tv Documentary RT June 5, 2022 12:30pm-1:01pm EDT
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from my economic perspective, in more mans provides us with new opportunities that we're looking to take advantage of in the transport and logistic sectors. for example, the northern sea root gives us possibilities of cooperation with asia in the far east. this is the road over the 21st century. that's how it goes cold. you can not sole the issues of the arctic unilaterally only nationally, some well partners where some problems are not open. are they hampering russia? well, do southern extend beyond but definitely will survive. we look at the regional, the western congress with know the corporation of the western countries. we have all the resources, we hope, all the capacity. and we have the support. and we have the corporation over great number of other governments who are they hampering with sanctions. will this negative position via hampering the interest, so lean to national community,
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their own interests, because without the russian corporation with them, the russian involvement is absolutely impossible to solve any issue the you can the arctic beef. emily rolled economy, be the only role politics everywhere. dark side of american focus, next, neo nazi hate groups there. but amid the extreme, this views, there's hope we examined how some members managed to change their lives around and are now a force for good in their communities, despite pressure from their peers. that documentary shortland is right ahead. the ah, the us in pushy russia into the situation. but that was not shoes back. you know, all the, for sure. you know, after iraq strategy where they use,
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they want to use other hunter to fight their war. we can the you know, there was no program when i left i kind of and all of us that life after have kind of stumbled our way through it. and then we can take the lessons that we've learned from that and shrink the timeframe down. so there's less one less wandering in the wilderness, so to speak. when i was in the move in the last 2 years, before i left, i was struggling with do i want to leave? i like part of me want to leave another part in it's been battle with us. if i leave, i have nothing to fall back on. i have that deposit. do i have nobody to go to? you know me? no that's. i lived around last 7 years. i have nothing and sometimes it's hard if they've got a swastika tattooed on their neck. it's hard for them, but just to say, i don't do that anymore. it's kind of
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a long process. it's not like you just leave it one day and you're like, well, i'm glad that's over. i had been out of the movement before i got connected with these guys, but i was on my own and didn't talk about it and had a lot of buried shame and guilt. and then i met these guys and i saw, you know, frankly talking arnold talk, it helped me get past that barrier of feeling like i had to hide this from world. that opening up has really just taken my, my healing process and my allusion to a whole other level. really. you've got to find a way to find an affirmation and every discussion, no matter how bad it feels, it is going. you've just got to be over at now like takes guts to do that. trying to help them discover the abilities that they have. this is why we don't want to foster dependency. this is why the intervention can't rely on my christmas. they go from being untrusting, hateful, spiteful, distant, to begging for more interaction. another phone call. another meeting in tell me
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poor, and don't be surprised when they say that's the best conversation i've had in a long time. that is something that's very routine that comes out of people just want to be listened to. and we're trying to teach you how to listen to them. well, we hold a mirror up so the person can see their humanity reflected back at them through our eyes. but when we treat them as human beings treat them for the suffering person that they are, and they, on the receiving end of that, they get to see that, hey, there is, there is a, you know, with inside. and lastly, i think the incredible power of compassion, it was very impactful. when someone finally came along with no fear, no judgement, she heard my story, did nothing to challenge it but validated. as soon as i started talking about my mother, tears came up. i just spilled my guts about everything she had done to me. letting her brother raised me and my sister denied the rape happen, making the school back around. how many times she she tried to kill me,
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broken bones, bruises the starvation, the sleep deprivation, the humiliation making me swallow my own. my brothers and sisters watching is turning my brother against me. keep my sister away from me like i had never had a chance to just unleash all. and i probably went on like an hour of just the stuff she did to me. and then he says, well, i want to ask another question. have you ever done this to anyone else? it just in that moment it was like i'm just like my mother me. what really changed me was receiving compassion from the people that i least deserved from when
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i least deserved. people knew who i was, it was a small town, they knew what i was capable of and what i'd been doing for 8 years. and they then attacked me in break the windows of my store and then argue ideologically with me. they came in and they were empathetic towards me, and they treated me with compassion despite the horrible person that i was at the time. the body might offer me a job carrying in antique furniture at cherry hall, new jersey mall for weekend 3 days, 100 bucks a day and i told him i so i think the job he was going to tell you before he say yes, the guy who owns this company is do and i said, can i talk to him? do i?
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i went to work for 6 months still thing i was in the are not in chief, would fit every jewish stereotype. religious right now, like i was, i don't bring them right or you know say where i broke the marble top table and i was like, i'm so stupid. i'm so sorry. 7 bowers frame. so i so hours a day right for the customer. but in spite of very drove me home, i was waiting for him to fire me. so actually, you know, i remember him when not to budge on that day. and i just kept my boots on a little seat of his trunk that you couldn't really put him any further than they were. and my knees were hurting so bad because it's trying to hold on a better. so for the whole ride home swastikas looks at him every day, like a normal neo nazi. and i just don't want him to see my boots with him and what he
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did for me, they dropped me off and they were full pay me on my pay. monday and i was told and i just can wait for 2 things at my feet. everyone back, i'm not scared. i wanted him. i'm done with it. i'm fluid. it was 2 parts to getting out of a violent extremist group. the 1st part is disengagement, which is where you leave the social group. you leave the behavior you leave, but you probably still have the ideology. you've been given this nice recipe for how the world works and you take that away from somebody and then what do they have, right? they, they were looking for an analysis and you've taken away their analysis. so, you know, what's left drugs, i mean there all kinds of things that they can just sort of fall into. so you have
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to be very careful about it. and when you're bringing them out, you will alert them to the risks. this isn't going to be easy, they're going to be people are angry that do this because they've lost someone. they've invested the time and energy and we do debriefing. you're going to, if you're going to be on the outside, we need to know everything you know about how it works on the inside, cuz you're not going back in. so we're, since we're going to burn those help you burn those bridges. so you can't go back and take everything away that was associated with that world. we take away your white laces. we take away your nazi fly because it's too easy to go back into. the next parts is be radical, is ation, where the belief systems in the audiologist are removed. or you can go to go get an anti mental from the cobra for a couple weeks. may get the rates at the same time snake that figure. that's how they do it. we're at the anti vent on to heat. you know, because we have, we had that metal mean, are we not spew it and also make it an anti mental and we had the answer. so i do
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believe the secret sauce is coming from a loving place. you can't hate this person and expect to communicate any of that. you can't judge this person and expect to calmer, that with empathy before you got out what was what was pushing you to want to get out. i wrote jackson this you know, before and after president, you know, most of my best friends, but it's like, ok in prison. you know, like, you know, you have to be. so you tend to be it. and after a while, before you realize that it's scary, is you actually become that image. you are just for training. i had myself every day for getting myself locked up. so when i looked at it, what made anybody else more special than me? i hated them. where did that shift come from? how come you one you went from? not thinking about that to really say and i need to start making some changes is why she wasn't much longer up in the heart range. and every time i leave it on
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the same level that another family because i can't be out there, the brothers didn't like that when they found out because they could just let me know. and i said they, you know, try to kill me. why now i can go off the road and you know, i'm going to come to the race car breaks, the brakes and i remember slicing. child caught us up, right. he's like i said yes, good. you need to is mad right across. and then we inside the school and open this, i up about trying to get out and just to get on time if there's one thing, there's someone stuck in there. what if someone in that life who may not be aware that there's a way out?
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what would you say they go all the have that have ruins, you poisoned your very own and a lot of human since really, during the summer in 2016, we started to see a significant consistent increase in the number of incidents reported to our office we saw between 20152016, the number of anti muslim. hey groups tripled tonight the f. b. i walking into whether have crime charges will be filed against an alleged white supremacists, accused of stabbing to good samaritans to death on a commuter train. in portland the guy who did that was someone who had been in the fringes of the all right movement. and he's up on erica lee. the country are great on there that we hear that all the time go back to where you came from and he just
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amped up that rhetoric that he wants to take his country back. and so that's, that's the theme that runs through that. we're not going to let people come into our country. troy, i saw this guy running for president doing the exact same thing and i couldn't believe that i was hearing it, but i knew that it would work. and that was the frightening thing. because i've seen it work on a klan rally and stone mountain georgia. i saw that kind of rhetoric where people are yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. what do we do about their culture? i don't want to know about their culture. if you want your body, you could just go back to much, much bucket of gasoline was kicked over and lit up. all those little sparks that already existed into a large forest buyer. part of donald trump's huge appeal was that although he does
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not think in terms of race, the way i do, he at least thinks in terms of nation, he recognized that the united states is a nation with a particular people. and that not everybody belongs. this is a great relief to millions of people who have seen their nation transformed in the name of diversity diversity that always comes at the expense of white people. he spoke to some of the things that, that angry white male wants to hear. we're going to put a wall on the floor. we're going to make the mexicans pay forward. we're going to bring manufacturing jobs backs as a kind of populous messaged, white males combined with racism, that was found to be very attractive. and everyone's promises like that idea. one does not tens of thousands this hundreds of thousands of them that have an intellectual curiosity and an understanding of national socialism that no skin had ever had. there was a price you paid if you were
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a public with your bigotry or anti semitism. it didn't serve you well in your career. your friends in your neighborhood really weren't excited to hang out with you. your kids might be embarrassed of you. your parents would be really upsetting you. and people learned that those attitudes were not going to be beneficial to their life. i think what we're concerned about now is that blanking that we put over it is being pulled back. that it's going to be really hard to put that back where it was, ah, a little boy in a border with
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schools. if you look on the initial, be one of them not to get a can use to put value a new would you do the origin, but you also still with the done those a lot going on with what i see these teeny, both. there's no growth you lation says diesel duty gumbo sub with ah, there was a state of emergency in florida. it's a white nationalist, was about to take stage in free our day. yeah,
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we're here florida is breaking for potential violence today of a speech by white national leader, richard spencer, who the protesters gathering out. so i just signed up with my son yesterday, but i will say that back to you all right. and read the notion that they really were the way to find a stage spencer, trying to speak to the noise for the kids with
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message with pure hate when i was randy, you know, i came home. i don't want to talk to you, you know, understand you. he was cool. no problem the whole time. we couldn't really have a discussion because the camera, you know, you people pushy, i don't get tell us what was it was go find more really intimate said neil, i don't know if i'm talking to you like really? and i guess our intimate setting was force known as we were both keep out. so we encountered some police officers, they were treating randy how they would treat me on a regular day. you know, just are for what they perceive by his our parents end up one, arrest in. yeah, i right. this made you got beat all it's been, are you see the sped on the back? is it usually is my birth. what is he doing wrong? why you haven't been, sit on a ground do this type of stuff. so we actually started walking and talking and we
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found out we have things in common. you know, i some, his views about certain bay. it was certain style i'm girl and both. yeah. he was telling me he got involved with his teenage years in the area nation, and i said, how a lot of my friends and different people get involved and a blow to cripps in different games they joined. that's what's around you. so what i was around you and your friends may be involved with whatever happens your, my state is going to be on that. so for me, i just saw the similarities of what my culture would deal with just in a little different way. there's no, there's nothing new up on it. a son. he has was just a different route. they angry white man, angry by 2 different people. the angry black man is angry because he has no home has no vision. yeah, no way to provide angry white people, especially a low income cause they have so many mental enroll models that you can just turn on the tv and see success. i mean, now i will be deprived to if i'm down at the bottom would be black people when they
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got to really be back in, you know, i'm why, what am i know? it is a d, c that you know, sitting around and, you know, no one you got an eye doctor and he, you know, what, better way to focus and anger that, that all these people are able to different feel color. i'd say it white man because he's angry because he doesn't really understand was wasn't oh that america he doesn't even if there are, he got to where do you that you know, i'll for the bless, went to years of my assistance back. i mean, everybody that white in america has benefited all of that. if tell me, answer that color or response to your payments are missing, you know, busy right now. given the wrong hope i got somebody to understand matches myself what my culture as
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a whole and look it differently just because of my individual encounter. we talk every week there are 2 times a week at least either that yeah, at least 2 times. you know, your phone calls, you know, our phone calls and we thought was hours with when you think about when you're done, just in the last month, the turn around the correction, what you've abandoned and what you adopted it's most people can't even lose the 10 pounds they want to lose much less make an entire mental, emotional lifestyle change to humanize terrell, which allowed him to humanize your like that. that's not rocket science but yeah, it's, it's evading. the majority of the country right now. there's a lot, i could, i could never make anybody and eric eric umbrella who the nation. anybody got
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a lot of on the same lack of i got free and then that was part of his narrative and changes his narrative. not that we agree with anything that comes out of the far right. is that we don't ever forget that there are people inside of us. people, you know that there's a human being inside this person, right. and if we just choose not to forget that you don't really see x not seen vitamin, you know, have a lot of dialogue. as we do. i mean, i can consider him a friend. i was glad that i could have that effect on randy to open his eyes up to see then you know something different. a c, whatever may have been introduced to him or told him was proven to be a last day in
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home. but i think we often think about this and terms of the ways in which they are failing us. they are a bad man. they are floating away from us. they are deviant. and i think we need to ask the other question. also, we need to ask the question and how we are failing them. what kind of ways can we keep them in the center? and part of my answer to that is we have to find ways to keep them validated as men . it's really amazing. when people feel more whole quickly and how easily ideology of hate falls away, and if you can reconnect them to the people that they thought they hated. that helps build that. i'm them. these are that they realize that they're actually a part of the solution rather than contributing to the problem. the 1st time i've ever felt accepted any shape or form from anybody is actually
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with my wife after have another p 5 med just recently. i feel as if those is degraded so i want everybody to know the human being here instead of like a mission that is but i have person and to be able to have the different cultures and different people here. it's really, it's good to be able to close this to be able to interact because it teaches me that no, we're all in this together. this is a part of our solution. farmers are, are evolving into a powerful force and justice quality from love, peace, compassion. we are operating as human beings from one of 2 places, fear or love. i mean get to choose which one that is still happening in the days following boston happened. it was such
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a turn out and just seemed that support for countering that narrative of white supremacy. it really flooded me with hope. i am proud that i can be a voice against what i use to stamps or i feel like i have i have something to bring to the team and run to bigger and better things while i'm still mindful of what i owe to society. but no one's better served by my guilt or shame at this point, including me, me. i fired a r 16 and a glock at this time,
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the me, i think all this fuss around extra supplies the crate. there's only one goal that is to drag out the military conflict as long as possible in his 1st interview since the start of the conflict loving recruiting takes aim of the huge amounts of western arms being shipped to ukraine. claims russian defense as our quote and cracking them like nuts. also ahead and the 5 civilians are killed this weekend. the done yet people's republic comes under ukrainian shelling stubs according to local officials. we report from the.
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