tv Documentary RT March 29, 2023 1:30pm-2:01pm EDT
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a distance, what's the difference is $82.00 and syria is no attrition, sir, and the situation you're king, there's no us armed forces inside of syria. and so at a so i don't have a, it's not a harold situation, you're sure there's no, there's no u. s. u. s. military personnel, i believe is military activity. yeah, but a but of a but in terms of ground presence in syria, i'm not aware of that. okay, 5 us service members were injured in that attack. if there's no, there were no us soldier service members in syria. how could they got injured at? that's weird, right? well, in 2014 nato allies led by the u. s. stage to an incursion, claiming there were fighting terrorists, but in fact, used an army of mercenaries in an operation where washington openly called for regime change to aust president bashar alyssa. while the mission creep started with her strikes, boots on the ground never appeared on the american flag has not been raised in an
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oil rich part of the country. while syria has stated on more than 100 occasions that those trips are not welcome. the message has fallen on deaf ears by pentagon chiefs. i'm multiple presidents over the past decade. in 2018 then us leader, donald trump ordered the complete withdrawal of troops from syria that did not help news editor of the cradle sites. esteban korea believe the presence of the u. s. army in syria is illegal on ridge national. whether this was you, an official or us state department spokesperson trying to, to defend a defensible and the president of the us army syria, illegal by international law. so and he said the us was in the us form after the 2nd world war 2, to the fan international law into it to prevent the conflict like these from iraq, the but now it seems to us has to be an attorney to simply another tool to to
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justify these illegal invasions, and these are the plundering of the, of the theory as resources. and these are attracted to where to reduce change about controlling the oil producing areas of syria. but what he does allow them to do is to, to pressure the government in damascus to the pressure, the people which on top of economic sanctions, the government cannot, cannot use their own resources to, to reconstruct the revealed saw the us inferior for that because there were there she's in the 14, around for, for team to training the so called motor rebels and allowed isis to, to, to grow and to spread and to threaten the government, damascus. because that's what that's going to be in the strategies to start this war. interior has been to oust the government of our 5. alright, and up, close, direct look next, some of the biggest racial trigger points in recent american history. what led to
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them and what some are doing to overcome. they with us for a short documentary healing from the i was standing in an alley, smoking a joint one day and a man came up to me and pulled the joint from my mouth. and he said, don't you know that that's what the capitalists and the jews want you to do. we were violent towards those people because we believed that were the superior race. we were here 1st and this is our pantry. guns ammo, still tow doc martens, tattooing violence just just prerequisite to enter or exit before he walked off.
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like you could see this, look in a safe fear, like he feared me being part of that movement. i got to feel a sense of power. when i felt powerless, i got attention when i felt invisible and accepted when i felt that we had a strategy, we wanted to clean our image up and make our message more palatable to the masses. don't get tattoos don't shape your head. don't get arrested. go to college, joined the military. keep your head down. go mainstream news. news
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what the guys who are currently getting out. what would feel like life after hate is an organization that was founded by for ex skinhead, neo nazi white supremacists in the us and canada. and they found each other, and they knew that they wanted to help other guys get out. so the idea is to get them out, make, keep them safe and get that kind of support that they need from other performers in order to stay out with . welcome and we will stop. yeah, well, we're pioneer in this past where the 1st one is to do this for the 1st one. and
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quite frankly, probably the only ones doing it. and we're certainly the only ones driven by 100 percent formless. and just a minute, your desire to do this is new and you don't have the experience. each of us in this room has the capability to help people where we, once we're, this isn't a path that anyone should have to do a loan. and if there are people in this room who have to do it alone in the beginning, and you understand how difficult that was and what kind of critical role we can play in the lives of someone else. when i, my name is frank marie jackson, philadelphia got in the movement at any age 13 going on 14 in the movement, i got very active, especially very violent kidnapped. somebody went to prison and i was 17. as i got out of the movers, oklahoma city bombing that made me reach out to people to help the picture of the fireman right down the street. that, that little girl is something that will always stick with me. ended up going to
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prison for about 4 years. and that's when i got involved the skinhead movement. there's meaning behind the color of the tattoo. like if it's a solid black, tad to a person committed a murder and got away with hulu. i do some serious things are not the same for i get that covered up. i have to look at it. no more went to treatment last year. and when i graduated, i reached out to my pastor, hadn't been involved with them doing stuff. hire portland, trying to reach out and help other people that are struggling to come out of the movement. i was involved with the white area and resistance skinheads and emerson heads in san diego for 13 or 14 years we would do gay bashing runs and we would attack people just for the color of their skin. i have left people laying there that i don't know if they lived or not. i was involved in the
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skin that seen from the mid eighty's all the way to the, to the mid ninety's. for 7 or 8 years i went through a disengagement, but i'd left the movement at the movement and left me. it was the birth of my, my daughter. you know, i get enough little girl in the delivery room and my son was born 15 months later. you know, they saw the magnificence of me when i couldn't see it and they gave me that, that gift that allowed me to we humanized i became a gang member. how about 18 years and sort of that kind of lifestyle in out of prison, june or home, stuff like that. after surviving a race right, became pretty violent and aggressive urban started started manifesting, to say, towards whites as a result of that race, right? because of my role in the riot, i quickly grew within the game one of the highest ranking, getting numbers in my state. i had even made
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a vow that if i was going to rob steel, pillage whatever it was going to be white, we can start to feel special and what we're going through here and it is special, but it's not as unique as you might think. it's really a humanistic, quite it's the same story. it's the same feelings it's, it's the human experience and hate no matter what. what flag you fly it under has a very similar approach. this inaugural gathering of the farmers, i think, is incredibly important. you know, we were able to get and so far as just us as volunteers working together as a team and being able to handle the load. but that's not possible anymore. countries in to far crisis with
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we are being ethnically plan. yeah. you know, a regular, we've got to like, reserve ourselves. we've got a right to keep this nation, the nation that our forefathers in vision. that's what we're fighting for here. everyone moved together now they knew before the words, i want to secure the existence of the white race in the future for why children. that's what this is all about, is about stopping why? genocide? solving multiculturalism. american white working class is angry. they, they've been systematically ignored by both major parties for decades. now, i'm looking at these extreme white nationalist flights premises. nazis, these guys were active in the stream, right? the very, very end of a continuous. because i want to know how they went from the center and drifted off there and ended up so far from what i consider to be the mainstream. because i
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think they can tell us a lot about what's going on in the mainstream as well. why would this group that seem so privileged feel themselves to be such victims? these guys are furious and in many cases they're kind of right to be furious. they have been delta bad and you can understand the sense of this range without understanding the sense of entitlement that it's founded on. so when i say that their anger is real, it's because they feel like they've been dispossessed at something taken from them . the the the language that they use is all a language of retrieving restoring, reclaiming your masculinity because you had it, they took it away. now you've got to get it back. the
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hey randy. a sammy i just wanted to check in with you see how you're doing before we come over can be so good to meet your brother. yeah. okay. all right, great. brother will be there in a few minutes. all right. it's the hardest thing i have ever made at the time. my young 900 years was to get out of this. i was 20 is i'm now going to lose family members that are in when i was every friends i've just had for the last 6 years. and they're all going to go are so just kind of recap and fresh out, fresh on like. i think you just like he one day to the next is still questions things, but he like he went, he didn't go through a period of questioning his membership. he went from being in it to be in like
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almost instantaneous, same day kind of thing. you know, he was got turned at the rally, the getting beat up, he was getting beat up through protester side of thing. people were kicking him in the house and people have to know that it's really ramp it in. when people are getting out to turn to other things, alcohol, drug was out, other addictions or so, you know, it's, it's, you know, this make this clean breaking. so it's, there's going to be a whole $180.00 on a lifestyle my situation when i got out it was like, i'm alone out here. like i'm completely isolated. i'm alone. and i would try to tell people what my experience was like, but no one can relate, you know, and it sounds like this guy that we're seeing right now is what i'm hearing is loan
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uncertainty. cut off. i think happy to know there are others out here to understand what it's like to be in the movement. to understand what it's like to get out of the movement. to understand what is like post change as possible. there's a way out there is life after have me when i was wrong, when all just don't rule out the thing because the attitude and engagement was betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart, we choose to look for common ground. oh
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the or ask you the racial and you always have been a little racist. yeah. yeah, yeah. this kind of fell into except and still was in your like in your family when your community is ever everywhere. so normal for you then. yeah, yeah. well, i'm way, way i was afraid to be open about it every come. grace was a good person. the prism never said that person around with you know, the other walking already had, you know, i need to know what i felt, what i believed. all right. love love, most guys in the get out. they don't keep with it. i know if i, if i have a good person that's all i have to do to click back. oh, so how long over the whole course your life are you involved like actively as like
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a white supremacist? michelle john? sure. it's all the time. we always make new ones. you know, they make them more fashionable. usually. i know if i just want to explore the on friday. no. i, michael. i was like, i was coming off now to what i don't i haven't had it pointed up, you know, 44 magnum, you know, long, barely, you know, it's gonna take everything inside and kick down. it came back and clean, clean shop. all you've been clean. now let's see when we left a couple of years ago or for 3 years. you know, she know, she met him all day long into life. was doing this on this. it's what it's called nazi. no. it's a lot of change is getting thrown at you right now. you know? yeah, yeah, a lot, a lot, you know, let, you know, using drugs, you know, it's
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a familiarity gone and you know, the racing was all correct if you will. you guys have been lifelong, irreplaceable. you know you're reaching out though, man, you know? yeah. didn't, didn't, didn't do william in the past. you know, god come to hit me and now there wasn't, wasn't that guy, you know, god. oh, no, not fair balls. and you know, when you called in today we are definitely gonna be down there like they got real got real quick. i can't imagine what, what, what the future holds. sure ma'am, but if it's anything like what we're seeing is good enough to glove and all of us that you're struggling keep going through, you know, scares hell. but you're joining that, that, that group of men and women men who are, who are facing the same change you're facing, right?
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i can't tell you how many hundreds of people who don't believe in the ideology of last the while they're in the movement are too afraid to leave or to afraid to leave for safety purposes. but they're also afraid to start over. they don't want to abandon that identity that they have or that community. and they stay in because they have nothing to go back to because they walked away from everything. when they joined up at the top. what do you think about a nation or political order that is racially, they are richard the what do you think of a real of have some coffee? let's talk. okay. mike michael. hey, nice to meet with me. oh no, no, no. what form is show us is that you can, you can think as, as low as human beings can think in some ways you can do horrible things and you
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can come out the other side. you should have been so badly broken that there's no way you could come back from this. if you did so can have that right. so can you, if you are going to pretend that this is simply an intellectual exercise, and you don't speak to the visceral experience that these guys have in the movement, you won't be able to reach that violence was fairly new to me. i know at the beginning i certainly enjoyed the adrenalin rush and the ability to instill fear in people that was like the water to someone to be wandering, the desert correlated factor and someone joining about when the extremist group with childhood trauma abuse could be coming from a broken home and drugs and alcohol. my case of it was abandonment. growing out the foster care my whole life in being physically abused as a kid by my an uncle and my cousins and stuff. and i was fighting since i was a kid,
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you know. and i grew up in the streets. i know my father loved us very much, but i didn't get to see him a whole lot when i was 10 walked in on him with another woman. and then bang, that's when the the gone fell off the pedestal. we started to act out at school and to go down this rabbit whole of, of defiance and anger and confuse i was very confused in my dad. you know, i used to be like another guy being another guy. and barbara ranch. no, i walk in and you know, it's not a in basically knocked me out with a punch. i'm out fade the black. they form a very unhealthy identity about themselves. they're not good enough. they're not smart enough. they're not pretty enough. they're on level. they're less than all my friends in the gang as a young kid, as a young man as an older man. we all have very similar experiences. nobody use words like trauma or abuse or child abuse abandoned man. my father wasn't there for me.
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no one could talk about that. it was just like we, we stuff it, we suppress it. the shame was, i think, compiled with schuman creation. if you couldn't put it away, and you couldn't be violent, we live our lives. and until we heal that shame in reaction to in another way is to adopt an ideology which tells you you're greater that that's what i did feel like other people think they're not. and here's a group that comes along and says, we think you're something that we think you're better, your special it was my family. it was my identity, it became the person who i was for 8 years. i found comfort and mostly because i was angry at myself and my parents and being a part of a hate movement, gave me an excuse to kind of remove my own pain and put it on other people so that
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i could project that and not feel it myself, it's sometimes hard to, to really look inward and see that maybe the cause of your problem isn't the other . the ideology as secondary. and i'm talking about every type of extreme, whether it's fundamental religious ideology or hateful or racist ideology. that's something that is just a layer on top of that group that here and most when i got in prison and mississippi, the reverse racism is so hard core. i got everything from my home, from a number. you know, so all the way up behind my ears. so i figured the best statement i can make and have enjoy the most vicious thing i can think of. and let them know if you touch me
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again, i'm going to kill you. and nothing said that message is better than the brother. much easier to recruit in southern out when it is easy to exploit. you know, you have that person 247 around you. you know, it's not like outside where they can go home, get a break and maybe make a difference. and then you want to do. and there is perfect. i guess you'd be, i just was here on around one and then not have a covered, you know, hidden in all my touches. so i used to be the guy with a swastika, all my neck down the street, and people would pull their kids or me literally. i've seen people pull away from me and i say this so yeah, i get that reaction to somebody who's looking down and like live down there. so now i try to, you know, keep stars like, you know, most of the possible. thank you that you wanted me to be able to get some of this remote covered up. i wouldn't be like changing because i people will never see that
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it doesn't come without putting 1st. when you come from nothing you really have gotten up and you know, little bit power, you know, it's nice and you know, those good to think you're in control or something once does it the whole things about who's, you know, power of power power. so yeah, it's hard to leave that, it's hard to give it up and go, okay. i will say with all that, but here's the thing. i've also taken on the bruise of everything, all the stress, i've been through years of torture for them from say okay, that was for nothing. i'm gonna leave it alone. i'm over here and be a nobody. i don't think there is a single group in the united states that i know of that can be accurately described as white supremacist. the white supremacists is presumably someone who wants to rule over people of other races. that's a term from the history books. i
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in terms of living in african climate, it's a lot easier. that's why they're, they're different. like foods falling off the trees. yeah. black and white. you looked at the victim service. i've looked at a lot of victim survey. ok. you're looking at how many male on black female rates were there, and the last 10 years, i don't know, approaching them 0. okay. okay, so like there are huge discrepancies in terms of crime and that sort of facts. but you think that they're more predisposed to to being criminals? yes. africans. yes or do you think it's just what it is? i don't blame them. you don't think it's a, you don't think of a product of our systemic failures and law enforcement and justice system and, and schooling system. and the fact that up until very recently, very recently in our history where parents were alive, they weren't allowed to have the same access. the way africans i, i think
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a lot of conservatives will sail african destroyed by the welfare states. i don't really buy that. i think there was a certain, i think they were destroyed by slavery. how are immigrants affecting you right now? here in whitefish white fish is deeply segregated. do you think we need to bring in more syrian right? no, i don't think we need to bring in anybody, but i also don't think we need to exclude anybody if they wish to come in. right. how do you feel about that? well, i would ultimately exclude people. yeah. but i'm willing to say, i'm willing to say it, like i'm willing to defend the community. and most people, i don't know, i'm doing everything i can to protect my people in civilization. i went down a path and like you, i was passionate. i was willing to die for it. i was willing to do what it took to to, to make the vision come through a reality. i think your last, like i was for 8 years, and i want to know what you down the path. i am the higher ideal of what the right white race can be, and i actually have a superhuman ideal. i'm not caught up in,
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you know, justice or security or comfort. so white people are just, they're so good in so nice. it once me, it makes me want to puke they, they, they, they really are accepting towards the other. they want to trust people. but you also need people like me who are guardians of these nice people. we live in a country that's rich by it's diverse and headed to the only way it's going to, it's going to become that ways. if it comes down to a civil war, i think there will be a terrible presentation. i don't know when it's going to happen. it might happen tomorrow, it might happen in 50 years or so on. but this thing can go on. what do you think you really going to accomplish and already accomplish so much like what identity hearing is on the all right. and i mean not to be good to go, but my name are now household to rooms with me. i mean what, endo, to create a more beautiful world. that's exclusive of everybody, but why people oh,
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a benjamin netanyahu say israel is still the best of friends with the u. s. despite the number of is really officials suggesting washington involvement in the nation life protests that have swept the concrete over proposed judicial reforms. live reaction on that coming up in the moment. also a big meeting in multiple wraps up. panels are run on russia, talk at us sanctions, ukrainian conflict on a comprehensive, strategic partnership between the 2 nations. the prime minister of poland takes aim at the e. u for failing to deliver on the key points of the western back ukrainian, great deal resulting in european farmers struggling to keep their livelihoods
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