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tv   Documentary  RT  November 12, 2024 9:30pm-10:01pm EST

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this gap is becoming smaller or is growing all it's growing. i don't know. they only want a handful of people. uh, controlling everything they want to keep people under their, under this, under your son's control people's, that's a way of controlling people, you know, power and money. everyone should have had these housing fields. you know, healthcare, education, close, you know, stuff, you know, things like that. yeah. and a little extra so you could maybe go to the movies or go out to dinner or something on a little vacation. you know, he's doing the, did the whole dance with the yeah, i'm 77 and i don't get enough barely enough income. but i have a affordable housing, it's called affordable housing,
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but they keep facing the rants that they don't make that they don't keep, they don't raise my income to match, you know what i mean? my social security retirement. so do come here to make some extra money. yeah. supplemental. you know what i mean? from the very last job i have was security, but i've done many things i've. i've been an optician, i've done security. i've been a secretary, i been a forklift operator. i've sent them different things and you were working all your life. right. well, you know from the 17 on us. yeah. the new i've been waiting for housing for awhile, like around 17 years. and um, how come home personal care and the salvation army that goes together and they got me a room for a year. so you know, which is pretty good because you know, now i don't have to travel up too much and still like fi to see i had of i had
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major surgery on my legs. come on this thing. but i also have a disease and my legs for my blood cells and my most a switch. and my skin has a hard time sticking to our legs. so they took these on there to hold it back. but this is the big one right here. because you don't want to kill them showing time. fortunately around here this, in other words, you know, that really is like, i don't know. that's what a lot of slough muscular homeless then. then the houses don't you know, some co sign you up telephones where you pay for new york one year, you know, and so you can see it for worth fucking facts cuz my girls tend to take the little overdose. all set over goes and have to come back to the greyhound, so you don't pay, you know, a lot of people die enough enough that i don't even know what the fuck is. it's all just crazy. a lot of my friends home boys and hospitals that are different options and our job is, is, well,
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i think we can handle it to new systems again as well. you know, they're not trying to find it. and if you want to be realistic, realistic about the problem regarding it where the problem really lives. and that's where the drugs, the drugs is, where the problems lies and legalize you did that. but like i said, nothing better, nice and other drugs to a misdemeanors. what good did that do is to just help them to be able to do more drugs easier because the fear before it was a fear of a felony going to jail, do it for, is it time or whatever the case may be. now is just a ticket. that's it. you catch him sitting on the side of the street endangering children's wise by smoking this crap out in the open. and you give them a ticket, a new one of the way. what. how is that changing any that he just goes,
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gets more and just does it again. it's like we don't care or respect the human of the human race. but when we may make laws and decided, oh, they're only a misdemeanor. now it's no big deal. it is a big deal. sorry. so you can say you're from london. yes. rhetoric just outside of london. yeah. what's the name of it? this is yeah ma'am. nice to me. and what do you think about the da says here and what the weather. so i definitely noticed a huge difference between the rich and the full. i knew existing, well, i didn't know existed to the level of did i know it's very high, i'm experiencing it 1st time. this is, you know, there's quite trouble. i've heard so i've heard of skid row. i was, i don't know much about it that i've heard so many people say they're going to bring it into it's good role and help the people there. that's been there since the 1960. we're in 2014 or, i mean,
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we run around other countries. like is your country, do you need some help? do you still grow? and they'll help you know what your money and do a bunch of stuff to help your people get better and then we look into and then you guys come over here, is water, treat everything. oh, perfect. because me being away so much of that. so why i've seen it all over the past 20 on 29. now the obviously grew up watching american television. all of that stuff in what we say on the screen here. it's like, oh sorry from that is more like a perfect image. everything. but we still go to depth and searching stuff up and seeing what was actually go, don't completely different story. i guess what's really interesting is people here much more neglect. it's been over that then. and i'll just see i've been every single state who i speak to some years in over the last as well as
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what used to be a partial problem of the families here and there. now it is because it's such a big problem. ringback so we're kind of them uh, you know, it's hot of skid row. we're on 5th then. well, so on the north side that's a mission. they have room for our own $600.00 b, both party to families. you know, you don't see it, but there are lot of children on skid row, they try to keep them inside. no, we have multiple themes from homeless held guard to the community health project doing valuable work going around distributing narcanon fentanyl districts, because that is a significant number of overdose. those that happen daily, you know, schedule like a lot of people, you know, don't understand what actually schedule is 54 blocks quote here. the funny thing is
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right, the middle of skid row is a police station. and one time when i was there, i saw a 2 huge arguing amongst each other. one shoots the dude over the dog and watch the way in the bodies laid out there until 10 o'clock the next day. why? i don't know, and there's a police station right across the street. and this was, that was right in front of the midnight shelter. after i saw that i, i just left, i decided not to be down there. so there are a lot of people who are struggling with mental health issues on schedule. a part of that is because, um, you know, homelessness by itself is so much trauma on people site keep that, you know, regular people just being on the street end up with a mental illness. but then also because we have such a fractured health care system in the us and a big part of it is having really no support for people with mental illness. so the way the hospital system works,
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aspect of the nice old days the state doesn't pay for the care of patients. so what the hospitals do is they medicaid them and they dropped them off on skid row. that was a hospital vegas that was caught down being 1500 patients with the 500 on skid row, 500 in sacramento, and 500 in ad tucson, arizona. most of the time when i'm out here, i'm not even flying for money for itself. mostly just out here, just people watch you like watching the television. oh is. oh, good, interesting television because there's a bunch of weirdos and he's in 8th or older. in words, it almost looks like walking zombies from the movies, like it's going to pop up in there. i don't know. but now, but being on the real to barnett, it's bet no it attacks the muscles were the, it basically started filling up with water. it also attacks the strength and in
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their body, where they can keep steak a straight body up. so they're basically folded in half a have a slip, right? no real sleep in a bed laying down with a shower or anything like that for over over 8 days past the point of delirium. i'm now as a point of just totals exhausting and frustration of i can't get a hold of my family holidays. 4 years old and i look like them probably 60 because of what streets of done this is i. it's tiring. oh, so tired. i tried to go to the hospital because i have these stories for my hands from the shit they're putting in the, in the, in the medicine and the drugs is that, you know, i don't,
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i don't use anything with eagles or anything like that. i don't understand what's going on with is, you know, it's, and it's only select people there. they're destroying me, little bits at a time where rather disturbing the military, i was with the marine corps specifically more so a little bit in libya smaller. you have the people in small entry each other veterans and we treat each other. i here on the street certainly is the most wretched group of people i've ever met in my life. i wish that there was a button you can pushing it would exterminate all divides all the bad people who hurt people what 0 get raped in the only way. and when i tried to get the guy offer, i was attacked by his homeboys. they broke for my ridge. ah, they split my lip open. i mean, like they spoke me, a pretty good excuse my language, the so
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sensor bare users children with the little uh like uh, maybe a furnace kind of thing is smoky, small like smoky, the but don't need to be afraid and cho yates. so i'm fairly see in your lives because this person, this person like says and now you're going to go and do that just because you're frightening. you want acceptance. recognize siege, purge, low. understood is all the really everybody wants. sure. sometimes some people go buy a weird way of trying to get it is that everybody isn't as intuitive or in salvage, that everyone has all the skills and all the gifts and the ones that don't, we need to be loving and patient and understanding instead of hating them for what
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they're doing actually notice and then maybe it might be a different story. this kind of cute, being short stubby like sometimes you don't even know where you're going to sleep. watch it. you know, you to walk into a town, you don't know where despite is, don't know where you can pop it up to be safe. still not the surface place in words, world, it's made of cloth and easy, nice could cut through it. but what they don't know is i don't how to my girl. she's the ones that type of word that because i'm, i'm, i'm, i'm, i'm not violent. i don't like being, i don't wife violence. but this was the question, is she? she has a couple, what they call uh, she calls the retreat, kirby don sticks where she's not afraid to come out of the tent and bash mazda.
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you know, i would do that because i just don't like violets at all. it's my home. it's where i live every single night, many of called the recent presidential cycle of change election. this is probably true, but will this include american foreign policy? donald trump has a mandate to pursue change. he will have the power to change course for continuity to sketch. scott bennett, i'm a former united states army psychological warfare officer, really served in the state department counterterrorism office under investor del daily the . so i wanted to come here to russia in the dawn bass area and to gather the facts
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to take back to the american people. the hold on bass of the front lines, the square, the bombs and the bullets are raging. this is where people are dying. this is where the buildings are exploding the go. i wanted to see 1st hand the scars of war. the maybe we could do a little interview with oh my god,
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the here. tampa. right to you. there least here. i am grateful for the look here. see me in the right places like there's only exist. do you imagine where you will be at the place like this? well, you know, this is some of the attendance and the struggle that people go through trying to keep up with the rents. you know, it's a real struggle. and then it gets very real, especially when you have family children, you know, can you imagine, you know, what are you going fuel canada for you, right? and then you have children. i mean, my heart goes out to moms like her that, that i see her daughter i, she's going to school down the street. and i need some beautiful sight to see that
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. and, and we have a, we admired her as a mom. and we also admire that little child that is smart, right, beautiful, biggest smile. so she brings a big smile to our own faces. you know, i just put them doing well. but without affordable housing. and you know, many people be literally, as you say, living on the streets. i mean, when, when age of, uh bought this building, there were some people that were living here. so some of the range kind of just, it would be more affordable, but they have certain amount of units that are exclusively for people that don't have homes. so we work with them and place them. if we have any openings, you know, you may go to whoever it may be applying, but applications come really fast and, and the fills out fast. we have other buildings that we just bought. and as soon as
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they fix them, you fills out really quickly because, i mean, the people are waiting for housing for a long time. you know, we have shown this, the city that we can actually provide housing a much cheaper than what the, the city is doing. the city spends a lot of money and deliver very few apartment units. some of the units can start as low as a $100.00 compared to other places with the amount for to what we offer here. you pay close to $2000.00 for the bathroom and the kitchen area. so pretty much less than half a month. the other thing less martha was gonna lose her subsidized income through the program she was in, and she wouldn't have been able to afford the rent,
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but they were gonna put her in another one of our building. and she loved it here so much. we ended of just trying to advocate for her when she was able to stay and then we lowered her, her rent down some of them so she could stay somebody to go. yeah. can you go in any city or state? they have cranes there just over building. i mean, some of those buildings are left to empty and we have so we have enough here of empty buildings that we could put all the people who were on our streets and but that's why there's always talk. so cities having attacks for having empty spaces, so then they would be more incentivized to, to accept section 8 or taken families in or not look for their ideal candidate. but real estate, i think has just become this huge way to invest and they're not
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thinking about housing, people anymore. and i think that's all over the united states. they used to be the, you know, you, you would get a, have a family and you'd be able to get a house and every, every just being is progressive thing. i don't think that's happening for most anymore. the wiley yeah, i use my own eggs. i love the sea, so my dream is to one day have a place in my own with my husband and be either running around coram, or working at one brian aquarium. yeah. and studying the see guys, you know, sea creatures and taking care of. um i love to see as much as i loved out, which creatures would be the 1st animals in your inquiry and they're on their
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cellphones and any data have a spot for the crabs and the clams and the, the oysters, you know, just beat those. you actually can raise them and they can give you pearls, clams, and oysters. they can give you pearls if you have enough sand at the bottom, the much more unhappy with that. because then i don't get to to worry about. i got zeros dresser, so about you, you as a human being, how many suppressors do you have?
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i don't have a list for me as me. i got no, i'm happy exactly where i need to be free from all the lies that everybody cast around like parity and then decide, you know, one we, because you're not so dark, you're ok or more where you want the little more dress nicer. you're all right, judge bear to devote how people should look dressed at all those aspects. it's going for different forms of races, like my daddy. oh, you say keep it simple, stupid. i have one son was right. that's a little different story. that's one. i don't know the, another thing to add with homelessness in california. um one of the things and again across the board in the us as well. one of the biggest reasons we have this
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issue is we have a really broken foster care system up to 70 percent of the children exhibiting the foster care system in the us become homeless at some point in their life way. when they exit after they turn 21, they basically have very little access to services. but unfortunately, because the foster care system is so broken and because these kids are going through so much trauma, by the time they hit our streets, desktop for him, for mental illness, they might be suffering from a diction or they might be. they might be putting situations where a pushes them into into in conservation, which i'll do monthly means that they end up homeless late in life. your income match the cost of living back in my time, but it doesn't match anymore. in fact i who we get in certain scandinavian countries, they have a cap on there, the minimum, but you can get, which is like,
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i say, a $22.00 to $25000.00 a year. but in america, there's no cap on how much you could make or how little you can get, because you can get nothing or the sky's the limit. they're talking about slash and social security and slash and different things. i don't know why. we don't get enough as it is, you know what i'm saying, you work all your life and then you want to retire. but you can't really retire because uh, i might end up homeless eventually if, if there was, if the rent keeps going up, then you know, i may eventually get homeless my own so which i worry about, you know, we, so richter profit from all this corporations doing the pandemic on ebay. now, rick of prophets. we have more billing. there is now the neighbor before i. yet we have more people who are living in poverty and extreme poverty than ever before. corporations control and these know secret billing there's control, you know,
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bonded fixing america. so when that happens is every policy that comes out, the 1st thing that is going to be thought about is not the, the, the working class or the people is how is going to affect feeling next during the, by the, that's in put in us against each other, you know, the republicans said that democrats are the enemy, the democrats say the republicans, are the enemy. at the end of the day. the rule of enemy is the people that are seen power, you know, and we have a whole bunch of followers that don't see how they have sold us out. it would be a good starter one. so it's not that bad, but it's too small. it would be a good start or would you rather stay in a car by vehicle? yes. rather then yeah. and i'd have to learn how to drive all you have to learn for the drive. yeah. i don't have my license yet. i've never driven
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a car in my life. so that's why. so it's also called sprain during which is squared change 2 words put together. you basically make a sign. you fly walking down either a median or you sit on a street corner and hope to make money with way of like the most successful day. i made a 100 bucks on this corner. yeah, i do feel like there's a villain. evasion of people who are in house and their neighbors are, instead of helping them, they are looking at them as a problem in very dehumanizing way. and i think if they would just embrace them as their neighbor because they are their neighbors and share and be generous. i think
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the world's and all this circumstance with he'll have to leave it outside for a while like um, bein underneath the bridge and hearing the car. it's susan. you can waste a lot of energy and time thinking about negative things and not being pause while you're sitting there. you know, a lot of time being negative about it. you're missing out in the opportunities that to be there for you. while it's happening. like i said, the worst critics will be yourself, make things harder than what it should be. it's not that it's not that hard money. i'm sorry. we're good.
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oh, pressure for the hey mom, it's me. i want you to get detail out of here before i end up having to hurt myself or hurt somebody else or get hurt myself. really? the who's coming to that? um, i got an attacked inside of the target last night. i just got attacked and had my bike showing it's all by the same people using them crazy. everybody else things crazy. but i know it's for a fact. it's not the
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after the nazis bower in italy, states foreign policy became extremely aggressive. benito, mussolini needed glorious victories. he decided to achieve his ambitions in africa . despite the fact that formally libya had been coming to tell you in colony back in 1912, the vast territories of this country were not actually controlled by rome. the nazis decided to put an end to this. but as soon as the religious order of this genocide stood in their way, the arabs did not want to submit to foreign power and put up fierce resistance. dividers against colonialism were led by the seats of this inside order. omar l
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move star, who was nicknamed the lion of the desert for his incredible courage. despite the violent, bombardments and voice and gas usage, mass keyboard agents, and the imprisonment of the local population in concentration camps, the invaders could not cope with the era patriots for a decade. in 1931, omar l moves are, was captured and sentenced the hanging type of trial. the hero of the libyan people behaved very bravely and rejected. pardon? pursuing a policy of genocide, italy was only able to temporarily suppress libya, 18th of the entire population. more than 100000 people fell victim to their. however, just a few years later, the entail you enroll, collapsed. in 1951, libya became one of the 1st countries in africa to gain independence the the,
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the line scott bennett. i'm a former united states army psychological warfare officer. and he served in the state department counterterrorism office under investor del daily. so i wanted to come here to russia in the dawn bass area and gather the facts to take back to the american people for the course of the .

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