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tv   The 360 View  RT  February 10, 2023 11:30am-12:00pm EST

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as the saying that there are $258000000000.00 of russian assets, but they will only been able to show today that they could find $36400000000.00. so when the rest, so not just that you've got to go in front of a judge and show exactly how much money you're going to call the gate and where it is. they don't seem to be able to show you that even though that see how, how it plays out. but, you know, obviously we've had zalinski during this. well, inter, right now, if you're a london in paris and brussels and all that, but i guess when it comes to the issue of frozen assets or even that the potential for stealing these assets, because that's basically what it's going to be as theft. why now? well, i think you've hit it on the, on the head. right. worry gate, you know, let me going around thing. give us your planes, give us your planes. i don't think any of the european leaders and even the americans want to give these planes because it's completely worthless because number one, the ukrainians come fly them a number to the very expensive pieces of kit that they need for their own natural defense. so i think that's part of the problem, and then you've just thought just this constant constant issue that we're seeing over and over and over again of of, of just just patsy lies that they're just trying to justify now. and really,
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the only way i think to justify is to create another sort of storm of a story in order to, to make the world see that, you know, i think also it's for the taxpayers in these countries to face them. hey, you know what? it's okay, we're not gonna make you shut out for the next lot. we're going to give them money . that is, we're going to steal money from russia to think in a way that ties to what some analysts are saying that there's some sort of fatigue in europe when it comes to the continuation of sending weapons and money into this conflict in ukraine. always seeing any cracks and fishers are happening in the unity of europe. i think you're seeing it with the general populations in europe. i think at the beginning people that when jar 2 people in europe had acceptable governments the saying, but now you've got the cost of living crisis affecting everywhere, especially your that's take the u. k, where you know, you've got, but nurse is pretty much half the countries on strike right now over over low wages . and then they're being, you know, richie soon, the prime minister stands up in parliament the other day and tells everyone that he's the one largest contributors in age of billions and billions of the british
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pound. i mean, how does that make a nurse struggling to feed a family feel if i were it and so i think hang on wednesday, so going, so i think that, you know, that's, that's the, the biggest issue here. and then you just got this concept again, this constant barrage of, of stories that company back up. i mean, we were showing, you know, right now, on the, on the screen of videos where she's not going to lensky laughing on a play. what do they, what do they last about? i mean, laughing about, you know, i'm not sure what's so funny about, about the current situation for anyone. it looks like they're on a military transport plane with the pilot. the helmets on, i guess and. and then laughing. i mean, what do they last thing about? i mean, he shouldn't be last thing. i mean it's, it's, i'd say for which you see, he's a 1000000000 s, so probably dying and ukraine these days. how many people are getting affected by this conflict? how many european countries continue to pump ukraine in front of weapons? and there's the british u. k. prime minister with the landscape laughing his bits off? absolutely, i mean, it's just, quite frankly, incredibly disrespectful. not just the lives of the many soldiers on both sides of
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this conflict, the died, but also to, to the, to the people of the people of europe, to the people of the west, the collective width, as we call it, that has now been shut out. basically, fill the fill the coffers to keep on. keep on driving this conflict forward. the conflict which is, which is i think we were breeze really unnecessary to keep going on. russia wants to come to the negotiating table. we have the israeli prime minister, tell us all this week after harley bennett. he told us, and he told us that, you know, the american essentially forced ukraine away from the table and then started popping up this, this charade that they're playing with their own people's money. while they, while they continue and continue to get foreign poorer and but potentially solve it's inflation keeps running rampant, we've just had the bank of england, isn't it telling the u. k that the standard of living is dropping and will continue to drop as more funding is being sent not to the u. k. taxpayer, but to the conflict effort in ukraine. at the end of the day, chris, it looks like europe is going to try and steal billions and russian assets to fund
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the conflict in ukraine. you think they're going to get away with it? it's, you know, really sadly, i think they probably will not tell you for why. i mean, we saw the bank of england did this to venezuela. oh, my daughters, gold is still sat in the bank of that or they haven't spent it. but the fact that they were able to get away without, without really seeming much outcry from the international community and doing, you know, that's quite frankly illegal. you may not like the policies of the government. there are many governments around the world. but you and i probably don't like the policies of but we don't advocate that you should feel that money. it is. it's setting a new president and you wonder why so many countries around the world are veering away from western currency. is archie contributed. chris adams. always good to see you too. thank you. and thanks for joining us here with archie international. you can catch up on all our stories anytime you like it r t dot com for the meantime in half an hour's time. you know, neil is right. the
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the museums are important for preserving our history so that it is a lot to future generation. but our fiscal museums places themselves a relic of the past. this is one of the best in the world, the human touch and st. petersburg. how rusty is the director here, and i bet you are in a world where no subject seems to be too sensitive to make money off of telling the story of the world's most horrific serial killers has become a multi $1000000.00 industry. but unlike fictional stories, the victims and the stories are real and the trauma they experience to my life. i'm sorry, now he's on this mission of 360 view. we're going to look at societies obsession
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with kill. does the oversaturated of gory portrayals in the media actually manipulate the public perception of the killers and possibly inspire others? ah, there is no doubt pop culture has a major effect on society. over the past 70 years, there has been a significant rise in tv shows and films which include a crime, the 34 year old killer young shouldered women working in massage parlors to his home killed them, would have learned weapon mutilated their. 1 bodies and buried them in the mountains. and so these are the things the tell tale sign of somebody that's going to become a serial killer. thousands of films had been made in the last 15 years, about fictional and non fictional serial killers. in fact, the term, a serial killer itself, comes from hollywood as
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a prior to the 1970s. they were just known as mass murderers. i guess serial killer did better with focus groups or did the term do a better job of dehumanizing and ever present yet rare threat. thus making an audience not think they are loved. one could ever be a victim dislike. they probably won't meet an alien or a deadly monster from the underworld. but that can be considered a very false sense of security. now, according to the sci there, $25.00 to $50.00 active as serial killer cases ongoing. at any moment in the usa and the u. s leads of the race with more than 3000 serial killers throughout us history. this is by far the largest number with great bit britain coming in 2nd 166 killers recorded. so considering the largest amount of media and hollywood attention comes from the united states, could this have a direct correlation on the large amount of serial killers in the country?
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to help us look at the media's portrayal of serial killers and what they're getting wrong, we want to bring in michael and lin matthews. now, micro lyn, producer documentary on sex crimes and abuse in the military entitled justice denied michael himself as a survivor of sexual assault in the military. welcome to you both. now michael, you produce a document. terry, on sexual assault in the military. tell us about your work. okay, well, you know, i was raped in the military when i was 19 and i didn't tell anybody for 30 years. and when i finally came forward in the counseling session, then having some problems. i realize that this is a big issue then then then just myself, i always thought it was just me, you know. and then loom got lost. so my husband came forward that his rate in the military. and he's though it is in counseling and some challenges and struggles. and i said, you know,
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we're going to get through this, you know, with support and education. we'll figure out how to go forward separately and together. and in that process, my husband made a suggestion about making a documentary we were up at sundance film festival. while working with a filmmaker, kirby dick and reduce it easier with the documentary, the invisible war. and when michael was hospitalized suddenly in utah during sundance, he said, oh i think was an ill and i thought was the morphine talking. um and i said, yeah, he sure will make a film the problem. we get home back to new mexico from you all. and i thought about it for about a day, and i said, we're going to do this. we're gonna make the film. i had no film experience, it's probably better that i didn't know what i was doing while might not have attempted it at all. and so i contacted someone in the film community here which we
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had a large community and i reached out to michael l. miller. he is the director and i am the co director and i said we want to do this film. and as it turns out, michael l. miller. oh, the director had made documentary before and so i thought he could assist us in it'll getting, you know, the, the conversation and just the other parts that need you to happen. so anyway, we met with michael and i provided the subjects. and before i knew it, we were producing a documentary. and it's, it's a little rough looking. we had a small budget but, and it made it all the way to our amazon. so if you look at it, so we get distribution on it made its way around. oh, we went to a lot of film festivals with it and it was an interesting process was for novice at the pine. ah. but, you know, they, the most of the biggest thing was, was all,
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although all the lives it ruined in the united states armed forces by rape and murder. it regarding the subjects in the documentary, i was lucky enough to come across to men that were in the military that were survivors of jeffrey dahmer. and i was quite interesting. it gave us an insight into serial killers and how they are in all aspects of society. including the military and how sometimes people can really stay under the radar for a really long time. say, well actually yeah. um and, and i was instrumental in bringing them on board because they were very sketchy. they had a lot of people approached and being that they will work by jeffrey dahmer and you know, took a lot of talking on the phone and being a survivor myself. you know, they, they trusted me more than they trusted of the directors and movie producers. so you know that gus, that got i got their feet went to that aspect of it. why are so many serial killers
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also sexual abusers? i think i'll a looney black was achieved better qual, court. why are so many serial killers, sexual abusers, etc. this is a very good question. when you look at nature versus nurture, sometimes you can look back to the history of a particular person and you can see how they were raised to they have a good attachment to their caregivers. were where they isolated by jeffrey dahmer, for example, my understanding is that he had a mother that had depression and that also was not able to nurture him and hold him . and she didn't want anyone else touching him either. so you know, that can really wear on someone physically and mentally just as a very poor attachment. and also jeffrey dahmer, my understanding is that when he became an adolescent he was also having questions about sexuality. and so he had issues around that. and i think his father was
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probably very unhappy with the road he was taking and basically encouraged him to join the army. and as far as sexual assaults, if you look back up regarding people that are abused, not everybody becomes a serial till it's been sexually abused. and or physically, is it any other way? i think it's probably a multitude of factors. you have to also look at the psychological aspects of an individual. do they have a personality disorder on? is there uh, is there familial environment in some type of disarray? do they have any type of brain damage? no, there's a lot of other factors that figuring to why someone might become a serial killer. it's not that black and white. so in your view, do you think united states produces more serial killers than any other countries per capita? or this really a global phenomenon from the reading said, i have john and speaking to other people in law enforcement as well. it seems to me
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that there are serial killers, you know, all over the world, not just in, in western countries. i think we have a lot of access to on to media. she can, you know, all kinds of media computers, radio, television podcast. so if you hear more about things like this, and also it seems as though at least american society, if it bleeds, it leads people love the sensationalism. they love freddy krueger and they love dexter. and any other names of the ones i can't call but it's wrong with the touching characters. i mean, people glorify dexter. it's like, wow, this guy is a hero. he's like robin hood, he's killing serial killers and he and his and in his role, he plays a police officer. so it's, you know, it's kind of an interesting juxtaposition. and then there's another show called berry, that's on netflix and you've got on a veteran that comes back from either iraq or afghanistan. and he wants to be an
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actor. so he goes into hollywood and takes a class and, but on his time off, he's a serial killer. so i so hate, serial killer goes out. and you know, like i said, we tend to glorify things. there is murder obelia on e bay and on a lot of other sites you can buy, you know, artwork drawn by, you know, john wayne gacy or gal manson. i mean, so people are sort of in thrall to mean, you know, look at holly, people are glued to their t, v sets, you know, watching you know, horror of the day. you, you know, it is kind of crazy, but it's kind of saying, because i believe probably that there is a lot of copycats in a lot of the stuff of the serial killing. you know, just like on the mass murders, i don't know if they consider the mass murders people, serial killers, although they kill more than one, but more than 3 people, which is a qualification. but, you know, this goes on and on and, and a lot of these people love problems. watch this really wanna emulate these of me.
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for example, when you look at something like, you know, the holocaust, is that the serial killer, you know, that's debatable. if you look at the school shootings, look at parkland parkland high school, and the killer was given life in prison because he had some type of neurological issues. and you look at, i'm trying to think um, bear with me a 2nd. oh, in new mexico. here we have the, the west mesa killer. it seems to be our prostitutes that they were finding in grades mostly. and then you go to new york and you've got the yoga beach killer, which was very similar to the west mesa killer in new mexico. where you have prostitutes again, that were buried, but in, along the ideals in the dunes, in the swap, ears. yeah. is it a sign of a sick society that we both produce so many serial killers and almost seem to idolize them in a weird sort of way? i don't know. let's sit. i get no more as it is as
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a fascination to white people do something. i mean, uh, we go back when i was a kid, i remember the movie the boston strangler play by tony curtis. i mean, you know, i think we would just fascinated by why another human being would kill so many people. you know, i don't know. what do you think, lynn? yeah, i definitely think there is a fascination with gore. just like people want us when you're driving on the freeway as a car crash, you know, people are breaking. they're looking why they look and you know, just keep going, but most people, with the exception of myself, will in a one a look. there is some kind of fascination with, like i said, blood and gore and gus, why that is, i, i really don't know. we've been thinking with michael and lind matthews. producers, are the documentary film injustice denied. now stick around when we come back. we will continue the conversation on a serial tour of fashion. i'm screen of youth with the 360
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ah, at this hour, american and coalition forces are in the early stages of military operations to disarm iraq, to free its people, and to defend the world from gray, with food, and medicine, and supplies, and free with
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ah, welcome back here in the 360 day, we're going to be discussing the phenomenon of a serial killer obsessions. we're joined by a couple who were to say documentary on sexual abuse in the military and their insights into the world of serial rapists and murderers. welcome back, michael and matthews. you know, for the survivors of sexual assault and i've attempted murders. how does healing happen? well, i can speak for myself as the wife of her survivor, i got my own counseling. i reached out to support groups online. there was some female, better in groups that were very welcoming to me. and as a clinician myself, i think there are a lot more resources now than there used to be with respect to sexual assault, per se, whether it's the re crisis center, a group on line. you don't even have to leave your house. you can just do just like we're doing right now. so there are a lot more resources for people. and i think that's the 1st step to healing,
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which is being able to tell another person that something happened to you that you need help. and very often with survivors of sexual so it can take 10 years, 50 as 20 years for someone to feel safe enough to come forward to someone that they trust and share that they are hurting and that they need help. and that's an opportunity at that point to share resources which was system and binding of resources. i myself was sir in counseling at the v a in new york at the time, who says at the 911, we went back and my wife was working with new york city fire department to counseling. and it was a lot of issues for me. i had peter steel did know at the tuesday and i was going to the v. a for counseling. and the counselor one day she just looked at me. she was one coming back to rape in the middle of a session. and i never told her anything about that impulse, anybody? my tire tire, 30 years of the woods and i just broke down and i told her everything. i don't know
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why. and i asked the lady what, why, why did you wanna ask me questions that i tell you she was no, but you were just talking and everything wasn't fitting. and i've seen so many men that were raped in the military. that, you know, i just figured i'd throw it out there and see what you do and don't, that's the reason i came out in them i came of, well, i didn't know that there was underlying depression and anxiety. i was aware of that as far as annual courage will go to class and i said, what was going on like, what's bothering you in, in he, he didn't barrel as anything specific. so i said, you know, you had this benefit at the be a, you know, why don't you don't use it. so he picked me up from work one evening and he said, hi, i want to talk to you. and that's not something that you usually say. i would have a fail or something. right. well, you know, i'm sitting in the car and thinking i said to him, you know i, are you sick like to get cancer? no. g, d, something legal?
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no. ah, do you have a girlfriend? no. do you have a boyfriend? no, i think i went to like every question in my own mind. and i was like, oh, okay, great. you know it's something serious. and and then we, we got hung, he sat down and shared with me what had happened. and in some strange way, i was almost relieved to know that there was something that we hadn't talked about together for that was 20 years into our marriage, a science and i was, i wasn't crazy. and that now there was an opportunity to go forward with some healing. do you think things have found the documentaries are cathartic or are there actually triggering, why does the universe keep doing this to me? lisa, continuing to investigate a 2nd letter, my belief in rich killer, i talked to one of the victims of jeffrey dahmer. ah, the survivors and i. e. e. he was quite annoyed actually cuz they don't betray
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correctly. you know, um he, he tell some wild interesting stuff about it that we've been using the movie that jeffrey dahmer used to call him when the, when, when this guy went home back to arkansas and billy capture, he used to get 2 phone calls from, from jeffrey down when he's travel across the country and he actually told the billy kappa charlotte, he killed her. um, what was a kid's name? wash, and wall adam walsh, yet he killed a he called him from florida and said he just killed adam walsh and hollywood, florida. and you know, did really, really bizarre stuff that you know, went on and he would torment billy what before he was captured, isa, called 1000000000 torment him all the time on the telephone. it's kind of her interesting stuff there. you know, it's a, it's like they really enjoy the are the tormenting the victims. and actually jeffrey dahmer was planning on killing ah, the t,
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his 2 victims in germany. and he told that it to the milwaukee police in the yard, in the documents that he mentioned that he raped that. so it's not, it's not the, it wasn't a make believe or it wasn't supposedly she did this. he did this and you know, he actually admitted to it. and in our actually there's a on the, i don't, i know billy capture was visited by the, the german police and in a poll. want to know more about geoffrey, cuz they believed that he had raped and killed some young men in germany when he was there. what it is like this. i can't articulate the way that i wish i did. what it felt like to be told because you were raped in your sleep, you are not worthy of dying for the united states of america. are these cathartic
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experiences, cent, oftentimes, victims and family members don't get to talk about what happened to them. well i know one thing i know it was for me, it was okay, but i went to a lot of counseling, lot of prolong exposure. you know, it became very easy for me to talk about what happened to me as a rape survivor. i know for billy kappa shaw the after he did the movie and then king forward more and now he's don't other other a speaking engagement, it's becoming easier for him. so yeah, i probably escrow cathartic. but i let linda evolve more of that for myself as a clinician and as the staff a survivor. and i'm fairly comfortable talking about trauma and traumatic events, i think for survivors in general, whether it's saw the towers falling $911.00, whether it's jeffrey dahmer, i think the more that survivors have an opportunity to share their feelings and tell their story. there is a d sensitization that takes place where it becomes easier over time,
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emotionally to share about this. yet if you think about what we do as a society and how we, how we relate to these are these rapists and then eventually a lot of become killers. is that we let fly a little radar, select the military, let jeffrey dahmer go and they had him, they put him in jail, it 12 people would still be alive today from that. and if you go off into the, the college campuses and in the boy scouts and the catholic church, you know, if they just would do something about it, it would, it would help make a big difference. thank you so much, michael and lynn at matthews. are we, we're should be sure to check out your documentary justice denied, exposing a ramp and sexual abuse, united states armed forces and the case of a serial killers. there are 3 point of views to examine it with the victim,
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often being given the least amount of attention, most of your killers are able to commit their horrendous acts. because prior to their 1st victim, they were labeled and outcast. therefore, their crime is not hurting anyone or anything they care about. serial killers looked the media and hollywood to give them the attention, the in boost, their own, a self esteem, something their prior life before killing offered. now the public has an attraction to these stories, mainly because they want to find an answer or reason behind the killers madness. rarely are those answers found and even more fascination endures. where there is demand supply as quick as we produce, which produces a high profit. however, it's not just those seeking answers consuming and hoping for more material. rather, it could also be those serial killers who are looking themselves to become a household name. i'm going to hughes, and this has been your 360 view of the news affecting you. thanks for watching.
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ah, this, i a sampler water is thrown in the old hon and the snow falls upon rescheduling this concert at the last dance. but what i feel is we sprung from kaiser hours from the end to lower the do it in bt dufrane. you get kicked away in the poly teachers kills on the edge on the brown asia. so was to let them know that it gives him a little bulk. um yeah, the crucial chest municipal and also all sweetness wookey bone is not good. p t. d, still not what you need to do with the leukemia. well,
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they need to work with up sheet. any video picks that will be good to go with, but no grossi should be missed, missed they needed, and that'll set them off. and you can give us history of the did it. what is a battle circle? this does this more detail, but in the 3rd toss, but even in the so gray, you need to locate those light l b. just to look me. it doesn't help out with them. yet than me, she go, she returns with not up to numerous marietta to handle most of his emotional specially to renew the lease is up or anything. it took a little of doing piecemeal. mm. the me
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the disturbing images in the headlines here on ard see moscow salaam international organizations on the west for their silence. so break rigid war crimes of more footage emerges online, showing the execution of russian soldiers by ukrainian the 2 are killed, including a 6 year old child as a car, plows into a bus station in jerusalem is really police are treating. it says tara un peacekeeping forces kill 8 civilians are nearly 30 more in the democratic republic of congo. and after protest.

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