tv Documentary RT January 22, 2023 10:30am-11:01am EST
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ah, i'm willing to go to the studio, no cranium, tv, toys, shooting her id. she ship, dr. lien that ship for a control. you put you on board so we should shield that needs to be at the mo, the priority system will only be me. i'm not saying what's the from the cd? yeah. well we can do. uh huh. channels actually it's a little news, but i live in buffalo. oh crazy that to leesville modern date my subway. but just dory. yes or no it's i live she elise, get us. but generally ship them instead of just a gift or should look like you know what of them. i need a you paying squirrels with that for a one they reached over or up with global. i'm
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went to the movies and get to the corner of 15th and ridgewood and there's another car just sitting there. when you achieve it and you go into do your 1st mission. that's what key is in the foot and a bag with pistols. and we all feeling like a drilling, searching through our bodies. but nobody's really talking because we know what you're going to do with here. a car's tires, screech yeah. we could hear the car ready. next to last all the way down it ski or what you ain't ski as a g at you don't know what these feelings are. do you know that with the car stop
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and we said there they go. we shoot every body, shoot. we did that every night. you know that those shots in the far is just constantly right next to us in a just shot after shot after shot, after shot, we end up crashing. we all jumped out the car and start running toward the store. they had already called the police, the ambulance and everything. ah dear, it was asking, where is cory? where's court in for like he's, he's right behind us. he's right behind us in so he ran back down to the crash site. he was trying to get cory out the car
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ah, on the want to talk to him to hear them say, deal at the same. mm hm. so we knew he was gone for prosecutor say commodity carter pulled the trigger on his assault rifle. the ford defendants belonged to what gang and fired on the innocent victims of the other car early that saturday morning because they thought they were members of a rival gang. they were not i didn't have that bay 24 and i got arrested may 27th. 1995 with i was 18 years to motto for. mm
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hm. mm. i came to prison. i was young and speak very well, wasn't really educated or some people believe that in the gang lifestyle that they were somebody, he was important to a particular group of people. they would rather be an important tyrant, then an average citizen, a struggle. all some people are afraid of being who they are. the road is an easy ground in developing an easy prison is an easing lineage kamani carter. and i probably started the life statements
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for gang related job a 9 years ago. my victim was innocent. he was also a student who was attending college. his name is corey pittman. at this time, i would like to apologize to the paper because only now about the gun. i understand that the enjoyment of life was taken away can never be replaced. and i'm sorry, my history is the life of a lot of kids out there at our community. and my reality as a young man, life of prison will be their future. if we don't start creating better ways of dealing with our children. who
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ever it looks a lot better. back and ladies early ninety's was one, motors looks a lot different. they started most over hours after year after dark to the streets and just the crawling . we just started out like any other patrol partners or just handle a regular please hold. and then we'd be on a like a burglary call or vandalism call, and it was made here shot to be on fire, you know, walk away or a couple blocks away and then at the return shots, somebody shooting out of a car. now, mackenzie, the telegraph bodies in the street, people who big sack lay in there.
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oh dear. in august of 1980 from the detroit area. the football coach that i had, he told me about it. i'd never heard of it before. he made it sound like heaven coming to the great northwest, the peaceful northwest was a young lawyer starting a practice. so i was doing domestic contract law real estate law by the end of the eighty's early ninety's. it was almost solely felony defense. ah, the news tribune had a headline comparing to coma as being little detroit a
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with very young kids. it seems. were getting involved with horrendous violence 20 to 30 years ago. and i think there's no question that the kitchen cripps from l. a came up here and seated this area. ah, is came a took a la blocked courses. i lived on all my life. bo roach, anywhere from orchard all way down to the top. and then yeah, these are the guys was kind of scary and they will rate. they had that on the side . ah, for read a booted mix in california, didn't mix him to come watch to move.
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ah, to com is about 30 miles from seattle. many of the african american and other folks that have come to this region after the forty's, after world war 2, a large influx of people came. many people came through fort lewis and settled in close proximity to the commer. mm. because of red line, people were red line at the certain area. the hill top in those areas is where black people were concentrated at that time. after world war 2. to com is no different from any place else in this country in terms of how people are relegated to that bottom wrong if they are poor or if they are of color
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name. there were so many of our children affected during that late eighty's early ninety's. if you are around the age, 111213, during that time, you are affected by this m. o. so many of the kids didn't survive ever killed. mm. if they didn't die, they're in prison for a long time. ah, they don't have very was already a poverty stricken neighbourhood. and then when you feel prostitution on that throw gangs on that throw crack cocaine on top of all that these kids, they are a product of the vironment that they were pushed into now. ah, and you so much, don't so much dog that was just saturated. you have to come along,
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which is ridiculous. like an 88. it was flooding a, lived in a world that was but believe wow, we did things that i never knew that i would live to see this day. oh man, the drugs guns, the fuel edge killing these kids grew up in something that a lot of people don't want to face reality about ah ah, so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy confrontation, let it be an arms race is on offense. very dramatic development. only personally and getting to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very critical time time to sit down and talk
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ah, in 1884. the german empire began its colonial invasion into namibia from the very start. berlin encouraged the white colonists to settle in south west africa and take away the best land from the local drives. the germans were actively draining natural resources and using the local population as a cheap labor source. this was causing major protests and led to a rebellion. in 19 o 4, the hero and nama tribes rebelled against german colonial rule. kaiser wilhelm the 2nd was fully determined and ordered to suppress the rebellion with the utmost severe take against the inhabitants of nam may be a germany through it's 15000 well equipped army all around the country.
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concentration camps were built in humane medical experiments over citizens were conducted within the period of 4 years. the germans killed up to 60000 people among weights. there were 80 percent of the hero tribe, and 50 percent of the nama tribe. the events in south west africa are called the 1st genocide of the 20th century, and not without reason are compared to the holocaust just 2 decades later after the massacre in nam may be a hitler's assault unit put on the same brown colonial uniform which poised the world into the chasm of the 2nd world war with a newness 23 years on the streets of your channels. pick her up
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like a me for myself, and my friends, ah, are talking about the school i emotionally, logan, there's a lot longer from medicine earlier than that. i am a blue moon. he saw the car wash in my family, solomon when i came up here for this washer the larva. ah, wait to hear news about arrival gang at the mall or at the ball. annella will go up there just a game bank tours door for
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her. like we have some freedom smart we drive called to girls draw cars of announced real fast. ah, was away from the police. come a slave slave who aly ran to were wishing to pollute, ran to the words, ah, coke money. i sort of turned on different others so that you know you can't turn back time but i'll she just will, alyssa, man, he won't even be in a situation as a good do. just a lot. i of the would all were lot the blindly not blown out here. we didn't know.
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no better. kimani is to be out here. what us you know, baby quickie young gangster, young brother. just eager to prove his wife. i was 18 when i met him. but he was doing the same things i was doing, you know, and he was only 11 to 12 with. he felt like we were his family, a baby gangster. we can tell him what to do. i won't do it his way. he looked at, she straightened her eyes for head is now fear added to he need is that my gun. never seen his mom around like united as she was the i mean even the south. i would as soon as i came on, i don't know too much about my dad. never seen. i see his mom.
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i grew up into like really bad situation. a plan was run down poor like really no food. really bad is basically raising his south. that's where he came in, or we was picking him up. keep him out with us. swimming the ropes. somehow to run the street lava. oh oh, he's just oh oh, i hear you got his your pistol. then you got your pistol. keep it on you.
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i don't know the saying no love among bees where we live among are we all out of each other? well, the deaf ridge, other no one, all a lot of people make it up to be the there was just a group of older guys who let you hang around and they almost kind of treated you like a peer of a or if there was smoke cigarettes they would have jewish and i was drinking alcohol. busy they will let you slip awesome alcohol. they paid attention and they really kind of genuinely care and they may have been in subtle ways, like had a you a few dollars giving you a nickname, so to speak. but you know, i think for young kids, those are meaningful. we want it to be like the old days who had been the praising, came home. they've got to respect because they went to his
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desk. they went to prison and we want to be like, do all my friends is either in prison, nan forever or dad, douglas or raleigh? i wasn't certain i could find it. it was actually out the office. they dug it out there. this thing is got to be back to 8889. we were educating ourselves so many kids running gang members and we started keeping a notebook on and mr. and getting pictures, and they found out we had it and they all want to see someone come up and say my, my face is and then there it was for a photograph. those are all the original kids that were recruited and taught how to be gang members. by the gangs, they were smart, they were natural leaders, the other kids looked up to them and listen to me. they could all do math in their head. you know,
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they all thought they were stupid away because they didn't finish school. but they knew how many ounces or in a pound, how many a balls you could get an out, how much money they should get back, how much they were owed. they were sharp, little guys. they had to be $1012.00 now. when the 1st time that i've ever encountered law enforcement, i was young, i was a kid. i'm running away from home. and i was basically living in this abandoned house with all these other teenagers and kids. one more than i was ride my bike and i was cut into the house because the house you're kind of like a, a short cut. you know, to the next block. i've seen some police in the backyard
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this moment police officer who didn't drill down on the telemundo more machines. oh shoot. that's a for some other than a rest. instead of taking me home and sent me to juvenile homes. 11. i guess they kind of charge us with burglary for those kids at home when i kind of played them as my family when not an annual home. that's what was there for me. every single time. what did you, what i'll always met somebody who did something different. i've never met none of you kids before my life. but all of a sudden i me would say it say if i, while he's in here for possession of crack cocaine, you know, it's and,
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and he was making 2 or 300. all that paper boy no longer. i'm on jet or selling arms. now would you rather warn you, you just fuel the mom as a nation? because you guys all my i had a we was shut out economically. who is still shut out economically? the institutional racism that we have around economic steel persists the underlying issues m j. disparities with education, with employment, with health care, with transportation, with housing. oh, let's look at drugs and let's look a gang busters look about the outcome. those a night input. the inputs are the disparities, they lead to that then america, money, speech,
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money makes policy. money decides who makes money off of drugs and who's communities are devastated. it is systemic. are we really saying to ourselves in this? got that money is more bon, any other thing? and how to get it and who you get it from? an injustice and all that other stuff is just the system is a fund henry is if that's all you leave for me to l, i will make it work. when i was cook my hopes for white books, you know, while i'm your slave aid, what she had left,
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you damn sure didn't leave no pork roast for me and no, no, no, no baby back ribs. i got not a ears, a tale. good cheers and mama nail made it best they could because that was worth it. if you leave room 2 drugs, alcohol criminal activity to make a live legal michael the take from the church. the church, a lawyer i was a single mother raising 2 children and the hell time didn't have much money with the california gains came up, made it so appealing to be a gang member. i could maybe put $10.00 in his pocket for allowance where they would give him a $1000.00 in his pocket. i always think that if willing had been younger older,
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he wouldn't have been swept into that lifestyle. that he was just a prime age for what they were looking for. he was 11 and they were already starting to recruiting process to get willie and many other young ones to sell rock, cocaine and powder cocaine. one time he told me that he wasn't going to go to school and i told him, oh you're going to school today. and he made a phone call in 10 minutes later, there was 3 cars in the alley. gang members sitting on the hood of their cars, they were vanishing guns. and they told me says i'll go to school today, can he's coming with us. they took him, i felt so helpless like what, how do i fight this? calling the police? they didn't care. i said it was his choice now that's when it took off and that's when it got so violent. lot of kids went around. wow, i lost about like 30 brands at this time. well, we will it in
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a know how many lysine bags and how bad it would end up being just got worse. and then finally, one day i was at work and my husband at the time told me need to get home because a place or go into your house for search warrants. and when i got home, they said, your son crossed the line this time, and we got him for murder. and his mom, when he was 17 and 18, he sentenced him to a 100 years and press ah, ah, children at st. andrew's eventual school suffered nightmarish levels of abuse, torture and child rape. and yet the office of the attorney general suppressed thousands of pages of police and evidence that identified the perpetrators in the school. i was electrocuted twice. i was only 7 years or just
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too high for me. so for me to put me in the chair or by the law warriors to run over here, abuse somebody and ran here and she kept solution in the whip himself. some of them are, my relatives didn't make it jerking themselves to death, over doses. but yeah, what it made me, it made me the person i am today. who's on it. i don't give up with anything. investigations were too often handled differently because the deceased was indigenous. so many of the worst criminals got away. the bishop's got away. the ones who done most of the damage never got charged for places which a form of a tens of thousands of years can give us important information into our climate and how it has changed over time. and what a scary is our glaciers are melting,
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added alarming rate to learn more. we came here to mount elbows to speak to victor proposed that he has a greasy ologist who has devoted his entire life to the topic. it is a fascinating at times dangerous, and very important job burger . with that is my number said over there in the distance abroad. all the ha, that is the last stronghold. all the laws handhold gradient follow the russian power military group. wagner, advance is further along the don back front lines. our correspondent remains embedded with that after they took control of the strategically important town of all solar. noonish folks from the states is created a coalition and it's using ukraine's wages promised people again, russia the old aim of finding.
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