tv Redacted Tonight RT December 25, 2021 9:30pm-10:01pm EST
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ah, ah ah, welcome to redacted denied i'm li camp. oh hes got bob's. it's been an insane year in which i've actually used up my fcc allowable allotment of curse words. so now i can't pong key not and use any bad words in this. god bless it, ap personnel, fire shy and lance, your fragile dazzle. but considering this year, we van, it's about time we looked back, the best of redacted tonight 2021. we cover every aspect on this show of the corruption, the greed, the show. see up at the,
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the inhumane destruction of our world by a tiny group of dig. taishan experts oligarchy was souls that looked like rotting, corpse, fecal matter. total con, shuree, hating morally bankrupt ass. ha, ha, ha, merry christmas. you get to point us on back the very best to redact of the night before i have a seizure and joyce in 2018, the worker rights consortium put out an extensive report on the forced labor in john. so where did they get all that information? where did they get it? i'm glad you asked. the grades on, looked into it, and the info came from these sources. ok. first you have radio free a u. s. government sponsor new service that even the new york times ones called quote, a worldwide propaganda network built by the ca,
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unquote. so we can forget that meaningless source. next to the u. s. government, if you trust their claims, then you should probably just give up on life because the, the part of your brain, the questions, anything is dead and shrivelled. so we're done with that source. now, the australian strategic policy institute does that again. no, i believe, you know, go back to playing bowler. i know cooking kangaroos on the barbara or some next up . adrian then. now i've covered adrian's as before. he's a lovely, very nice evangelical christian from germany, who believes, believe that he's at war with china and that all jews will be burned in a fiery furnace. when the time's come, he really said that he also has been shown to completely misinterpret data. that's a nice word lie. when it comes to accusing china of all kinds of crazy stuff. i'm
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pretty sure he said he had proved that china was indeed the cause of his small penis. so. so across him, off las wow, that is a northerly group of sources so far. that's like a friend just saying i have, i have it on reliable authority that user to best all of your money in a craft cap yoke and putting because the stock is about to jump. 500 percent. and then you find out that the sources for your friend stock tip are 3 tapio ca, putting salesmen, a dog and an anti semitic pedophile. but that still leaves human rights watch, right? that's still them. they sell a jet, you know, but they to signed off on this extensive report. well, as the greys on points out, human rights watch was created in 1978, mostly is a u. s. regime change tool back then,
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they come out to their time accusing the soviet block of human rights abuses. never noticing any of america's extensive list of human rights abuses. and to this day, human rights watch continues to almost exclusively accuse americans adversaries of violations. and they're mostly funded by our old friend, john. oh, but little stark. you, they can make him look a little more faster. man, like, i don't know much better sorrows is a hedge fund billionaire who believes he's at war with communism and that china is out to get him pretty odd that someone like sorrows who survive the holocaust is allied with adrian then who believes all jews will burn in a fiery furnace, but here we are. the head of human rights watch is a man named kenneth ross under raw leadership,
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human rights watch justified the nato military intervention and livia, after to collecting to oppose the us invasion of iraq. it is also refused to call for an end us saudi assault on yemen that has produced the worst humanitarian crisis in the world. human rights watch has campaign ceaselessly for toppling leftist government across latin america. so kind of ross and human rights watch, defend all human rights. as long as it's not human being destroyed by the american empire, those human rights are a little less important. and by a little, i mean a lot. and by a lot, i mean, not important at all. so back to the big chart. oh, there are some sources for this extensive report. there are no some sources for the extensive reports every once in a while. our military industrial complex looks at their weapons and goes, i wonder what they will do the large numbers of on just back to human beings. if
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only we had large numbers of human beings to tested on. and then they go, oh my god, we have low divines is backing humans right here at home. this is someone citing, it's our lucky day. so let's begin. on september 20th 1950. a u. s. navy ship just off the coast of san francisco, used a giant hose to spray a cloud of microbes into the air and into the city fog. the military was testing how a biological weapon attack would affect the $800000.00 residents of the city. so they perpetrated a biological attack on american citizens to find out what would happen in a biological attack. great idea really is why i dropped the nuclear bomb on eagle by south dakota to see what the fall out of being that they're telling me that it's
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eagle butte. but we all know one man, the blood is another man's beauty. and if you don't believe that and kiss my beauty, but no, i'm not making this up in one of the largest human experiments in history or military cover the people of san francisco with 2 kinds of bacteria. so ratio, martha sense and bad fill of global g? pretty sure i know that the gas attack thickened many and was known to kill at least one man according to rebecca crested discover magazine. this event was one of the largest offences of the nuremberg code since its inception, because the cold requires voluntary informed consent to, you know, hit people with bio weapons. unless you're trying to kill them. in which case i think the informed consent is off the table. you've got to
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wonder who the signs off on these projects? sure. we'd like to gas the people of san francisco. you may, you know, god damn queer repairs around time. how my uncle died. probably just view only a couple o too bad. go ahead and do it anyway, we'll find a way to up those numbers later down the road. but that experiment was not the end of such things. it was just the beginning. over the next 20 years, the military would conduct $239.00 germ warfare tests. overpopulated areas, according to news reports from the 1900 seventy's. after the secret test had been revealed in the new york times, the washington post associated breast and other publications and also detailed in congressional testimony from the 1970s. after it came out, the government explained that the goal was to deter the use of biological weapons
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and be prepared for them. yes, of course we want to deter biological weapons attacks on americans by dropping biological weapons on americans. first, our enemies will never see a carbon plus, why would they attack us with germ warfare? if we do one to ourselves, we're crazy. you can threaten to kill a man if he wants to die. we're a country, a 1000000. why goes who don't what we're going to do. brilliant. just brilliant. of the 239 biological and chemical warfare test by our military. so we're done across the midwest to see how the pathogen would spread throughout the country. and what asked why military planes were dispersing unknown clouds of over cities. they claimed they were testing a way to mask the cities from enemy bombers. yeah,
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yeah. we're just, we're just covering the shady ob, from, from the bad guys. she's covered with a warm blanket of bacteria. there's a go protective germ blanket all cosy and say from from the, from the bad guy who are not on there. very bad guys. and other people who are not currently hitting you with bio weapons that are not knocked down later them now or later them later them just later we're just doing our part serve in our country. a platter of germs. many across the country are calling right now. strike tober. tens of thousands of us workers are either on strike or planning to go on strike soon. that's. that's so interesting. and you, you treat workers like for a long time while the rich get richer and richer and richer and richer and richer and richer and richer. and apparently
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a dumb hole in the work is go you. oh, good thing, this carbon you'd need a magic 8 ball. we'd be more dues doors room and a main ring to see that common. can the ring tell you what kind of mood the countries workers are right now? it jolly, is it jolly? kellogg's nabisco, john deere, parts of hollywood and more hospitals in california are bracing for strikes as workers, protests, staff, shortages as weary health care workers enter the 19th month of the pandemic. thousands walking off the job and onto the picket line, demanding more staffing. even m b. c news says many low wage workers have had enough, they're demanding increased wages, meal and rest breaks better benefits and shorter shift they want mail bribes. what did they just get their nutrients away? my hard working bandpass, we did tube up the but that's the manly way. or maybe maybe there was
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a tube down the throat and something else up. the doesn't matter. i can't remember . it doesn't matter. pulling it meal break to lose are wimps and some mafia. king pins that it or maybe just maybe american workers have been crushed long enough. maybe the strikes are a sign of a grave illness in the system. a sign that the workers aren't willing to put up with being treated like property any more. and behind every strike, we can all feel the potential for a much larger revolution because every strike helps define the 2 sides. the workers versus the capitalist owners. a strike, even if it doesn't achieve everything it set out for reminds everyone who are the exploit in it and who are de exploiters. any explain. 3rd, the ruling lead. have a lot of tools at their disposal. they own the court,
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the police, the mainstream media, and they have the ability to hire desperate people lovingly called scabs to try and break the strike. john deere, whose workers were on strike this week, have tried to use scabs. but on the 1st day of doing so, here was the theme outside the factory. oh, it seems of the went wrong. yeah, so it turns out experience workers are useful when building heavy machinery don't say i thought a john deere tractor was put together like an i k, a futon. you just look at the picture and yeah, you don't do what the brownie faith is doing. in 1980 the american petroleum institute, internal c o. 2 and climate task force meats and sciences. john lockerman reports in 2005, they'll be a one degrees celsius. rise in temperatures that would be barely noticeable by 2038,
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2.5. degrees celsius, rise with major economic consequences. pointing 67, a 5 degree celsius rise with globally catastrophic affects. wow, if only someone had listened to him or i don't know, told the general public. this is still what we're talking about is still 2 decades before george w bush was making fun of al gore for acting like climate change was real. also in 1980. the american petroleum institute publishes to energy futures, a policy booklet that advocates expand in coal, oil and gas production for decades in the whole booklet. they don't mention their understanding of the harms of climate change. so this marks the 1st known public climate dis information. then in 1981, exxon concludes a c o 2 study and internally says in direct control measures such as energy
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conservation or shifting to renewable sources represent the only options that might make sense. yet even as they're saying that internally in their own goddamn offices outside, they're telling everyone else is fine. what are you talking about? he plan it now. don't look out. no, it's not 80 degrees in february, and it's called bur. i'm cold, i need i need to find my scott: no, no, no, i'm not sweating profusely. no, those are face icicles. do face sickle, drippy, drippy face circles. we've got a quick break, but i'll be right back with the rest of the best redacted tonight. 2021. ah
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ah, ah ah. ah, oil and gas manufacturing, electricity, telecom quotation, all of them now have io t type of infrastructure connected to the internet. so clearly realizing there's disruptive potential so that those countries cons ignore it because it threatens national security issue. but if we take them to you countries,
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virtually all of them subscribe to certain doctrines and maintains selling but task forces. they are a cyber army on behalf of a country that's their job. with welcome back to redact denied. i'm still the camp and here's the rest of the best to redact of denied 2021 slate. i mean prison. labor may not exactly sound wholesome, but it is the smartest way for these companies to get their employees back. instead of offering their former workers' more money and safe conditions, they can just say fine, you don't want to work for us at these wages. we'll just wait for you to get poor enough to be swallowed up by the criminal justice system and you'll end up having
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to work for us anyway for even less. who says crime doesn't pay. some of this work though, pays even more than on the outside. in kansas prisoners from the topeka correctional facility get paid $14.00 an hour to work on a russell stover. candy production line. that's almost twice the federal minimum wage. that $14.00, though does come with some licorice strings attached. the state of kansas also deduct 25 percent of prisoners pay for room and board, and another 5 percent goes toward the victims one. the prisoners also must pay for gas for the nearly 2 hour bus ride to and from the plant. in kansas is defense. they do have a lot of victims who have been impacted by a wide range of disasters, especially around small ville. elsewhere, states like texas in delaware are setting up work release programs with the restaurant industry that will train convicts when they're in prison, then hire them once they get out. it's a group on level deal for the restaurants anyway. usually,
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companies have to pay trainees, but not anymore. and i'm like, all those ungrateful coven quitters living off unemployment. ex. cons won't have any better options, so bosses can pay them next to nothing. it'll probably get awkward. shake shack when a customer asks is my order ready? i just heard buzzing, and they'll have to say no. that's just my ankle bracelet. contracts negotiated between prisons and private industries stipulate that a certain number of prisoners will always work for these companies. meaning there needs to be a certain number of people who become prisoners in the 1st place. these perverse incentives have created a vicious self perpetuating cycle of crime and incarceration. pretty soon, career counselors are going to be saying the kids be considered counterfeited. you sure know how to work a printer? no. russell stover didn't pay me to say that. of course, it is a good thing for the incarcerated to receive help finding work when they leave prison. but their pay and working conditions should be the same as everyone else's
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. the real motivation behind these programs isn't altruism. for capitalists, the point is to drive down wages overall by forcing workers to compete with literal slave what i mean. prison labor. just something to think about when you're reading russell stuff that 30 energy companies are using the energy charter treaty to sue countries for future earnings. an obscure clause that allows companies to see when a country harms their investment. it was meant to secure richer nations foreign investments in developing countries with unreliable legal systems. and we governments like the us what the canadian company t c. energy is suing the american government for $15000000000.00 in lost profits after the byte in administration. cancel the very unpopular project,
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the keystone ex l pipeline. hey, this treaty was designed for richer countries to take advantage of poor countries. not for a canadian company to treat the u. s. like a deadbeat dad. we're not going to pay we pipelines support for this pipeline. we never had. plus, we already have our hands full with the enbridge pipeline, the other canadian oil company in the us. if these mega corporations can frack drill, dump, or polluters, we usually do. they will take our money another way by holding us hostage until we pay them to leave oil. companies spend decades building influence and they're trying to cash in on that right now. but their future earnings are a little difficult to calculate because renewable, wind and solar tend to be cheaper. so who knows that they could even compete in the market. they, nonetheless, the u. k. oil company rock copper could force the italian government to give them
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$325000000.00 because the country band offshore drilling close to the coastline. $325000000.00 they didn't earn. while that's capitalism. when a company fails, you can always count on the invisible hooligans who will come shake down on potential clients so that company can survive. we all know big pharma is currently making record breaking profits off of a global pandemic. we all know they steal intellectual property and profit from publicly funded research. but did you know they have even stolen someone's body? who spooky october halloween episode? in 1951. henry at lax miraculous cells the 1st to be able to survive outside the body were taken without her knowledge or permission. and have since been used
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for many, many medical breakthroughs from the polio vaccine to h i. v. treatment to cope it. vaccines to the now famous flex tape, flex, hey, the super straw water please have the item might have made up that last one. but these breakthroughs have earned corporations billions of dollars in profits all from stolen cells. now, her family is suing the pharmaceutical company, thermo fisher scientific and demanding reparation. so you might be thinking, how could it takes 70 years for this grave injustice to finally be addressed? well, a clue could be found in this picture. we look closely, you'll notice that henrietta lacks was black. welcome to the world of investigative journalism, also medical racism, a rich but often overlooked history. that's part of our country is greater overall
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races. history. we'll get more into that later. the cells were taken at johns hopkins university, which was segregated at the time, or as a johns hopkins website, put one of the only few hospitals to treat african americans. it seems like johns hopkins university is trying to whitewash it's rate this past, but we'll get more into that later. henrietta lax had died from cervical cancer at age 31, and her family wasn't even notified when she died. in fact, they only learn about her miracle cells by accident 20 years later. now, i know what you're thinking, but how's thermo fisher doing? well, they've earned a billions of dollars in revenue, and they're giving back to the community by creating the just project. partnering with historically black colleges and universities to provide free cove at $900.00
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testing and diversifying the thermo fisher work environment. how about you give back the billions of dollars you made from exploiting black bodies. also, johns hopkins school of medicine, named after the famous abolitionists may be, you could provide reparations for the cells you stole, or at least reparations for the slaves. your abolitionist founder owned 969. a finish occur, and several of her comrades were charged with a laundry list of $156.00 trumped up conspiracy to murder charges. in a case that became known as the panther, 21 fini. and the panther's face to potential 350 year prison sentence. initially, they were to be defended by reknown civil rights attorney, william counselor. but he had to be replaced at the last minute by the lesser known carol left court. this was concerning to a fiendish court because left court had
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a tiny, squeaky voice of amy thought aloud. hell no, she can't represent me. the judge won't be able to hear her object to corps best option was to represent herself and the panthers in court. despite having no legal training. not only were prison conditions awful, a feeney was dealing with sexism and turmoil and the black panther party and her personal relationships. on top of that, she not only had to learn how to be a lawyer. but 7 months before the trial of feeney became pregnant. when the trial came of fini was ready, the prosecution's case rested on the testimony of undercover cops who would infiltrated the organization and claimed it was a militant terrorist shell. but your corps know that these informants had seen no such thing. when the informants took, the witness stand shook or asked them pointed questions about what exactly they had witnessed that was illegal and the officers came up short. she'd asked, did you ever see me killed some one and they'd say,
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i never saw you kill any one. did you ever see me blow up anything? i never saw you blow up anything. did you ever see me rip off that mattress tagged and says do not remove? yes i did, but you just passed the statute limitations on that. damn you sure. core. i made up that last one a finish, a cor, now 8 months pregnant gave a powerful closing argument against the unproven charges. on the day of the verdict, the judge spent an extra half hour figuring out security arrangements because he assumed the panthers would be found guilty. much to his surprise, the jurors announced that the defendants were not guilty $156.00 times, which left them with a whole lot of extra jumpsuits because of the incredible actions of one brave woman . a small act of justice was able to burst through what deeply unjust system of all the amazing music that to patrick or made. perhaps his greatest collaboration was
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in that courtroom with a fini. that's the show. but join us in 20. 22 was the fight continues. for a better world and a mainstream media that doesn't suck a whole rugby teams worth of cock tails down. they. they drink a lot like like long island ice teas and stuff like that until next time. good night. ok. fight it. ah, i'm with the school was the child did one with each one. i was just my william like he's a curriculum. well left the game is that with
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a couple of menu i wasn't at the department was put in that if you can check issue machine that i did with no, i need to go put that a female power to store you with ah, working or should she popped in, she said, well, i'm getting ready to go shopping for christmas. and we, we snuck up there was a girl to buy another, shooting another safe part of american life. shattered by violence. the gunman was armed with an hour 15, semi automatic rifle. when the issue comes home, it's time to act when we're silent on this issue, the other side wins by default,
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lady that lived over there. i was walking one of the dogs, which is why do you wear again? were you scared with nothing. they took it off of it. i think the people need to take responsibility in their own and be prepared if those kinds of weapons were less available. we wouldn't have a lot of the shootings. we, i wouldn't have a, a us code response hit new road block testing, give us that he runs out with the data with actually searching 7 of old across some states. we have a search and we do need more testing centers. look at these lines. that is, are horrible. honestly, you know, most of my friends have to wait on line for hours and hours to get tested. i've had to wait on the line for hours to get tested, rushes foreign ministry says holding nato's expansion and will be the top priority . upcoming talks will be lots and the united states and russia.
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