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tv   Documentary  RT  January 30, 2025 1:30pm-2:01pm EST

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or, or one die. and so the united states now the us senate is currently deciding on the nomination or tools a bod, helpful my democratic congress, man, as president trump to speak for director of national intelligence. local journalists, caleb mot behalf details along with robert kennedy junior, said to lead us health services. and on top of that, you got kosh patel, an outspoken critic of the api i set to become a leader of the agency. tulsa gabbert is one of 3 controversial appointments by us president donald trump. all of this has given trump's opponents quite a bit to speak about during the 2016 election installs the gabber and for trade herself as an anti establishment. rabble standing up to the d. n. c and her anti war stances got her labeled as a russian asset by hillary clinton and she endorsed bernie sanders rather than party favorite hillary rodham clinton. and she even met with syrian president
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bashar al assad. all of this earned her the rebuke of the establishment, but now donald trump has appointed her as his director of national intelligence before she entered the us congress, tulsa gabbert, worked with her father to oppose the l. g b t agenda in the state of hawaii. this certainly didn't match the trend among the democratic party at the time supporters rally behind tulsa gabber and seeing her as unafraid as saying things that might make her unpopular with the washington dc leads. democrats, republicans, the main stream media, the washington elite, essentially in the pocket of the military industrial complex. and rather than looking out for what's in the best interest of the american people, our national security, our country, they see dollar science when they look at ukraine, there are $25.00 to $30.00 us funded bio labs and ukraine. according to the us government. these bio labs are conducting research on dangers pathogens. ukraine is
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in an active or zone with widespread bombing, or tillery and showing. and these facilities, even in the best of circumstances, could easily be compromised and released these deadly pathogens. now light cove, it these passages no no borders the today's democratic party, it's controlled by fanatical ideologues who hate freedom. they despise the constitution. there is no shelter, as our leaders failed us them and they continue to fail us. now. it's not exactly clear why donald trump shows to a point, tulsa gabbert is director of national intelligence, but those who support her see her as blocking the establishment and opposing the washington d. c. elite that seems committed to endless war caleb off in washington, dc. a lot less, they are big now still with our international sites for watching the
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last real jobs that last job i got a paycheck from was a college professor in new york city at the digital new york film academy. and i tried to make 20 programming languages in different classes. i have all the courses here and i found them all recently, which is great. like i always looked at my google drive. and i was like, i have recordings of my lectures. i have my quote, i have my lesson plans. my are, is, is digital. i actually joined a, our community in brooklyn to, to just to, to prove that to myself and to other people that are taken out to do is art as well . and, you know, by the end, they agreed, you know, because i was making
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a guy that talked back to me. i was doing gallery shows where we will put people in a room. you know, we have like a bunch of mannequins like 5 mannequins with different, different personalities, you know, little different a personalities and we put people in the room for 5 or 10 minutes. and as soon as you say a single word, they all start cascading a golf of each other. so you have this really like a conversation with 5 different people, like i have one had a jamaica next. and that goes that different temperaments are women. have you heard of the technological singularity? the technological singularity is the hypothesis that the invention that artificial super intelligence will abruptly trigger runaway technological growth resulting and non fat and the goal changes to human civilization muffler. the can you tell please, what is its left and what is the cost of sitting there?
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should i have right here? like i say, this is one of the dining halls. so, and you can tell that by this long stretch right here. this is where the dining room was, is where the officers sit down and they stablish probably a storage st, cuz you could tell there was walls went there. you could tell were all the walls when i bet any money that high rise section right there. there was where they went and got their food. it was a mess, all written, you know, the soldiers food place. you know, we call the mess in the military. i don't know why they call it the mess, but that's what it is, right? there are forest labs just like this one around here. i mean, exactly the same pattern, the military, this was just a temporary base during world war 2. while there are training the guys to go to war, you know, and then the, so after the words they, they close this base down the think
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a 1st year i was out here. all these feel this was like a field and there was so much green on it like the plants. so we see right here where like feel like it looked like a blanket blanket of green and there was these, i don't know what kind of butterfly they were, but they're migrating and you'd walk through and they just like lift up and it was like, you know, like a blanket moved on right here. i'm going to put in uh, a grove or uh an orchard with um apple trees, you know, citrus a full variety pomegranate. a lot of different things. my sister's husband bought me 14 trees for trees. so maybe putting those in the i built the staircase of 4 years ago now it goes down or up the end of it up to the top of the tank wall. and
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then i did a whole ladder on the inside that goes down into the tank. and it's a if you're afraid of heights and might be a little challenging, but all cell phone, cell phone for me. i've built this staircase and 7 days for the just to get in the thing the, i want to make it into an off of bond where i have vertical aqua phonics coming down the walls. and then i want to grow bits in here that want to have a truck all way around. $471.00 foot circumference. yeah. it's going to be a big project like to go enough to provide for the community for the most part from your fruits, industrials,
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and maybe you have livestock as far as chickens. i always want to keep costs for garden dogs. easy be coming down the wall, right? here the like that and come back and drop down into the the trough. this trough would be like maybe 3 feet off and wall about 3 feet high. and just put a legal parapet wall right here to check this, but yeah, i just use what i got here. usually i re a poster receipt, but i'm kind of looking for something like that drugs. okay. yeah. okay. well, i will say that i got something to do every day, and it's a good thing your life stay busy because i've been through some crap in my life and i'm a processor. and oh yeah, you know,
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i don't hold myself to my pass, but if you say you don't think about it, you know, believe me, i've done some pretty things now. yeah, that's why i'm saying, uh maybe you can help me out cuz i'm telling you, man, it's a weird bike. put those sparks rather natural. yeah. cuz just go the other way. just like that. yeah. last night and my last wife i shot my brother in law. i got sent to bring in board. i've just said god, today i doing, telling me so a yeah. this is less that they do more hours or she divorce me. you know there, there. i mean, i can talk about it now, but it was a very difficult time. i. i remember that time and being in prison on top of that, i couldn't even talk when i go to oh, my mouth i my crack which is and that i was broken, hasn't man,
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but i did down there. i mean, it was a restaurant space. there. i remember though to see it that was only 5 years ago or so for me you yeah. about 5 years minus the 7 months and then 7 months that i left it for prison for 7 months. i'd rather talk about the future in like what i'm just doing now, you know then, and then all the problems they gotten here. but i mean, you know, you have to bring it up, i suppose. just so you know, the, the whole story. you don't want to. yeah. yeah. it's not that big a deal though. i guess just seem like a lot when i was going through it though, you know, and i seen a lot of other people too. so i got compassion for people because i've been there kind of a lot of it on a lot of the homeless things and stuff like that now. so i know what i know what
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it's like to get down there. they've gone in and try and come back up and i'm, i'm doing it. doing it slowly and so long. you've been here about 5 years. they picked me up about 6 months and after i'd been here, they picked me up right in my b mx bicycle down the side of the road was about 30 feet off the road. they stopped me for no light on my bike after sunset. and i had a warrant from san diego felony warrant for some stuff and, and that's why i came out here to try and trying get away from them because they're just, they were looking for things they were creating, creating problems where there was no problems. so they could profit off of it. okay, jim, you've already put select stuff in the sheet up in the after people are here because of the notice to go where they can function in society and the other hand of here because they loved the place and there's nowhere
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else they'd rather be than here. but i'm one of those people, so i to leave and i did for a little while. and i, i always remember that. and that's why i'm patient intolerant with people. because the, if i'm not serving, i'm taking a spot somewhere. someone can live here who has, who can live anywhere else. and so if i'm going to live here by my own choice, when i have the option to go to los angeles and do fine. and then i need to serve to make a student to earn my spot here several 100 people have passed through here. either under way, somewhere else or provide safe space to abuse women and to elderly people to mentally ill people, to addicts, to children. you know, if i have an extra trailer, i always i always making rooms out of it so that when people come near phase the state and they have one that
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i was married to until executive for, for all this 25 years that that had an extensive bank account, tell me. no. i played the game. i did the whole purpose and my cousin asking on time, what was it like living in the white man's world? and i went to the art sales floor and i'm like what we call him. the culture of old service. so that white man mentality of their just spectators. they're not participants in life. but they pay for adventures. call it the living. things are going to leave it every day. i was a born again. christian conservative house wise for politic 16. i gave him 6 capable of 5 kids and the baby came up to me. then once on that mostly
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and tough risk them swear, i lost my mind. it's no better place to be to the village in the some beautiful features and live free live. however, you want to get along with everyone who had all the dogs. how did the dogs get along with the goat? he think susan, one of them was. this is just a horn dog. your name again is mike. uh, mark. so he's my pulled hard for info, a marco paul. uh no, i know i get it as i was julie,
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and i guess in the sense that there are no authority is within the city. everyone is their own citizens, including the animal of her own free, awesome. and there's no organization except for what comes out except for what emerges from everyone coming together, bring their own situation to it and creating their own home and environment. and joining in when i 1st came there of most of the population here was snowbirds, you know, mom and pop. get to retire with age. the kids a wall left. so they sell the house and buy a big motor home and start traveling. and you could stay here for free. and so those were the people i met when i 1st came here are the people all started getting old. owning a motor home got is 30,
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getting more expensive than the economies started going down and are all those factors together those that crowd of people died out. but now i, in the world today the, there's a lot of people that don't have a way to build a life that you'd want, you know, the ranking on some p like so what i can say is i'm going to start remembering the whole. so there we have a lot of refugees. we don't have to have in the regrets for refugees because we got refugees right here. you know, you see the, all the, the blue tart homeless people in los angeles and, and the other cities. i'm sure this is better living than living and skid row
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los angeles, you know, that's gotta be so hopeless. it's heavy. i think about this because i'm in fear of what they think about. then i see a bunch of hungry people feel and this is blessing, right? here for all that food we get him. we good. try like you to feel a lot of this whole thing to they come and look every month. but every month, feel they make sure that we hit, we have food out here. you know, a lot of people are hungry there. don't have no money or anything. vices, you know, say yeah, it's all good to love the community that helps people out here. that's what i love the most likely that all of this is one big happy family. that's what i like. and even though you see people here with nothing, you know, some of them are cardboard checks. you know that,
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but the cardboard shack of real coffee, if you just been sleeping on the dirt, you know, and you get a few odd jobs and maybe you could find a rundown, broken down trailer to, to leave it. and then i was talking to steve, you can pull your life together and that kind of way here for if you're in the city, have to do is never ever met the cancellation in your car and to see. yeah, you know, those, those sites you run you off, but i'm not always nice because that's why we call this the last free place because it is not because you can't live here in free. it's because you can be here and nobody's going to persecute, prosecute you about it. you know, you're just laying down in the dirt here. people are just coming to ask if you're all right, but nobody's going to guard you off to jail for 077 decades, your new sure. but uh so you know,
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here you can do the things you wanna do without having to have uh you didn't turn in jail, have people take what you are now? i gotta talk reading tony sometimes who is doing this program over here. so yes, thank goodness, in my little kitchen area is in transition, as is, everything's really in transition all of his time. but uh, yeah, so it's all scramble around right now and when i get done with it, well i have a good job. what is it? i don't know what cooking with gas now. you were out for 2 days. yeah, i don't know. hardly ever run i guess, but somehow within pollution way it is and things costs. and so what we're apps, roger, i just heard from my beer because it's like i said, inflation oh, inflation is gone up. so i a last one year. i mean it's been going up for like 4 or 5 years now. but the last year that's just really checked is right in your wallet.
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you know, right in a money department, if you force, you know, if you get money out here, some of us are and some of us aren't. so everything has gone up and show much in price, and especially if you have to shop right here in town through, gosh, robbery is a 1st degree you get food stamps once a month. i just but i buy cheap natives. very try to get my money is last as long as i possibly can. i mean, i got a couple more years. retired that's. that's the goal here in future retirement. and after that, yeah, got some things to do 6, that's the fix for the new man. it's up 7, said 17 obviously i just,
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i bought it near 7 bucks for dylan. sitting here is the problem. i'm that for this and in 2009 or 10 to the airbag issue, still gotta get ready to get your money. oh wow. i worked steve for 25 years and whatnot, and then all a sudden it gave me as a, you know, um, literally disturb kind of but as i have your list here and then the body shop here for uh, you know, you got your option down the highs and lows and this kind of thing. and that is um you know, considered to be a handicapped. oh sure. yeah. to where they you know, ship them like your hands on there. i mentioned that mine was uh, yeah, i will. i love the torch feeding. i wish a welder to, but well, garage
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a pretty good welder, but in your torch department and bidding, no, why was that the top? so you said you wouldn't be probably able to make it out there with the amount of money. oh, hell no. but you have to have 2 or 3 people you know, conglomerate, and together to do you have enough money to pay the rent japan's your electric, just pay your sewer bill. and obviously, again, by your groceries, you know, as you, it has a good combination of people where we're here with, we do do it in combinations of people. we help each other. sure. and as a good thing, over a year ago, we started what we call these labs, the soup kitchen, cuz every poor community, an american, and brought like it, almost a world nowadays has some kind of free feeding, but we didn't like study. so i'm starting a little over a year ago on christmas morning. we started feeding on sundays and we've been feeding every sunday for a year. and as you can see, we're starting
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a little thing here. um and it just is just trying to help our neighbors out. and i mean, it is a place to congregate and always eat. and joe is all done by one man named lorenzo . even when he's our cook. i kind of put it together in between to, to meet him in a couple of their homes or for him, put it out, you're on the streets and i mean, you know, trying to change what chance and change these things out here. i'm sure you see, i mean, slides to these are place, you know, a free meal in a bag and food is a nice thing every week. we're all not at the back of food yet, but we're trying to get bags of food too. so we do every sunday we feed before i can this lives. i was on the streets. i've been in the science of 15 years. i've been in prison, i've sold drugs. i've, i've done a lot of things. and for one is i want to do something nice for somebody. so we decided feet. and i mean, i cleaned up stop doing drugs and open up a soup kitchen in my town. yeah. and start getting bags that always taking. i mean, everybody goes up. everybody goes up, somebody has always started early, early learning, you know, call me slow. you know, i think is like, it took 40 years or 20 years, however long. it took me a long time to figure this out. but this is what makes me happy. now,
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when everybody can get to play the food there and they're smiling, trapped jobs. oh them to me in there may the term does your letter re page was the age of 1st. so the what are we the it's all uh let me see. i think opening day was new year's eve and oh, to me. right. i don't make money. you know, if anything i spend my money the reason i've kept it for 20 years is the only thing
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i ever did that made a difference in the world. you know, if this wasn't here, the people that out would be quite a bit different. i think issue, you know, you look around our existence, things to check and look rather bleak. look, but this is the thing we're, that the humanity of the beauty of, of life comes out the feeling of, of the art, the feeling of people feeling like they're an artist, as opposed to a vandal, if it affects the selective, the collective self image of everybody here to be part of this, you know, even though it is adult play of the growth. yeah. really bad actually. so my friend screwed this piece of metal on and i,
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when i read poxy, did you say you say that the you wants to play? did 13 year yeah, i learned like, uh, maybe 3 years ago now. maybe a little less than that and was a and wasn't conspiring to where they were in the range. and yeah, yeah i, i said there for a year and a half or 2 years cuz i live like music, you know, so we sit in the phone and i watched them and i love it. i did it in new york. you like watching music and it's like, i can do that just like most people in the audience, you look in there and you're like, i can never do that right. i can learn how to play guitar in my fourties and they were, they know a single court, you know, where they're had to sing to which and the most thing i would do is like i'm doesn't care, you'll be set after them. good half of them. and then we learn how to write songs too, and we do a lot at the same time. and i'm going to stand up there next to my heroes, you know, next to build a bill and all these amazing jones that people that view, you know, they're also my family, all those people. so they'll then me their instruments. and i was like, these,
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me another car getting too serious and yeah, now i know like 4050 songs though, and i wrote saves a phone with a carrier that i can do that most. no, no, no was . that's what brought me here. was the public guard or kept me here. it was brought to it when i got here ignorant. i didn't know nothing about swenson but it was the public car and some of the minerals out here. bloom, my my and if that was something with inspire you to stay. yeah, cause is not a lot of places who are in america where you can do this and not be criminalized. right here, you can do any kind of art and it's not criminal. it's appreciated and it's not in some phases, it becomes famous. so this is my original taxidermy dinner party that i, i did,
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i think it was 3 years ago when i set this up originally in there. so we've got young bucks. i'll go back and grandma back and young back is here bragging about this guy. he's like, oh my gosh, him is there so stupid? i was just hiding behind a tree. i just lasted him right in his face while he was filling up. his car with gas is going to be years like, you know, we could add, think we research human some, you know, prostitution rings, drug brings the homeless. there's so many places we can get people besides us. and grandma, that's why police are feed me. i'm starting. see, i will stay here as long as i'm happy here and right now, i mean, and it's like a dream come true to be living here and having the amount of people that come through every day that i get to share this with and get some people are like mortified, some people are excited, some people are like, oh my gosh, i love your brain and it's like, i didn't really get that kind of attention and feedback when i've been doing my
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artworks in my life. like even like the 1st post i did of like a baby at all. i put horns on the back to make it look like wings or something and i posted it on like some obscure, like, not instagram, it's like google plus or somewhere and i are. the only thing was one person to be like, oh that's weird, like delete that big with the did the whole fishing? yeah. that's the plague of christianity that it's not against christians. it's just the christianity crusades and what not the propagation of one religion type of thing. and then the plague, i don't know, it's kind of open to interpretation just to put the name alone the i'm not an atheist living here in the desert. you find you find spirituality all over the place. so you get really connected to a lot of things here. the
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on the home last, a huge crowds of people slot at the streets of the west bank city of ramada. as the boss, full of prison is released from the prison arrive that usual previously delayed the exchange the earlier in the day. have my eyes read these 8 hostages as part of the agreement. some of them were taking to a nice ready hospitals to check on the health and e's real prohibit. so you an agency that was crucial in assessing palestinian refugees.

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