wildfires was fact checked and labeled pot default. so he said for defamation, as you said, but the social media platforms response has been to lift up the towns and say when it can't be defamation, because these flat check has what parenting out to rid the world of nasty misinformation are actually surprise 3rd party people who decide what is full, so not based, not on facts, but on opinion. and because this is america opinion is sacred. stills, stills claims focus on the fact, check articles written by climate feedback. not the labels have fixed through the facebook, but for the labels themselves are neither fools nor defamatory to the contrary. they constitute protect that opinion. so facebook has essentially admitted that for the fact check has facts, opp, optional. and of course, it does have
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a right to do this facebook as a private company, so it's policy is an internal matter. but the point is, is that it does have responsibility on accountability before it's roughly 3000000000 users wild wide. and actually speaking of them, undoubtedly who feel misled at best and may be downright night to it was they've been sharing that take on these latest developments. court filing, facebook admits it's fact checkers. don't check facts. is facebook admitted here that it's fact checks are not really fact checks at all, but merely pin him assertions also by facebook clement it's labels constitute opinions than doesn't that make it a publisher. facebook, your opinion piece is not exempt from being fact checked, even when they are clearly labeled as o peds or editorials. also, facebook or fax labels cannot be false or to pharma tree because they constitute, protects it opinion, even though we present them as fact. we know facebook's got a whole section on its website dedicated to fact check, isn't it ready? does salad. while you know, a 2 organizations watching 60 languages fighting lies together. it's
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a rigorous process and that process involves identifying the problematic post and then reviewing it. and apparently in order to decide whether this post is accurate or not, it goes straight to the source. it interviews, people consult data, and that on the basis of these findings that determines whether that content needs to be filtered or allowed to circulate. so it really. ringback does sound like a thorough only scientific process, no way in all of that and believing actual lives of tool through that was a lot of it is absolutely no use watson, my opinion, subjective, you know, personal perception, judgment does nothing like that a speech more widely. you know, if you do listen to some, the top ross at facebook, you believe that they never really feel to any content because as such great champions of free speech. if your democracy can't tolerate the speech of people, i'm not sure what kind of democracy it is. i do believe in giving people more access to information and more access to connect with one another and not reserving those as tools for some small number of a lead people. i don't feel comfortable at all saying they don't get to have
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a voice because i don't agree with. they said our ability to know what is misinformation is itself in question and i think reasonably. so i think many people would agree without a party sentiment from head, but the question hair is, is facebook trying to get us out out of a tight spot with this will soon by suddenly amending the job description of fact jekka in order to escape any liability or has it actually just been lying on its website for this time? by the way, it's not good enough for the company. and it sat in does absolutely nothing to count all those accusations with all these years that they have been silencing voice says arbitrary blocking content, quite frankly, straying into the dangerous territory of censorship. we spoke with social affairs broadcaster dave perkins and he thinks that facebook is deliberately trying to avoid a barrage of further lawsuits. facebook has found themselves back against the wall and if they try to cling to the idea that they are fact checking in court, they're going to lose. and not only is it going to cost them big time, but it's going to open the door to
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a flood of similar lawsuit in the near future. and it could be more than they can handle. i think they're hoping that by admitting that fact, jack just means opinion jack, when facebook puts a label on there, hoping to get out of this lawsuit without harm. and then just sink the story into the daily fountain of news events and hope people forget about it. in due time and in the, in the future, you'll see changes in their labels. they'll stop using the word fact and they'll come up with some other way to express it where they still exercise their dictatorship right to control speech on their platform. but it won't be a false presentation like the word fact jack is os u. k has begun to record omicron cases in the thousands. the variant now accounts for 20 per cent of infections in the country and nearly half in london. one death linked to the so called mutant strain has been confirmed in forest johnson has brought in his plan beat new restrictions and an accelerated roll out of booster shots. many members of
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his own party are not convinced it's the way forward. we are not to papers please society, this is not nazi germany. well, the prime minister's lakers instruction to the nation is get a boosted and now the aim really is to get every single adult in the country vaccinated with that boosted job. by the end of this month, the is quite ambitious then really because that would mean a 1000000 people need to be jobs every single day. and i'm outside saint thomas hospital here in central london. and as you can see, the queue is really piling up. now this morning, in fact, the chances are telling people to stop trying to book their booster online. the system has totally crushed and why. 7 may you ask about the acceleration of this booth to program now? well, according to the how secretary the on the chrome variant is now the dominant one. no, very old code 19 has spread this fast. oh me con. expected to become the dominant code 19 fair in the capital in the next 48 hours. so the 2nd of this week is to get
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a boosted now, and it's all part of a drive of the plan be covert restrictions that include face mouse being made. mandatory again, cove at passports, cove isolation rules, but also the most controversial one is trying to get the n 8 just to get vaccinated, making that compulsory now many people in the public se that's an attack on civil liberties. that's something that some m p 's agree with. and so we're expecting a huge tory rebellion. many people saying compelling the public to get immunized as simply a step too far. not to mention the temporary emergency measures that don't seem to be so temporary anymore. we were told these measures might be left to before santa took to his sleigh, and suddenly, before half the country was pinged into the gulag, there seems no lead up to this kind of self defeating dystopian logic. well, just yesterday, then the government put the owners back on the public saying we must all be playing our part. but that's quite a difficult message for the public to take,
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especially after the last few weeks of revelations that some call a dish don't seem to be playing their part in trying to get on the other side of this pandemic. and yes, i'm told me about those downing street christmas parties as being the headline news here in the united kingdom. but many people, as you can see, the key directly behind me, they are following the rules. they want to get that these to now, perhaps as long as it to save their christmas is. meanwhile, there was a brief moment of panic on tuesday morning after in person pc, our tests were temporarily unavailable across england. the government's website has now been updated showing new time slots, and despite u. k efforts to ramp up testing to counter the new coded omicron variant, there are still plenty of questions over how potent or otherwise it actually is on that subject. we spoke with simon clark, who was a microbiologist at the reading university in the u. k. who is inevitable when you,
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when you turn up the volume on these measures for eliza said that these things take time and the to you have to change what's available and what's delivering that to that program. and i think that's what we need. i think that so what we see is, is governments being nervous about leaving the stable door from the horse to bolt because that's what's happened before. and they don't want it to happen again, much will transmissible. so they'll transmit ability mold, and i would take them any central drop in violence, inability to cause disease is missing from people. then you'll end up with a big burden on, on society and on its health care system. after august spots drawn strike and afghanistan that killed 10 civilians, most of which were children. no u. s. military personnel will face punishment. pentagon made the announcement on monday do not anticipate there being issues of personal accountability to be had
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with respect to the august 29th here st. lou . busy busy ah out of the 7 children who died, the youngest was just 2 years old. the man target in the strike was named demari amadi, an aide worker who the u. s. mistook for a terrorist. we heard from his grieving brother of the key up a she themselves. so the news came as a shock. we feel betrayed because no one will be prosecuted. they should have kept their word. we held it. the people who ordered and carried out this attack would face justice. the americans claimed that they can spot a needle on the ground from their satellites. so how could they not see the innocent family they were about to kill?
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they found no connection between us and his nomic states. so why didn't they do those checks before launching obama to us? it looks like no other country is forcing them seek justice. there is no one to challenge them because they're superpower. that's why the americans have failed to keep their promises. i'm sorry, he spoke with former u. s. military drone operator. brandon bryant, he told us why he thinks the pentagon is reluctant to punish those behind that the drone strike you can watch the full interview on the unheard voices project of our t dot comp. a couple incident followed a long string of similar disasters. according to the bureau of investigative journalism of $2900.00 afghan civilians have been killed by us drones since 2004 and includes dozens of children. the brother of one of the victims again says that despite promises of justice and compensation, he wasn't even contacted by the us authorities. bismark, almost o'clock to the whole shallow, the americans promised justice and compensation,
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and they would take us to the us. we found out on the news that they would take some measures, but nobody approached us. no one contacted us and we were given no information. how can they compensate us for our family members? all the wealth in the world means nothing to was now we've lost 10 of our relatives . my brother was working for foreigners. he was innocent. all of our children were innocent. what did they do? they followed british government is planning to reform its human rights laws by adding a healthy dose of common sense as the justice secretary put it. some of the proposals have been long called for including deporting foreign criminals. but the overall package has drawn a wave of criticism from the opposition and rights activists. this bill represents the biggest legal assault on international refugee law ever seen in the u. k. a future where the u. k. brakes his international law, obligations, and ox out of human rights protections is a very bad future. these conservative governments attacks on the rural floor must top the human rights ad does not stop as deployed in serious criminals threatening
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to weaken people's ability to challenge the government. just because the course sometimes rule against you is that of dictators and despots, not democrats. the proposed changes would apply to the u. k. human rights act, which has been in place for 20 years. among other things, the conservative government wants greater powers to curb foreign criminals ability to appeal deportation and to give british courts more flexibility and interpreting rulings from the european court of human rights option returns the host of going underground on our t told my colleague union o'neill that the timing of the proposals may be significant. viewers around the world are going to say, you know, this is just coming days after a, a british court accused of corruption by some overturned to previous judgment, that the julian assigns of wiki things can be sent to the united states to raise 175 years for revealing war crimes. so why,
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why so soon as we learn of that judgment and his stroke in a high security prison? do we suddenly hear a reform or consultation document on the human rights act, which will, which will and on the table is a reform of you european human rights at court affiliation of the british system. one of the reforms, one of the main points of it is that the u. k. wants to make it easier to, to port foreign offenders. that's something that a lot of conservative voters have been asking for for many years. why should that one be a problem? the numbers is a foreign offenders that have been coming to britain. if you look at statistics, our minuscule, in terms of overturning the entire human rights act, one could maybe say that britain is acting quite intelligently about this britain off to rule knows exactly the scale of the refugee crisis from countries that it participated in the annual bombarding of it was britain, of course,
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that destroyed africa's riches per capita. country libya on the mediterranean, there were thousands untold thousands of drowned. course england and france were involved in that we have refugees drowning in the english channel. and of course, england and britain was responsible partly for the aerial bombardment of iraq, afghanistan off syria, that britain knows where and why refugees seeking solace in asylum from countries whose economies and whose entire populations have been destroyed. you're watching archie international and american diplomats wife accused of killing a british teenager and a road crash is finally due to stand trial. that story and more after a short break. ah
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dares sinks. we dare to ask oh, welcome back. now the u. s. u homeland security department is under fire after it was revealed that the agency had secretly obtained information on journalists, congress members, and possibly even its own staff using databases set up to track international terrorists associated press, whose reporter was one of those targeted is demanding answers where deeply concerned about this apparent abuse of power, this appears to be an example of journalists being targeted for simply doing their jobs, which is a violation of the 1st amendment. what we have in question is a secret border patrol unit called counter network division. and apparently it had
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very few rules, very few guidelines. it operated and well abided by and according to the report that has, well, that has made the headlines views to proudly some of the america's most sensitive databases to look into and to vet people. when i say people, i do not mean known criminals on poor people, charged with something or even people suspected of committing a federal crime. when i say that people, they were rather vetting journalists or world congressman or congress people or just angio workers. they were vetting them as they were considering working with them this well counter network division and the sort of information they could get they could obtain from databases like for example, a terror watchlist is well, quite expansive. for example, they could get their financial logs, they could get their travel logs, they could even pry into their personal affairs. for example, the apparently used their the most sensitive databases and all sorts of tools to
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look into well into a journalist than a political reporter who was well, romantically involved with a senior senate staffer, they called the operation a whistle pig, apparently inspired by a very particular brand of whiskey, and they used the information that they had obtained to ensnare said senate staffer . now these revelations, they have caused quite a stir and of they have been condemned. these practices have been condemned by journalists by privacy advocates, and even officials if true, this abuse of government surveillance powers to target journalists, elected officials, and their stuff is deeply disturbing. if multiple government agencies were aware of this conduct and took no action to stop it than he's to be. so various consequences for every efficient involved and department of homeland security and the justice department must explain what actions they are taking to prevent this unacceptable conduct in the future. official, as they have said, that quote unquote, they do not condone the investigation of reporters and one person who was singled
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out as a member of the secret unit. jeffrey rambo has also dismissed the reporting as sensationalized. he has said that they did not do anything out of the ordinary that it was all common practice. this secret unit by the way, it is still operational to this day and a party operates according to the same rule book. okay, prosecutors say the wife of an american diplomat charged with killing a teenager will face criminal proceedings after all, and the coolest fled back across the atlantic. after her car collided with teenage motorcyclist harry done outside of a u. s. military air base in england. the tragedy took place over 2 years ago after which mister kula says after which mister coolest was accused of causing the death by dangerous driving. she claimed diplomatic immunity and was allowed to leave the united kingdom. the don family then filed an extradition request which was initially rejected by washington, but has now been granted lawyers acting for schools previously admitted that she
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did drive on the wrong side of the road before colliding with harry done. they say though, that's because she had only been in the u. k for 3 weeks and took the right hand lane. instinctively rad seager, an advisor for the don family earlier spoke to the program. and he said that their long campaign for justice is finally making progress. we sort of feel this is a combination of almost 2 and a half years now of relentless, tireless campaigning for this appalling decision by the u. s. government should deny mary's family justice. we don't know why this happened. all we know was that it was a, it's a terrible decision on the part of the us government. and supposedly our strongest ally, why you would want to condemn a totally innocent family to, to this torture. this mental torture is beyond me, but we're very pleased now that i'm with your help and your colleagues helping the media that they have now clearly been left with no choice other than to change
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their decision and allow justice in whatever form that takes to now take its it's natural course, i think the turning point was. ready when president biden came into office and we know he suffered a, a similarly similar family tragedy himself. and we, what we learned from, from him that he was going to take a different approach to under president trump took, i think my other theory is that inevitably, governments, when they make a decision, find it very difficult to change their minds. but the, the courage of this family and the help of the media all around the world, the americans ultimately were left with no choice and other than to change their decision. these things, unfortunately, do take a lot of time as no let up to america's inflationary spiral. wholesale
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prices in november were almost 10 percent higher than the year before, according to the latest data and analysts have come up with some rather surprising advice. first, cash strapped consumers is caleb mauppin, reports with prices on almost all goods and services rising. some media have come up with some advice that isn't going down too well. they say copy inflation ravaged argentina and simply blow all your money before it evaporates. in high inflation economy. money that sits in the bank is losing value each day, those $100.00 and deposit by a little bit less. as a result, many argentines spend their paychecks as soon as they receive them, cards in a way, weeks worth of groceries in a single shopping trip. even if some of it excess me chicken fish will sit in the freezer for months. so won't burg, offers us to spend more. that's as consumer inflation costs of jumps, 6.8 percent the highest and 41 years. no doubt, many have pointed out how disconnected from reality such
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a solution is. in the weimer republic, the price change so fast, the customers bought beer for the whole day in the morning. it's coming or the fed can stop printing trillions of dollars, making us all poor in the process with a decline and currency that also works. yeah, you definitely should start live in a hand to mouth because of temper or a blip in inflation. it's not the only example in a recent washington post article, a leading columnist, aptly suggested. not expecting very much. rather than leaving constantly on the verge of throw in a fit, and rescan taken it out on the la welm service, struggling shop owners later ivan delivered a pupil. we'd do ourselves a favor by consciously lowering expectations. a recent article from walks recommended reducing holiday requests in order to not feel the crunch of by nomics . the mission to my alas with more intention is achievable for everyone, especially affluent shoppers. it's incumbent and americans, the wealthiest people in the well to come back,
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come and be critical of their consumption. many c biden's policies as being directly to blame while an infusion of treasury bonds may have been necessary at the beginning of the pan annex. the strategy of printing money seems to be backfiring. everything costs more grocery stores. um, pretty much everything universally costs more. everything its got up gas, food, everything. so it's not dead. i'm a small, you know, black home business owner and all the prices are my products, have a coffee shop in brooklyn, in prime grand coffee and like all the, all the beans, all more expensive and it's harder to get like even little products like napkins and cups and all those stuff, so it's kind of bad, you know, i dont think biden has been handling any situation. i think biden has just been sitting in office, says kind of a doddering man. joe biden seems bored of explaining how he sees it. not too interested in defending his actions. if we were all going out and having lunch
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together and i said, let's ask whoever, whoever's in the next table, no matter how were what restaurant ran, haven't had them explained the supply chain to us. 16 understand was what we're talking about. why wouldn't biden be trying to stop inflation? if apparently he's the only one who knows what it is, but even economics nobel laureates writing for the new york times say they did not see the inflation coming. trying to clarify my own thoughts on inflation. i got inflation wrong. i didn't see the current such coming, but why? i didn't think the fiscal stimulus early this year would boost demand as much is summers. that's how predicts it. and in fact, so far it hasn't. now at this point, 60 percent of americans blamed joe biden for the crisis, but mainstream media seems to disagree and tell them they should blame themselves, not the people leading the country. there's nothing that upsets american voters more than having to pay for ever higher prices that are going up dramatically by to
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mr. trisha to try to blame the energy companies and private is all they want. but it's all happening on his watch. and i expect that the democrats are going to pay a very serious price for this and the next election, if we make it that long, we don't know what inflation is going to be at. by that time, i'm very much afraid that, that we're going to be facing a reckoning of without any kind of historical precedent in anybody's life times. the inner practica annual science and business form kicks off for the 8th time in moscow on tuesday. that brings together business reps and scientists from around the country with the aim of boosting collaboration between the 2 sectors. perhaps on surprisingly, the main theme of this year's event is how co it has affected the global economy. and people's values in a practica will run for 3 days and include
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a series of addresses and discussions with some of russia's most eminent business leaders. we managed to catch up with a few of them settled because he's made is cove. it has forced many changes in economic development to be made. it has given us additional impetus to move towards further digitalization. now there's a visible acceleration of technological development. it's important that he's happening on 2 tracks. they will tenuously on the one hand national demand for home grown tech is growing on the other. the government is acting as the driving force is opening up new markets and removing obstacles. the speaking of skeletons, i believe, in my opinion, is supported by experts that the technology sector can become the trial that can help me commonly recover. medium sized tech companies out the most adaptive, and they're able to integrate quickly into the economy quicker in just a production systems. and like large businesses login when we live in a fast paced world on the pandemic has accelerated the processes of digitalization . while marketing and informational messages are becoming more personalized. this
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creates new requirements for content, which should become more and more diverse environment. how just before we go, a quick recap of our developing story. a suspicious package was reportedly found in the compound of the russian embassy in washington. d. c. appears to have been thrown over the fence and police have cordoned off the street near the building course. we'll keep you updated as soon as we get more information on the story. roth cross. oh, that's the news for this. our stick around for more in just about 30 minutes. ah . ah, central banks, all banks, small, unfair bible committees, under my wall centers of our arc run. some of them are very corrupt, some of them are extremely current on here in el salvador, their money system is completely absent. a penny corruption because it's only
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