tv Documentary RT July 13, 2023 11:30pm-12:01am EDT
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some states do pay the inmate population a certain amount. it's not what you're gonna find on the streets. it's gonna probably be very cheap labor, all but then again, there's also cost that they're also paying for the inmate to reside there. don't forget, you know, i mean, they may only get paid certain amount, but they're also getting medical for free program. it's a free food for free. you know, whatever living arrangements aren't, by the way or another side know, nice people that go to the jail system, have never even had care for medical or never even seen by mental health. a lot of the times when we're discovering a certain is when they're going through the jail. and it's been discovered by the bible workers who work behind the wall, like the mental health professionals or the medical. but i, i'm not going to say it's way labor because there's another thing that's being done here that some people overlook their learning trades in the process. i got food service workers who are coming out with serv. save and uh, you know, certificates. so when they get off, they can get right into, you know, helping out in the food industry. i got maintenance workers that it made to work in
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maintenance, but then the process, the learning how to be amazing and learning how to wells. and then when they get out, they have opportunities, they know how to drive a forklift. so i do think there's a balance. but in the process why they're working, they're being educated by a supervisor who's like a trade instructor who's gonna wind up helping, getting them certified. so when they get released, they could wind up getting some vocational tray, but again, prisons are self sustaining. and in order to say some level of money from a taxpayer, there is some labor that we do rely on the inmate population for. but having said that, in return, they do take whatever they're being taught and they could apply that gift out into the real world. i, i know a lot of it make maintenance workers that 1st off want to be called out because it's something for them to do. let's not forget that they want to get out of their cell. but then when they, they get out and do them on the, on the best plumber and they get out and they get a job $4050.00 an hour, right from the get go because of their experience to working in the prisons and
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jails. so i mean, you know, i, i want to see it both ways, but in my experience i, i just find that it does become beneficial if they take advantage of the learning opportunity. but we saw behind what is being a task towards them as opposed to just saying, well, i'm not doing that, i'm not a slave. what? well, it's not that it's, you're part of a program. at the end of the day, you do this, you can become a mason or whatever it is and you can go out and take that skill with you into the real world. i think one of the things that, you know, people talk about in this context also is that, you know, the population has no control over what kind of job they do, right? and so there are limits in assignments available. and there's some, some positions where you have to be qualified to do the work, right? and so we may have to pick certain people to do certain things because this is what is required. and you have some individuals who don't want to do what's required in order to hold that position or do that job. so it's, there's more,
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i think detail in the employment process as it pertains to an inmate in prison. i think it's easier to say, oh, it's cheap labor and, and everyone's on that you know, the present systems benefiting but know here all the options and which they are limited. these are the options available to the population. we have to be able to pick and choose and give people opportunities to grow into learn, especially those who will be transitioning back into the community soon. because those are the ones who need to be employable, right? they need to have some sort of skill that they've cultivated over that time and that they're going to give into while they're going to learn from and be able to take it with them when they go. so as much as you know, there's a start that they should be paid more money and all of that. there's also this restitution essentially that is being paid back for the crimes they committed and
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to the people they have offended. thank you so much, anthony yankee, and connie allen for your time today. while it's hard to think of prisoners as winners and losers, it seems like those incarcerated in europe went out over those behind bars in america, as they're given a better chance at re integrating into society after the sentence. currently there are various movements who are trying to follow norway is example of prison reform. norway has one of the lowest rates of formerly incarcerated population, committing another crime within 2 years of release. even after 5 years, it was still extremely low at only 25 percent of the population. meanwhile, this rate is one of the highest in the world in the us with almost 44 percent of criminals released returning to prison within their 1st year out. the researchers have attributed this high rate to a plus real factors ranging from the social stigma taishan and inadequate skills necessary for employment. i'm christy. i thanks for watching and we'll see you
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right back here next time on the cost of everything. the with the discovery of the new world, at the end of the 15 century, there appeared atlantics laved re the slave traders from european countries started building fords on the western coast of the african continent to transport the african inhabitants to america, to be forced into a hard labor until the middle of the 17th century, portugal had laid the main role. india said process business. then great britain,
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france and the netherlands took the leadership for this fan of 400 years of legal and illegal slave trade. about 17000000 people were forcefully shipped across the atlantic. not including those who died on the way due to unbearable living conditions. modern historians estimate that for each slave ship to america, there were 5 who died while captured during transportation and peru obliteration of rebellion. this roof was the whole tre. practiced by the leading european countries, took away tens of millions of african lives. the organization of united nations class advised the trans atlantics slave trade as one of the greatest human rights abuses in the history of humanity. and this is the biggest act of deep orientation of people ever seen by mankind.
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so look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings, except we're so shorter is it conflict with the 1st law? should we live in justification? we should be very careful about our personal intelligence at the point, obviously is to great trust rather than shit. the area, i mean with the artificial intelligence, we have so many of them in the most protect this phone existence was alexis the guy, i'm afraid this to the possibilities will continue dates and then we may expect to the escalation because i don't see any sincere demand for peace in europe,
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at least level, there's no peace of it. let me do some oversight, but they'll be more sections introduced, aggravates the situation at the time you decide to keep up. this was in the interest of us administrator. so the base c i a program, same wasn't, don't need to create fearless and ruthless soldiers, but also to control the minds of thousands of unsuspecting people with narcotics. it's just the nature of your opinion. morning richard will association will start when you put the instruct me on it to fill in the way. so i'm glad you asked me to call me on monday, just for pamela. one of the fail from the new modem, the moon on the line. but the wire printer, no,
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they chased you is your wireless is under the impression that the only the deal is extra, but the most of them are going to do right now is please order something else. the c i a m k ultra project involving the use of special drugs for military and political purposes. first on my done and then in the ukrainian army, i've shifted towards a large scale technical trials that aren't going to stop any time soon. the
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hello and welcome to cross talk. we're all things are considered on peter lavelle. they tow failed to crane still again, another promise not kept. in fact, the military alliance has no intention of bringing kevin to native. this is always been the plot ukraine as an after thought inflicting a strategic defeat on russia as always in the plan, the process of getting the nato summit. i'm joined by my guess yon oberg in london. he is director of the swedish independence transnational foundation for peace and future research in columbus. we have missed the winston. she is a political activist, as well as host of the miss the winston show warranty and see radio. and here in moscow we have mike jones. he is an independent journalist, all right, cross talk roles and effect. that means it can jump any time you want. and i always
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appreciate you on let me go to you 1st. there's so much we can say about this summit that was held in building this. it was built up, covered extensively. it was a bost. okay. but at the end of the day, the 2 most important things to take away from that. not that it ukraine, made it in or didn't make it in are conditions that can all watch it. that's all a footnote, what really matters here is it this some, it did not discuss peace and it did not discuss security security for all young. no, it didn't, and that is not in the vocabulary of nato. i studied nato's because i, i wrote a book about it last year and why it shouldn't be abolished 30 arguments and i want went through all the documents. there's no conceptualization of pieces, defends and guitars, or deterrence, and defense and security, then it is pronouncing who is the enemy, or who is the opponent always a potential threat such as china as population. so
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a possible ex is no analysis and it's combination of others and never self reflection. so the web piece is not that, and it's not a defensive a lines in any academic, reasonably sustainable definition of that word. yeah, well, oh yeah, the, it's primary mission. this is has to stay in business that's been stopped. the goal is to stay in business. missy, but essentially the same questionnaire because, you know, the, we've always heard the stilton for the head of the nato. you are the rush. it has no veto, has no be what does apparently it does have a veto. that's why the ukraine was not invited and never will be invited into the alliance. they are flowing themselves and that there is their scribes in the media . just lie about it. go ahead and columbus, and yes, i think that that is absolutely correct. i don't think it's a surprise to anybody who is paying a bit of attention that ukraine has no chance whatsoever of making it into nato at this point. or at any point, i think that this is kind of
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a care that there dangling in front of them on a stick, in order to continue. i think that this is as doing a science one said that about afghanistan, the goal is unless we're not a successful we're it applied, then i think it applies now. and i think that the membership and the data was something that they are just kind of waving in front of ukraine in order to justify the continuation of using you creating a bodies, this cannon fodder for this proxy war against russia. and it's initially, it's really quite amazing that the little political leadership in care of goes along with it. it's, it's really extraordinary, a sacrificing their own people. i suppose. the lensky and his crowd are paid very well. compensation is very good for these people. mike, let me go to you. i mean, when do we, we, they talk about allies when all the allies agree and conditions are met? you know, when my friend, they are farther away from getting into nato than they were in 2008 when they were invited, as a potential invite and to be alive, they are farther away than they are in 2008. go ahead. absolutely the right. i'm
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gonna reach back to the united kingdom and ben wallace who echoed the us saying we can't have a new member in the middle of a conflict that would just import war into the lions. and it really baffles me how this was never considered before. how's the lensky or much move into it? because the p a has been a catastrophic, even the photographs of the lensky just standing on his own, completely excluded from what's going on when, when we think about it, they say when the allies agree, when they've been able to agree in recent times, they've been divided over a success to stoughton bug divided, the cluster bombs now divided the key f. and yet the headlines will read that nato has been more united than ever. you only need to do a very quick google search on the minimum requirement is for the nato membership. and the us state department itself, and it's archive explicitly states, there is no checklist for membership, but it does say we've made it clear the minimum their off 5 following requirements
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. number one, you members must uphold democracy, including tolerating diversity. you're absolutely right. that's not been existing in the crating for, you know, at least what 2008 if know 2014. so no ukraine has never had any chance of being in the nato by even the, in the us is own sort of requirements as a to the sleep. it's it. well, you know, it's, that's a very good point because they talk about democratic norms and rules based order, which does not apply to ukraine in any sense. yeah, and you know, one of the things that's very interesting is that they say that ukraine has to win the war to become eligible to be a member. so what they lose the war, do they get to become a member? i mean, i don't understand the logic here. yeah. and can you figure it out? i think the lot judy is that if war is the only game in town, so to speak, and they tell us towns and there is not a word about peace. negotiation sees fire or anything else, reason level. then of course a movie you that by pumping in weapons down,
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immunization and political support on good works. so that today or you find would be able to win over russia. i think the assumption is at night. and also it's very interesting now in a historical perspective, to look at nato as being in various ways in ukraine, basically is things i think 3 months of the video crime to be cameron independence thing. yeah. everybody in the west who knew anything about security including the number of.
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