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tv   Documentary  RT  January 22, 2023 11:30am-12:01pm EST

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ago the school for global leaders, the likes of justin trudeau graduated from the school of global leaders, jacinta arden, the former prime minister, or soon to be former prime minister of new zealand. they graduated from the school for global leaders. klaus schwab even said a year ago that i have managed to infiltrate every political cabinet of every government around the world. how do you read into that lionel? how can i not read into it? you know, gorb, it, i'll said, i'm not a conspiracy theorist. i'm the conspiracy analyst. let me give you one more. we decided something here called the declaration of north america. this was i, n l body covered it here is between of course the u. s. a. canada and mexico and the they, they list the following as pillars. now let me just read this to you and tell me what, which one with this number one, diversity, equity, and inclusion climate change in the environment. always climate change, not climate improvement issues to change. there were 3 competitiveness,
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migration and development, health and regional security. now, remember this worry whenever somebody sounds innocuous or even beneficial, that's the danger point. never call some never give something a scary name. call it, for example, we have somebody here call. no child left up behind is a particular policy. that means leave kids behind. whenever we talk about words, a equity versus equality. all of these words are, these are masters of euphemism. they know exactly what these words mean, but here's the best part and i know we're running out of time. they do this worry in, in plain sight. they don't hold back and imagine what you're talking about behind close battery, right? i don't want you to hear exactly this is the i me that the disconnect between the top one percent and the rest of the hard working world is just bigger than it's ever been. you mentioned climate change their line or listen, don't forget you or me. we can lower the temperature of the world if we light, we just to have to pay more in taxes, line or legal and media analysts joining us here were naughty,
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international. always a pleasure. my friend. thank you. thank you sir. thank you. i thank you for joining us. your naughty international union. o'neill is here in half an hour's time with the next edition of your weekly ah. in elementary school, the teachers called me that problem kid. so i was labeled early. i ended up getting kicked out of school. i was 1617 and 18 though should have been my graduation high school years. but at stan, i'm on the streets. selling crap. gang bang and bacon that
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i was going to make to see 21. i would get dresden all ready, ride the bus to the hill just to walk around and wait for a group of blues to approach me 1st, i would try to fight it tagged eisen. i'd walk in the middle and then i'd pull out that day and, and watch up scatter when i oh, you know, watch and wound like roaches. then i got addicted to be and feared. my mom was here trying to be the disciplinarian and the bread winner. but she didn't have no help. i rebuild gives her what it wasn't her fault. we were in this
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together. and that's what i should have known then. ah, my mom was my 1st law. up until the mid eighty's, when crack became the reason to be for her, it was okay. but she had an addiction. it grew monstrous. her addiction to crack, so proceeded everything, her dignity, her ability to reason her desire to be a mother. it was one of the things that broke me. i didn't like the life that i was living, but somehow i felt hopeless to change it. i felt like i was just being carried on this wave of circumstance. not being able to have a job, not being able to be the person that i thought that i could be. i just couldn't
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seem to get to her. i remember a few days before being incarcerated, crying out to god and knowing how trapped i felt knowing how limited my options were. and i just wanted out of that life. i didn't stand on the corner. i didn't do drive by, but i had a boyfriend. i did and i had school myself in the thinking that if i just stayed on the fringes of that lifestyle, that i couldn't get caught up. it wasn't true when we started rhonda, nothing unusual suspects. and i was on my boyfriend, was all my protestations of innocence. it is fell on deaf ears. there must be no doubt about who side we are on. people who commit crimes should be caught convicted and punished. the savings will be used to put
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a 100000 police officers on the street a 20 percent increase. it will be used to build prisons to keep a 100000 violent criminals off the street. you will be put away and put away for good 3 strikes and you are 1993. washington state was the 1st state in the nation to implement the 3 strike policy and make it okay to put people in prison. throw away the key. there are many people who have rehabilitated their lives, who could be contributing to our young people to our families. and that door has been slam schatten washington state. we are still one of only 16 states that does not have the parole system. what's interesting about washington state is really reflective of what's interesting about the whole country. this country is based on beer. when you have a country that is based on or that has grown out of colonization and slavery,
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people don't rest easy. that's why everyone needs to be armed in this country to protect what they have. because what they have was stolen may not talk about it may not admit it, but it's there. whether you are on the read or on the blue. whatever side it is, no one fleece easily in this country. there was a drama georgia, mrs. baker. i simply want to say legislators have an inherent conflict of interest . the number one object of the legislatures to get reelected. i, how do you get reelected? truly easy. ponder podium and sam tough on crime of the children who have been k, o dog victims of bile, the public is fed up, and that means more prison time. we have a greater percentage of our population in prison right now than any society in the history of western civilization. and we have this high and mighty attitude about
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ourselves. i want you to imagine that as much as $60.00 to $0.70 out of every tax dollar in my county goes toward criminal justice. it is a horrendous waste of resources. if you don't care about people, it's a horrendous waste of resources on a private washing. it's very, very easy to instigate beer. that's what happened with 3 strikes because the face of the threat then became young, black and brown. men. we need to take these people on. they are often connected to big drug cartels. they are not just gangs of kids anymore. they are often the kinds of kids that are called super predatory. no conscience, no empathy. we can talk about why they ended up that way, but 1st we have to bring them to heal. and the president is asked the f b i to launch a very concerted effort against gang everywhere. john and i were to go to the f. b i task force. they were forming a task force,
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a work gangs. we met with the drugs are privately, as you go around the country, you see communities that everywhere people who are no longer willing to hide their houses. this is our hill all we wanted to know it. go by your jackson pure, all up or lake. we don't come here, you've got to take a stand, but are willing with leadership and with involvement, lease and direction, least willing to take to the streets. you want to know why we're having success with our federal task force because they set them up all over the country and not all of them are kicking like we were in need to know why john and i knew the gang members from work and the street and so we kind of knew who they should be targeting. oh, i mean, the police started doing more sweet say, would just get the kids and round a left for whatever little reason they could if they could get them on
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a sentence and give them the long keep them from ever coming. that is to play doh police, keith play guns, only skiffs kicking doors, and they could search one later. i got you when i got you down in a damn bay annotate, they got you on the rules all by yourself in it because you by yourself, you are going to jail, may not have them even been a criminal activity. they just because they were out there, they get them just unloading. if i was walking to the corner store and i and i saw a house lo further up and i thought looked nice. so i wanted to walk by in the police saw me, they would say to me, what you do when here you live around here on the narrative that we keep hearing is that there are people who are entitled to be here. even though folks know that this is not anybody's, it's not their land. so that narrative of being entitled and really protecting that
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is really what drives a lot. but we as a country don't want to uncover that's too painful. given a race based country such as we are, the people that really are impacted are the poorest and the black is mm. looking back now and i will see everything that happy. i wasn't able to see it. the install wasn't able to avoid the trash. now were safe for me. a lot of was weren't, i don't wanna excuse any of the crimes that were committee because there were carm's committee, but some people didn't commit crimes and were just caught up in the friends that they chose. and it was in the friends that they chose, difference with, i grew up with, this is the neighborhood you live in. these is the kid you went to school with these 2 people whose auntie, how she went to eat sunday dinner and mm. most of us didn't just wake up and say, i want to be a gang member, this is what i'm going to be in life. we just went to that because this was exposed to an enabler.
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last part of my career, i had the best job. mm hm. least i had ultimate freedom to set my own targets and my own investigations long as i was producing, they left me alone. so i didn't have a lot of supervision by the late ninety's at the heel top area was pretty much cleaned up. mm hm. and i can dig aggravated murder. a drama aggravated murder is the highest crime in washington. they changed some law in a hard time for arm crime in 1094 that says if
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a murder occurs during the discharge of a firearm from a motor vehicle, then you can be subject to the death penalty or life in prison. if i would have got census to 1st to be murder, i probably would have had 27 years since the murder occurred during the discharge of a file from a motor vehicle. i got 7, he said, he said he's reason that a judge did not have the ability to give him a sentence of less than life without parole. is that the legislature made it an aber voting circumstance to do a drive by shooting because he shot impulsively without knowing who was in the other car, but out of a car, only one punishment was appropriate. that law was passed because mostly white
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legislators viewed it as worse for gang members to shoot from a car. it was a clear reaction to the fear of black and hispanic individuals, a weapon, and the commission of a crime. the promise of the criminal justice system is that it rises above race will be the title of the when i work in washington state, it's a state that is overwhelmingly quiet. that's not true when i go into a prison. criminal justice system remains broken by the influence of race. ah ah, no, we look forward to talking to you. oh,
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that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings, except where such orders at conflict with the 1st law show your identification. we should be very careful about artificial intelligence. at the point obviously is to make truck rather than fit with the various job with artificial intelligence real summoning with obama protective phone existence with a ah
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no said humanity, privacy you're surrounded by middle and clean human eye. you feel like cattle, you feel like something that's not real? they shoot me down and search. you know, it's a roller coaster on your emotional well being put in a still 8 by 10. fill with people that you don't know. you never. you don't know what they're there for, what their bell is it deprivation to your scientist to explain.
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mm. you're away from everything that you know, i could not conceive of my life taking place within the walls that i saw around me . we're going to give you 3 meals a day. we don't give you a c, that's lab less to go. labs sleep on. and that's basically it. there is no rehabilitation. there's no repair present as socializing for a total institution. does it work? by and large, now people learn to become anti social. it's not designed to help anybody. well, office, make sure that you understand that you are a prisoner. when you find yourself in contact with them, they tend to look down as a way of not giving you eye contact for
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a lot of prisoners. it kind of makes them internalize that here. nobody i don't think that as prisoners were treated as people ah, i am able to vehicles on use all over. like my slavery. you know me when i get out of it? yeah, it's just so new. i used to be a young new sitting in his room and i used to be talking about stuff that i didn't have no clue about. you know, i'm saying politics, policies, legislators. i used to hear people speak about these different. i've been saying that i use a hate not knowing institutional writing. i used to hate watching cnn and see these guys talking about politics and have no clue about what they was talking about. but knowing that these decisions were affecting my life somehow. and i will say that that is kind of one of the things that she sent me. oh my quest i
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wanted to learn. i think that the opportunities with the black prisoners caucus slipped my interaction with free people. i'm able to really internalize and i'm not an offender. i'm not a prisoner. i'm just a man who happens to be in prison. what are things at the black prison is caucus says is that they may be absent from community, but there's still a part of community in people constantly outside every single week who cared about us in homes and a let us know that we were still part of the community not always remember, mary. she said, if we planned on returning back to the community, how we came in here than we might as well stay in there. mm. mm hm. i was the president of the black with caucus at monroe. i went to the hall for a class a infraction possession of a cell phone because i was like what out?
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it didn't grant me the opportunity to stay at my room. i got ship the column by ah, monroe, the black person caucus was essentially a large part of every day that was going on. but when i got here that was enough, i basically just reached out to ministration. it was kind of hesitant on allowing us to be able to have the name, black prisoners caucus, it was too radical for them. my favorite for something to have black. and i just reinforced that the black versus congress has a long productive history within the department of corrections with and so eventually it wanna leverage progress on this, you know, we've been able to get going. and so, you know,
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as we started to have some of our 1st meetings that the idea was now, what is it that we want to see, right? what are the opportunities that we need in order for us to, you know, really stay committed on, improve yourself. you begin to meet people who've been there longer than you've been alive. people want them says the 7. and so you realize that know what, they're really not letting people know how many got 7 years or more or more did searching or you know, wanted to start for that's a lot of that's a lot of black was the law then us go does a lot of mist husband does like this,
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so it's not only do you have to make a commitment, but you have to make a choice. if i still want to continue living the life that got me here, or i want to try to live in a better life. like we can never become somebody different, but we can be a better version of who we are. i almost immediately upon antimony cloud bay, i found out that a few guys had just started a program and they call cheats. and it's for taken as occasion and create and help me and come on in college. i've been on it since lucas kids in the same place. he was on the side, i was on the heels. so we was really rivals back. and when he came, when he came here, i seen him and he with any of the all the b p. c. and he went to start a teen program. they came up with the idea. we was like, ok, let's do it. there were several of us were a column bay who had
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a lot of time doing present and we weren't being allowed to attend education class . the priority for our education department is those individuals with 7 years are lot on their send. so if you have more than 7 years, which a lot of people do, you don't get a chance to get an education. we wanted to get professors to be able to come out here, but we were too far. so the next thing was to either let this program go to waste or do we figure out a way to make it flow? so later we came up, we would just teach the class work backwards from here. and then we're just gonna move on. we know that we get teach math, we know that we could teach writing. and so it was more about the skill sets that we already had and being able to just really nurture those and provide those in a classroom setting to a y equals negative a negative is positive. we reached out to a lot of prisoners,
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right guys were had degrees and all that stuff, but then we also quickly came to the realization just because you have a degree doesn't mean that you can teach. eventually we began to find guys who teaching was something that was a natural town. he said about creating all syllabus and all curriculum and in all classes with a story changing and shaping people's thinking. and from there, the worst spray when i got here and was working on the school floor, i blew by the teach classroom. and it was the 1st time i ever seen a classroom being taught without an officer and it was prisoners lift enough prisoners. and so when i seen these guys doing that stuff, i had to be part of the, with the money order. for those who have 2 hours within the day, we decided to diversify our board. this way we can attract more students,
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but also we can understand each other more. so is reaching all corners. it presently with part of me coming on board with this was seeing what you guys were doing and, and wanting to get behind that. i was like, yes, finally, an opportunity for me to go and do something productive that was provided before that inmates created. we've created a support group for positivity in the most unlikely of environment with we've been kidded against one another for so long. it literally allows a prison to run itself as long as they stay separated, we got to worry about them coming together, becoming knowledgeable to fixing the social issue that end up landing them in prison in the 1st place. ah, the more that we begin to educate ourselves, the more empowered we become, the less manipulated we can be. the less oppressed we can be. now while we're begin,
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it's realizes that we can get more accomplished together than we can apart. you know, cuz it can take an assessment at 1st. i really didn't want to leave column by because it had things that we were doing. i dared i were so powerful in the relationship that we have with administration. i didn't think that we're gonna be able to duplicate some of those things. so i thought to state air in my cuff results. i continue to bill. ready lamar was coming up for his time a leave also. ready the more set his mind on shone and i went to my review right after that, where i spoke to my counselor and he asked me when i went to go, when it came time he transferred a told me shout. so i was happy. i seen were to do more than i was coming and he sent word to say good, i'm glad because i mean having some problems with trying to get to pbc story here. most of the people that live in this county worked is this is not a diverse community. the most diversity they have is behind these barbed wire
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fences. some days they have a challenge accepting me. so i can only imagine what the challenges would be around a black christmas cocher. the fear that i hear is that all, you know, the name is to block prisoners carcases. it's a black gang. we should be fearful of that. people who form ignorant shore sighted opinions about things like that, haven't taken the opportunity to participate and learn really what is going on there. welcome to watch the corrections that are thank you for being here today. i attended the summer and i was speechless. i listen to the stories that were being told, the things they had to say really resonated with me and drew me in the, the things that we have been through the things that we have been around. i would
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worry what others would think it would. i think i go saw that was my concern. i used to think that not to gang bang was assigned a week. i only intended to be there for a few minutes to kind of check can do an introduction, see what it was about. and when i sat down, i did want to get back up to help young people away making some of the same bad decisions that we may also, we hope to be able to reach young people themselves. we believe in them and expect them to influence and add to the world must we solidify the b p. c. here we wanted to move on to the next thing and start to teach program because this prison as forest prison is, is canada mac of prisons. in our state, this is where every person 1st comes to an issue. every person, if you're transferred from one prison to another prison, you have to come to here. so as we in mit who is going to be here for a while, we see everybody in the state, they have to cross our past assay, young guys, all the time,
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come to here whose life i've influenced negatively. that's something that i've had to live with. working towards having a positive influence on those generations. now, it gives me a way to undo some of the wrongs that i've done in the past. ah, ah, a will not be forced to work on. it will not be any kind of pre legal power. i was saying before that, you know, you have to take that by force a body so that you can do is big old international system. and i'm only happy, i'm begging for all kinds of a
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a ah, that is my number's 7 over there. in the distance above the kilometer and a half. that is the last stronghold all the loss handhold gradient on solid as the russian private miller free group. wagner, advance is further along with don balance front lines our correspondent to being embedded with reports and how the company took control of this. strategically important type of solid are also ahead. a united states is created a coalition and it's using ukraine.

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