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the prosecutor general's office of ukraine a cure those former r r r r r r r r r r r presiden mosque and church and on to your own mind on that city's major embezzlement of state property and power takeover. he is put on the international wanted list richard. this is a full class president. he's a legitimate president. it's common knowledge tennis tennis on the american record and currently the number is its quest to make a decision on de campos extradition but because he is a legitimate president the unit which has a lot of dirt seventy seven the land hating on you cram financial intelligence is investigating then uses of the un appointed government during the month. it was provided to it evidences of over one hundred and twenty corruption facts. among them embezzlement of state bonds and property by former president himself his family and his officials are to be lining up the block and that counts in ukraine and banks an investigation is meant to him in one hundred and thirty six countries of the world chretien got a new constitution. it was adopted by the self declared state counc
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r r reentry, and now they're considered criminals. not only my experiences once you're in the deportation proceedings you can't get off, but there are so many risks along the way of living as an undocumented immigrants that you could get caught in the net. >> we're going to take a break. when we come back we'll talk more about what deportation means and how it's proving problematic for many people and we'll talk about what the new rules are. hardly anybody can really explain them well. stay with us. this is inside story. >> welcome back to inside story. i'm ray suarez. immigration and deportation this time on the program. how the u.s. handles those in the process of being deported. how the system work. al jazeera america will premiere it's new series on immigration, the lives in this country and their legal status. it's called "borderland." our guides to the issue are not reporters or politicians, but six every day americans with different opinions of how the country should handle the millions here illegally. in episode two, participates, a retired marine from illinois and an artist in new york city mitre transport dropping off deportees in central america. >> there was clapping, and i'm like, what is that about . they're treated humanely and provide any form of medical services that they might need. we immediately give them food and something to drink. there is a mixture of feelings coming back to this country, but you can tell there is not just a somberness, but of what they left behind. >> in the last two years an estimated 200,000 families in the united states have been torn apart by deportation. like myra, many of those being processed are desperate to return to their loved ones as soon as possible. >> how does it feel to leave your family? >> i feel bad, you know . i was 14 years in dallas, i feel kind of bad because i leave my wife and my two kids. >> you leave your wife and child behind, how are you going to see them again? >> well, right now, computer. video. >> that's a clip from border land, the original series debuts on al jazeera america 9:00 eastern. the man who left dallas and left his family behind said he hasn't decided if he'll try to get back to the united states. many do go back, and many do get caught again. just that re-entry is serious enough of an offense that that thanksgiving can be considered the serious crime that moves you to the top of the deportation list. >> that's statutory. congress decided to make that a punishable offense. in many of the ramped up aggravated felonies, most of which are not felonies, but they're called aggravated felonies. they can be used to put them to the top of the--they don't say deportation but congress calls it removal which is more clinical. >> can a hearing officer look at that fact, the serious crime you're charged with is just, in fact, coming back, and use the discretion not to send you back again? >> in some instances they can. the different is the use of prosecutorial discretion by an agency out in the field is guided by the laws and recognizealations also. so these aggravated felonies don't give you that discretion because it ends up being a mandatory detention type of case. the officer will look at that discretion and say do i want to be the person knowing that this person may have committed a crime already in the past, to now give them a pass the second time around. why don't i just take them into custody, reduce my own personal liability. let an immigration judge or immigration attorney exercise their discretion, and ultimately it could go back to the agency, a member of congress can ask for that discretion to be used. so to almost ask the officer in the field to make that decision where he's not sure that everyone will support him up the line if that person were to come back and do something again, the likelihood of them exercising that discretion is not as high as you would think. >> is there a discernible pattern of it going harder for you if you're arrested in one part of the country as opposed to another, where there are certain immigration judge who is might an little tougher, a little harder on the people who come before them than in other places in the country? >> again, part of the discretion is that every field director has a chance to exercise the way they see fit. we've seen, for example, a lot of deportations of people who have immigration histories in new orleans where they specifically have a pilot program called the new orleans criminal removal initiative that target specifically people with criminal histories and people with deportation backgrounds. i mean, honestly the reality of that all over the country in places like chicago, cook county where i grew up, where that is supposed to be a sanctuary county where ice does not cooperate with the police, you have ice going into people's houses asking if they have relevant criminal histories and removing them for proceedings. >> should people who are sent out of the country, should they think very carefully, even if they have families here, kids, should they think carefully whether or not they come back because that's bound to go worse for them when they try to regularize their status down the road if there is comprehensive immigration reform. >> as far as the senate bill which passed last year goes, no, that is not a factor, but it is a factor under current law. i wouldn't have much advice to give someone in that position. whether to commit an act of love as you jeb bush said, or whether to stay put. that literally takes an act of congress, and we haven't had one. >> when we return we'll talk more about the detention centers, how they're working, how many people are in them. this is inside story. >> on the next talk to al aljazeera... >> i'm antonio mora and this is talk to al jazeera >> award winning documentary director ken burns, talks about his craft, and his latest project on the gettysburg address talk to al jazeera only on al jazeera america r >> hai'm ray suarez. r it's well-known that 2 million people have been deported in the first hive years of the obama administration. what is not as well-known is how it works. who is being deported. how the process works. we're tackling that part of the story. with us, defense organizer for the national day labor organizing network. mark ma mancini who specialize ms. immigration, and john torres who from 2008-2009 was acting director of ice. what is it like in the detention centers? is there a pattern? are they roughly the same everywhere in the country? >> i've never been inside of a detention center myself. i've worked with a lot of people who have. i don't think that it's the same everywhere around the country because the standards are so hard to implement especially with private prisons. one thing that we do know is that we have lots of people who are in detention centers who are complaining about the conditions, the pay and the treatment that they're getting and lack of ability
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r. r. martin hasn't finish writing the books yet. yeah so if you're wondering who's most likely to die at the end, it's george r. r. martin. great show. give it up for a roots right there! [ cheers and applause ] ♪ >> jimmy: yeah. welcome everybody. we have fun tonight. we got more big shows ahead. tomorrow night academy award winner kevin costner will be here. [ cheers and applause ] plus alan cumming will perform a song from "cabaret." can't wait for that. it's going to happen here. he's the best. the greatest. and then on friday, [ nicolas cage impression ] nicolas cage is here. [ cheers and applause ] and we'll have music from kiss! >> steve: whoa! [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: that's going to be nuts, on friday. but first tonight. i cannot wait for this show tonight. from the new movie "draft day", the lovely, the talented jennifer garner is here! [ cheers and applause ] that'll be great, she's in "dallas buyers club." i can't believe these guys are on the show tonight. i can't wait to talk to them. from nirvana. this week they will be inducted into the rock and roll hall of fame! [ cheers and applause ] dave groh
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. >> my name is judy roland, i'm the project manage /-r. r. the lower box that was shown -- i believe they were depicting the bbu /pwhrobgs. box. the dimensions on that box are 27 inches high. it has to be a minimum 17 feet from the street -- if it's on the street side of the pole and has to clear, like, high profile vehicles that would come up the street. >> how many feet? >> 17 feet above the ground. if we turn it the other way, we could turn it the other way, but we are limited to how close we can be to the existing utilities on the pole. >> in one of our previous hearings i recall there was some discussion, and it may not have been your company, but one of the other companies that the technology is changing a little bit in terms of some of the equipment getting a little smaller and thinner. is this the thinnest equipment that you can provide? >> this is the only technology that's available to us that's vast technology that does what we need it to as far as the frequencies, the capacity that -- to carry at /t*rbg's service. we actually look
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there are those who are charged r r reentry, and now they're considered criminals. not only my experiences once you're in the deportation proceedings you can't get off, but there are so many risks along the way of living as an undocumented immigrants that you could get caught in the net. >> we're going to take a break. when we come back we'll talk more about what deportation means and how it's proving problematic for many people and we'll talk about what the new rules are. hardly anybody can really explain them well. stay with us. this is inside story. >> what excites me about detroit is the feeling of possibility... >> the re-birth of an america city >> we're looking at what every city can learn from detroit, >> the industrial revival entrepreneurs driving growth communities fighting back... >> we're fighting for you and we're taking these neighborhoods back, for you. >> a special look at the moves adding fuel to the motor city five days in detroit only on al jazeera america. >> now inroducing, the new al jazeea america mobile news app. get our exclusive in depth,
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there are those who are charged r r reentry, and now they're considered criminals. not only my experiences once you're in the deportation proceedings you can't get off, but there are so many risks along the way of living as an undocumented immigrants that you could get caught in the net. >> we're going to take a break. when we come back we'll talk more about what deportation means and how it's proving problematic for many people and we'll talk about what the new rules are. hardly anybody can really explain them well. stay with us. this is inside story. >> aljazeera america presents a break through television event borderland... six strangers... >> let's just send them back to mexico >> experience illegal immigration up close and personal. >> it's overwhelming to see this many people that have perished. >> lost lives are re-lived... >> all of these people shouldn't be dead. >> will there differences bring them together, or tear them apart. >> the only way to find out is to see it yourselves. >> which side of the fence are you on? borderland only on al jazeera america
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with his eyes t-o-r-t-u-r-e, t-o-r-t-u-r-e, t-o-r-t-u-r-e. george mcknight, george coker, george mcknight was a boxer from oregon. george coker was a state wrestling champion from new jersey. these guys were like molotov cocktail. these guys were part to the most in senior prisoners that they had over there because for the second the land in north vietnam they hated their captors and they let them know. they never let them forget it. in fact, these two escaped. i'm not going to tell you what exactly happens because i want you to read a book and find out, but one of the best sites doors of the entire pow era is what these two characters did, how they got out of their cells and how far they got. it's an amazing story. harry jenkins and howard rutledge. these two men were both commanders, both squadron commander, ended up being kind of laurel and hardy, the african fracked of the pows. they were never more than -- african fracked of the putative. 30 feet apart for eight years. for the first years there were number number three feet apart with th
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witnesses say the violence began in the school's science wing, r&r the attacker ran through classrooms and hallways before he was tackled near the building's main entrance by an assistant principal and a school police officer, who is among at least 20 injured. 17-year-old zack ansler was supposed to be in that hallway. >> you think you're so safe there and then something like that can just happen. >> reporter: the victims were rushed to four nearby hospitals. doctors say a 17-year-old stabbed in the chest is now on life support. >> fortunately for this young man the knife missed his head and his aorta. he had injuries to his liver, his diaphragm, and major blood vessels between the chest and the abdomen. >> reporter: parents waited helplessly to be reunited with their children, frantically trying to find out if they were okay. among them, zack's mom. >> kills you to know that your kids are in there and you can't get them out and you can't do anything about it. it's terrible. >> reporter: the school tucked away in a rural community where some families say they moved to escape urban crim
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effort to make it look super polished, so a great app or website that i use is called five er f-i-v-e-r-ryou've got to really sort through, you can find people doing cool things, including stingers and graphics, stuff that will make your video and online marketing shock. >> a key aspect is customer service and one app that we found very valuable and that's camtasia. it allows you to record a screen path on your computer and we send that to our customers when they have a question. so we are no longer really typing customer service responses. we take a screen camp and customers love watching the video. it's a medium they're used to seeing. they're used to that communication, and they're used to acting on that information. >> it's time now to answer some of your business questions. let's get our board of directors in here to help us. carol roth is an on-air contributor at cnbc. she's a former investment banker and entrepreneur and an investor. and john jantsch is a marketing consultant best known for creating the duct tape marketing system. his new upcoming book is called duct tape selling.
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r & r acanteur will be gone. they will have common words based upon context. here is an example from the reading section. the coming decades will likely see more intense clustering of jobs, innovation in a smaller number of bigger cities and regions. the question is: >> the answer? >> i go with b. >> you can say whenever in doubt, go with b. take our word for it. we know that a few questions will be based upon america's founding documents like the constitution or on text about justits amend freedom. the section that has been the hardest for me, math. calculated or allowed on some sections in the math section. here is an example where you cannot use one. can you figure this out, tony? do it quickly in your head. okay. >> ready? >> the question is: in the equation above what is the value of k? >> ready? when it doubt, go with b. >> so smart. the answer is b. of course. a couple of other changes. the total score will drop from 2400 back to 1600. students will be able to take the test on paper or on a computer. tony, the college board over seeing the test is also going to offer free online courses for students to prepare for it through the kahn academy. they want to lay level the playing field. >> my kids and parents all over the country paying for the kids' prep. >> did you take the sat? >> i think i mentioned earlier, i turned off my sat brain before i took the test. >> really? especially math? >> i believe. >> thank you,ines. thousands of australians turned out to welcome prince william and his family. australia is a constitutional monarchy. >> could change before the duke who is second in the line to king. andrew takes a look at the prospects of australia becoming a republic. >> they call this a royal tour, a chance for future monarchs to meet their future subjects because the united kingdom's monarch is also australias then the company won independence in 1901, they remain a constitutional monarchwy a kick or queen it's formal head of state, too. prince william will become kick william of australia, baby george will one day be king george here. >> somebody to look up to. >> that's how i was brought up, and i want my young children to do the same. >> this is as much about celebrity as it is about roy royalty. even sew, you won't find many here critical of australia's attachme attachment. >> isn't universally shared. >> david morris thinks australia should be a republic with its own australian head of state? >> the constitution tells us someone on a throne in a palace has to set above us. >> a referendum was held on whether australia should ditch the monarch i for a president elected by members of the par rame parliament. people ventoted against change. elizabeth ii remains australia's queen. the queen son made his own trip to australia when his son, william, was a baby. since then, charles' popularity dropped but as the baby became a husband and a father, support for the royal family has risen again. opinion polls show a slight but growing majority in favor of keeping the monarchy. >> in a word, should australia be a republic or a monarch i? >> monarch i. >> monarch i? >> republic blic. >> monarchy, of course. >> with celebrities at the helm, the debate is on hold? >> the british family are fabulous. they are promoting grand britain very effectively. we look forward to the day when the brains will welcome an australian. >> this trip, the english couple and their baby son have ten days in australia. whether william or george will one day come back as kings will be up to their family subjects on the other side of the world. andrew thomas t al jazeera. >>dronnies the new online craze of ta
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secretary of interior standards but not seeing a significant impact in sequa do they have to do the r i r. >> for other reasons. >> can you come up. >> if it's not if there are no significant impacts under sequa and clearly no significant impacts under sequa there's no requirement to do an eir and they wouldn't have had to do an eir. >> thank you, ms. jones. >> i wanted to directing your attention to some of the other sections in sequa. specifically the recommendation this or that is the collaborative process where a project sponsor wants to comply that the secretary of interior standards but prefer to meet with the planning department staff and learn what we need to do s to have a compliant project early on as opposed to going through the laborious processes and then find out their project didn't conform. i think for belittling 16 it will be helpful to have a timeline when the update is implemented you've been talking about that and it will be great to have that and recommendation 16 we've talked about the new process for conducting the hr e's. will clarifying what they're required for p
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fresh off some much-needed r&r. >> beyonce is sharing her family vacation with her fans, posting somes on line. here she is in the dominican republic taking a peaceful walk with 2-year-old blue ivy. >> wow. the musical couple there, power couple celebrating their sixth wedding anniversary on the beach and looking very much in love. >> in the bikini looking amazing with no make-up, as usual. all that downtime after wrapping up more than 100 shows for her world tour. i said it before, i'm going to say it again -- how many beautiful vacation pictures in paradise do i have to see before -- i love her -- before i'm like, i'm a little jealous? >> yeah, i'm a little jealous. that's for sure. >> a little jealous. >>> all right. another lady who's working hard -- something like that -- is kim kardashian. she says she's a little tired these days. >> come on! kardashian admitted to having some exhaustion on her way in to an early morning workout. she's been struggling through some nights dealing with baby north. girl, i know the feeling. welcome to motherhood and to humanity. >> in addition to b
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mission and insert is the first mission again blake been very b e and b e r r y of care on the last name is none of the raglan r a g l a n d a car fire southbound 68 at the montague expressway. over at the bay bridge this morning traffic is increasing. the meter and actors the loss. never at the san mateo bridge despite the rain drive time to adjust well to 13 minutes. very light conditions and of cash payment lanes in both fasttrack and lanes. as the ticket over to the traffic maps. still seeing top speeds for your ride out of tracy. >>:noon funeral for u.s. marine was killed by an allegedly drunk driver while riding his motorcycle in fremont on march 24. note: the funeral is set for friday. this weekend.officials are holding a gun buyback in san francisco's visitacion valley neighborhood. on saturday between 9 a.m. and 2 p.m., participants can drop off guns for cash at the grocery outlet on bayshore boulevard. participants must arrive with unloaded guns in the trunk of a car. guns in working condition will get 100-dollars. assault weapons can be returned for up to 200- dollars. each car that comes through can
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up next, millions of americans will head out for r & r this summer. is there a way to invest?ove, more "mad money" after the break. >>> and later -- like it's 1999? cher had the hottest song. and dot com stocks were dancing all over wall street. >> market had a record day. >> but it wasn't long until the bubble burst on the entire party. will some of today's biggest momentum names suffer the same fate? fate? [ male announcer ] the wright brothers started in a garage. mattel started in a garage. disney started in a garage. amazon started in a garage. ♪ the ramones started in a garage. my point? some of the most innovative things in the world come out of american garages. introducing the lighter, faster cadillac cts. 2014 motor trend car of the year. ain't garages great? for $175 dollars a month? so our business can be on at&t's network yup. all five of you for $175. our clients need a lot of attention. there's unlimited talk and text. we're working deals all day. you get 10 gigabytes of data to share. what about expansion potential? add a line anytime for 15 bucks a month. low
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r t bars cover of the crisis in ukraine was biased. the country's media watchdog called the programming coming from group c o r t r war propaganda. ukraine has quit to broadcasting and the all russian state owned tv channels most of which have been whipping up fear and russian speaking ukraine is a country in the grip of the new nazis and fascists analysts say propaganda on russian tv looks today like it did during the cold war and generally only contains a small grain of truth the only two milton has played to the jewish wife of fraud says new prime minister michael bell's influenced his opinions on the controversial mill just a thirty five year old former west brom striker at that he had to foul swoop put as much energy into fixing prawns as he did invite him to begin to donate the inventor of the widely perceived anti semitic with no texture and open toed francaise mantra news that the few describe people to the phone to quinn ella's anti semitic than is like claiming the priests of paedophiles and all muslims are terrorists an okay read it right. he was into anti semitic and they have no problem with the jewish community. my
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r r t. so the motos chose to shoulder the massive cost of global security by itself but of course is going to be those cash strapped american and european citizens who are going to be those taxpayers and be bearing the brunt of the bill end of the day well more than half of the world's to from spending a whole warping trillion dollars is poured into the alliance every single year that figure dwarfs the defense budgets of countries viewed by nato as potential threat china russia one murray german military officer told us he thinks europeans are at risk of becoming pawns in washington's game of brinkmanship against moscow. since the one nine hundred ninety s. the u.s. has viewed itself and behaved as a winner because the soviet union was no longer an obstacle that's exactly why vladimir putin was right when he said the collapse of the u.s.s.r. was the biggest geopolitical catastrophe of the twentieth century the american store their hands were untied and they were free to act as they please but now china's become an economic superpower and this game cannot continue to be played by the old in the hope that we can find some way to convince the americans that they can't keep playing the role they chose in the ninety's there are some reasonable politicians in america who understand this the confrontation with russia cannot continue right now we're still seeing the same policy of containment from the one nine hundred forty seven only in a new form a new european should not become a tool of such policy. than the political standoff had a cosmic scale too in the way with nasa it's suspending contact with russian government officials for that sort of the story is gone if you can this is special includes nasa travel to russia and this is by the russian government representatives from nasa facilities bilateral. and teleconferences or video conferences at the present time and the operational international space station up to have been exempted in addition multilateral meetings held outside of russia that may include russian participation are not precluded under the present guidance so as we understand joint work with the international space station will continue meetings are possible but on a neutral pear tree u.s. astronauts are currently on board says their mission will not be affected we understand the launch of a so you swap it on april ninth will not be effective either but washington definitely giving russia the cold shoulder it's finding different ways to do that this one is at the expense of science and nasa scientists i spoke to the virgin news site on the condition of anonymity said. this masters goals are and political this is one of the first major actions i have heard from the u.s. government and it is to stop science and technology collaboration you're telling me there is nothing better the last time we were suspended ties like this was with the soviet union at the end of the nineteen seventies but the international space station was not even started yet at that time now some say if this moves beyond rhetoric washington could single handedly undermine cooperation that hundreds of scientists have worked tirelessly to build together throughout many years in washington i'm going to check on party. so crucial areas of cooperation do remain in touch you can see why if you look at the numbers that's because russian rockets to send americans into war with eleven times in recent years with more flights planned for twenty fourteen the u.s. also relies on russian made transporters to still launch satellites for government use that are also used to provide everyday ordinary people like you and me with internet access and g.p.s. and it's this dependence that nasa has been trying to reduce lately while all u.s. astronauts currently launch for the baikonur cosmodrome operated by russia nasa has been hoping to revive again its manned spaceflight capability from cape canaveral they're hoping by twenty seventeen the problem a server cash funding for years now the agency's been denied its budget request often having to settle for half of what it asked for one former director of the johnson space center told us he believes that by getting involved in political games see at nasa stepping on dangerous ground. we are working with common goals and objectives and we work together with russia very well they've been excellent partners and we have worked well to put the international space station together and everyone i've spoken with my fellow colleagues here both engineers and scientists are quite disappointed we don't think it's a very wise decision and certainly can affect the safety of operations of space when you're flying he was in space on the international space station you want to enhance cooperation in advance communications and when you start faking actions to lessen those communications it's not a very safe action and it's not a very wise thing to do. coming up ukraine's acting leaders point a finger at the police for the victims of sniper fire during the coup in kiev. i. just had in the program we'll bring you key evidence suggesting that the new leadership is choosing to look the other way it's coming up very soon. an audacious onslaught by rebel forces on the small syrian town of moscow to appeal to the un security council to investigate the border areas mostly populated by christian armenians hundreds of whom had to escape to safety. flags were raised overall for dogs churches there in the week the national reports claimed at least eighty civilians were killed after militants crossed the border from turkey the deaths have been verified a campaign those service on twitter with the hash tag save care sub drawing responses from celebrities with armenia backgrounds including american reality t.v. star kim kardashian and the singer share also mass rallies were held in the u.s. greece russia and several other countries to to bring attention to the community's life for sleazeball the store. paying the price for supporting president assad and being christian the syrian towns to sub populated mostly that it's me kamini is. weak i want to get the bombardment started early morning we struggled to save our son we were laying on the ground because of the heavy bombing the boy only just escaped damascus is jihadists crossed from over the turkish border to target civilians launching mortar attacks on the town and surrounding villages hundreds of families were forced to flee political nothing more or less look no there is nothing out we just left with what they were wearing and i ask you what is the i have two children my husband left he said he would join us but we've heard nothing from him i don't know where he is. so strategically important is one of the last remaining posts to. which rebels are able to pass from turkey to syria i'm pretty sure the church has provided all kinds of solutions to stop or chink living in the nation providing there isn't any lobbying down to that's really true it's borders they are accusations which and clear vehemently denies turkey had a long history of helping the. people coming from all over the world gave the syrian regime and freshly taking their entrance into syria training . for turkey to say well we didn't know or we couldn't stop it or something like that it's a little bit ridiculous i mean you know also suspects took involvement the two countries have a deeply painful past especially since the first world war genocide of more than a million armenians in one thousand sixteen i don't know if it's a coincidence or not it definitely speaks to the history of the armenian people and of course the wall of turkey i believe that the turkish government who has refused to recognize the armenian genocide of course utilizing the perhaps ongoing animosity towards me if you know as another mechanism for the destabilization of the multinational of the syrian. question i asked the united nations security council to examine the alleged attacks against armenians in concern but he declined a blow for vulnerable towns such as those flying along for risk order that's helping feed syria's civil war. r t. coming out the right road to victory polling station was closed in hungary when white when firebrand victor all but looks like you retain a comfortable grip on power with up to fifty percent of the break we'll tell you what makes him so popular. this week. first of all accusations of wrong. reports. many questions. this daily beast dot com article boasts off exclusive footage it says reveals exactly who is behind the shooting in kiev on february twentieth the writer claims to have sifted through ninety gigabytes of photo and video material to establish the identity of the kilis it's a tempting headline and a tale no doubt but looking at the four pictures provided the only thing they show is people with guns hardly a surprise on that day. it's also claimed the troops in the photos are from the alpha counterterrorism regiment a unit only authorized to shoot at people holding hostages or threatening the lives of v.i.p.'s. of the city nothing of what they did here on their own initiati
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puntos de seguridad, e. >> esta mos en la iglesia del e sepulcro santo y nuestros per r peregrinso no han podido inre rrinacio npara dar las gracias que se cosinsiguen cÉl.l >> desde jerusalÉn telemundo. >> lnadie pensarÍa que pelea d j judo podrÍa ser tierna, pero t esta pelea si lo es, las peque pequeÑas de 3 aÑos mostraron sus peleas en 3 minutos pero ellas se levantaban y se saludaba,a millones de psersonas han visto este video, nos vemos ellunes, g gracias por su sintonÍa. [balbuceos] [♪] [voz femenina] >>josÉ... toma a la mujer y al niÑo y ponte a salvo. josÉ... [voz masculina] >>toma a la mujer y al niÑo y ponte a salvo.
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r r reslute and ready. they are waiting for this day to get their atheir even -- revenge.er crosses at 7 p.m. and they hope to keep them safe. they will not rest until the race is over. >> such a beautiful day. we wish them well. pro-russian separatisseparatist to hold buildings and the standoff is becoming another test of president obama's strength in public policy. this has david brooks calls him out saying he as a quote manhood problem with foreign policy. >> let's face it, obama does have a, i will say it crudely, a manhood problem in the middle east. i think a lot of the wrap is unfair but this might not be. >> brett hume is here. what do you think of this? >> good thing he works for the new york times instead of ours where he would be under indictment for incorrect speech if he said that on our network. he said it is probably undeserved and talking about n perceptions of the president held by allies in the middle east. he was saying the president shrunk from forces like in syria where he backed off. and now he is engaging them as partners and trying to disarm them. >
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r r t new york investigative journalist robert perry he believes poor fucked checking is no one of the facts of life when it comes to today's western media. the new york times and really the entire u.s. news media pretty much has been very eager to take whatever negative information they can get regarding the russians and their role in ukraine this seems to be an example of that the new york times didn't know it was taken in russia or or ukraine or any place else on the earth really they were accepting the word into the kiev government or the state department the new york times presented it as flat fact that many of those ideals that we once held in american journalism have eroded and essentially disappeared and so what you're seeing now in the case of ukraine is the result of that it. could have you with us or a naughty international coming up a bit later on the program citizenship for sale five hundred thousand euros the price tag of a portuguese possible war with a country giving away residency in exchange for real estate spending the details of that story just around the corner. when our energy firms in britain could get the right to pump shale gas under people's land without their consent ministers want to make it easier to access the controversial fuel currently companies need permission from at landowners to build fracking tunnels if the owners object the developer has the option of appealing to the courts although the decision could go either way but now a major push toward shale gas in britain could see the courts being bypassed all together to remind you hydraulic fracturing involves sinking a vertical shaft on the ground and then right there gas deposits and then extracted by fracturing shale rock with high pressure blasts of chemicals the problem is these chemicals pollute the soil nearby lakes nearby rivers as they migrate back to the surface opponents say this also creates economic nation posing very serious health risks is on. u.k. government want to embrace shale gas extraction they say that it will create lots of new jobs that will make energy prices much lower and it will bring more money into local communities here in britain which is why the department for energy and climate change have confirmed to us that they are reviewing current legislation to basically make it easier for energy companies to come into the u.k. and start extracting shale gas so one change to the law that's apparently being looked at did allow energy companies to transport shale gas underneath private properties without the threat of being sued for trespassing so an energy company would still need to obtain permission in order to drill and drill wells for fracking but transportation would no longer be an issue so it's all part of a whitehall bid to reportedly lure more investors into britain this potential new law would reportedly provide financial compensation to homeowners under whose houses the shale gas would be transported but my prediction is that that is unlikely to placate the anti fracking movement here in the u.k. in fact changing the law to make fracking easier is likely to be somewhat controversial people are worried about the risk of contamination to go to table the risk of endangering wildlife potential small earthquakes that take place as a as a result of hydraulic fracturing not least they're worried about the value of their properties going down if it's next to a fracking site or above a pipeline. there's no easy route to you susan trip and it goes for your portugal it's open to anyone willing to spend half a million euros on property in the country residency for real estate is giving the economy a lift it's also sending the house prices through the roof. it's a lifestyle that's being sold around the world portugal sanden see can be anyone's for the right price splash out half a million euros on a place in the sun and you'll be given the right to live here so this apartment is around. thousand euros. we are talking about around seven thousand euros per square metre nuno has been selling properties to foreigners since the golden visa scheme was started two years ago it also gives take is the right to work in portugal and travel freely around most countries to six years they can then apply for a portuguese passport to be interest is coming from the chinese and there's plenty that attracts them first of all the life here very fresh air they can send their children to schools not in particles that are saying you are so far the portuguese government has granted over seven hundred such visas and they've generated over four hundred million euros for its hard hit economy but not everyone is impressed all of these investments are in real estate so what is happening is housing the center of lisbon or houses by the beach or whatever are going prices up it's speculation on real states and i'm pretty sure we all remember that this was the cause of the financial crisis nuno is doing well one of the best features is his real estate business deals with around one hundred forty golden visa clients a year but he's quick to point out it's not just him that benefits remember that these developers that are selling are buying new products and refurbishing lisbon and they are creating more jobs in construction and there are drivers that drive the client so the the economy is changing totally so there is some trickle down but it's not as much as promised the visas are also granted to anyone setting up a business employing more than ten people but that's not a popular option recently i guess it was a month or two ago there was news about the first job that was created front of this golden fleece i think. it's very little whatever the criticism selling a slice of the. good life is a popular money spinner spain sign prosy greece also badly affected by the financial crises run similar schemes. to gains and weighing any long term fees over reinflated property market andrew farmer for see it has been every comes from moscow a reminder now of our breaking news story for you here were naughty international at least five self-defense fighters and a policeman have been killed as a relaunch is a military crackdown on anti-government protesters in the eastern ukrainian city of slovyansk according to the interior ministry three self-defense checkpoints were destroyed with tanks snipers and troops now being deployed in the area meanwhile ukraine security services called the military operation quote extremely challenging saying they don't want any casualties among the civilian population ukraine's south east has been in the grip of mass protests for months with people defying the interim government in kiev as illegitimate and demanding greater. and we have many more updates on that breaking news story and i just over half an hour's time here on r.t. international for now though a very small break and then we take you backstage giving you the behind the scenes from some of our front line reports here want to see international. the stand off or should i say stand down by the government at the bundy ranch is probably the largest victory for the average american against the bureaucratic machine that any of us have seen in years in fact this event is a microcosm of what's going on in america he had this classical image of lots of such an american cowboy a rugged individual wronged by the corrupt federal government and their bureaucracy trying to take away his livelihood you know i bet a lot of you out there could really relate to this sort of narrative but there are certainly a lot of people who don't many of those in the mainstream and liberal media are enraged that bundy didn't immediately abandon one hundred forty years of family tradition on that land the second the federal government told him to because it's the law look i'm not the type of guy to wear a cowboy hat or pronounce the name of the country americo but i can tell you one thing the rugged individual in the usa did not flourish because he bowed to authority at the drop of a hat neil just give away anything that was rightfully his to the master and america also didn't flourish by sending agents who looked mostly like soldiers with assault rifles to break up protesters honestly when we look at the bundy ranch standoff we can clearly see everything that's right and everything that's wrong with america right now but that's just my opinion. right. now a. lot if. today and signs of progress in secret peace. where demonstrators refuse to release a case. or an. international news and call one's life from moscow you won't say international with me as you know. very well welcome to the program. several people have died as a government process in the ukrainian cops will go into a fool's consecutive day with a whole new level of violence. to do it was. good very quick so we have to feed it over to moscow and then we can use it in our lives. it's much louder than yesterday and the picture now is much better because you can see all the remains of the buses over here which pretty much tells you the story of how things and traveled yesterday. this morning in cuba but the tensions of sunday night are no dying down anytime soon you can see what remains of the police cars and police buses which was done yesterday afraid to take a picture of what happened here yesterday literally. fifty meters from here maybe even twenty meters we can see the police lines the riot police are over there they're trying to secure the perimeter from time to time there are clashes between the protesters and the police violence. from both sides we see pictures. of blood on the ground. what is happening. here is not likely to die down any time soon. right now we have to feed it over to moscow so they can use it my life. which is about fifteen minutes from now so we actually got to run a good thing we're so close to the whole scene actually because. this tells us a lot in terms of our speed so my friend the plan is like weekly upload it to moscow because i'll be having a live broadcast in forty minutes and it has to be included in the live broadcast so i hope we do it last night it took less than five minutes to get it right ok cool the technologies are progressing and key if you feel that it used to take us three for me six hours to get i want cereal to moscow. right now it's actually five seven minutes which is good and especially when you get a quick candid camera man who can do stuff quickly it's also helpful we don't even have time to actually look through what we recorded because it has to be like bang bang which is to moscow but i can see the pictures it's much better than yesterday exactly what we needed but it's daylight it's so it also helps because when you can see everything you can see all the factual stuff around you burned buses the rocks thrown at the police the police itself because last night the police was a lot visible because of the dollar so today it was like i'm hundred percent satisfied with what we did. i hope the newsroom will be as well i'm telling moscow right now that the report will be there in blocks and to ten minutes he says ok. affirmative look at the speed so it's actually two minutes remaining i was talking there for four minutes in my walk and talk and it's feed it to most going to mean in two minutes so it's twice foster than the real time actual footage it's sometimes a bit awkward when the newsroom calls me and says you have a live in two hours like maybe an hour and a half in two hours so well two hours is brady enough time to get yourself dressed to wake up to have a shower have a cup of coffee everything and then they say oh you also have to do it as life or film something or an interview before your live and feed it over to mosco was like . that's getting a bit complicated good thing again the speed of the internet and the fact that we managed to get everything it was going in the space of fifteen minutes which is sixty times faster than five years ago. last. they're sticking up overnight to. the city really it works against you it's hard to. stay attractive here because it's so hard to get from a to b. and looking like crap by the time you can see. just shoveled and smash our from the sweat pouring out of the air oh i don't that. there is nothing glamorous about this narrow and i'm actually not very glamorous elegant dude i really do i'm continued in a blazer. but so as a female correspondent we work and i really do believe this we work harder than our male counterparts to be taken seriously and to be considered smart. it's absolutely true and i love men but that's that's the truth reading. and that's clear about it and. it is controversy because reemerge given the political climate around the world. where do you package them next to come from the western world see something very differently than russians do and it's. just trying to be objective but it's hard when the when the figures this is. the seat of the. car down guys i'm sorry. go to. with the. faces swallow and. the international conference on syria which is taking place. its success widely depends on the participation of anyone with an influence on the situation and i'm sure that. added to that iran. iran not taking part in the conference is not a catastrophe but it would be. taking part in the conference is definitely not a catastrophe but it surely won't help unite the muslim world in the fight against terror which is also expected to be one of the key issues on the table here in montreal since it's widely known that besides the political opposition fighting there in syria terrorists and. the international peace conference on syria taking place here in this beautiful town they've been saying that its success really does depend on everyone on the situation. we'll be covering the whole conference and we'll be bringing you the latest details as it happens. ok i think. my face is all poppy today and i'm with looks. just like this. something with. these don't they're not opening like this. swiss water on my face and i. just hope that it says no swimming because the water is contaminated. thank. you jesus. they're installing a catapult over there we need to go film it right now. this is like a middle aged thing. believe in the middle age i think it was used. in the war between france and england which look. guys we've got to go record a little bit so we can invert it into our life. let's go let's go this is serious i mean. i. think i have to take it with me this time. god knows what's on their minds. last night i wore it i put it all because there was a stiff feeling that. i could get hit with a rock. which was. probably yesterday today so far it's been not likely but still i'm. keeping hold of it because you never know where it's going to go. just to give you the idea of how serious this whole thing is here the protesters are installing a catapult ability to make sure their project tiles would reach the police lines over there so far not all the molotov cocktails and rocks have reached the police lines well they're trying to make sure things they're hurting at the police will actually reach the police lines which are just literally seven to me just away from here this is but this device here when they set it up they hope that definitely the the project also would be able to reach the pole the cell the tension is still very very high frequency. might get actually it might get even worse just today something else there will be a big holiday in ukraine which is always marked by a march people through the streets so we've got to make sure we're ready for that. my colleagues told me that if a massacre is to happen it probably happens and once they. do we speak your language i mean some of the will not of the. news programs and documentaries and spanish what matters to you breaking news a little too much of angles stories. for you here. detroit altie spanish move visit. all tito's comb. you can write the same. search string. and i would think that you're. an army corps player. and instrument. to be in the know. there's a media lead us so we leave that maybe. by the seat cushions to the play your party physical. issues that no one is asking with the guests that you deserve answers from it's all on politics only on our t.v. . i know c.n.n. the m s n b c fox news have taken some not slightly but the fact is i admire their commitment to cover all sides of the story just in case one of them happens to be accurate. that was funny but it's closer to the truth and might think. it's because when full attention and the mainstream media works side by side the joke is actually on here. coming up. at our teen years we have a different thread. of the day. because the news of the world just is not this funny i'm not laughing damnit i'm not. good. at. you guys stick to the jokes will handle them they are such that. so you're go go go go oh the cover of. ok so cold walk walk walk talk talk talk stop talking then go out ok well an apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind the walls of this model we live among the five remains of the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to save his resting in peace should i walk out of his view ok. three two one apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind these walls the walls of prove that another learn one second. and one apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind the walls of the small silly i'm going to slip. well an apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind the walls of this mausoleum lay the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to say that he's resting in peace here. should i keep walking while i'm saying it and walk out of his view because it looks funky when we just stop and talk. should i walk in family with direction. it's going. to turn to are you here actually rest in peace or so i'm just trying to get these lines perfect because i want them to sound exactly like they want them to say on it's not my voice saying if it's hard well an apple of discord and the whole of this is hard guys. three to. ok hold on. freddy. when apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind these walls lay the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to say he's resting in peace here it's her number fifty eight. when apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind these walls lay the remains of a revolutionary and a founder of the soviet state but it's hard to say he is resting in peace here. you know. when apple of discord in the. when apple of discord and the very heart of moscow's red square behind the walls of this mausoleum lay the remains of the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to argue that he is resting in peace there. let's do one more i'm not happy with that i don't like it. more now full of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind these walls of the mummified remains of the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to argue that he is resting in peace there. that. normally doesn't take that many takes but i want this to look right because this is the square. and i want them to i want this right i want this one right and . sorry under. international peace conference on syria. on the shores of lake. just watching my report and well there's a problem with the puffiness. policy for me not only for me but i guess the law profession. work hard we don't have a schedule. at all. and we work hard and we. just basically it's i guess it wouldn't work. you can't work hard. or the other way around so basically what i mean wasco if i have. friends and i'm not sick or have a cold like that. then i just get pretty. funky. and this was a problem we had to be. when we were filming because i don't know what happened but it looks like a truck drove over my face or something plus the light outside it's. sunny or anything that's sort of me but. everyone looks bad in that and i just looked. i mean. there's a trip out to fix that which is not going to make me. look very masculine. got to do i think i guess maybe because i am sort of tired. we just spent a week in paris doing some stories and some reports and then only had two days in moscow which i had to use completely to sort out some of my. just like house stuff. like i don't know. i didn't drink lots of water. i don't know what it's called. we don't want to know. this is. how to do it just at the shop where he came and said i need some. help me. and so i'm just going to do what it will be to do. i do have to look. so he would. only say. i think i'm getting better. first time i think i put a little bit too much. like a transvestite. i. feel very manly right now. i hope that's going to work. and i don't look like a transvestite at the same time. i looks a little bit like it. you know something when no two i like it when i do this the whole thing jiggles under my. bag and under my i was juggles. it's not good. all right i have to fix the no situation stuff. the self-made self assemble kind of pulled by the protesters there back to. the mansion attack on the police forces over there it's really hard just hard to imagine how the police might respond so that you see they take they cleared a passage over there in the middle so that means that the couple may actually move towards the police lines and hurl whatever they want to hurl i don't know a mob of cocktail or a rock or something else at the police we're meters away from the from the whole scene and we're above it so it gives us a perfect view point we can see basically everything happening just a great credit to the to the guys that are t. who booked this hotel for us and particularly this this room because it gives us a great advantage over many of our competitors. there now chanting what is already a like a typical thing of the protest glory so ukraine glory to its heroes glory to the nation death to its enemies they believe that the government is trying to sell their country to russia the biggest worry right now is that on the other side of the police barricades there of course they have the heavy armored vehicles not tanks but we call them bt r.'s and if those big. try to break the protest the lines there will be there will be blood spilt because this. these cars are heavy they are very reinforced and everything which is which is now in the possession of these protesters like maldives rocks and things would not be able to stop would not be able to harm those bt ours. is getting serious we climbed on top of. the building and throwing molotov cocktails directly at the police. at. the task that it flew roughly five meters. this is not going to work. i want to what the next step will be here's maybe a choice of horse. or not going as. i would tweeted right now about the test launch. i've been tweeting yesterday and today about the whole things in crane and lots of retreats like hundreds literally so people i reached in what's happening here it's actually going to raising huge interest online at least protest isn't give just test launched they're got to pull the project out flew less than ten meters. twitter lets you know if you
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i was still on my r and r time. >> went down to the exact restaurant where we were having our last mealhe night before he left for afghanistan, and we were rei having that time where we were so uncertain of the future and not certain if he would return safe or even with all of his limbs which is incredibly ironic. >> at one point, think, all right, let's walk down the marathon and cheer some people on. >> we were walking and all of a sudden we heard a bomb go off. there was smoke everywhere. and i wrapped my arms around adam, buried my head in his chest and said the next one's going to hit, the next one's going to hit and he said, no, babe, no. [ explosion ] >> and then the next thing i know we were on the ground. at that point, for me, everything was deathly quiet. i remember the smell of smoke. went from a sunny day beforehand to just a dark day. nothing i saw in afghanistan prepared me for this. >> i remember being in the fetal position, and i couldn't move my foot. i remember adam picking up my foot and looking and just screaming a scream that you never want to hear a loved one scre
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his controversial relationship with hugo chavez >> talk to al jazeera only on al jazeera america r ♪ rome back. we have a former mayor of new york city michael bloomberg is using $50 million of his own m money to campaign for stricter gun rules. he has launched a campaign called every town. >> >> reporter: it's an all too familiar story. a gunman opens fire in a crowded place. there is shock then anger. there are calls for stricter gun laws. gun owners and lobbyists push back. now a new group is trying to break the cycle every town has been launched with a $50 million donate from michael bloomberg. >> reporter: the strategy is to bypass the politicians and focus on voters and membership. the group hopes it will be win by going state to state. >> for a long time the gun lobby has done a good job of making a very vocal mie floerty of being afraid that their gins will be taken away. as mother's we we're afraid our children will be taken away. >> reporter: the furreder of 20 young school children in 2012 shocked the world. in all adam lanza shot dead 27 people, including his mother. severa
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ask ur dtor out r-e- r co.rsprescripon fe aty eo.c anncr: at jennie-o we heard of a place in iowa where every thursday people ride 10 miles for tacos. we thought we'd show up and surprise them with a better kind of taco made with jennie-o ground turkey cooked thoroughly to 165. i feed my kids turkey tacos over regular tacos any day. i think they are light and they are just fresh tasting. yeah. when i eat well, i feel well. anncr: it's time for a better taco. the tacos tonight were pretty much perfect. make the switch. look for jennie-o ground turkey in a store near you. and earth and mars are lining up to white marble rise near sunset and move over head. it will be tough to mr. it will be a big right burt watercolor at almost 10 times brighter than the brightest star in the sky. mars is this point where it lies directly opposite the sun. coming up captivity controversy. while a shows could be sunk by california. a man to accused of throwing his wife of the avo: safeway gets that staying on budget can be a real
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r a ull hours. and breo hps ruce mpto fle-upthatast veradays and reire al sroid tibiics,r hoitaltay. breos not for asth. eo ctaina ty of dici that incasesisk dea in pele wh it is noknowif ts ri is ineas breo won'tepla rese hale fosudd cop symptomsnd suld t besedmorethan. breo may incase ur rk of pnmoni thrh, oeoposis, and me e proems. tell youdoct if u ha a het coitio or higbloopresre bore tang bo. ask ur dtor out r firsprescripon fe aty eo.c i gotta go deposit a check, transfer some money. so it's your uncle's turn. what? wait, wait, wait... no, no, no, wait, wait. (baby crying) so you can deposit a check... with the touch of a finger. so you can arrange a transfer in the blink of an eye. can help make a bond... i got it. that lasts a lifetime. the chase mobile app. so you can. woah, this kitchen is beautiful! give him the tour. let me show you! soft-close drawers, farm sink! where's my room? we had to take just a little bit for the kitchen. because your kitchen dreams can be big. ikea has it all. hyde of san jose state university became a victim of vandalism university police looking for vandals who climbed. and cut away his article gold medal. police say it's either battles or to one mistakenly thought the model might be valuable and could be stumper for profit. fragments of metal ball at the statue's feet. to honor the memory of smith and john carlos street and made history when they raise th
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. >> senator -- r r -- senator -- >> you have to measure price in certain ways. is he paying a price? his oligarchs are not able to travel to some of their, you know, various place, they're losing money, their ruble has gone down 7%, there's an impact in europe. i think he's had a massive change in public opinion in ukraine. people who once felt better about russia don't today. he's united many ukrainians, even those who are russian-speaking, against russia. >> but he's still sending in agents -- >> he's pretext -- [inaudible conversations] >> he's not been deterred. >> yes, he is. no, he hasn't stopped doing that, that is accurate. but there are, you know, i think questions about legitimate questions before you pull the trigger that need to be answered about what they may or may not be willing to do in the next days. they are willing to meet with europe, with ukrainians. that's a step forward. they're willing to sit with the interim government of ukraine with europe, with the united states in an effort to sort of plot a road ahead. and we have made it clear the
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r me thsacricesou'vmade the ve a car yove gen.. but matr wh, you' alws ha my spec my gtitu anmostspeclly, my le. ppy ther day irarlli uarechocate... a ltle ndezus savor r luiousilli coinedith r melng ccola. ♪ that ttleewarfor l e thgs y do.♪ onlyrom irarlli. lot warmer today compared the sla are rising temperatures are several degrees warmer now than 24 hours ago. sign-off this tuesday morning temperatures in the 5651 and san jose and 53 and oakland. here's what looking forward to today upper 80s close to 90. it's gonna be high did that a seagoing. tomorrow we warm things up even more so low load low 90s. tomorrow is the better plan for the coast. we will be challenging a couple how long the he will laugh before the cool air it returns. >>: and it's a slow ride to the quarter today for san leandro and down to milpitas to 38 to 237. nearly a one hour drive time after 53 minutes. another hot spot as dryden the mamet's freeway take a look at this liquor traffic care heading north around on a 80 northbound. severe weather across the nation one of our top stories for the storm system right now is a deadly tornadoes right now. the latest system as thel commander and the death toll
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r luiousilli coinedith r sl melng ccola. ♪ that ttleewarfor l e thgs y do.♪ onlyrom irarlli. to prepare our kids to compete main today's economy?way woman: a well-rounded education that focuses on science, math, and career training for students who don't choose college. man: and that's exactly what superintendent of public education tom torlakson has been working on. woman: because every student needs the real world skills for the jobs of tomorrow. man: torlakson's career readiness initiative is helping schools expand job and technical training across the state because it makes a difference. woman: so tell tom torlakson to keep fighting for the career and technical training our students need. get 5% cash back at lowe's this quarter so you can score more cash. activate your 5% cash back at chase.com/freedom. chase. so you can. hey. hey. [doorbell rings] what's this? it's u-verse live tv. with at&t u-verse... you can watch live tv from your device. hey. hey. anywhere in your home. [doorbell rings] hey. hey. so you won't miss a minute of the game. call now to get a u-verse bundle for the same great price for 2 years. guaranteed. the accident was, and 24. as road continues to back up the right not only on 24 routes from but on 680 into 42 southbound the ride from highway 42 walnut creek and a change. the crime 4 morning news continues. as another word i nee when la quinta.com sends sales rep steve hatfield the ready for you alert, the second his room is ready. you know what he brings? any questions? can i get an a, steve? yes! three a's! he brings his a-game! the ready for you alert, only at laquinta.com! internet operate killing at least 18 a new video coming and arkansas. at the south and midwest yesterday the deaths of 18 could climb as it continues this morning. homes destroyed big to applaud and and trucks slipped to. and more dangerous weather and to more tangles it hit the weather. we do have a strain he by midweek could get downright, high for some of our location. the san ramon valley of the livermore valley the delta the south bay the deal or a are morgan hill could be by wednesday of this week. the december does right now wriggling ok some of them in the upper '40's. webb 54 and 01521 san jose 51 in livermore. december jet should be right around 34:00 this afternoon were expecting san jose to be about 73 degrees. most of the south bay will be victorious 72 and 75 degrees for candling it seth in the east and the delta but will be in the upper 70's mid-70s for livermore valley. of course as you had crossed into the battle did a lot more cooler for you. mid-60's for sampras cisco and as you head north to be warming up and to lower mid-70s this afternoon. high pressure is pushing and cool weather and the wet weather that to be heading our way wealth for north and as a result were going to have steadily increasing heat. tuesday tempters really skyrocket. by wednesday and thursday were in the '90s some locations could in fact get into the upper 90s and maybe even touch the 100 degree mark. also you will we can expect for the weekend coming up on our seven a round of a forecast. let's heterotrophic center with a torch for falling as long ago. >>: earlier occuring problems was spotted a slight hill road. sending traffic to the walnut creek and a change jamming of the ride on south on 680. even north found 680 approaching highway 24 you could be backed up all the way to highway 4. and then his freeway and anisette 580 both fairly heavy this morning. approaching at 8 minute drive time. in the 980 interchange which a 80 northbound we still have an accident here southbound 680 at washington and is backed up traffic beyond the. and a pleasant and the south bay were still pretty heavy in the northbound direction and '87 and guadalupe parkway heading out into the valley heading into downtown san jose. the bay bridge believe and not it is still backed up into the macarthur mace even the ec breaks here and here a 80 is the best approach for the bridge. 24 is still about a 30 minute proposition. for the san mateo bridge we still have slightly heavy traffic care. between the toll plaza on the bay for high-rise. there's a 22 minute plus i rise. exactly sunny ease just said that even the was backed up still at the toll plaza and five it was gone. >>: this is the crime for a top celebrity public as to his has been found guilty of sexual assault. he is guilty of indecent assault and the charges stayed back from the late 1960's and evolve action which he took with an teenage girls create here's also known for representing an unpopular celebrities like o.j. simpson and also representing celebrities. apple and samsung has screened each other for ripken of the guys in t- shirts apple wants samsung to play $2 billion and samsung wants apple to play that-pay. they have documents that show the frustration that each company is going through. the u.s. senate will try to raise it from 875 to . congressman michael grant was taken into federal custody following a two-year fbi program officials say the new york republican is charge of the connection of a failed aleged fa statement that he gave. the house members' campaign donation after a friend and donor have charged with an illegal that such illegal contributions. the search for the mess and malaysian airline tony abbott said that u they have sphagnum starring the initial search area far off their trillion west coast they still have not found anything the search will now be entering a new phase. it's hardly a likely that we will find anything or any type of debris around the surface. the current size to a unhook which focuses on searching the ocean and a much larger area. it was an original area of a 2.8 mi.u. for the scene that airplanes black boxes were found. >>: the president says that hi it is one of our top story turning on crime 4 dock, and on social media l.a. clip owner dollars that says donald sterling's is making racial comments care, check out shaquille o'neal's twitter page he is actually set anything directly but he has retreated other fans messages saying basically that he should just go away. other celebrities such as magic johnson are doing a little more direct . commenting on the situation. . there are a lot of its water accounts for tending to be donald sterling. tough road trips for the athletics usually have no problems with the houston astros and the lowest payroll in the majors. with the houston astros are now beating the athletics 521 yesterday. they continue the texas road trip on three nights now. we have watersports covered every sunday night here onkron 4 . nor could could be the star of the show cynosure videos for our segment called my kids die. san as a sports video of your child some is to us and we may run on the air on sunday night some is to us and we may run o[ male announcer ] this season, let's do all kinds of colo in all kinds of places. there. there. even up there. let's get the real dir from a guy like this. not this. we're gonna save big and then we're going in. ♪ ready to color outside the lines? let's do this. more saving. more doing. that's the power of the home depot. get beautiful color with one quart vigoro annuals now just 4 for 10 bucks. with one quart vigoro annuals in every life, there are when you know, you know. the all-new volvo v60 sportswagon. the s60 sedan and the xc60 crossover. test drive one today. model year end sales event. the s60 with 0.9% apr and up to $2500 in allowances. female narrator: for over 60,000 california female narrator: for over 60,000 california foster children a pair of shoes is a small but important gift. my shoes have a hole in them. i can barely fit in these anymore. i hope no one would notice. they hurt my feet. i never had new shoes before. to help, sleep train is collecting new shoes of all sizes. bring your gift to any sleep train, and they'll be given to a local foster child in need. not everyone can be a foster parent... but anyone can help a foster child. ♪ well i love a rainy night.♪ ♪ i love a rainy night ♪ i love to hear the thunder, watch the lightning ♪ ♪ when it lights up the sky. ♪ ♪ you know it makes me feel good. ♪ ♪ 'cause i love a rainy night.♪ yoplait with flavors the whole family will love. it is so good for a night in. at least 17 people are dead in arkansas oklahoma tornadoes sweeping to their part of the country. as the search for survivors continues montana cut a 80 mi. pass to the state park. . >>: the warriors are even as stephen curry finished with 33 and the hammer the clippers won. 18 to 97. well more on the warriors and the racist comments that overshadowed the game by clippers owner donald sterling. as to see the process they're wearing their warmup jersey's inside out covering the clippers name a saturday th-the web site is reporting that the . >>: the big news is is how high it's gonna get it is the-extremely hot and some communities by wednesday were talking temperatures around the '90s. here's a live look right now at an san jose you see the sun shine out there as the temperatures are quickly warming up. they're slowly now warming up into the mid fifties. by noontime or tennessee the upper 60s by the bay. possibly the upper '70's and most communities by 4:00 this afternoon. is much warmer than yesterday's a little breezy but as greece and coming from the ocean that is what's keeping us on the cooler side today compared to what organdy like wednesday and thursday when the wife that-when chefs and starts blowing in the high air. the full forecast coming up about 15 minutes. >>: quite a few hot spot sampling in a slow travel to go round starting with a wry, into one a creek as we h towards the othe was down 24 heading 20 to 42 almost to highway 4. an accident out here at university avenue and interstate 80 in the westbound direction is jammed up the east shore freeway ride and the 580 ride coming in from richmond. there's another accident north from i has backed up the cafe all the way to 580 were still a. and to the right on 680 southbound backed up into pleasanton down because of the accident involving it overturned. and of the bridges here it looks much worse than it is is still solidly backed up into the macarthur maze highway 580 backed up all winter 24 over 30 minute drive times. and were only back into the san mateo bridge still 18 + minute drive * was found and more improvement here at the richmond san rafael bridge 580 west found no longer backed up into richmond. >> darya : there is amber alert a three year-old girl who was taken from fresno county last night. >>: normally was seed ever alert to signs live up because the cac and then do have a description of the car or the license plate number of all their miller is this is an affair in which you don't see the sign lit up. the abduction happen a little over 12 hours ago and fresno county they say that three-year-old tonya was taken from the city of tehran last night around 745. according to the fresno police department the mother and a little girl were heading to the grocer's store last night she put her in the car seat with back into the apartment to grant for wallets came back out a little girl was gone. so what are looking for? we're looking for a three year-old she is described as a hispanic girl standing about 3 ft. tall and weighs about 33 lbs.. there's not an away of the discussion of the suspect but we are looking for a hispanic man around 30 years old with long care wearing a red shirt and a red baseball cap. as we get more information and if and when we get a car or license plate number will pass along to you. police are calling it one of the most deserving cases ever seen 23 year-old ashley new and . and her seven month old son and please don't know why. as the police were about the toll the car he came out from the side where her son is body. . now we don't know what caused a surge . it was one of the disturbing moments. however investigators say that she may be suffering from some type of depression. three people have been arrested in connection of the stabbing the event of shame. lear was stabbed in the torso, on pacific avenue a mcdonald avenue. he has remained in hospital he is expected the reserves survive the attack. and the police said that the three attackers have not obtained that party. they also said it does not look like it was game or drug-related. . the morning commute is winding down stopping on the way to the toll plaza no major backup age with gear maker way towards the bridge. lasteeke.ied depend it reay ma theiffence beeen a morning arou theouse d geing little exeise. beeen a morning arou theohi-ya! and triea bang css. beeen a morning one ekencan make all e dierence.unke the bar, pendivesou the condence ofew f-flex® ptection. i's a sm. 'our st protection. with fresamp atdepend.com takeour ekend on when la quinta.com sends sales rep steve hatfield the ready for you alert, the second his room is ready. you know what he brings? any questions? can i get an a, steve? yes! three a's! he brings his a-game! the ready for you alert, only at laquinta.com! this morning one of them in the cemetery of rich dry times between 18 and 22 minutes was on a very slow trip despite the fact that we ban and said every year. a full check the weather and traffic coming not including a warm up on the day. >>: a new lab just for kids. , remote-control of the smyrna are designed with little hands and mind but a new free at turned the device into a chesstree remote that's perfect for the kids. joe some money in as a tv personality and founder of the dock from, silicon for ways to keep her daughter's entertained. which view the new ad from our friends at at&t you for is called the redskins. what can you push a button when you watch when you watch? the free have turned your smart phone or tablet into a also a remote. kids can't let tatoos and on tv and sally. is pretty brilliant. we all know how use the mobile devices whether it's a phone or tablet enhance to manipulate the buttons and make your recognized that it is the picture you work with the pictures, and exactly what we deliver. parents can set limits on the channels or the ratings allow. do not pause? new push the right button we wanted to you. , so easy to use even cancel figured out just as the show your watch and it's on your tv screen. i love all this at key test to some touchscreens and as the best thing in the house. if you like to learn more about the universe some wrote just go to the web site the tech report that tv. live from the weather center we're gonna continue to get a fee waiver getting. but a live look outside shows a clear skies of the rapid, each day leading up the potentially in the '90s with a lot to look forward on the weather. here's a look like $return to the temperature is 54 and oakland san jose. santa rosa still picking up on those of the 40's. this above the 50 degree mark. 73 and san jose and maybe even some upper '70's for east bay valley special on delta will get out to 77. services are run across the bay there as 65 passengers in the north will be in a load mid-70s as well along the coast and daly city we have looked, and at the 60 degree mark we could replace that with a degree weather. here's what looks like a satellite brave revenue. does the ball california is joining clear whether the high pressure is sitting right above us is forcing any wet weather that are specific to the north. high pressure means to high temperatures especially when wednesday thursday the hottest days a week with temperatures getting up into the '90s, be surprised if you see the upper 90s may be even a 100 degree here or there may be a nominee of room but you could see temperatures approach... if you like the house whether don't worry once the ground too long. we're still trapping has thought east bay loss of slow traffic especially at the macarthur maize eased forward very heavy. down to the macarthur made in the berkeley kerr 580 westbound back up to carlson is an ax and a university. . was down 24 the backup back into walnut creek interchange is working his way westward and the core. backed up almost to highway 13 along the freeway turn again to the macarthur made 30 + minutes drive times. and 5 a through oakland most extremely heavy this morning. the 680 wide still backed up into pleasanton now doubling actually leading down to washington and fremont here's an accident that occurred, about an hour ago the south bay freeways are still quite heavy especially 1 01 north from. and then continuing up toward redwood city. let's take a look at the bridges for the bay bridge is the back up into the macarthur maze. it's still a very slow ride a like to approach from the malik's. , the san mateo bridge were still recovering from spock's and you may encounter a package or to on your bridge from the toll plaza out to the base of the high-rise where we have seen continuing improvement your access richmond san rafael bridge or still backed up only in the left and lanes this. slowing down 580 west from a dozen reached much beyond the toll plaza here. >> darya : 848 google is one step closer to getting jarvis cars on city streets. google says test vehicles are getting much better, is a virtual obstacle course for the vehicles. the driver is vehicles can have the freeway pretty well. google says they can now negotiate thousands of situations by using high-tech. but wants to get the technology to the public by 2017. new developments on the alley races rat are basing your tank now join the boycott against refusing to go ahead with a plan to say in the national anthem tomorrow clippers game. tanks tells dmz as african- american man he can i, do that on a matter that matter so deeply. he tells us that he would not associate with an owner and that makes minority a welt on wellcome. this is a photo of the magic johnson and the girlfriend that started the alleged racist ranch between her and the owner of the clippers it was done to dmz which they got off ofs set leon knows instagram account the full allotment as that's the final no longer exist on instagram it was deleted. we do know that the woman on the tape who we believe released it to tlc is a defendant on the lawsuit alleging that sheet embezzles more the $1.8 million. the story continues to unfold and will have more including this tape on our web site will keep you up with the very latest on kron 4 news. the linthe same cot appeals that senses a was 37 people of on more than 500 last month they were all convicted on charges battered rising in the city of many last august in the murder of a police officer. government regulators been issued a surprise order from lines streaming companies to stop showing for american tv shows and includes the good life, the big bang for the theory that the tickets were targeted and shows./ the shooters are taken photos on their vacations and oakland and to the web site a few days later some of the service is usually require reservations we, said of man's most services were intertwined to hire a, professional photographer for your next vacation. > > no bomb will go right 5852 will be right back us take a live look outside, here's a look at the san mateo bridge will be right back. itas a blisty ra. i cobecae itburned. i codn't sit up asirst lady ourchurch we v. havactities. it wld sm li it uldset it ofi d i uld't do anyf that. crest 3d white whitestrips vs. a whitening pe. i feel like i'm going to miss a spot. i think you actually might have. i feel like my lips are gng to, like, wash it off. these fit nicel wait, it says to use up to four times a d? oh, gh. i'm not going to do tha [ female announc ] crest 3d white whitestrips adhere to your teeth evenl and safely remove stains 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[ female announce] crest 3d white whitestri. the way to white [ female announce] crest 3d white whitestri. irarlli uarechocate... a ltle ndezus savor rcola. ♪ that ttleewarfor l e thgs y do.♪ onlyrom irarlli. developing store were from this amber alert which is a: the toddler was missing and now it's think, so the three year-old was found alive at the sheriff's department issues then taken to hospital the county is still looking for the suspect who snatched three-year-old,. it's neve too late to live on your dreams and i'm '95 real man from colorado, was just 12 years old when he composed music from the hospital bed after being in a hunting accident here's all. today into a nonprofit group that held senior citizens allowed the state to comel and to veterans. and another good story at a colorado that teenagers looking for a way to pass on the time they had dinner before the big dance. the restaurant payroll tax the way it did that bill to the team and the couple at the bar to care of their tab. it brought back memories of their own prom. , a warmup in the work san is and have a look at the fall forecast as we been watching and waiting
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r veteranos y soldds, porqueado r francamente; no han podido est b establecer un programa para a ayudar a los veteranos y atambÉn a los miembros del servicio a a armado para que no haya tantos s suicidios y violencia, falta el enfoque de siquiatras entrenad s entrenados, de personas que pu puedan ayudar a esas personas antes que vayan al frente y d despuÉs que regresen en su kcas, cÓmo pueden estar en el ser servicio, donde tdodos le manda, leds dan ordenes y dpespuÉs lo a mandan a casa, y notie tiene c l lidiar, sin sesposa, sin kcasa o soin hijos, tentonces, son cosa muy pesadas para nuestros sol soldados. >>>e sespecialmente para nuest c comunidad, es dfifÍcil dedici u pÚblicamente, tomar el paso para buscar ayuda, qporque uno se p o procdupa cÓmo saludreaccionar t nuestra familia . >>> en paÍses de sudamÉrica es un estigma decir tengo prb problemas en mi casa doncon mi i familia y hay que cambiar esa c actitud , porque nombrestenuesi estÁn en otro mundo en estados unidos, con otras presiones, ya sea en la escuela con el b bullying, en casa que hay dos e lel lenguas y tenemos que sbaber cÓo ayudar a los nÑiÑos a crecer si los problemas en el futuro. >>> en el ambiente econÓmico donde la situaciÓn es tan d difÍcil ,con recortes y mÁs recortes en los presupuestos e t estatales y fin de semfdederal p pregunta es si testamos haciend lo suficiente como sociedad para crear lugares, sitios, i informaciÓn para buscar ayuda . >>> desgraciadamente no hay s t sudsudf suficientes puntos en l;as af g agencias federales, tentonces, n tenemos que agregar sitios en las comunidades para que nombr a acudir nuestras familias y que busquen dÓnde ir, quÉ pedir y cÓmo pedirlo ,porque muchas v veces temen ellos, por estigma o olo quo lo que qruieras, y tambiÉn ala g a agencias federales tiene que e t estar mÁs teatntos a las n necesidades de la comunidad. >>> congresista napolitano de u muchas gracias por estrar con o nosotros. >>> al regresar tnenemos la i informaciÓn de la familia var vargas, su vida es un sÚper e Éxito e n la cadena mun2, char m charlamos carro nban elloscon oe con tide con blanqueador le reviví la camisa con la que tocaba con su grupo de salsa hace... uff. uff. ya sabes, bodas, quinceañeros. está de show -- ¿siempre estuvo así de blanca? no, no siempre estuvo así de blanca. por suerte tide con blanqueador tiene más del poder blanqueador que a mí me encanta. para que su crisis de los 40 brille. ♪ crisis, yo no tengo crisis ♪ ♪ crisis, yo no tengo na'a ♪ tide con blanqueador, ese es mi tide plus. reconocen una pareja perfecta. desde zapatos a amigos a romance. y ahora hasta rasuradoras. venus tiene la pareja perfecta para ti y tu piel. ya sea, venus sensitive para una menor irritación hasta en las pieles sensibles. venus snap para suavidad instantánea siempre contigo. o venus y olay. que reduce la resequedad sin necesidad de crema para afeitar. porque hay algo que todas sabemos la piel suave y hermosa es la pareja perfecta para todo. ♪ ♪. >>> gracias por continuar con nosotros en enfoque, welcome to los var vargas, es el sÚper eÉxito de l cadena mun2, un reality show de la flamilia avargas, el campeÓne boxeo fernando vargas y su fl familia. >>> aa ambos, gracias por esta c con nosotros en fenfoque. >>> gracias, un placer tenrlos. >>> por quÉ creen ustedes que la vida de ustedes ha sido tan ex t exitosa en la televisiÓn. >>> bueno, primeramente porque tenemos cristo en nuestra fam familia y tenemos una fe muy grande, mucho amor siempre nos abrazamos nos besa besamos nuestra flamilia nos qremos muco y pienso que van a ver algo muy diferente en televisiÓn >>> yo que toestoy kcasado y te dos hajijas, qzuizÁs no hay n a mÁs maravilloso que pensar tener la suegro viviendo con uno, . >>> bueno mi spesposa me dijo q que si mi suegro se podÍa mover con nosotros porque estÁ teni teniendo problemas y pus muchas cosas le paasÓ, d difÍciles quea Él ,le dije, mirr eiand navidad come uno, comen 2, 3, 4, 5 y tambiÉn siempre hay chistes a yandamos hablando u jugando el u uno con el otro. >>> eso es en serio, pero se e c encela que cuando tomo mucho t tiempo con mi papÁ. >>> sÍ. >>> hay competencia entre los o dos en la familia. >>> fdernando, kcÓmo alas ozzie guillgulogrado tener esta familia ejemplo aar i siempre pensando con cosas p positivoas. >>> asÍ es, diositio lindo unÍaa que taestaba suspendido en la l escuela me puso a boxeo amateur en un canal de oaxnard, y era un muchacho que si no me allegaba al boxeo, estaria en la cÁrcel t todo ala la vida, y mi relaciÓn con dios comenzÓ c cuando iba a tnener mi ppropi e pelea, donde vi el boxeo amate ru s hijos haya logrado esto y q qque zs para los hjijos les dic que los pulsoÑos no es la soluÓ . >>> claro, a mis hijos se le ha enseÑado que viniendo de una f familia donde su papÁ es b boxeador, es algo que no es una responsabilidad que no tiene, q porque no es para ir a hacer a g golpear a alguien o hacer lnomÁ porque sabes para enseÑar, no, e eso es algo que si lo necesitas usar, lao puede usar, pero nada mÁs e nel ring usan esto, pero el boxeo ha sido mbuy bueno, porque les ha ensÑea enseÑado de disciplina en la familia tambiÉn es importante para nosotros, porque ha sido especialmente en momen o momentos difÍciles para no tirar la toalla. >>> fiasÍ llegamos al final de e esta ediciÓn de enfoque, si qr quiere charlar conmigo, toyh een ttwitter y para participar en f enfeen en enfoque en twitter y tambiÉn en facebook, gxracias por acompaÑarnos, hasta me eaÑana el noticiero telemundo todo lo que van a ver es real... personas reales, peligros reales, emociones reales. prepÁrense para
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r transbordador uhundido y hay a r alrededor de 300 desaparecidos, tampoco tuvo xit el intrento de inyectar aire a los compartim compartimientos del ferry, sm mensajes de texto hacen cree que algunos pueden estar con vida, n no se descarta que en alguna e secciÓn puede haber aire. >>> hay pocas personas en el b ro se puede ver nada, ls mujeres stestÁn gritando y no as muertos todavÍa, por favor, co comcom compartan este mensaje >>> el capitÁn ofreciÓ una sdi c disculpa por abandonar la em embarcaciÓn antes que otros p pudieran escapar, un miembro de la tripulaciÓn asegura que el a capitÁn no emitiÓ la orden de v evacuaciÓn, porque el equipo b s buscaba estabilizar la nave. >>> algunos sobrevivientes dij r dijeron que la primera indic indicaciÓn fue que se pusieroan los chalcosecos salvavidas, 3 n minutos dpespuÉs se dio la orde de evaciÓuaciÓn. >>> un momento muestra que la transboraddadroor se estremece. >e>> l presidente de la cÑompaÍa que adminisrta los servicios del transboraddador, hizo decl declaraciones dramÁticas. >>>d ijo que habÍan cometdo un g gran pecado, los familiares de los desaparecidos dicen que las autoridades surcoreanas no han h hecho lo suficiente para encontrar a sus seres queridos. >>> tambiÉn el hombre que testaa al manodo del transbordador, h i habÍa ocupado el puesto
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just in case you have to run off somewhere, hopefully you're just getting a little r&r. >> just stayave a lot more this morning on the search for malaysia airlines flight 370. >> actually, a lot of news coming from the prime minister this morning, who seems to be very confident, saying that four signals detected by a u.s. pinger locator are coming, he says, from one of the plane's black boxes. he's that confident. >> right now at least ten planes, 14 ships are scouring the smallest search zone to date. crews are focused on an area in the indian ocean about the size of massachusetts and connecticut combined. you may recall that at one point the search zone was about the size of the continental u.s. >> but time is ticking away here, obviously, for search crews. the batteries on the plane's black boxes are quickly fading, if they're not dead already. officials warn recovering the black boxes is a massive task. even though those signals were detected within 17 miles of one another, they're coming from about three miles below the surface. >> so let's talk now with someone who knows these
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r luiousilli coinedith r sl melng ccola. ♪ that ttleewarfor l e thgs y do.♪ onlyrom irarlli. with men 50s through concord livermore. we are still a little chilly. as you head south of further inland. it will dip warmer for it. here is the forecast for the game tonight. at at&t park ridge san jose host of the dodgers it will be too late to start. 715 as the first pitch. 59 to begin with. it will cool down to about 55 to 54 degrees by the end of the game. partly cloudy cold and windy to. when coming from the ocean at 10 mi. per hour. >>george: the back up at one time have been up to 48 minutes of the corridor. back down now to 40. so conditions are improvement proving. still no sign of the missing malaysian airlines flight and today in robotic search continues and the deaths of the indian ocean. it's the second underwater search. bluefin 21 us of is expected to stay and the water of the indian ocean for 20 hours searching. and already surfaced early on monday when the ocean got too deep for this up to perform correctly. meanwhile plans are making the final sweep for in the floating debris on the airliner but none has been found. >>: and man taken into custody near the boston marathon finish line had a rice cooker in his backpack and is being charged with possession of a. it was one of by the bomb squad as a precaution and it's also a sucker and unintended backpack found nearby. lawyers for suspect arson and i f-1 some of the charges against their client tossed out and some of the restrictions eased. his attorney says many of those charges are redundant and could sway jurors. >>: kron4's as a commodity on has been on the story from the beginning and now is the solution. >>: notice something different? >>: i noticed the lights are off. >>: delights in the parking lot here at the north, perhaps bart station are no longer on during daylight hours. this comes the day after it on a guaranteed as voiced his concern to kron4 about the electricity be used to power the lights 24 hours a day over the past several weeks. and that was a big sticking point the fact that this was a waste of energy. >>: yes. i walked up smiling because i thought that's really amazing that you did this report and all of a sudden someone paid attention to it. >>: no more lights around the clock. >>: not at concord station. >>: they say it is likely maintenance workers turned the light sensors off. >>: this could of been the case where when they were doing the maintenance they switched the contact for of the lights in the parking lot and north concord on the manual mode and when you brought this to our attention, our crews went out there and flipped it back to automatic. applicants for a toll call a least one prospective a juror in new jersey to take a bite out of crime literally. the county's some unnamed ivy is a 850 german shepherd grid is a figure out the mistake. that the summons. the dog owners game is very grinder the fourth uses the nom in roman numerals of a four id for the initials. is probably for him not the dog with a dog there received a summons. i don't think he shot wirethey're big. fast. andome. dependable. and at net10 wireless, we let you tweet, text, talk and surf... on those amazing nationwide networks... without getting locked into a pricey phone contract. america's best 4g lte networks for half the cost. that's wireless your way. unlimited* talk, text, and data starts at just $40 a month. and now android smartphones start at under 50. net10 wireless. corporate earning under way. abettor expected earnings for intel and yahoo. of 5% due to l.a. baba is performing so well. the chinese company. says we have the latest video and information coming out of this fairy dust off the coast of korea. hundreds are missing and are preparing to unveil train cars of the future. we will tell you where they're expected to add the tracks and were you can go to theslitt angels builin stnes and ese ttlengels ild strength. anthat littlangesays, theeeeeeee!"els builin stnes 60moreverhingou wantyou love. for what reality teaches you firsthand.. in the face of danger, and under the most demanding circumstances. experience builds character. experience builds confidence. and experience... has built this. the 2014 glk. the engineering, and the experience, of mercedes-benz. starting at $37,480. new video. at a firsthand look at the rescue operation under way. search crews on the sunken ferry on the coast of south korea. at least four people are dead. more than 300 people unaccounted for. many of them high-school students. >>anny: tracking hot spot and the traffic center. here's george. >>george: 580 and the rich and san rafael bridge. it started with slow traffic on the stand about 45 minutes to an hour ago and really backing up the toll plaza ride and then an accident occurred. it is solidly backed up here. >>: the push is on the c berkeley. the push is on. to hold u-c berkeley more accountable when it comes to sexual assaults. on tuesday, two bay area congresswomen joined victims and supporters. who came forward to voice their outrage against the university. here walnut creek this morning coming soon to a bart stationery yolks new trains. at the trains that are shiny claim and have many bells and whistles like better air-conditioning and seeds. today bart is unveiling a sneak peek into their new bart trains. we have some video to share with you about the trains and today will get some reaction from commuters. one person i spoke with said it is about time. here walnut creek terisa estacio kron4 no st >>: >>: there's a lot of fuss over a piece of grass that could potentially house 740 new homes. >>: a patch of romo to voice their opinions on the environmental constraints for the proposed housing development of the hills of san ramon. the coalition of northwest neighborhoods says the area of preserved the met will destroy the quality of life. nearly 450 a. of those tramples foothills will be used in the blueprint. neighbors say to major rich allies will have to be destroyed >>george: welcome back to the kron4 morning news a 39 and we have a real mess. the rich and san rafael bridge is jammed up from a mile between the toll plaza on 580 westbound grid of a way out to mid span. and we're calling accident that still may be blocking the left hand lanes. a bridge to avoid this morning. >>anny: and george you remember the sony walkman. to l.a. based man asked people between the ages 6 to 13 if they knew what it was. >>: what do i do with it. >>: is a walkie-talkie. >>: a boom box. >>: wait wait wait. >>: they were all pretty close for the got the function right. most kids admitted to never seen a walkman before and poke their private added before discovering you can actually put a tape and it. on early and said after discovering the music player and made her feel like indiana jones. after all that work to get the tape and a figure of abundance for a much of the kids said they prefer their ipad to bipods of today. >>: kids these days. >>: when we come back will have an updated look at weather forecast for today. beautiful afternoon on tap. in fact if you go to the giants game tonight at at&t park will let jan know what weather to expect to beat l.a.. mainz it is one of the most popular free style model cross game series 3 we are going behind the scenes with child fears and a man synonymous with '70s california. >>: biker fans set for trial fusion. one of the most popular stories of games is here. >>: this time with a little help from '70s heartthrob erica estrada. tell me about trials fusion why is this a good fit for your image. >>: very funny stuff and very creative >>: trials fusion blends the fun and excitement of freestyle motocross with a futuristic look. >>: it's a weird interesting mix of but third rising. the challenge of it is you try to find the most optimal way. >>: up is a complex. based upon apocalypse. >>: still life and a guy after all these years. trawls fusion is out for all the major game council's starting today. if you like to learn more our troubles erica estrada videos just go to the web site is the tech reporter that tv. i'm rich to merrill. >>: on the weather and traffic right now. let's go to george right now with more on the hot spots. >>: we're still jammed up on the approach to the rich and san rafael bridge because of an accident that occurred around mid span in the midst of what had already been slow traffic. and now a mile to a mile backup on 580 westbound. and this is going to take a long time to clear. i would say at least another hour before we see things return to normal and possibly longer for the westbound 580 ride. the bay bridge is not much of an alternate and their only other choice would be highway 37 and of course that's a long distance to go in order to avoid the backup. looking at your ride on the peninsula another hot spot with an accident so the bond on all of palo alto. we mentioned the big back up with the bay bridge toll plaza. and the back of a ride starting to ease a little but still have the out of the maze. and from highway 24. and if you're heading to the san mateo bridge you can see it is not an easy commute either. it's jammed westbound from well before the toll plaza out toward mid span. use the dumbarton here instead. >>: now let's get a check of the weather. here is a james. >>james: a lot of sunshine out there. temperatures. doing ok. 57 degrees. that's a relief. most of the bay area right now solidly in the '50s. satellite radar shows exactly what we shot. thed cover relate to speak of. all of us stayed well to our north thanks to high pressure which will hang around. mid-70s across the bay. if you'll be at the dodgers game. we will call it off to the low 50s as we head toward the end of the game. partly cloudy. that notion freeze is going to become a man about 10 mi. an hour. definitely bring a jacket to bundle up. the chair on the giants as we beat l.a.. here's your 7 day around the bay forecast. springlike weather continuing as we look off into the rest of the weekend. the weekend temperatures solidly and the '70s with the upper '70's may be low 80s come saturday and potentially on sunday as well street fair coming up to talk out this is spring break free of the bases >>: another quick. sugar bowl 60 in.. >>anny: the n.c.a.a. maybe giving student athletes more generous males. the n.c.a.a. legislative counsel give a proposal to expand e-mail program for all last week to allow division 1 a schools to provide unlimited meals and snacks to our athletes including a walk on three the announcement comes after university of connecticut star covering the n.c.a.a. tournament says he is usually starving because he can't afford food. that is to be approved by a board of directors on a meeting on april 24th. >>: a wild week in bay area sports. the stars seem to be aligning for all of our sports teams facing off against their southern california rivals. >>: kron4's jackie says all is that at&t park. >>: good morning. and let's face it is sound like it's going to be ringing through the bay area for the next week. that's because bay area teams are going up against their southern california rivals. here at at&t park epic battle. here's a video from last night. 12 and into between hector sanchez stuck to the plate in the 12th inning. after midnight in a ranking single. brandon crawford, to win the first game of the weekend three game series against the los angeles dodgers but it's not over yet. that's because the a's were taken on the anaheim angels down at anaheim last night and they needed extra innings. nauseous and the stars are kind of aligned because it's also cal reverses of no-cal over the next week. the nhl playoffs stars of this weekend is just so happens the san jose sharks are taking on " kings of l.a.. and it doesn't stop there. that's because the nba playoffs also start this week and it just happens that the golden state warriors are set to take on the l.a. clippers. >>: i was going to talk to some giants and a's fans. and find out what they talked about this beat l.a. rivalry and who are running into. in l.a. fan. >>: i would have to probably. the angels. i'm from southern california. >>: on from orange county that angels. at the half to go dodgers. >>: clippers. >>: kings. for sure. >>: your note you know you're in the wrong town right? >>: it p.s. i'm here for work and that's it. >>: you get out of here quick. >>: now i like it here. you guys are nice um as long as i don't drink of the teams i like. >>: 715 dodgers giants. >>: when the rnase a giants warriors or stand up sandy your pictures. all told them to facebook are twitter. kron4 dot com. we've been sharing pictures online and kron4 dot cobulldog: been [yawning] it's finally morning! i can't wait to get to mattress discounters because the tempur-pedic bonus event is ending soon. i'll have first pick from the huge selection of tempur-pedic mattresses. then, i'll get to choose 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[doorbell rings] what's this? it's u-verse live tv. with at&t u-verse... you can watch live tv from your device. hey. hey. anywhere in your home. [doorbell rings] hey. hey. so you won't miss a minute of the game. call now to get a u-verse bundle for the same great price for 2 years. guaranteed. line >> anny: a family out of brazil is asking for help because their infant son ways 40 lbs.. this is arthur. at the age of 8 months old, he weighed 39.6 lbs.. his mother says that he is so big, that he needs to use an adult diapers. a new report out this week finds that 39 percent of brazilian children are either obese or over way. >> heading into the 6:00 hour, wants to show you this kit who manage to get stuck inside of a claw machine. this happened in the bowling alley in lincoln, neb.. the three year-old climbed to reprise a door and was playing with the stuffed animals. the bowling alleys owner had to call the machin
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r r t. nato has been quick to send forces to its eastern borders patrols over the baltic states have already been stepped up in surveillance planes dispatched to poland and romania washington also aims to station more troops on its black sea base security analyst and former u.k. intelligence officer charles shoe bridge i spoke to a little earlier he believes the ukrainian crisis is being used as a pretext to justify military spending by a lime states. when it comes to the military complexes of different countries of course they're always looking for reasons to justify their existence and indeed expansion and indeed as we've seen in the last couple of weeks in the west in the united kingdom that the crimean situation and the ukraine situation generally is being used to justify military spending intelligence spending and indeed being used by many to attempt to. defense cuts that have already been announced by different governments but it always helps in this case to have a bogeyman on the horizon whether that is terrorism whether it is communism whether it is the russian expansionist threat or any other convenient threat she would say that comes along the u.s. house of representatives has approved an aid package to ukraine as well as sanctions against russia washington will now give a one billion dollar loan as well as pumping more money into what it calls democracy promoting. the fact that when you walk through full spectrum dominance believes doesn't bode well for ukraine. these are not democracy promoting n.g.o.s these are coup d'etat and geos who are doing what the cia used to do only through private agencies that are backed up by the us government so this is not anything good for ukraine ukraine doesn't need this nonsense it's interference in the domestic affairs of a sovereign country so this one is washington the congress men concerned about that this is not democracy this is just raw power politics and geopolitics. it's cost u.s. taxpayers billions upon billions but afghanistan's drug problem has proven to difficult for the u.s. military to solve alone after the u.s. led invasion afghanistan turned into the global center of poppy cultivation of cooperation between moscow and washington to help stop large amounts of drug traffic in and around afghanistan preventing dichotic from reaching europe but that could change up to eighty percent of the world's opium is cultivated in afghanistan and it's europe russia and america that it could be trafficked to so just take a look at these figures heroin production has grown by more than forty times since two thousand and one more than a million afghans have died over the course of the past decade from addiction but the earnings from the trade clearly considered worth the risk of production and a lack of international dialogue could let this business grow even further that's what one expert on the region has told us by far the main source for drugs or for natural products that smuggled to europe and russia is actually afghanistan. and of course the u.s. in particular have to set aside all. your political interests when it comes to global security and russia in particular and scored a huge huge interest in state in this process and different and they have to be taken into confidence and they have to be incorporated in there in the process if there is a lack of cooperation between russia and the west it will be a huge threat to europe's. security and also to the overall social stability u.s. is reluctant to pressure farmers for fear of pushing them towards the taliban many are looking to cash in on the poppy profits with more than half of all provinces in afghanistan now cultivating drugs and there's a couple of reports it's taking a heavy toll on the afghans themselves. last year afghanistan recorded its largest opium harvest ever and the scene behind me tells a story of just how devastating that's been for the people here the men are part of a growing addiction epidemic according to the united nations more than a million afghans are addicted to opium and heroin out of a population of some thirty million people which makes against and not just the world's top export of the drug but one of its top consumers too despite more than a decade of western efforts to curb production a combination of economic and political instability has meant that farmers are planting more poppy than ever before more than half a million acres in twenty thirteen which according to the u.n. is a thirty six percent increase from the previous year and that's translated to big box again if that is believed to harvested nearly one billion dollars worth of the problem last year alone now this illegal opium economy is a lifeline for thousands of afghan farmers but it also funded the drug traffickers and the taliban a problem that extends far beyond this country's borders more than three decades of war and instability in afghanistan must yield drug production and efforts to stop it simply haven't worked the u.s. has spent seven billion dollars to counter narcotics since two thousand and two another three billion dollars on agricultural programs there was the post of hope grower switch to other crops but the bypass the united nations says that nineteen of the country's thirty four provinces are now growing opium which also reflects an increase in recent years with the presidential elections around the corner along with a looming withdrawal of most foreign troops again it stands booming drug trade is a major concern with global implications and if western allies and the afghan government don't do more to topple production the fear here that the drug trade could splinter the country into a fragmented criminal narco state reporting in kabul for r t m d c cops know. when exemplifying the procuress security. situation there in the country six police officers have been confirmed killed by an explosion in kabul it was caused by a suicide bomb at a checkpoint outside the interior ministry building that claimed responsibility keeping up its promise to disrupt the forthcoming vote as much as possible and as a group says the election is a. sham. to stay away. well the afghanistan election is set for the for the april and we'll be covering the vote extensively for you in the series of reports on the future of afghanistan the people of afghanistan head to the polls for the third all of that. will be full. of our democratic. national. international live here in moscow still to come europe's pipe dream experts what it would cost to ship american gas to europe aging a challenging picture for countries hugely dependent on affordable energy. plus an israeli court hears evidence that some of its top officials committed war crimes in the gaza
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. >> it's k-r-a-k r-o-k. i want it to sound like the drug terminology. that way it intrigues.ve it. controversy sells. it always will. >> today a toned down version of krak rok will be allowed to emerge inside the jail. they are about to stage a battle rap. >> i've done see people mess this up every time. you have one where you go in and diss the person to the fullest extent you can. you have ones where you freestyle. whoever has a better freestyle. >> deputy king is assigned to abendroth's housing unit. >> the more you can occupy their time with different activities, the less time they have to think about someone in here that did them wrong. i'd rather have a battle rap than a physical fight any day. >> this man's stage name is ben harper. he says he'll be watching closely. >> i'll joke around with the guys from time to time but they usually know when i mean business. >> right now, a three-round battle. all freestyle from the top of the dome. anything goes. you know what i mean? first round, whoever wants to take it, can take it. who wants to go first? >> you. >> you can go f
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want to ask the question related to executive directive report and that is on reports on our b r t and gather b rms like there's cost ex /hraeugzs that we need to get a hold on and a handle on. i would like to see if we can actually discuss the leadership of the transportation authority. we can meet with the director to discuss how we will proceed. so i want to discuss vice chair scott wiener ander er eric mar to attend as well. >> thank you. we will take that direction and convene that meeting the next month. >> we usually have a special trip. we took one last /kwraoeur to look at how we can move more effectively, these projects. i'm really concerned that we're not moving
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r t and gather b r t. it seems like there's cost ex /hraeugzs that we need to get a hold on and a handle on. i would like to see if we can actually discuss the leadership of the transportation authority. we can meet with the director to discuss how we will proceed. so i want to discuss vice chair scott wiener ander er eric mar to attend as well. >> thank you. we will take that direction and convene that meeting the next month. >> we usually have a special trip. we took one last /kwraoeur to look at how we can move more effectively, these projects. i'm really concerned that we're not moving them, even after this added attention that was given, we're not moving them quickly enough. >> great. thank you, very much. >> okay. can we have public comments on the executive director's report? seeing none, we will move forward with the comment. >> this is the next item. >> okay. comments and questions on item number 5? seeing none, we're going on to the public comments. we will close the comments. we're required to do a roll call vote. so we will have a roll call vote. [roll call]. >> the item passes. >> the item passes, let's go on to the next item, please. >> item six, not to exceed 598,000. the off ramp realignment project during the construction phase. and non-material terms and conditions. this is a national item. >> thank you. comments, concerns or questions? okay. let's go on to public comments. any member would like to comment on this item? seeing none, let's close this and have a roll call vote. [roll call]. >> this item passes. >> great. next item, please. >> item 7, for an additional of 1 year period, not to exceed 167,000 for city built services for phase two of the city of park way project. modifying agreement terms and non-material agreement terms and non-conditions. this is a national item. >> okay. colleagues, comments or questions? seeing none, we'll go on to public comments. public comments is open on item number 7. seeing none, we'll close the comments. and another roll call vote. [roll call]. >> item passes. >> item passes. let's go on to our next item. >> item number 8, amend the adopted fiscal year to increase revenue by 2, 907, 000. decrease other financing sources by 290 million, 23, 510. and amend the prop k strategic plan. this is a national item. >> thank you. colleagues, any comments or questions? okay. public comments? public comments open on item number 8. seeing no one from the public, we'll close the item and have another vote [roll call vote]. >> this item passes. >> item passes. let's go on to our item from the plans and programs committee, item number 9. >> item number 9, allocate 4 million 252 in prop k funds. allocate 1 million 844, 000 for request. subject fiscal year cash flow distribution schedules. relevant prop aa and prop k programs. this is a national item. >> thank you. colleagues, any comments or questions? okay. we'll go on to public comments. any member would like to commented on the item number 9? i also have a number of cards as well. why don't you /tkpwr*d and line up in the order the cards are red. tailor, steven son, bruce, patrick and howard wong >> my name is steven /taeuber. i am here as chairman of the transmission chair for russian hill neighbors. we have been working over the past several years for the extension of the central subway. as pointed out earlier, while it is greatly in support of the subway, it is a major dictionary addition, it is supported through the transportation system. it doesn't extend enough up market street to the full detail of that investment. we urge that this project be extended and we greatly support the allocation of funds to renew the first part of this study. about a year ago, at the sponsorship of conspire enwith the participation of m ta, and participation of neighborhood associations, businesses and community associations throughout this neighborhood and throughout the city, there was virtually a unanimous consensus that the subway would be a desirable improvement for the city. the transportation in this part of the city is rather poor. it's crowded, slow and unreliable and we believe that the extension would be a tremendous benefit, both to the nearest part of the city and to the city as a whole as we build a rapid transit system for san francisco. we urge your support of this allocation of funds to get this study started. thank you. >> thank you, very much. next speaker, please. >> good morning. my name is bruce ago /et. i'm active in the community as a transportation rep for the south beach neighborhood association. i'm also involved in many other community and transportation advocacy efforts. i support the subway work and at this time, /spefpbgly the initial study. this study is critical for several reasons. first, the north eastern neighborhoods are essentially cut off from the rest of the city and the rest of the city is essentially cut off from the northeastern neighbors. there's many reasons why this study makes sense. it will begin to identify the overall benefits and costs. if this study determines there's a strong case for an extension, it will label two critical next steps. first, to revise the f t cma board and the site that re/srerts back to the owner. and secondly, it makes it a formal project. the study of information can then be used to inform the study. based on the results of this study, the project will be prioritized and ranked with other projects agreed to based on the parameters. i urge you to support the study. thank you. >> next speaker, please. >> good afternoon, my name is pat valuety no, i live in the south beach neighborhood. i attend quite a few community meetings in our neighborhood and surrounding areas. what i've noticed recently is a lot of talk is about supporting the transportation subway. in fact, our first meeting out of the gate was about the subway and 20 minutes of conversation ensued from that. what i've found going out in the community and talking to people is there's broad based support in continuing this line in getting transit going underground. i think one thing important for us to consider is that we don't live in separate gated communities. connecting neighborhoods is important. extending the subway will do so and it's the first step for us getting there. it's better for business, it's better for the environment and for our neighborhoods. if you think through the number of neighborhoods that are immediately connected, russian hill, north beach, bay view, financial district, mission bay and dog patch, many of the bus lines would now have a significant north, south connection. so i urge you to support the funding for the initial subway and the project over ail. >> thank you very much. next speaker. >> my name is julie christian. i ask you to support this as well. the toughest thing is to get the people to believe this isn't already happening. in a couple months, those machines are going to couple out and we're going to have a tunnel to go a half mile to fisher man's warp. i didn't realize it until i started watching the construction of phase two, it's difficult to find the conditions to handle the underground construction that needs to take place. the theatre is an unusual site. it's 10,000 square feet in a tiny neighborhood of lights. it is a perfect place, not only for a station entrance but to stage the construction of an underground station without undue disruption to the neighborhood. yet, in a few months, that station is going to revert to the ownership and probably get turned into condos. whaaat but when we are finally ready to build the subway, it may take us a decade to find site to do it. they had to take half a million dollars to find location of the current church. today we're at 173,000 to study whether or not we should extend the subway. my operative word is yes. thank you for your support. >> the thank you. the last card i have is mr. wong. >> al ward wong. we all love subways. as a transit person, i've been in subways all over the world as many of you have but we oppose this allocation of 173, $212 for a subway study. unfortunately, as we have seen, the subway is taking valuable scarce funds for the rest of the systems and have not only cut services not only in north beach but throughout the city. prop k 3 is a more higher priority for our scarce transportation dollars and that's a fast reliable bus system, rapid transit study like in mexico city and throughout the city. that hasn't been done. al train downtown extension, huge priority. in 1973, voters of /stkur ex switzerland rejected funding for transportation instead. today, it is the highest point of the highest per capita required says in the world. 62 percent of public transit for trips to work. there are other very important items that should be studied such as the trend for free circulator buses throughout the united states as seen in baltimore, dallas, denver, rolly, oakland with a free downtown, emory ville. with the multicity free shuttles that connect vertically and in oakland and all of regional transit. the mission bay shuttle is funded but very valuable. there are many, many things that our moan should be implementing >> thank you, very much. next speaker, please. >> good morning. my name is lance and i'm a resident of north beach. i also support extending the transit into the fisher man's wart. i read the study submitted by the ct a and m t c, the very first thing on the scope, one of the items that was requested of the people requesting the funds is the level of input into the prioritization process. and, that wasn't answered in the thing, in the bottom here. as far as i know, i don't recall any public requests or input on this or at least open public input. page two under city objective, it says three possible alignments will be examined as part of the initial study. at last week's meeting, we raised a point. we asked, okay, of the three possible alignments, are you considering any surface options and they indicated that yes, they would be. we sent some /skpwaoepbs the planners at s fmta and s f g ta and received no reapplies. we don't know what the alignments are and what surface will be considered. the /sur plan is the primary being s sfcta managing this study. it seems like it would be much better for the /r-pbtsz and this neighborhood to have an extension of whether we need that transit into fisher men's wart. this is probably going to be like the tobacco causing cancer in the 50s. so they're going to build a subway. i think options should be looked at as well on the surface and otherwise. thank you >> thank you, very much. neck -- next speaker, please. >> chairman avalos, members of the board, fill from the transportation and research and improvement project. we strongly support the study. we think it only makes logical transit sense to extend the t line further north all the way to the waterfront. and, we urge that you approve this proposal. thank you. >> thank you, very. . any other member of the public would like to comment? seeing none, we will close for comments. and, mr. chiu. >> thank you, very much. i would like to say i appreciate the support of our programs and plans committee. and, i want to make really two brief points. first of all, this is a study that is long overdue. we
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r r t new york well we'll be bringing you minute to minute updates of all the developments coming out of ukraine so you can also get the latest. energy firms in britain could get the right to pump shale gas under people's land without their consent ministers want to make it easier to access the controversial fuel currently companies need permission from landowners to build fracking totals if the owners of jack the developer has the option of appealing to the courts but a major push towards shale gas in britain could overhaul the system u.k. ministers say fracking will be a huge boost to britain's economy by creating thousands of jobs or just remind you that drug fracturing involves sinking a vertical shaft on the ground and there re angling it gas deposits are then extracted by fracturing shale rock with high pressure blasts of councils and the problem is that these chemicals pollute the soil in nearby lakes and rivers as they migrate back to the surface opponents say this also creates air contamination poising poisoning opposing serious health risks are just now reports. u.k. government want to embrace shale gas extraction they say that it will create lots of new jobs that will make energy prices much lower and it will bring more money into local communities here in britain which is why the department for energy and climate change have confirmed to us that they are reviewing current legislation to basically make it easier for and the g companies to come into the u.k. and start extracting shale gas so one change to the law that's apparently being looked at we did allow energy companies to transport shale gas underneath private properties without the threat of being sued for trespassing so an energy company would still need to obtain permission in order to drill and drill wells for fracking but transportation would no longer be an excuse so it's all part of a whitehall bid to reportedly more investors into britain but my prediction is that that is unlikely to placate the anti fracking movement here in the u.k. in fact changing the law to make fracking easier is likely to be somewhat controversial people are worried about the risk of contamination to be voted table or risk of endangering wildlife potential small earthquakes that take place as a as a result of hydraulic fracturing not least they're worried about the value of their properties going down if it's next to a fracking site or above a pipeline. and i'll bring you more news after the break washington national stay with us. people florist teddy roosevelt once said a man who has never gone to school may steal from a freight car but if he has a university education he may steal the whole railroad yes in a guild and corrupt a new and as we know today one needs to get the right education in order to steal the right thing. your friend post a photo from a vacation you can't afford. the difference. the boss repeats the same old joke of course you like. your ex-girlfriend still paints tear jerking poetry keep. nora's. post only what really matters. to your facebook. welcome back you're watching our to international and a reminder story five silva fans fighters and a policeman have been killed as kiev relaunches a military crackdown on anti-government protesters in the eastern ukraine city of slovyansk according to the interior ministry three self-defense checkpoints were destroyed with tanks snipers and troops now being deployed to the area self defense forces in the ne ants could be gin half an ounce for mobilization and they describe the situation as a civil war ukraine southeast has been in the grip of mass protests for months with people defining interim government in kiev and demanding greater autonomy. cross over to the u.k. and we have neil clark on the line his international affairs expert on broadcaster neil thank you so much for joining us here on our tour let's take a closer look at the situation there and specifically the authorities. have demanded a key of pulls back its military but let's take a look at what's happening there would that be they have got what they want to just by say for example making sure the protesters vacate the buildings that they were supposed to vacate. but by. creationists to the vice president joe biden this week what happened straight away they read their anti-terrorist operation and look the cost so i think that the people who control the situation in washington are not in kiev here clinton came to power we can americans support came to power dollars five billion dollars to topple the democratic president. and so i see that what happens now is going to get paid and what on the pavement here depends on great puppet masters in washington. well neal what do you make of the geneva peace accords i mean do they mean anything. but because. you know this should we go question wasn't it because she was of course was signed the americans two or three things show their content. which is what. they were. so that was making wasn't a story and he were just having a very very bad quality of sound from going to apology for that. there but we'll try to bring your viewers a little later in the program. meanwhile top officials from ukraine and some of its neighbors are a tanning of the european union's eastern partnership summit the gathering underway in prague is designed to woo former soviet states towards the e.u. but some leading western figures have chosen to give this year's summit a miss s.b. alternately four pts. when it was set up the european partnership summit which sees the you and former soviet republics sit down for talks it was meant to try and encourage the expansion of the european union integration between the e.u. countries this time around ukraine is set to dominate all of the talks both while ukraine is being discussed in prague or even that won't be taken notable absentee the european commission president jose manuel barroso and also the e.u. head diplomat catherine ashton also know senior members of governments from what you would call old europe really likes of great britain here in germany of france none of those senior representatives are going to be taking part so it seems they've moved away from this body that was set up to try and get people involved. in the e.u. one thing that will be discussed that this will be a future aid that could be given we've seen the united states recently offer quite derisory fifteen million dollars also the e.u. had initially offered a whopping thirty billion euros in eighty ukraine so far they were trying to lower that figure well ukraine's you have to see one of the promised money we are seeing though is some opposition to wards the expansion of the e.u. borders here in germany the the christian social union who are the sister party of under the merkel's ruling ruling christian democrat party they have there that big . book partnership with ukraine yes but membership for ukraine no this is something we saw towards the end of last year when it was being discussed the partnership deal people in europe saying we want to do business with these countries but the money it's going to cost the e.u. to make their members well that's just not going to cut it with the citizens of europe. the u.s. and israel have can down the palestinian unity deal which will bring together former rivals in gaza and the west bank washington and tel aviv you say that fatah has put peace talks on the back burner by choosing to side with hamas and the palestinian agreement calls for a unity government and the a seven year rift went to mass one election back in two thousand and six tension with fatah escalated the latter took control of the west bank while hamas dug in deeper in gaza infighting and conflict with israel have been shaking their region for years a million now have gaza residents are still living under a blockade imposed by television human rights advocate he says israel as now washed its hands over the prospects of a peace deal with the palestinians. israeli government led by prime minister in it and you know. i think in the back room open the bottle of the bottles of champagne this government is not truly interested in promoting a peace process and therefore while they have such a unity government with hamas who's of course see an organization that. uses terror measures against israel for them it's a big victory to prove that they're not the ones to blame on the installment in the peace process but rather the palestinians in the long run though i think that the inclusion of hamas and the reunion between the two parts of the succesive. sixty seven palestine meaning the west bank and gaza are actually good news for those who actually want peace. now an afghan security guard has shot down three american doctors at a hospital in kabul it's latest violence in a country which is awaiting the results of the recent presidential election and it's still unclear if ghana stand out will be able to avoid a potentially risky vote. governor is here with me in the studio and spend a lot of time. and. let's take a look at the situation there i mean the vote counting has been a lengthy process a stake in a really really long time now but will that translate into greater transparency in your opinion it's difficult to see how that's going to happen what we're seeing now is that there is much more fraud in this election than previously reported afghan authorities got something like three thousand complaints about a third of those were serious enough to actually affect the outcome of the vote and they need time to investigate that in fact there was more incidence of serious fraud in this election than the previous one in two thousand and nine when more than a million ballots had to be thrown out and what we're seeing is that this election was really hailed as a success that largely was in the cities but over time it's emerged that because of violence and fraud in the countryside there's sort of a different picture on the ground there we've heard very disturbing accounts for example of ghost polls that means polling centers that were open on paper but never in reality they're taken over by a warlord or a powerful strong man who then stuff the boxes the ballot boxes there's also a new report from the and our district in gaza a province that found basically most of the polling centers that the independent election commission said were open actually weren't and residents there reported threatening letters from the taliban being tacked on to doors roadside bombs. away to the polling centers and actual fighting in some cases at the polling centers and this is of course also on top of allegations that independent observers are being kept in the dark about the process there had been a lot of foreign monitors for the election on the ground but many of those had to be pulled out because of the spate of high profile attacks and foreigners in the country's capital so all of this adds up to a really murky picture and of course threatens to undermine the legitimacy of what's supposed to be afghanistan's first ever democratic transfer to a very tense atmosphere there and but putting all the political paper shuffling aside i mean how will all the changes impact ordinary people's lives it's very difficult to see of course the hope is that they will somehow but the challenges are so big for the country and for the people at this point the two front runners are. gone now connie is a former world bank executive he was educated at columbia university he's picked a really controversial running mate a man that even he described as a known killer general dostum has been accused of brutal killings in the civil war of the one nine hundred ninety s. dr abdullah has been the foreign minister in the past in a country he too has surrounded himself by dubious dubious people and of course whoever wins will have immense challenges ahead the international community had poured billions of dollars into the country under president karzai questions as to whether that level of funding will be there there's economic problems there's corruption there are security challenges and so while the hope is that there will be political change that will translate into meaningful change for people's lives difficult to see how that will actually happen we're losing this point thank you so much for bringing us the latest on the situation in afghanistan especially the vote counting and how it's going and what people implications of this process will be for even when there are a afghanis there's a gulf and they are. there's now an easy route to citizenship and it goes via portugal it's open to anyone willing to spend half million half a million euros on property in the country but while residency for real estate is giving the economy a lift it's also sending house prices soaring as artie's and reformer reports. it's a lifestyle that's being sold around the world portugal sound and see can be anyone's for the right price splash out half a million euros on a place in the sun and you'll be given the right to live here so this apartment is around nine hundred thousand euros we're talking about. around seven thousand euros per square meter new you know there's been selling properties to foreigners since the golden days of skiing was started two years ago it also gives take is the right to work in portugal and travel freely around most countries to six years they can then apply for a portuguese passport to be interest is coming from the chinese and there's plenty that attracts them first of all the life here even fresh air they can send their children to schools in particle that are saying you are so far the portuguese government has granted over seven hundred such freezes and they've generated over four hundred million euros for its hard hit economy but not everyone is impressed all of these investments are in real states so what is happening is housing the center of lisbon or houses by the beach or whatever are going up prices up it's speculation on real states and i'm pretty sure we all remember that this was the cause of the financial crisis nuno is doing well as one of the best pictures of his real estate business deals with around one hundred forty golden visa clients a year but he's quick to point out it's not just him that benefits remember that these developers that are selling are buying new products and refurbishing lisbon and they are creating more jobs in construction and there are drivers that drive the client so the the economy is changing totally so there is some trickle down but it's not as much as promised these are also granted to anyone's. setting up a business employing more than ten people but that's not a popular option recently i guess it was a month or two ago there was news about the first joy of that was created from to the school that if you think it's for a little whatever the criticism selling a slice of the good life is a popular money spinner spain cyprus and greece also badly affected by the financial crises run similar schemes so you are of sure to gains weighing any long term fees over reinflated property market. for artsy. and or modern our breaking news story at least five self-defense fire example these men have been killed as for launches a military crackdown on anti-government protesters in the eastern ukrainian city of slavyansk according to the interior ministry three self-defense checkpoints were destroyed with tanks snipers and troops now being deployed to the area to fans forces in some hours are saying they had to regroup into the city center as they are expanding in new offensive activist in donetsk region have announced for mobilization they describe the situation as civil war ukraine southeast has been in the grip of mass protests for months with people defying the interim government in kiev and a man in greater autonomy. after the break more explicit insight into the work of our teams correspondent and a news team to stay with us. the standoff or should i say stand down by the government at the bundy ranch is probably the largest victory for the average american against the bureaucratic machine that any of us have seen in years in fact this event is a microcosm of what's going on in america you have this classical image of what's of such an american cowboy the rugged individual wrong by the current federal government and their bureaucracy trying to take away his livelihood you know i bet a lot of you out there could really relate to this sort of narrative but there are certainly a lot of people who don't many of those in the mainstream and liberal media are enraged that bundy didn't immediately abandon one hundred forty years of family tradition on that land the second the federal government told him to because it's the law look i'm not the type of guy who wear cowboy hat or pronounce the name of the country but i can tell you one thing the rugged individual in the usa did not flourish because he bowed to authority at the drop of a hat neil just give away anything that was rightfully his to the master and america also didn't flourish by sending agents who looked mostly like soldiers with assault rifles to break up protesters honestly when we look at the bundy ranch standoff we can clearly see everything that's right and everything that's wrong with america right now but that's just my opinion. the bios of believes that it was the cleansing us forces of it was an attempt to seize the opportunity to purge the presence from the territories do you craniums the leaders of the ukrainian insurgent army considered their own. genocide is genocide and polls should never support increasingly vocal opinions that the mass murder of jews should be considered genocide while the mass murder of poles shouldn't. go if you close the door on monuments to. shoot she gave each clutch call ski. and to many of those in ten up hill it is very alarming. says order gave orders to kill completely innocent people and have thousands of civilians murdered to do so but putting up a monument in honor of such a person is something that is completely beyond reason that the. economic pressure. for. the boy. to. optimise now is. hearts. and minds. today and made signs of more or less a secret police. presence where strangers are feaster against an arcade facing up to what he. saw. that we are in space. international news and collins live from moscow you won't see international with me as you know. very well welcome to the program. several people have died as government process in the ukraine into a full scale second day with a whole new level of violence. was. very quick so we have to feed it over to moscow and then we can use it in our lives. it's much louder than yesterday and the picture now is much better because you can see all the remains of the buses over here which pretty much tells you the story of how things some traveled yesterday. morning in kiev but the tensions of sunday night are no dying down anytime soon you can see what remains of the police cars and police buses which were pretty afraid to take a picture of what happened here yesterday literally fifty meters from here maybe even trying to meet as we can see the police lines the riot police are over there they're trying to secure the perimeter from time to time there are clashes between the protesters and the police violence extreme violence happens from both sides we see pictures of policemen beating up to a bloody pulp on the ground is said to be pulling all the shots and what is happening here but definitely it's something here is not likely to die down any time so. right now we have to. if you feed it over to moscow so they can use it my life. which is about fifteen minutes from now so we actually got to run the thing we're so close to the whole scene actually because. this tells us a lot in terms of our speed so my friend the plan is like weekly upload to moscow because i'll be having a live broadcast in forty minutes and it has to be included in the live broadcast so i hope we do it last night it took less than five minutes to get it right ok cool the technologies are progressing and give before that it used to take us three for me six hours to get i want cereal to moscow. right now it's actually five seven minutes which is good and especially when you get a quick candid camera man who can do stuff quickly it's also helpful we don't even have time to actually look through what we recorded because it has to be like bang bang which is to moscow but i can see the pictures it's much better than yesterday exactly what we needed. but it's daylight it's so it also helps because you can see everything you can see all the factual stuff around the burned buses the rocks thrown at the police the police itself because last night the police was not visible because of the dollar so today it was like i'm hundred percent satisfied with what we did. i hope the newsroom will be as well i'm telling moscow right now that the report will be there in blocks and to ten minutes he says ok ok knowledged affirmative look at the speed so it's actually two minutes remaining i was talking there for four minutes in my walk and talk and it's feed it to most going to mean in two minutes so it's twice faster than the real time actual footage which is sometimes a bit awkward when the newsroom calls me and says you have a live in two hours like maybe than hour and a half in two hours so well two hours is pretty enough time to get yourself dressed to wake up to have a shower have a cup of coffee everything and then they say oh you also have to do it as life or film something or an interview before your life if you get over to mosco was like. that's getting a bit complicated good thing again the speed of the internet and the fact that we managed to get everything in the space of fifteen minutes which is sixty times faster than five years ago. last. they're sticking up overnight to. the city really it works against you it gets hard to. stay attractive here because it's so hard to get from a to b. and looking like crap by the time you can see. their shovels and smal from the sweat pouring out of the air well i don't that. there is nothing glamorous about this show and i'm actually not very glamorous to look and do do i really do i'm continued complaints or. so as a female correspondent we work and i really do believe this we work harder than our male counterparts to be taken seriously and to be considered smart. it's absolutely true and i love men but that's that's the truth ok ready. that's clear about it and. it is controversy because reimburse given the political climate around the world. or do you think it's you know the next to come from the western world sees it very differently than the russians do and it's. just trying to be objective but it's hard when the when the figure is. this is. the scene of them. are down because i'm sorry. go to. a lot of. the. faces will swallow. the international conference on syria which is taking place. its success widely depends on the participation of anyone with an influence on the situation and i'm sure that. added to that iran. iran not taking part in the conference is not a catastrophe but it will. not taking part in the conference is definitely not a catastrophe but it surely won't help unite the muslim world in the fight against terror which is also expected to be one of the key issues on the table here in montreal since it's widely known that besides the political opposition fighting there in syria terrorists and. the international peace conference on syria taking place here in this beautiful town they've been saying that its success really does depend on everyone on the situation. we'll be covering the whole conference and we'll be bringing you the latest details as it happens. ok i think. my face is all poppy today and i'm with looks. just like this. do something with. these don't they're not opening. this. swiss water on my face and i. just hope that it says no swimming because the water is contaminated. thank. you jesus. they're installing a catapult over there we need to go film it right now. this is like a middle aged thing. believe in the middle age i think it was used. in the war between france and england which look. guys we've got to go record a little bit so we can invert it into our life. let's go let's go this is serious i mean. i. think i have to take it with me this time. god knows what's on their minds. last night i wore it i put it all because there was a stiff feeling that. i could get hit with a rock. which was probably yesterday today so far it's been not like that but still i'm. keeping hold of it because you never know where it's going to go. just to give you the idea of how serious this whole thing is here the protesters are installing a catapult ability to make sure their project tiles would reach the police lines over there so far not all the molotov cocktails and rocks have reached the police lines well they're trying to make sure things they're hurting at the police will actually reach the police lines which are just literally seven to me just away from here this is but this device here when they set it up they hope that definitely the the project also would be able to reach the pole the cell the tension is still very very high frequency. might get actually it might get even worse just today something else there will be a big holiday in ukraine which is always marked by a march people through the streets so we've got to make sure we're ready for that. my colleagues told me that if a massacre is to happen it probably happens in one state. we want to make sure that the region so citrus was the most tourist of the role. within the state which respects the rights as far as language go use to route through additions hugh roofs them into the things that could sort. of malnutrition. violent. drug addiction. government. in security. corruption. what are the values you lucy company reports on afghan realities this is an incredible group. the fact that. i didn't know that you know the price is the only industry specifically mentioned in the constitution and. that's because a free and open press is critical to our democracy trek albus. role. in fact the single biggest threat facing our nation today is the corporate takeover of our government and our craft semi-colons we've been hijacked lying handful of transnational corporations that will profit by destroying what our founding fathers one still just my job market and on this show we reveal the big picture of what's actually going on in the world we go beyond identifying the problem trucks and rational debate and a real discussion of critical issues facing or not to find her job ready to join the movement then walk away from the big picture. dramas that can't be ignored to. stories others refuse to notice. the faces change the world writes never. filled picture of today's news. from around the globe. dropped. so you go girl girl girl the cover of the. ok so cold walk walk walk talk talk talk stop talking then go out ok. well an apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind the walls of this model we live among the five remains of the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to save its resting in peace should i walk out of his view ok. three two when apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind these walls the walls of blue the no one second. and one apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind the walls of this mausoleum i'm going to slip. well an apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind the walls of this mausoleum lay the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to say that he's resting in peace here. should i keep walking on i'm saying it and walk out of his view because it looks funky when we just stop and talk. shit that i walk in family with direction. it's. to turn to are actually rest in peace here so i'm just trying to get fuse lines perfect because i want them to sound exactly like they want them to sound it's not my voice saying it so it's hard when apple of discord and the love of this is hard guys. three two. hold on. freddie. when apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind these walls lay the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to say he's resting in peace here it's one member fifty eight. well an apple of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind these walls lay the remains of a revolutionary and a founder of the soviet state but it's hard to say he is resting in peace here. you know. when apple of discord in the. when apple of discord and the very heart of moscow's red square behind the walls of this mausoleum lay the remains of the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to argue that he is resting in peace there. let's do one more i'm not happy with that i don't like it. more now full of discord in the very heart of moscow's red square behind these walls lay the mummified remains of the revolutionary and the founder of the soviet state but it's hard to argue that he is resting in peace there. that. normally doesn't take that many takes but i want this to look right because this is the square. and i want them to i want this right i want this one right and . sorry under. international peace conference on syria. just watching my report and well there's a problem with the puffiness. policy for me not only for me but i guess the law profession. we do work hard we don't have a schedule. at all. and we work hard and we. just basically it's i guess it wouldn't work. you can't work hard. or the other way around so basically what i would go if i have. friends that are sick or have a cold like. that i just get pretty. funky. and this was a problem we had to be. when we were filming because i don't know what happened but it looks like a truck drove over my face or something plus the light outside it's. sunny or anything that's sort of the bad everyone looks bad in that and i just feel. i mean. there's a trick to fix that which is not going to make me. look very masculine. got to do i think i guess is it maybe because i am sort of tired. we just spent a week in paris doing some stories and some reports and only had two days in moscow which i had to use completely to sort out some of my. just like house stuff. like i don't know. i didn't drink lots of water. i don't know what it's called. we don't want to know. this is the told me how to do it just at the shop where he came and said. made me. so i'm just going to do what it will be to do. so he would. only say. i think i'm getting better at it first time i think i put a little bit too much. like a transvestite. i. feel very manly right now. i hope that's going to work. and then i don't look like a transvestite at the same time. i looks a little bit like it. something and i know this too but i like it when i do this the whole thing jiggles under my. bag and under my i was juggles. it's not good. all right i have to fix the no situation stuff. the self-made self assemble kind of pulled by the protesters there about to. leave launch an attack on the police forces over there it's really hard just hard to imagine how the police might respond so that you see they take they cleared passage over there in the middle so that means that the catapult may actually move towards the police lines and hurl whatever they want to hurl at an automotive cocktail or a rock or something else at the police we're meters away from the from the whole scene and we're above it so it gives us a perfect view point we can see basically everything happening just a great credit to the to the guys that are t. who booked this hotel for us and particularly this this room because it gives us a great advantage over many of our competitors. there now chanting what is already a like a typical thing of the protest glory to you crane glory to its heroes glory to the nation death to its enemies they believe that the government is trying to sell their country to russia the biggest worry right now is that on the other side of the police barricades there are reports that they have the heavy armored vehicles not tanks but we call them bt ours and if those. try to break the protest the lines there will be there will be blood spilt because this. these cars are heavy they are very reinforced and everything which which is now in the possession of these protesters like maldives rocks and things would not be able to stop would not be able to harm those bt ours. is getting serious they climbed on top of. the building and throwing molotov cocktails directly at the police. at. the test that it flew roughly five meters. this is not going to work. i want to what the next step will be here's maybe a choice of horse. or not going as. i would three different now about the test launch. i've been tweeting yesterday and today about the whole things in crane and lots of retreats like hundreds literally so people i reached it in what's happening here it's actually going to raising huge interest online at least protest isn't give just test launched their get up all the projectile flew less than ten meters. twitter lets you know if you and your tweet has been repeated by a follower with more than ten thousand followers. by someone with more than ten thousand followers and i had like plenty of those today someone. from north america just for tweeted me into seconds left i tweeted about the catapults. i always tweet in two languages i tweet in english and in russian as well or actually interesting which is good which is good i mean seriously it's not it's not the case of a vanity or anything like that it's just that i find it very pleasurable that people are interested in events here. that's that's is that is my job to deliver the news to the people so that they find their interest and. going. this is on seem to national kind of see line from moscow how and welcome to the progress. two people have died as a until government prize has seen the ukrainian capital go into a fourth consecutive day with a whole new level of violence police have torn down barricades blocking central kiev entrées down rises and the retaliation of protesters has been equally as forceful as an expat ash of scale is that for us right now the situation in kiev throughout the night has been indeed very tense still there was an attempt by the police to push the protest this off the perception of a street which is the governmental court or the government buildings in fact only a hundred meters away from here it was done not in a violent but sometimes used non-lethal shotguns against the protesters but there were no scuffles they were just trying to push the protesters off this square after that some reinforcements came from independence square that's about one hundred fifty meters from here and the protesters they charged at the police so the police had to take a few steps back and. the situation right now is pretty much at a standstill the only a few dozen meters are separate from the police line and the line of the protest this as you can hear like records they're being exploded that sounds some points molotov cocktails have been thrown at the police the police actually responded with throwing those most of cocktails back at the protests this this issue ation is still very tense we do know that president got a call which urged the opposition to hold negotiations with with members of the government we do know that some talk has held but there has been no information about what these talks were about they were held behind closed doors and as the know there is no political solution political decision to solve this ongoing crisis the situation is still very tense the assault may happen at any moment we can see a water cannon standing in the middle of police lines that have no form a you letter around this one account which suggests that they may be forming something of a formation to assault to to try to push the protest. again back to the independence question. we're still following the developments and we'll see how the rebels but right now right now it's monday with grenade situation pretty much unexpected unpredictable and nobody knows where it's going to go. right on the scene. first for you and i think you're. on a reporter's twitter. and instagram. could be in the. on top. of the i also believe that it was ethnic cleansing or spores most of it was an attempt to seize the opportunity to encourage the polish presence from the territories at the ukrainians the leaders of the ukrainian insurgent army considered their own. genocide is genocide and polls should never support an increasingly vocal opinions that the mass murder of jews should be considered genocide while the mass murder of poles shouldn't. go largely because of their own monuments to. shoot she gave each to watch close ski leave. and to many of those instead not pale it is very alarming. says order gave orders to kill completely innocent people and have. thousands of civilians murdered it would be so but putting up a monument in honor of such a person is something that is completely beyond reason that you know. breaking news here on rt international five members of the self-defense force police killed crackdown on anti-government protesters in the east of ukraine it's stoking fears the country is on the brink of civil war. kiev relaunching its offensive as a crime against the people this just hours after the u.s. president moscow for not abiding by the geneva roadmap to peace. with the energy the u.k. government could allow corporations to shale gas right under people with no fear of legal consequences. welcome to the program here on r.t. international we come to you live from moscow and straight to our breaking news for you this hour five self-defense fighters on a policeman have been killed as launchers a military crackdown on government protesters this in the eastern ukrainian city of slavyansk according to the country's interior ministry three self-defense checkpoints have been destroyed with tanks snipers and troops all now entering the area but self-defense fighters say the armored vehicles had to pull back a
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r&r. much needed. well-deserved. i'm sure all the nice snow and the time with your lovely bride was interrupted by this news yesterday. and i want to ask you what it brought back for you. unfortunately it was too recently that you went through all of this yourself and survived that in 2009. >> right. well, november 5th, 2009, was obviously a terrible day as was yesterday. and, you know, it brought back a lot of emotions, very difficult time for me to look at the file footage that they have with the police and everyone running around. that was so similar. it just -- it just tore at my heart strings because it's the same exact situation except for the fact that we don't know the motivations behind this shooting. >> you're right. we don't know the motivation. were you surprised that there was another shooting at ft. hood? >> i was surprised and you know you can never tell when these things are going to happen and it's just really difficult whenever it happens to just all of a sudden deal with the emotions of, you know, and you just want to -- you just want to kind of turn your back on it, but you can't. >> no, you certainly can't. does it feel like a different kind of betray l or worse because it's a soldier and on base where you're out of harms way and safe? >> well, it does have a different dynamic with another soldier killing his fellow comrades. that was the same situation on november 5th. and just hard to believe that these people that you serve with who are your brothers in arms would turn against you. and it -- it actually has happened a lot overseas. it's just incredible that at home someone in the environment of a military base would decide to do this. >> after the navy yard shooting in 2013, after the 2009 situation at ft. hood, some changes were made. what more would you like to see change at the bases to protect our personnel? >> honestly, i have a few ideas about that. the thing is that the chain of commands and the security procedures and all of that are never going to be enough to stop someone like this because if someone's determined to commit a crime like this, they're probably going to find a way to do it. it's more the responsibility of the people around him or her day in and day out to monitor their fellow soldiers' mental condition. and there are tail tale signs when this is going to happen. it takes somebody brave enough to step up and report these people in order for it to be prevented. to me, that's the biggest thing that needs to come out of this is just awareness and putting political correctness aside and just being able to, you know, be brave enough to step up and say something before something like this happens. >> staff sergeant, it could save lives. want to thank you. we know this is one of your first times on national television. thank you for speaking out so passionately. we want to wish you continued success in your recovery and in spending quality time out there with the folks from the wounded veterans. thank you so much for joining us today. >> yes, ma'am. thank you. >>> good morning. we do have breaking news. welcome to our viewers from across the u.s. and the world to "new day." it's thursday, april 3rd. kate bolduan is out sick. we have to tell you that america's largest military base is reeling from yet another deadly incident of soldier-on-soldier violence. four service members are dead including the gunman. 16 others wounded, three critically. the army confirms the shooter, an iraq veteran. why he did this still unknown. we're live at ft. hood with the latest. george? >> reporter: good morning. we know that this happened, the shooting spree happened in several different locations. first of all, it was between two buildings. the medical building and the transportation building here on base. lopez went to the first building and allegedly opened fire. then got into his vehicle, fired shots from the vehicle. then went into the second building, fired shots. we know that at least 16 people were injured. they are in various states of conditions at hospitals here in this area. we know that three people were killed in this situation. that number not including lopez. from what we understand, lopez used that weapon, that .45 caliber smith and wesson to shoot himself when he was confronted by a military officer. ft. hood, texas, back in 2009, a shooting where 13 people were killed and dozens of people injured as well. this community had to go through it again yesterday. the base was put on lockdown. people were told to shelter in place as ft. hood went through the trauma of yet another mass shooting. >> they barely had time to cover from that in 2009. what do we know about army specialist ivan lopez the shooter? >> we learned he may have been battling post tra stress disorder. and that he and his family just arrived in february at ft. hood. they were with lopez's wife when she found out her husband was the shooter. take a listen. >> the news when they repeated the name, everybody just broke down in tears. it seems like it was disbelief and, you know, it was a lot of hurt at the same time. >> let's bring in pentagon correspondent barbara star. give us an indication of what else we're finding out. >> specialist ivan lopez, we have some facts, but of course investigators still now digging into everything they can find out about him. he did serve a four-month tour of duty in iraq back in 2011. that, of course, as the war was winding down. in addition, yes, he was being evaluated at ft. hood for possible post-traumatic stress. he was undergoing treatment for anxiety and depression. and he had recently purchased the handgun. the army says this soldier was also undergoing treatment for a variety of other psychological and psychiatric issues. so certainly, this is going to bring up multiple questions now in the investigation. did ft. hood security meet standards after the 2009 surgery and what was going on with this soldier and how come nobody noticed. >> good question. barbara star, thank you so much for that. >> and obviously on the military side, they did notice, they were treating him. the pictures cloudy. trying to pick our way through it. joining me from washington, mr. tom fuentes. the obvious concern because of what happened in 2009 that this is someone self-radical liezed. i have no information on that. do you have have any? >> no, there's no indication yet. you can't rule it out until they complete the investigation. as of now, it does not appear to be terrorist motivated. >> earlier reports are it was soldier-on soldier, a beef gone bad, that cuts against him shooting multiple people in different places. do you think the mental health issue is going to play into this? >> i think absolutely it will. you have the base commander saying he had mental and behavioral problems receiving psychiatric treatment and medication. at least he had other problems that were well-known. but this is -- this is yet another story, a person with psychiatric problems walking into a gun shop and being able to obtain and weapon and ammunition and go shoot who he wants. i think that's nothing knew. that's not going to change. there's no indication of any political will to change that situation, so we'll just have to deal with it as it comes. this is not a u.s. penitentiary. it's like a small city. you have 90,000 people that live and work there. they're not going to search every car, every trunk, pat down every person going through there. it's a city. it's a working city. and the -- and it's a place where people are trained and deployed as war fighters. so you have an extra personal of the population that are trained to kill, if you will. this is to be expected. we don't want it to happen and we say we're going to do everything from stop it from happening, but we're just fooling ourselves. it's not going to be completely eliminated. there's not anything you can do to completely stop this on military bases or in any other city for that matter. >> you've had several, maybe five shootings. it's not like they're hot spots for violence. coming off of 2009, there were supposed to be changing made. many were made. you're saying the issue of whether or not ft. hood knows how to secure the fighting men and women isn't an issue. yes? >> we can pontificate that they're going to do some exotic security measure that's going to keep 90,000 people safe and everybody that comes and goes checked, but it's not going to happen. it's not a practical solution for that to happen. >> sure. >> as i said, you're training war fighters. what's to stop someone on the firing line with a live weapon exercise from just turning on the instructors and fellow people. >> that's a hypothetical. that's not what happened here. want to take one step back. he is undergoing mental health treatment and evaluation. he is yet still able to walk into a private store and get this semi-automatic handgun that he's using. don't you think that's something that needs to be addressed in terms of who's abled to get these conceal carry weapons? >> that scenario has happened over and other. our country has shown it has no political will to change that situation. >> but, as somebody in the business of stopping crime, when you see this pattern, is it something that is relevant to address in your opinion? >> in my opinion, yes, it's relevant to address. but in my opinion also, it won't be. >> why not? >> that's a political question. that's a political question, chris. law enforcement executives across the country have asked our leaders to do something about the situation of people with mental problems being able to obtain a weapon and the lack of background checks and on and on. and, you know, we've seen where that's gone over the last how many years. that's not going to change, i don't think. >> you're right. it's a discussion for a different day, but obviously a factor here. because again, if you want to talk about ft. hood security, this is not a military-issued weapon, it's his own weapon. as you say, if you check everybody who comes through, it's going to stop all business in what is basically its own city. you're the one treating him, you're the one evaluating him, should there have been a red flag on this guy that he should get extra attention security-wise. what do you think of that? >> thatst that's a question for the military. we don't know all of their procedures internally right now. i think that is yet to be evaluated. i will say this, that there have been enough of these, not just the major incidents you've described. there's been enough frequency during the last 13 years of the u.s. army war for the united states that the army and fbi execute add memorandum of understanding where the army said, you know, this happens a lot, we'll do this. normally the fbi would have primary jurisdiction of a capital crime on a u.s. military base. they said you know what, please support us and provide assistance, but we'll go ahead, the army's criminal investigation division will go ahead and take the lead on cases. that was based on how often these things have been happening for more than a decade. >> what does it mean for you that he winds uptaking his own life when confronted by the brave female mp who came at him? >> we've seen that before as well where individuals at the end of the shooting spree go ahead and take their life whether it was the shooter at virginia tech or others. hasan didn't do that and was wounded and neutral liezed. many individuals like that go ahead and take their own life. >> when you rook at the situation, the most important question is the hardest to answer. how do you stop it the next time. not an easy solution. >> no it's not. >> there's a lot of issues like that. and again, as i said, making ft. hood or any other military base the equivalent of a u.s. penitentiary is not going to happen. >> understood. we're going to keep you up to date on what we learn about the shooter at ft. hood. a lot of other news as well. >>> break overnight as well, chile rattled by a powerful aftershock measuring 7.6. this is a day after an 8.2 magnitude et quake rocked the country's northern coast. at least six people killed. no word on damage or injuries from the latest big tremor. >> scary moments last night for passengers on a flight from atlanta to new york. it was diverted to jfk after signs of trouble with the hydraulic system. that controls the brakes. it rolled into a grassy area while taxiing. no major injuries to the 118 passengers and five crew members on that flight. >> some 175 marines will begin deploying to romania. it serves to increase the u.s. military presence in the region as tensions rise over russia's troop buildup on the ukraine border. they are suspending communication except for the international space station. >>> attacking what one called a culture of corruption. senators grilled general motors ceo mary barra wednesday over recalling 6.2 million vehicles for a defect now tied to 13 deaths. barra unable to explain why gm failed to change a critical part number possibly hindering investigators trying to find a problem. guys, that was quite a grilling for two days. >> two days. >> should be just the beginning. >> it is just the beginning. >>> all right. a little break here. when we come back on "new day," the search for flight 370 has a ticking clock. we have to find the black box before the batteries go off. will it happen? 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(mom) i'm so excited. >>> welcome back to "new day." the australian prime minister today called the hunt for flight 370 the most difficult search in human history. it just got more difficult. the ship that will help detect the black box is delayed. paula newton is live in perth with the latest. why are they shifting the search? >> reporter: such a moving target it is, chris. when we asked them a straight answer about whether or not that search zone has been narrowed, they're refusing to tell us if it has or his hasn't. the other areas, they're not sighting anything new there. which is why they're searching the adjoining waters. yesterday, tony abbott hosted the malaysian prime minister. both of them had very sobering words basically this mystery may never be solved. all the assets are in play, what they need, of course, what everyone needs is a trace of that flight 370 and then they will be able to backtrack, take it from there and look for those black boxes. i think though many are wondering how much confidence they have that this is the right search area. it's a certainly a question that continues to nag family members. >> all right. thank you. we should point a out this is all coming adds time runs out on the flight data recorders pinger. let's bring in david, the author of a book called "why planes crash" also a former faa inspector. let's talk about this shift in the search zone again. does it make sense in your estimation to shift the search zone and rule out certain areas given that what we know of the current and the winds constantly moving items in the ocean? >> you know, i think it really does make sense that it's shifting. as michael kay said earlier though, i'd like to see more moving to the north. i'm not certain as to why they're not doing that. it would make sense they would. perhaps the assumptions they made are a little off or their recalibrating their assumptions. >> we don't have a lot of hard data to focus on. let's talk about the hard data we have. it's netting these wildly differing conclusions. that is frustrating to some people. i imagine from your point of view too, that sort of seems like we're sort of casting a wide net. >> we are. and something that happened yesterday that's very interesting to me and that's that we had the suggestion that -- that we recreate it i why don't we send one out there with the same equipment, attach it to the sat com, get some pinging that could be compared. fly the routes that we think it may be. compare that to the l-bands and see if we can narrow this down to a very close period of time. so i've contacted boeing through some sources and we're going to talk about that today hopefully. >> has it been done in the past to recreate a situation to figure out what could have happened? >> yes, absolutely. the 737 that crashed in colorado springs we did extensive testing to try to reproduce the issue of the rudder pedals. we did thousands of hours flying that 737 through the same area trying to duplicate the winds and the position and the rudder position from information we got. >> let's get back to some of the resources and assets being used right now in the investigation -- in the search, rather. we know the japanese pulled back one of their assets. there was a gulfstream in the area. do you get a sense that countries are going to start pulling back assets? are we going to see in the next weeks or days a bit of search fatigue? >> well, absolutely. and every investigation, especially when you're not getting results, you're going to lose a lot of motivation, a lot of push. you know, the prime minister talked a lot last night about saying we're going to do everything we can humanly possible to continue this investigation and to find this airplane. as i said last night, humanly possible has its limits. there's a point this wirpt it won't be humanly possible to do this. >> you talk about winter, the australian ambassador to the u.s. said they're going to search until hell freezes over. it's a bold statement and a commitment. >> yeah, it will feel like that out there when it gets cold. it's time i think to shift our efforts from from -- if we took a fragment of the money and spent it doing proactive things. >> like what, david? >> like funding the next gen program. it's an air traffic system. it's updating the system that we've had in plates since the '50s. it needs to very much be done because the air spaces are getting more and more crowded. you can see it at airports. in the addition, the amount of fuel. billions and billions of dollars are being spent unnecessarily routing around airports. under next gen that doesn't have to happen. it's only for the united states air space, but it should propogate into other air spaces eventually. it would be in this scenario, all the other airplanes around there would be receiving radar data as though they were the radar controller and they would be able to tell us exactly where that airplane was the entire time. >> so the faa might be looking into it for america and american air space. how does it then get adopted by international entities and how do you make sure that that kind of thing is available the world over? >> literally, everything single aviatiiviation authority i've w with has adopted at least a version of what the faa does. the faa is the world leader in safety. it's followed by almost every other country. you'll notice that those regulations are almost cut and paste and put into them and and then adopted to their particular culture. it wouldn't be a stretch to have the international civil organization accepts it. once they're accepted by those two, other countries would definitely fall in line. >> we certainly can expect there will be changes. david, contributing again with us on our coverage of the missing air flight 370. thanks so much for being with us today. chris? >> all right. let's take a break here on "new day." when we come back, another shooting spree at ft. hood. 16 injured. we're going to speak with the trauma surgeon who operated on some of the victims. >>> plus, we're going to go inside politics where a new poll shows who has the most 2016 buzz. let's make a little bet. tweet. most of the time people are shocked when we show them where they're getting the acid, and what those acids can do to the enamel. there's only so much enamel on a tooth, and everybody needs to do something about it now if they want to preserve their teeth. i recommend pronamel because it helps strengthen the tooth and makes it more resistant to acid breakdown. we want to be healthy and strong through the course of our life, and by using pronamel every day, just simply using it as your toothpaste, you know you will have that peace of mind. with waffles and laughs for our family of four. the pool is waiting, don't you dare fret. there's no need to ask, "are we there yet?" be a weekender at hotels like hampton and embassy suites. book now at hiltonweekends.com >>> welcome back to "new day." cnn's breaking news coverage of the deadly shooting at ft. hood. four people are dwed including the gunman. 16 others wounded following the second soldier-on soldier massacre. the army is confirming that the gunman spent four months serving in iraq in fwef. he and his family had just arrived at the base in february. he was also being evaluated for ptsd. we're learning more about what the mental health treatment may have played into in terms of motive. there's also going to be the perspective on the victims, some of them are critically wound. we're going to talk to a surgeon who is treating them. let's get to the other stories. >>> secretary of state john kerry says israel and the p palestinians made progress over night. he says gaps remain and will have to be closed quickly. kerry has spent a lot of time in the region but canceled his latest trip. >>> a closely watched vote expected today over releasing details of the cia's tore chir programs. the vote on declassifying part of a 6,000-page report will likely happen behind closed doors. most republicans expected to vote against releasing it. the investigation reportedly found the cia misled the government and the public about torture after nem9/11 in order justify using it. >>> after the deadly consulate attack in benefit ga si libya in 2012. they wanted to avoid the appearance of gloating. he said politics had nothing to do with it. four americans were killed in that attack. >>> an intriguing stud shows overall women who take fertility drugs do not increase their risk of getting breast cancer compared to those who forego treatment. but women who were not able to become pregnant after taking fertility drugs had nearly twice the risk of women who never took the medication at all. but as you know, more and more women taking these drugs to get pregnant, delaying childbirth quite frankly. a lot of people concerned about what these reports are saying. >> thank you for that. >>> let's get to "inside politics" on "new day" with mr. john king looking at polling for us today. >> good morning to everybody. we're going to start with good news and not so good news for the governor of new jersey chris christie. on the good news front, he wants to say bridgegate is not affecting my viability and importance on the national stage. look at these new numbers out. they announced late last night they they raised $33 million in the last months while he's been chairman. he's trying to say, look, i can still do my job with this cloud over my head. former ap -- reunion here. my old friend from my ap days. let's start there, ron. he can raise a lot of money, be that doesn't mean there's not still a cloud over chris christie. >> i could probably raise a lot of money right now given the stakes and the selection. i still think it's a hard road for him. he's supposed to be somebody bipartisan, e official as a leader and a truth-teller. we don't know what the doj is going to do with this investigation. >> this is not an approval rating. how do you feel about a candidate, do you feel this person is hot or cold. chris christie was number one in january. he was the hottest politician in america. he's fallen to ninth now. that tells you one thing. elizabeth warren, the senator from massachusetts, hillary clinton number two. what does that tell you, january he's top, now he's ninth. >> i think it tells you people are paying attention to this bridge skap dal. those of us in washington and on the east coast, we know chris christie, we know the story. people in other parts of the country hadn't known him as well. this was supposed to be a period of time building a national profile, introducing himself to a lot of americans who didn't know his story. and what they're hearing is bridgega bridgegate. i think that's what you're seeing reflecting in some of these numbers. >> it is still early. it's only 2014. the president hit the road yesterday. first he was at the white house. and hit the road and wanted to talk about the economy. he's in michigan saying we should raise the minimum wage. he's trying to make it more about the republican budget. >> if it all sounds familiar it should be familiar because it was their economic plan in the 2012 campaign, it was their economic plan in 2010. it's like that movie "groundhog day" except it's not funny. >> this is what you would expect him to do. find something on the republican side to try to criticize. do you believe they it can work or is it just their best play? >> it's a little bit of both. this is also a message that worked for obama in the 2012 election. he talked about how ryan's budget is a throwback to 2012. well, that's a throwback to obama's reelection mess sanl. they think if they can cast democrats as the part looking out for the middle class that they have a chance. there's a lot that goes into the election beyond that message. >> part of the president's challenge here, ron, when you're president at 40-something in the polls is to keep your energy level up every day. we saw him at the health care event. he was energetic campaigning there. he is suddenly a happier warrior or is this what i might call faux mojo? >> he's going to improve his base, by he's not going to help himself in independence. knocking is not -- mocking is not how you improve your numbers. >> the biggest concern is getting that base out. >> the question is, will we see him. he was in michigan again. will we see him delivering this message in alaska, montana, arkansas? let's move on. a big supreme court decision yesterday. a lot of people complain about all the money in politics. another decision yesterday for the supreme court essentially saying free speech means you can spend almost whatever you want on campaigns. he put it this way, if the first amendment protects flag burning, it surely protects political campaign speech despite popular opposition. >> the short term, it means not only more money, which doesn't trouble me personally, it's more money that's going to be hidden. going to these third-party groups that don't have to disclose their donors. i think we're moving quickly to the point that even democrats have to look at the old republican idea. if you want to be the senator from tobacco, fine. you can take all the money you want, but it's instantly disclosed on the internet. everybody knows about it as soon as you take that money. >> that's the question. will we get more transparency? >> got to. >> you would think that's the ultimate goal of this. you're just a small number of people that can really max out and hit this amount of money. what kind of influence do they get in presidential elections and midterm elections in donating to the come pains and the committees. if you don't add in more transparency we're heading down a troubling path. >> a lot of people think this is great for the fund raising committee. we can't say now everybody's maxed out. they're just going to keep coming, keeping a asking. it was demeaning to a president that a marketing ploy for david ortiz -- but here -- >> let us do it at this table? >> say what you wish. he takes this selfie with the president at the red sox celebration, it turns out he has a marketing deal from samsung. do they feel the president sort of snuck it into this? >> i think they're torn between their loyalty to the red sox and the president. they say he didn't know it was part of a marketing ploy. i think that any time you add in something like this that creates a distraction, it becomes a bit of an annoyance for the white house. i think it's a little uncouth to pull the president into something like that. >> it's just a spontaneous moment. oh yeah, i also have this marketing deal. i was at the ap when the first cell phone came out. it didn't have a camera in it. sarah palin gets a lot of criticism. here's one thing we can say for sure. she is funny. watch this. >> what are you doing calling me? >> well, i heard that back in 2008 you predicted that i would invade ukraine. is this true? >> you bet you vlad. >> i once innovavaded country cd you bet you vlad. >> a little known country. >> i actually think that was fallon being funny. he's a great impersonator. what he doesn't impersonate is being a red sox fan. >> i was trying to move on. >> i hear them laughing us. >> here's why, big poppy taking a selfie is not news. you have to stop bringing it up. it's over, j. >> okay. we won last night. we're back on the winning ways. focus on the records now. >> that game's on dispute. they actually lost 18-6. >>> coming up on "new day," we are learning more about the soldier who opened fire at ft. hood including his history of mental health problems. we're also going to track the status of those 16 injured. you're going to hear from the trauma surgeon who operated on some of them and hopefully they'll be recovering. >>> and also finding flight 370 is complicated and time consu consumi consuming. it also is a 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[ woman ] got me to 70 years old. i'm going to have to rethink this thing. it's hard to imagine how much we'll need for a retirement that could last 30 years or more. so maybe we need to approach things differently, if we want to be ready for a longer retirement. ♪ suddenly you're a mouthbreather. well, put on a breathe right strip and instantly open your nose up to 38% more than cold medicines alone. so you can breathe and sleep. shut your mouth and sleep right. breathe right. >>> welcome back. the search for flight 370 is unprecedented in its scope. it's also likely to be the most expensive investigation in history and this is just the sear search phase. christine romans is here to crunch some of the numbers with us. we know not any of the data is going to be figured out for several months. in terms of the stuff we do now on a daily basis, give us an idea of how much this is costing. >> they say basically everyone is just paying their own fright here. 61 aircraft. mast what's so interesting to me, originally a lot was coming out of military training budget. they're doing training admissions with this equipment. >> they're getting a chance to do it now. >> some of it like right now for the u.s. is going right into the navy operational budget. >> how much is the u.s. contributing? >> they've earmarked about 4 million. one source in the military telling us in general the rule of thumb here, they're looking about $100,000 a day. some of these aircraft deploying are $10,000 an hour. depending on how many aircraft are up and what the conditions are, that could change these numbers. >> the weather doesn't cooperate and deploy. that's hard. the u.s. just one of the multi nation effort. >> here's sort of the big seven. australia, knmalaysia. this search is centered off of perth, off of its own coast. basically saying everyone is paying their own way here. these are the seven key players at the moment. >> compared to others -- there's been a lot of comparisons made to air france. how much is this costing comparatively? >> this is now $21 million a month is the rule of thumb if you're looking at what the u.s. is paying, assuming everyone else is. you compare that, depending how long this takes. air france, 50 million. >> that went on for two years. >> yes. this is one of the longest ntsb investigations in history. and swiss air 111, this was in 1998 in canada, 39 million there. it took them years to find that aircraft. this gives you an idea of what the total cost ends up being. >> granted, like you said it's coming out of military budgets. >> and operating expenses. >> after litigation, lawsuits et cetera, what is this going to mean for malaysia airlines? >> solvency is an issue because they've been losing money for several years, right? we don't know what the burden will be on malaysia airlines in particular. it is the malaysia airlines, the government funds much of it. it has 20,000 employees. >> big employer. >> it has been losing money. malaysia will always want to have an airline. so the sovereign wealth fund, the big pot of money the government has to invest in companies, many thing the government would never let it go under or it would rebrand it. >> sure. >> if there's an image problem, they will rebrand it. >> part of the problem is, confidence in the airline safety, right? >> and liability and there's a criminal probe right now. >> all stuff down the line. now we got to find the plane. we got to find debris. >>> all right. going to take a break here on "new day." more on the mass shooting at ft. hood. 16 injured, three critically. going to speak with a trauma surgeon who operated on some of the victims. hopefully they're going to return to their families. i'm j-a-n-e and i have copd. i'm d-a-v-e and i have copd. i'm k-a-t-e and i have copd, but i don't want my breathing problems to get in the way my volunteering. that's why i asked my doctor about b-reo ellipta helps increase airflow from the lungs for a full 24 hours. and breo helps reduce symptom flare-ups that last several days and require oral steroids, antibiotics, or hospital stay. breo is not for asthma. breo contains a type of medicine that increases risk of death in people with asthma. it is not known if this risk is increased in copd. breo won't replace rescue inhalers for sudden copd symptoms and should not be used more than once a day. breo may increase your risk of pneumonia, thrush, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking breo. ask your doctor about b-r-e-o for copd. first prescription free at my breo.com at your ford dealer think? they think about tires. and what they've been through lately. polar vortexes, road construction, and gaping potholes. so with all that behind you, you might want to make sure you're safe and in control. ford technicians are ready to find the right tires for you
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injured one around a dozen people believed to be pro-government troops moved in near the town of solid r r useful as leader traveled there shortly after the incident. yet found. a way to cut and we baked. seventeen country today. with my own eyes i had delivery men there all along but were not wearing any. checkpoint and then simply. no one has seen them since. nobody knows. what. it's like. i think. it's that. this is a. number of times. these are individuals similar. events. i think a legal court of. this is that in the ship's been talking about weeks now and you. appear to be like you're saying that you can do this but the. people who. say i think i think that's what. makes this not have been in. the new york. is much greater. than the guardian russians and their role in ukraine and this came to be an example of that. in russia ukraine. and the earth really stepped. up government with the state or the new york times. fact. ideals that. journalism. essentially disappeared and so what you're seeing now in that incident is the result of that. washington millions of dollars in support ukrai
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r r t new york. now ukraine's radical right sector group is forming a squadron to fight anti-government protesters in the east and it's a clear breach of the geneva peace plan of which demands that all illegal armed groups lay down their weapons former counterterrorism intelligence officer charles sure bridge says key of faces major trouble if it fails to disarm the radicals the right wing elements are quite powerful within and without the ukraine government in areas such as kiev so in many ways it's to the benefit i think of many within ukraine not just on the program activists are the people living in east ukraine their organizations such as right sector. we may see a multifaceted situation. here where it isn't just. against probably you government against. the multifaceted in this way with a number of different actors which will muddy the waters for that make it more difficult yet to understand really with the lack of actual solid evidence that's emerging from the instance who is actually responsible for walt now russia's foreign minister says the u.s. is moving the goal post one of blames russia for stirring the unrest in the ukraine and his exclusive interview with r.t. sophie shevardnadze sergei lavrov said he believes that the americans are running the show in kiev very closely and he also hit out at ukraine's interim government for failing to implement the peace deal agreed in geneva and the foreign minister accused the west of inconsistency pointing out that people refusing to recognize the election in syria without constitutional reform are at the same time doing exactly that for ukraine. and first for russia's chief diplomat sergey lavrov has joined in that social media staple the selfie we'll check out our twitter stream for more on that. day in the. as if being battered by political turmoil wasn't enough ukrainians are now braced for a roll out of painful austerity measures in the east which is an industrial hub and key sector of the country's economy people are already on edge staging rallies and going on strikes that enhance going to ganske regions are also currently hotspots for and taking if unrest what you can see here are the local mines and they make up to twenty percent of the country's gross domestic product party's policy or when they're to find out what's driving people to the edge. tempers are flaring for two straight days these miners have been here on strike demanding to see management as the minutes climb so does their anger. it's a scene playing out across ukraine few you that said repayments are late and cough up too little to live on we're not sure but. i have one question how come they don't give people a job what are we supposed to do now steal turn to drugs rob people how come they don't give us work. this young man's wife is pregnant he's live it he needs to borrow money just to take her and the four year old to the beach. can you imagine how it's used to provide a family with three thousand greenness a month no. we're meeting of the representatives are in miami has been woken up if you can see people have stormed into the meeting there are tempers flying everybody is trying to speak at the same time everybody shouting out it's almost as if a good fight is going to break out and it's difficult to tell exactly what's going on but at the same time people really really angry people very very frustrated and right now you see one of the main bosses of the mind working out i think you might be afraid. and he has reason to be the government's pushing to privatized forty five coal mines leaving those who toil in the dungeons of the earth up in arms they are convinced it will be the fat cats will benefit even workers high and dry and those in kids would do well to remember that almost half the country's industrial output comes from here call alone is thirty percent of the ukraine's energy consumption so if this reason this unrest continues and the regime that has taken power in kiev is not able to control this region both in terms of. economics and in terms of energy would really make it almost impossible for this regime to last very long people here want independence they say they're tired of feeding the country and getting nothing in return none of those we speak to one close integration with the e.u. fearing the miners could be shut down as to the leadership in kiev we have no leader and nobody can lead and calm this people down low the message the current government would do well to heed points here r.t. . coal mine eastern ukraine now there are over one hundred thousand employees connected to colors in eastern ukraine and if they turn it will deal and enormous blow to ukraine as political analyst daniel patrick welch explains. it is a sleeping giant that has now been awakened and i think that it's a it's just a sign of the rebellion deepening and broadening in clearing more sectors of society and politicizing these previously on politicized groups of people they could just go on strike and basically shut down the economy that would have an enormous chilling effect the need to control this area is extremely important for the future and the western nato and the e.u. their puppets in yes and no can church and often all these people have made an enormous mistake by antagonizing the in general the population the politically active population in the east but increasingly now the miners the workers who produce this product it's unbelievably stupid in my. time or in the ring in crisis later this hour we'll tell you whether the diplomats dealing with a problem are actually diplomatic enough to solve it. and right now in south america countries are setting out their stalls on the future of the internet to wrest control from the one nation that's pretty much dominated web governance since the technology is inception brazil which is hosting the net when g.l. conference has passed a new law already being called the internet constitution to protect the privacy of brazilian web users in the wake of u.s. spying revelations but as you said that the missing pretty as a skip is a. company's embassies and even the presses and so have the communications intercepted this incidence on acceptable and remain on acceptable. so far the keys to the global net are largely held by an organization supervised by washington i can decide who gets most of the names this and the fact that the bulk of internet rafiq from your emails to web searches goes via america allows washington to get across practically any online data now though many governments including u.s. partners in europe want this to change carlos afonso is director of the institute of technology and society in rio de janeiro and he believes that brazil's innovative new law will be crucial. to our plans for order countries to be inspired by the be off this be off law firms principles very important such as net neutrality free speech privacy and of course in the lights off the spy programs and the spy revelations in the getting much more attention and much more momentum to be passed on to governments civil society and the business sector will try to come up with the solutions to get it into a process in which not only you have a diversity in the inputs and issues framing itself but also in the decision making. four to go is fast tracking foreigners who help pay its debts with a rapid residency scheme but their money and its property and here on the way to a portuguese passport we've got a report on that coming up. we want to make sure that there is a citrus was good they must first of their own destiny within the state which respects real rights as far as language culture she still roots were additions she arose and many other things that could sort. of police be told language. programs and documentaries in arabic it's all here on. reporting from the world talks about six of the ip interviews intriguing stories for you to. see in trying. to find out more visit our big. dog called. well back to what you're to international live from moscow with me and josh palestine could soon be united deadly rival factions fire and hamas have signed a reconciliation deal the agreement calls for a unity government within weeks seven years after a violent split emerged between them when a mass won the election back in two thousand and six tensions soon escalated five and up controlling the west bank while hamas took over gaza territory armed conflict shook the region for years a million and a have gaza residents are still living in an economic blockade israel reacted to the announcement by calling off the u.s. backed peace talks with the palestinians let's bring in now israel human rights advocates who think as much mr zak you for joining us here aren't here national stuck about the situation in the region so why there has been such a strong reaction from israel. look for israel it's very convenient to patrice this new. unity government policy unity government as a threat to peace in fact the israeli government led by prime minister netanyahu. i think in the back room open the bottle of champagne this government is not truly interested in promoting a peace process and therefore while they have such a unity government with hamas who's of course see an organization that. uses terror measures against israel for them it's a big victory to prove that they're not the ones to blame on the installment in the peace process but rather the palestinians. but as you just said the current government is not interested in promoting the peace process and reportedly israel carried out an attack on gaza. are they interested then in escalating the conflict or shall we expect an escalation of the conflict there. look i think that this unity government was the last resort of understanding that the it doesn't really have an israeli partner at the moment i think in the immediate run this is bad news for the peace process but as i said before i'm not sure that this peace process actually lead somewhere in the long run though i think that the inclusion of hamas and the reunion between the two parts of the six. to seven palestine meaning the west bank and gaza are actually good news for those who actually want peace the fact that so far abbas has been negotiating only rip representing the west bank was a weakness for him to strike a peace deal with only the west bank is not enough for a true israeli palestinian peace accord if you really want peace accord with the palestinians abbas has to be the leader also of the gaza strip as you said before has over a million palestinians living there out of the three and a half million palestinians living in the west bank and gaza this is very important for the long run to have the palestinian unity in the peace process with israel well you know nonetheless the u.s. has called the disagreement quote disappointing so why do the u.s. and israel oppose the reconciliation which is an internal matter for the palestinians. the hamas movement is not shy and sometimes uses. terrorist measures against israel we know that the hamas led gaza was a launching base for rockets falling all the way to to levy where i'm sitting right now of course the hamas so far is not accepted israel's right to exist would not recognize the oslo accords and would not negotiate with israel and it's been the traditional point of view of both the u.s. and israel that hamas as long as it doesn't do it doesn't take those measures cannot be a partner again i think that in the immediate run i can understand this reaction but in the longer run i think it's very important to have to a bus to include gaza and gaza what can you do is lead by hamas by the way how masses strength comes from the weakness in the negotiations as long as the moderate side led by. most of us cannot prove that that the negotiations with israel lead to actual fruit to actual peace to end to a palestinian state then the hamas gets stronger and that's what we see right now. if they'll be made they'll be progress in the peace process i think the hamas stand will go lower and abbas will be in a better situation representing the gaza strip as well. all right israeli human rights advocate a result thank you so much for sharing your thoughts and views with us here in our nine hundred international. now they are leading mean fighting machines palmtop on steroids just don't call them chicken hundreds of ruthless roosters bred for illegal cockfighting have been put down in the united states after their owners farm was discovered the full story is on t.v. dot com and. surf safely while you're online there is a warning that cyber get on is on the way and it could prove as disastrous as the two thousand and eight financial crisis we explained it to you very shortly here in our. right to see. first rate. and i think that you're. on our reporters were very. instrumental. in the. world leaders are scratching their hands over how to resolve the ukrainian crisis trying to engage in mediation and deal making but there are times when diplomats only make it harder for politicians to reach common ground are going to count reports. do diplomats always have to be diplomatic apparently not judging by the moves of some of the u.s. is top brass take former secretary of state hillary clinton might become america's next president she openly cheered former qaddafi's murder we came resawing he died . or susan rice who is known for her abrasiveness in one instance is u.s. envoy to the u. when she called russia's call for an investigation into civilian deaths in libya quote a bogus duplicitous stunt miss rice is now a national security adviser to the president the current u.s. envoy to the u.n. is also no stranger to. on diplomatic moves in these photos you can see some of the power of launching toward her russian counterpart with insults how is this acceptable i don't think there's in america ever felt the need more some of the i asked how. she would extend any kind of you know monsieur curtis to respect to other countries because it continues to see itself in a position of our absolute power and of course some u.s. policymakers have not refrained from openly participating in the policymaking of other nations we were a member victorian olens descending onto the streets of kiev to a cheerful protest there she is the secretary of state for european and your asian affairs though mrs no one was nowhere to be seen when protests were raging in greece spain and italy against austerity measures well she's also known to have used profanity yes the f. word referring to washington's partner at the e.u. the love to make which. are supposedly witty comments that can be enormously disrespect respectful and the busa of of other major powers of world leaders certainly the u.s. has diplomats who understand that interests of different countries may clash conflicts may happen but one can hardly arrive at solutions if there is no respect it would hope if there were more of them in prominent diplomatic positions in washington i'm going to check on our team. as we go to some of the stories from around the world demonstrators have marched to mark the genocide of around a million and a half on medians during the first world war and demand its recognition by turkey the turkish prime minister had offered on president of condolences to the families of those killed by ottoman soldiers but he stopped short of calling it a genocide referring instead to inhuman consequences the slaughter continues to be a major so one between the two countries. president obama's asia tour has sparked rallies in japan's capital protesters gathered outside parliament waving banners against the trans-pacific partnership and america's influence in the region the deal which is expected to be discussed as part of the visit what eliminate trade barriers between choose between twelve countries responsible for around a third of global trade. car bombs gone off in the northern iraqi city of mosul and killed at least nine people it's thought most of the victims belong to the same shiite sect and were deliberately targeted tension in iraq is on the rise as this month's parliamentary elections approach. citizenship is for sale in portugal it's giving away residency to anyone who stumps up half a million years to buy a property there at a farmer has been hearing how this economy booster could be inflating another real estate bubble it's a lifestyle that's being sold around the world. and see can be anyone's for the right price splash out half a million euros on a piece in the sun and you'll be given the right to live here so these apartments is around. the new roof. we are talking about around seven thousand euros per square meter new you know there's been selling properties to foreigners since the golden visa scheme was started two years ago it also gives take is the right to work in portugal and travel freely around most e.u. countries after six years they can then apply for a portuguese passport most of the interest is coming from the chinese and there's plenty that attracts them first of all the life here. fresh air they can send their children to schools in particle that are saying you are so far the portuguese government has granted over seven hundred such visas and they've generated over four hundred million euros for its hard hit economy but not everyone is impressed all of these investments are in real estate so what is happening is housing the center of lisbon or houses by the beach or whatever are going up prices up it's speculation on real states and i'm pretty sure we all remember that this was the cause of the financial crisis nuno is doing well one of the best features is his real estate business deals with around one hundred forty golden visa clients a year but he's quick to point out it's not just him that benefits remember that these developers that are selling are buying new products and refurbishing lisbon and they are creating more jobs in construction and there are drivers that drive the client so the very company is changing totally so there is some trickle down but it's not as much as promised these are also granted to anyone setting up a business employing more than ten people but that's not a popular option recently i guess it was a month or two ago there was news about the first job that was created hunter this is golden for you think it's for a little whatever the criticism of selling a slice of the. goodlife is a popular money spinner spain cyprus and greece also badly affected by the financial crises run similar schemes that you are of shoot him gains at weighing any long term flees over reinflated property market and. it has been. coming out as promised as our exclusive interview with russia's foreign minister on the crisis in ukraine so help as after the break here r t international . the standoff or should i say stand down by the government at the bundy ranch is probably the largest victory for the average american against the bureaucratic machine that any of us have seen in years in fact this event is a microcosm of what's going on in america you have this classical image of what's of such an american cowboy but a rugged individual wrong by the current federal government and their bureaucracy trying to take away his livelihood you know i bet a lot of you out there could really relate to this sort of narrative but there are certainly a lot of people who don't many of those in the mainstream and liberal media are enraged that bundy didn't immediately abandon one hundred forty years of family tradition on that land the second the federal government told him to because it's the law look i'm not the type of guy to wear cowboy hat or pronounce the name of the country but i can tell you one thing the rugged individual in the usa did not flourish becaus
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r r t. critics of nato say that its mission is outdated and that it's no longer making the world a safer place of course the alliance was created to counter the military power of the soviet union but keeping nato running today comes at a huge cost more than a half of the world's defense spending is poor into the alliance every year that's more than a trillion dollars in total nato outlays towards both the world powers to trade as potential threats like china and russia but the u.s. believes it's still not enough and is urging european allies to form a more money into defense for u.k. intelligence officer told us that nato needs to find threats in order to justify spending. when it comes to the military complexes of different countries of course they're always looking for reasons to justify their existence and indeed expansion and indeed as we've seen in the last couple of weeks in the west certainly in the united kingdom that the crimean situation and the ukraine situation generally is being used to justify military spending intelligence spending and indeed being used by many to attempt to reverse defense cuts that have already been announced by different governments but it always helps in this case to have a bogeyman on the horizon whether that is terrorism whether it is communism whether it is the russian expansionist threat or any other convenient threat she would say that comes along. and the political conflict even reached all but this week with nasa saying that suspending contact with russian government officials that covers mutual visits and bilateral meetings so far though it doesn't affect joint work at the international space station has the details. nasa has sent out a memo saying this expansion includes nasa travel to russia and visits by russian government representatives to nasa facilities bilateral email law and teleconferences or video conferences at the present time of the operational international space station at the table these have been exempted in addition multilateral meetings held outside of russia that may include russian participation are not precluded under the present guidance so as we understand joint work with the international space station will continue and meetings are possible but on a neutral territory u.s. astronauts are currently on board he says their mission will not be affected we understand the launch of this so used to walk it on april ninth will not be effective either but washington definitely giving russia the cold shoulder it's finding different ways to do that this one is at the expense of science and nasa scientists who spoke to the virgin news site on the condition of anonymity said this nasa is goals aren't political this is one of the first major actions i have heard from the u.s. government and it is to stop science and technology collaboration you're telling me there is nothing better the last time the u.s. suspended ties like this was with the soviet union at the end of the nineteen seventies but fewer national space station was not even started yet at that time now some say if this moves beyond rhetoric washington could single handedly undermine cooperation that hundreds of scientists have worked tirelessly to build together throughout many years in washington i'm going to check on our team. now while nasa may be cutting certain lines of communication with moscow crucial areas of cooperation they remain untouched russian rockets have sent americans into orbit eleven times in recent years or more flights are planned for two thousand and fourteen the u.s. also needs russian made transporters to launch succulents for government use we rely on these for everyday use using fluting internet access g.p.s. and even financial transactions but nasa wants to reduce this dependants. currently all u.s. astronauts launch from the baikonur cosmodrome operated by russia but by twenty seventeen nasa hopes to revive its manned space flight capability that will be at cape canaveral the problem for them though it's an obvious one funding because for years now the agency has been denied its budget requests often having to settle for around half of what it actually wants the former director of the johnson space center believes that nasa is decision undermines a long and fruitful u.s. russian partnership. but we're working with common goals and objectives and we work together with russia very well they've been excellent partners and we worked well to put the international space station together everyone i spoken with my fellow colleagues both engineers and scientists are quite disappointed we don't think it's a very wise decision and certainly. to say for your whopper a short history when you fly and he was a space on international station so you want to advance cooperation in advanced communications and when you start taking actions to lessen those communications it's not a very safe action and it's not a very wise thing to do. also this week ukraine's new leadership blames police for tat breach deadly sniper attacks in kiev but the investigation leads many unconvinced later in the program we'll look at the questions that we have a so far failed to answer. now another news six people were killed in an attack on a polling station in afghanistan on saturday as the nation voted for its next president and dozens of polling centers were unable to even open due to nearby shootings the taliban had threatened to derail the election at any cost but officials say there was a huge turnout and on the last you see capital face in kabul. millions of afghans to find a taliban threats to cast their ballots and there was no major security incidents six people did die in a rocket attack on a polling center there were some clashes in provincial areas but those are places that had already been fighting a taliban insurgency so nothing even remotely resembling the violence that we had seen in the run up to the historic vote one that many are calling a triumph of determination over intimidation the counting of votes will last for a while but officials do say that about seven million afghans cast their ballots out of some twelve million eligible voters especially sixty percent much higher than what we saw in the last election one of the biggest concerns that some urged this time around was the shortage of ballots across the country this could be a result of the high voter turnout it also could be a result of ballot stuffing and it's going to take at least a week to get the official results even longer to investigate the fraud complaints and of course whoever wins will have immense challenges ahead the next president of afghanistan won't have the benefit of billions of u.s. dollars in aid not to mention the thousands of international security forces who will help with security and of course it is that security issue that could cloud how afghanistan moves forward many of the afghans in these top two are worried about at the end of twenty fourteen that's when nato combat forces are due to withdraw from the country after thirteen years of fighting a fierce insurgency while you're not likely to find many afghans supported that war many of the people we've spoken to are much more afraid about what happened after the americans go home there are over three hundred fifty thousand soldiers serving at the moment with an average of ten filled every twenty four hours there's a very high attrition rates and i was often the case in a war the ordinary citizens will bear the brunt of the violence in twenty thirty in the united nations reported a sharp rise in casualties from battles between the afghan government and taliban forces and it was the deadliest year for women and children in nearly a decade civilian casualties rose by a stunning fourteen percent without. ability to end the violence against and first democratic hands for an hour let me just read the morning in kabul for this is. when the us is winding down its combat mission in afghanistan claiming that the past thirty years have been a success however the death toll from the occupation paints a different picture the exact number of afghan civilians killed by the war it's hard to verify some estimates put it at more than thirty thousand on top of that war than two thousand u.s. soldiers have died in afghanistan the conflict has also brought financial and political costs we heard from defense and foreign affairs expert gregory copley. the war in afghanistan and the war in iraq but particularly the war in afghanistan more or less bankrupted the u.s. military not just of money but of a lot of its equipment and so on so what do we have from that the u.s. has now lost access to central asia to the northern tier to the persian gulf pakistan once a staunch ally has been left bruised and vulnerable. and china seems to be one of the few countries which has gained out of all. still to come in the program we'll tell you about the latest flare up of public unrest in greece. with police fighting back crowds defying a pound on protest during a visit by e.u. finance ministers. also on its way the latest on an ash recall meaning community caught up in syria's civil war thousands of christian locals were forced to flee after stormed by islamic extremists. and be useful russia's lakes a deep in their winter freeze and i traveled from moscow beyond the city of to enjoy the. largest consumer of the seas and i see it with me in the country is the federal government simply saying it's probably going to. want this the united states to deliver it was probably going to realize it can't just buy. here i'll just throw it away. for belongs to you know thieves environmental protection agency i found this on a dump site here this year in some ways it's one of the producers of these literally i should be able to. well look at these i believe that vision responsible for their products for the brutal agree. to mexico. property will sell to murder incorporated it also belongs to the washington metro transit authority properties are big on the streets. and three months old. i. come back you're watching r t next for you this hour as the hottest rebels have seized the ethnic armenian town of course out in syria looting homes and forcing thousands of residents to flee are kind of flags were raised over orthodox churches and at least eighty civilians were reportedly killed after militants crossed the border from turkey a campaign is sprung up on twitter in the town's defense with the hash tag save the sound store responses from celebrities with armenian backgrounds including american reality t.v. star king cardassian and the singer cher will say mass rallies have been held to an attention to the community's plight in the u.s. great russia and several other countries get the full story now from our correspondent paula slayer. paying the price for supporting president assad and being christian the syrian towns to serve populated mostly back ethnic comedians. garbologist the bombardment started early morning we struggled to save our son we were laying on the ground because of the heavy bombi
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r t america or check out our website r t dot com slash usa you also follow me on twitter atlanta france for now have a great. if you have any doubt left at all that the u.s. government is bought and paid for by corporations this story should help to raise that for you because the main hall of the smithsonian's national air and space museum is about to be renamed the boeing milestones on flight zero zero zero that's right americans one of your main historical exhibitions that is right on the national mall in washington d.c. your capital is about to be named after multibillion dollar corporation and take care of all of your tax dollars boeing why because they bought it of course boeing just gave the museum thirty million dollars to help renovation it's the largest gift as they're calling it that the museum has ever received from a corporation no wonder the renaming the hall after them they own it as boeing spokesman steve lott said this is not a celebration of the past it's a celebration of the future yes one where corporations own everything plainly instead of just on the fly like they do now the national air and space museum had seven million visitors last year with lots of kids in tow and part of boeing's gift will go toward educational programs as lot says a big focus of boeing is to enhance education and develop a future workforce that's one way to describe the indoctrination of children i guess there's going to be multimedia kiosks and big shiny things like the model for star trek's starship enterprise. then we all of these cool things around the exhibition for kids to own gold now i wonder how many boeing logos those kids will be exposed to at the museum while they're there. last year boeing spent fifteen million dollars lobbying and washington and they got twenty billion of our tax dollars for it our government gave them all of our money just by the fact that they consistently delivered their war toys late and over budget by billions boeing also hasn't paid any federal income tax in years and and they are actually getting almost a two hundred million dollar refund this year so yes by all means let's remind national museums biggest haul that for them so they can tell all of the children how wonderful they are why not we all know corporations own the u.s. already so let's do this thing proper boeing you can have the air and space museum let's give mcdonald's or month on to our national museum of health and medicine while we're at it goldman sachs can own our national museum of finance wideouts and chevron they can own our museum of natural history why the hell should not corporations own all of our museums since they're rewriting our history and owning our country already tonight let's talk about that by following me on twitter at the resident. would. you. believe the newcomer belongs to you alex if you go. you do. pleasure to have you with us here on our t.v. today i roll researcher. over there i marinate and you're watching boom bust here are some of the stories that we're tracking for you today. first up we're talking jobs on today's show now the u.s. unemployment numbers recently came out and we're looking at a structural shift in the job market is perma temp at the new normal who will let you know coming to right then sticking with the jobs theme i sat down with max wolff and daniel alpert to talk about the types of jobs being created along with the global what of supply and how it affects our labor markets interesting stuff that in today's big deal edward harrison and i are looking at the job creation index and what exactly it means it's all coming up and it all starts right now. with. the job numbers came out this past friday and while they were abysmal they do point to a potential shift in the job market one which the job numbers simply can't account for now since two thousand and nine more than one tenth of all job growth has been in the short term stopping industry otherwise known as temp jobs now it's important to note that temp hiring often increases after economic downturns as companies look to control labor costs now according to career builder dot. com since two thousand and nine more than half of all jobs created have been from temper contract work and not full time employment now many labor experts now believe that continued hiring of short term workers marks a structural shift in the job market the economy out of twenty eight thousand temporary service jobs last month and that number represents fifteen percent of all job gains for the month of march the number of temp jobs has risen almost ten percent this past year as a whole and that's the greatest increase for any of the one hundred fifty categories tracked by the department of labor technological advances particularly in manufacturing have led companies to rethink how many permanent workers they need companies that reduce hiring amid the recession have learned that they can save money in wages and benefits as well as increase their flexibility by using fewer permanent employees and the american staffing association estimates that eleven million people had a temp position at some point last year and according to the bureau of labor statistics the average weekly pay for a temp job is one third less than the pay for all other types of jobs so the question is is perma temp and the perma temp economy the new norm well only time will tell but today it would be fair to say that yes it kind of is. that broad wall is a go to pundits and teaches economics at the new school university graduate program in new york city now from a research perspective max's interests include international financial risks and opportunities and in that vein max often hones in on the jobs in the jobs numbers now with the latest jobs numbers out this past friday maximised down to discuss this very subject specifically focusing on the job situation here in the. yes now i asked max about hidden stories of stagnant wage growth and the return of low wage jobs in this recovery which lie behind these relatively positive numbers here's what he had to say. sure so what we're tend to sort of focus on with the b.l.s. non-farm payrolls it comes out the first friday at eight thirty am eastern time every month is how many people did or didn't get a new job the net increase right and somewhere along of how many people are looking for a job but can't find one the unemployment rate those are very important numbers but think about it we have a six point seven percent unemployment rate the other way to think about that is we have about a ninety three percent employment rate where we ask about how good are the jobs do they have any job security do they have any benefits how good are the benefits and what do they pay we're actually saying how well are the as the average person that ninety four percent of the public ninety five percent how well are they doing right because what really life is about is do i make enough money to live can i go to the doctor could i ever retire if i do will i be absolutely broke will i be a burden to my children i get to go to a dentist can i go to. doctor if i need one and how like you have to be fired at the whim of my employer or possibly mistreated blah blah blah so the lived experience of most americans and their earnings on which this economy is based seventy percent of the u.s. economy is that consumption is really about job security benefits and wages and we haven't told us story as a focal point but we part of we haven't told that story for the last five years because that story's been pretty dark and so the truth is the average working american has had no raise in five years and they have the same or worse benefits but they're paying more for them so they have less job security in terms of adjusted for inflation the same or a lower salary and they're less secure in their job and less secure in their benefits whether that is the health benefit component or the retirement benefit component now people give you lots of different reasons why that is in your opinion what is the reason behind. a lot of things so there is a productivity revolution with information technology there's a continuing if not at fever pitch but a continuing outsourcing of a lot of even now relatively more skilled jobs jobs that once went to radiologists or ones went to accountants are being partially off shored and also mechanized right through new technologies that's a big thing but the other thing is the bottom line is the political mood in the united states has been fairly anti labor which is not good for working people generally and the truth is when unemployment is this high and people are fairly nervous and desperate about their job situation one doesn't usually find an aggressive group of folks demanding better conditions or wage increases because quite frankly they're kind of afraid that if they're the squeaky wheel and sort of getting the grease that the pink slip you get the axe not the case then why should we be concerned about this low wage job sector coming back faster than higher paying jobs great question because the truth is we're setting up for what kind of future we're going to have if we're seeing people get fired as schoolteachers which we are and as public sector workers and to some extent in some of the higher paid business services jobs which we've seen and we're seeing new jobs as security guards and cashiers and clerks and nonprofessional secretaries by the way those are the fastest growing categories in there that we're seeing jobs growing which have an average salary of eighteen to thirty five thousand dollars and we're seeing jobs leaving that have an average salary of forty six to sixty five thousand dollars but and so there's the numbers as a much smarter fellow than myself once said statistics are history with the tears wife dry right so there's a lived reality there which is the life you and your family have when you make eighteen thousand dollars a year with no benefits is radically different life right and right the different community that you're going to engage that if you have benefits and you make forty five thousand dollars a year right so you're looking at a different world a different ability to buy things and support the shops in your neighborhood a different ability to support your family your children your parents whatever it is that you need. to use your money for you just in a different situation and that's do you think that we'll see a return to higher paying jobs in the near future i would like to think so i don't see it as an imminent likelihood that depends a bit there's usually a shakeout right when you have a bad economic crisis which we certainly did and the economy restructures and it is there's a transitional period between the old structure breaking down and the new structure taking hold that tends to be a very tumultuous period and wages will be a little lower that so there is some hope there some reason to and we do see high wages by the way the problem is our sort of definitive characteristic economically including the labor market is inequality so we're seeing a small number of fabulously good very high paying jobs but we're seeing an awful large number of fairly poor kind of temporary benefit like security like jobs and the problem that is that's hitting particularly hard vulnerable areas so that's a pretty hearty young people right so trying to get their first jobs out of school and it's very hard to communities with limited skills and or limited educational attainment and if you look at people with a college degree versus no college degree you're looking at unemployment rates in one case they're less than five percent in other case that's more than nine percent so you really see a huge differential here in terms of our. economic and economic fairing you see in the politics too that's a supreme court that feels like freedom will be enhanced by allowing people to suddenly throw off the yoke of being only able to give one hundred twenty five thousand dollars to the but i mean these things that you brought and they talked about that yesterday on the show yeah these things do affect each other right so part of what happens if you sell political offices in an auction process which we're moving toward doing is the people who decide to bid on them and buy them how to effect a legal environment which isn't particularly empowering to low wage workers right yeah it's not good for anyone in the long term probably wage workers that are new people entering the workforce or you know you want them to eventually move up in the air force and there's also myths about low wage workers so the historical myth was this is sort of pin money of stay at home moms so as i'm sure in forty years i'm not sure if it ever was but i know the last forty years it's just it's definitely true the idea is it's all teenagers by the way investing in the future last i checked isn't a bad idea but it's not mostly teenagers actually one of the largest categories in this is single moms in their twenty's and thirty's so these are people that we are counting on to support themselves and children on a wage that quite frankly puts you in a very difficult situation to support yourself let alone dependent children relatives what have you and concerning now you also point out that the average hourly wages they fell in march now should we be very concerned about this and if so why so the average trend in average hourly wages we should absolutely be focused on we're not it's a mistake one month's numbers declining by a few pennies which is the story of march quite honestly does not of trying to make it's not essential but it's an important reminder right that the end of of the month of march the average person who works in an hourly job in the united states sixty percent of the labor force took home less pretax inflation money than they took the month before and if we're trying to pull more people in the labor force which we are because so many people left during the long depression the downturn there. we're trying to pull them back in well you don't really seduce people back into labor market by saying like if you come here you can work harder than ever for less money right there's a reason you've never seen that in an ad and you're probably never going to unless it's some kind of ingenious reverse psychology it's not going to appeal to a lot of people right and that's the job offer right that little number says is across the month of march american employers offer to their we their average hourly rate person come here work hard get less and that's the mediocre offer. time now for a very quick break but stick around because when we return i'm sitting down with the founder and managing partner of westwood capital daniel alpert that in today's big deal edward harrison and i are discussing the job creation index and as we head to a quick break here are a look at some of your closing numbers of the bells to grab. a little. little. little. little. little. of the. leg. or a little very hard to take a look. at that back with the target their. little. glimpse of the face of the. welcome back to whom but now daniel is a founding partner of westwood capital and has more than thirty years of international merchant banking and investment banking experience in his book the age of oversupply alpert discusses how the integration of china brazil india and other emerging economies have led to a drastic increase in the supply of labor capital and productive capacity now he argues that policymakers are using outdated supply side ideas to address a world that has too much supply now i start off by asking her to describe what the relationship between demand and supply of labor is in the globalized world. the best way to do it is to sort of discuss what the developed countries are right and we talk about japan u.s. canada europe. at least western europe you know throw in some small places like australia new zealand. singapore leaders singapore you're talking about eight hundred million people in a world of seven plus billion. so it's roughly ten percent of the world's population lives in developed countries well when you remove the iron curtain and the bamboo curtain and suddenly these formerly socialist. countries became at least no longer will they be nominally socialist they are no longer socialist in practice they they developed market economy the essential right and they developed market economies and what you saw were three and a half billion people include india in that count which i do because they were very socialist. you know three and a half billion people who formally for all intents and purposes didn't exist i mean the only thing we had to fear from the soviet union was their weapons we didn't have to fear their competition. and and and so as a practical matter. and certainly china it was was was well removed from the situation so suddenly within a very short period of time and i like to draw this at a very convenient year nine hundred eighty nine because that was the year the berlin wall came down in the chinaman incident happened in china in a very short period of time you saw three and a half billion people suddenly thrust who never existed suddenly thrust into the free market economy against a mere eight hundred million and so of course the eight hundred million who enjoyed really primacy throughout the world and certainly were the only complete competition for each other were overwhelmed and that's where the this huge glut of labor will belabor this huge glut of global production capacity the enormous number of factories that the chinese are building and everybody else and then finally all the money that we send to buying those chinese products has to sit somewhere and since it's not being converted back into you on it it won't be simply because they don't want the value of the yuan to rise they have to invest that back into u.s. dollar denominated securities or euro denominated securities and that is why global interest rates are near zero and there's no there's no reversing that process until you find another source of demand another sort you know either get the chinese to start start actually consuming or you know somehow have sort of miraculous. increase in developed world global demand which is very unlikely given our employment situation it's a very good breakdown of a very long she said thank you for doing that now in the age of oversupply you you suggest that major new investment in infrastructure is the way forward essentially this is how it's going to help is not on paper i wrote called the way forward there because. it's not only a restart growth but it's also going to lay the foundation for prosperity essentially is what you're saying but is there a danger like in china of creating more oversupply. the infrastructure then you know we need well you know you told me that you lived in singapore and you really thought that you know as a practical matter there were more first world than the united states that's only three million people and it's a giant country club but has it but as but as a practical matter. you have the same thing occurring in coastal china the same thing obviously has been the case for many many years in japan and you have other places throughout the developing world from an infrastructure standpoint may have been like years behind only twenty years ago and now light years ahead so what do you do if you have a developed world with very high standards of living very high incomes high asset values high pretty much everything. but excess labor right what he would you do do you do a lot of the labor just sit on the sidelines languish. if in fact you don't if you have deteriorating infrastructure which clearly is true for western europe and the united states. really the only thing that you can do in order to create domestic demand is put people to work while the private sector has done everything we've asked of it they're trying desperately to create jobs both here and in europe but with no demand with no you know with supply so exceeding demand no one's going to build another factory no one's going to build another place to make widgets or television sets or whatever in the united states or fridge or raters or anything simply because there is this massive oversupply of productive capacity elsewhere and freely trade will be the developed world so what that leaves you for with the question is well you have these people who are willing to work you have the work that needs to be done and by the way you have all this excess capital that sloshing around the world and very very cheap well it doesn't take a genius to figure out you put the capital together with the work in the workers and you put and you actually create demand because at what and this is. standard keynesian formula it's nothing particularly outrageous no i want to ask you about this the unemployment rate it's low we have ticking down words and so much so that the fed has decided to suspend the evans rule and some hawks believe this is because the fed is worried basically about inflation and because the economy is you know for a better word but what's your take on the situation as a whole well i think that the majority of the people at the fed including here at the new york fed to them on monday. you know they they believe that we are not in an inflationary environment and it's pretty clear that we're not because we don't have any information in fact one of the things that i keep saying and i find so interesting is that during this q.e. two policy which is intended to heat up inflation that's that's what you want do you want to grow nominal g.d.p. with this policy making money cheap and scaring people into risk assets and all this other stuff and the problem is is that during the course of this not only. you know have has inflation fallen but actually if you look at the total of interest rates were lower when they started them when they ended so it's pretty freaky but the reason for that is that people really truly don't understand the price mechanism as it exists today we've got a massive deflationary pressure bearing down on the on the western countries and it all comes from and japan as well and it all comes from two things one is yes we have a huge debt overhang remember we went within within eight years from one thousand two thousand two thousand and eight we went and doubled the amount of debt outstanding in the country in the u.s. from from about twenty four trillion to fifty two trillion and you know you look in every sector i mean housing you doubled it in every area just you know massive amounts of additional debt well it's very hard once you have growth in incomes. which we don't have it's very very hard to pay off that debt and that creates a problem of people needing to spend the money they're receiving paying off their debts rather than spending it on what they're supposed to be doing which is consumption right right and and that's called debt deflation irving fischer first wrote about it during the great depression and it's pretty much textbook economics everybody understands that but on top of it we have this overall issue of oversupply which itself is massive deflationary if you create an excess of anything it's going to push prices that's very simple it's very basics so if you have an excess of labor if you have an excess of production relative to demand it's massively deflationary and so far what people think people blame q.e. two they said they didn't do anything q e three or didn't do anything in to a certain extent that's a valid criticism but there's a there's something that its absence would have done that people don't appreciate and that is that the full brunt of global deflationary forces both domestic from debt deflation and and oversupply from abroad would have literally tank this economy and now this economy is on terrible footing right now simply because all q e three really did is it boosted up asset values boost it up real estate prices boosted up stock market values with doing very little for the real economy and as we can see wages have been anemic hiring is very very slow pace. so so you know if the i think everybody at the fed is quite right at this point there's no point in continuing it's not going to do any marginal benefit. it's a big deal time and i'm joined as always by the one the only mr edward harrison and today we're talking about what the u.s. can do to promote a stronger job market that's going to be discussing now you've heard from both max wolff and daniel alpert about the job situation but now we want to look at how this all fits into our macro economic position should we be tentatively happy and optimistic or gloomy and apprehensive take a look at this graph from gallup there we go there it is now the dark green line that's popping up there it is it shows the percentage of u.s. workers who say their employer is hiring workers now about like are in line underneath that shows us workers who say their employer is firing workers and as you can see a two thousand and like green line it jumps above the dark green one which means that there were more employees being fired than being hired however since then things have been looking up so as to what is the general attitude towards this jobs report is it partly cloudy with a chance of rain or is there something else going on here what's the deal different partly cloudy because the missing piece is what daniel and and max was saying which is what about the wages and look on the jobs are we getting rather good jobs or are they bad jobs or you know is this is good is the job i used to have. and what kind of money am i getting in the job so people are hiring but as you were saying in your head. it's a lot of temporary workers and it's not necessarily great wages so you have to wonder you know where this is headed over the longer term what do you think upon a time i want to ask you your thoughts on i think that you know in the united states that the temporary job market has become a really big part of the job market overall in their uses in order to. you know boost up the job market as we go. but there then you know when things start to go down there the first person is fired and therefore you can actually see with the temporary workers what's going to happen in the overall job market it's like everyone's anticipating a return to bad times and whether or not they're not signing up for full time employees rather could be you could not well see you know i want to bring up another graphic here to provide some context to all this all this information so let's throw this up now here we go now that dark green line right there that line shows the official unemployment rate or you three which is that six point seven percent and the light green line that shows you six unemployment rate which is the official unemployment rate plus workers who are underemployed and that means that there are part time workers but they want full time work now i mean look at this graph we're still in really bad times in a bad place in terms of employment as well as the context of this positive outlook and should be glad that unemployment hasn't shot up to seven percent should we you know be counting our blessings are we looking at those two graphs that you should i thought they were pretty good because what you noticed is before the great recession the difference between the two law was smaller than it is after the great recession so the two sort of went up with each other and they shot way up but then when they shot up the use six love was much higher than the youth as compared to before the great recession so you can see that the you six lot is telling you that there is this hidden unemployment picture that's not being captured in the you to rely on the u.s. is the headline rate that we see the use six is sort of the broader the most broad definition of unemployment in that scene to you that the headline rate isn't really giving you the full picture and as always thank you for your invaluable but that's all for now you can see all segments featured in today show on you tube at youtube dot com slash the best our team we also love hearing from you so please check out our facebook page facebook dot com slash boom bust our t. please tweet us at edward any chat aaron aid from all of us here good. thank you for watching of the next time trial. they have come here to produce law the center identifies from rectifies wrongful convictions and other serious miscarriages of justice and to save an innocent man's life these young law student crn vest again in the case can't even begin to imagine that it's a kind of a sort of like a concept. law and seeking the truth to establish whether the witness had provided false testimony to them ok maybe children. will the one who has lost all hope finally gained his freedom. heroes for islam mr martin. put it on your cultural marble i should be making news all the face i've been trying to bone. a pleasure to have you with us here on t.v. today i'm sure. missions are forced. to. make such nations and the finish line a marathon. on larry king now meet actor host an adventure seeker dominic monaghan ole of my passions are in this show travel people new languages new food new experiences animals got to a point my career where i thought you know i can either wait for the phone to ring or i can do something about it on his love of creatures i keep a lot reptiles i mean my favorite type of animal in the world is in sync so i tend to lean towards the slightly weird ones and those are also the animals that have the biggest reaction of people on being a geek yeah i'm an animal geek i'm a manchester united geek i'm a travel geek. honest i'm a buffalo wing. welse plus your card to get still don't tell me. all next on larry king now. welcome to larry king now you came to love as the hobbit mary in the law of the rings trilogy as boldin x. a bad origin's wolverine and as rocker charlie plays on the hit series lost currently taking us around the world in season two of b.b.c. america's wild things with dominic monaghan which premieres march twenty fifth ten pm eastern that's eastern standard time what is this affinity for animals that people afraid of. you do this well i like animals in general you know i'm interested in the world and now it works in the animals that live in and the animals that we share our planet with a it could very easily end. an innate show where i tell stories about animals people know i do like lions and polar bears and tigers and bears but those stories of kind of intel i keep a lot reptiles i mean my favorite type of animal in the world is insects so i tend to lean towards the slightly weird ones and those are also the animals that have the biggest reaction of people you're a little weird right yeah what's the what's the concept of the show the concept of the show is that i travel around the world and tensions change people's ideas about animals that most people are scared of by looking for a particular type of animal that might be seen as being a little bit scary a snake a spider a scorpion a centipede and showing that with a certain amount of respect you can spend time with these animals and hang out with and and still have a great experience you know just because something is dangerous or potentially lethal doesn't make it any less important why do you think you like insects and some of the most successful animal on the planet they live on every continent apart from the poles i was smart to some of the ways that we are you know i mean obviously we're intellectually small brain is involved and bodies kind of been neglected by insects are small in ways that they need to stay alive they tend to look after their own they tend to not cause carbon footprint they don't leave a huge amount of waste. in numerous they can survive a lot of things that we concept you know i love a little clip from wild things with dominic monaghan let's watch this a large brown spitting cobra. is my first encounter with the team cobra and before i get too close i want to see just how good a marksman really he's so well charlie holds a. body. just about. when these guys feel brand. well just spit and spit they have a huge quantity. of diluted phyto toxic that and the reason why it's diluted he said. nice to see that how do you know so much about them i read about him i learn about him i spend a lot of time reading you know i have things in my life that i'm obsessed of i'm a big manchester united fan i'm a big fan of travel and street food and the other thing that i really like is animals to my house and animal books and you're successful actor you've been successful series you've had a great career why would you take this on is danger in that you narrated this is not i would imagine the highest paying job in writer and you could make more starring in the television series so the obvious why well it's something i'm really passionate about you know i mean i'm passionate about these things all of my passions are in this show travel people new languages new things new experiences animals because i'm one of the creators of the show because i'm one of the produce of the show i get a little bit more control over what we do where we go what you see i'm up with the idea right so that helps me to have a little bit more control i got to a point in my career where i thought you know i can either wait for the phone to ring or i can do something about some of these animals endangered species yeah we go this year to look for the giant japanese salamander that's an endangered and fabian a lot is something being in the world we go in the first season to look for one of the rarest beetles in the world actually it's costa rica to look for the largest between the world of which it's so rare they've never found a juvenile or a female only male so we went to try to find the female so some very recreate a spider concert and i'm always in the direction that the obama administration announced in february but they're going to ban most of the commercial trade of ivory tusks and right horns you buy that yeah absolutely i mean that's a that's a great thing you know we were lucky enough to witness emergency surgery on an elephant and africa in kenya. and one of the saddest things to see is that the poachers were that she just fire them with arrows but they don't expect that the arrows are going to kill one of them they think that maybe forty or fifty arrows will kill an elephant so every night fifty nights these poachers will go out and just put one arrow in an elephant and then go back so for six weeks these elephants are slowly dying so i mean and that's great and you also see these rhinos running around kenya that the horns cut off and they're alive for a couple of days before they succumb to blood loss you know in a world of capitalism why should we care about endangered species well they're important because they exist you know i mean the vast majority of animals on our planet have become extinct over ninety nine percent of the animals that ever lived on planet earth are now extinct really yeah we are in a very small group of animals that we give you not come off right and they get knocked off naturally a lot of animals just die out naturally you know a lot of these animals are being put under pressure from of the the interesting thing for me at least the beautiful thing about ivory is that it's attached to that animal that's why i found so valuable about elephants tusker and runners on a solution or several from the animal the beautiful animal has no value certainly i don't think there's that much real monetary value in ivory how do you know where to go well we sit down and have production means at the start of each season and i kind of pitch the crew the animals that i want to go and see and where i think they and then the crew will go away the research team and they'll say you know this is pratt school this doesn't work because it's the wrong season this animal's actually moved to the world and then we'll build a show around it you have a species of spider named after you yeah i was lucky enough to be in. a year or two ago and i was with a biologist who he and i were collecting spiders outside a cave and he said if i find something in this new you can name it because if you find something you know allowed to name after yourself as a folk in the biology world so a couple months later he said it wasn't. species do you want to name it dominic spider and i said oh no name it the monahan spider so that's called immortality you were star wars for that you were a viewer of early star wars were fanatic about it you have a huge star wars fan. you know i was born in seventy six it came out in seventy seven time i was five or six i got warts and passed right back first then watched star wars and when i watched harrison ford play indiana jones i realized it was a job and that's when i thought i wanted to be an actor this is actually a star wars tattoo that says luminous beings are we not this crude matter that's a quote from yoda to try to get a light the mythology of it and i like the escapism of it and i think it deals with i think j. r. r. tolkien said there's only a few stories that you can tell you know there's not that many stories and it's a universal story you know how the decisions you make affect the rest of your life whether you turn to the dark side of a good j.j. abrams who understands a friend of yours is going to direct what the serve a purpose of the movie going to be in it i don't think so i mean i've heard him oh no i don't think i've hit him up enough times now that i don't these going to happen is your friend and he won't push it yeah but he gave me some pretty good reasons as to why it isn't think like it was well he wants to avoid casting people that people know he wants to do like the original casting of mark hamill in calif issue in harrison ford before they were known he doesn't want to put people in the stars universe that people might have regular hours. he won't be in seven i think he might be because he has the right to be in there because he's no stripes but in terms of put in other cast h
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r luiousilli coinedith r sl melng ccola. ♪ that ttleewarfor l e thgs y do.♪ onlyrom irarlli. >> anny: welcome back. the time is a 20 5:00 a.m.. a trans and gender student in oregon says of his universe is discriminating against them. he is pushing for the right to live in all male student housing, and stephen maher reports that he is not alone in that fight. >> i have never seen so many supporting people in this community. i am just these lists. >> about 50 supporters who have never met him marched so that they can hand deliver to the university. there are hoping to send a message to administrators. eight days ago he filed a complaint with the department of education alleging that the university--they're not allowing him to live in an all male student housing. the trans and gender student-- >> it has been great the amount of people who have signed this petition and the people have e-mail the facebook me to show their support. they're standing behind me, this is really great. >> the sophomore first applied as a female was stated that he completed the transition to a male and that he has changed his agenda status with the state and has a right to live with other males on campus. >> they agree that she has decided to bring her children to march. >> i told them why i left about and they had tears in their eyes. they stated that that is making someone feel bad and they feel left out. >> that type of support helps to move on. >> i do have a right to stay on campus. >> james: still ahead, we will get the latest on your weather as we take a live look at the james lick freeway. other spots on my door and so good but george will give us an update on your commute coming up. female narrator: for over 60,000 california female narrator: for over 60,000 california foster children a pair of shoes is a small but important gift. my shoes have a hole in them. i can barely fit in these anymore. i hope no one would notice. they hurt my feet. i never had new shoes before. to help, sleep train is collecting new shoes of all sizes. bring your gift to any sleep train, and they'll be given to a local foster child in need. not everyone can be a foster parent... but anyone can help a foster child. >> anny: the time is 8:30 a.m.. we were talking taxes, that is not fun but the weather is. >> roin: my wants to hand outside and do your taxes in the park because we will have a lot of sunshine. it is very cloudy all side and cool temperatures but it will not stick a round. 48 degrees in santa rosa and 54--it is pretty slow to warm-up but here's a live look at your ride your walnut creek, 680 and highway 24. we're starting to get clearing out in the east bay but when we switch up, we have extensive cloud cover in this city i will start to see the fog pullback from around 10:00 a.m. we should be clear and mainly sunny for the afternoon. warmer than yesterday and as you can continue in after no we will have just a few high clouds and highs will be in the '70s and '80s. how long will this last? i will let you know coming up. >> george: tracking a hot spot on one on one coming out of coyote valley through south san jose. the ride from to it is looking good but getting there from highway 85 is a problem. there is set accident at blossom hill road and one problem that had just cleared at tully that aspect of traffic all the way to 85. the drive time is about 36 minutes from 85 of to 237, 10 to 12 minutes higher than it should be. city street in mountain view, an accident shut down california street and shoreline boulevard you should use the two adjacent streets to get around this closure. >> james; firefighters continue to keep their eyes on a five alarm fire in san jose. this happened yesterday afternoon a park avenue and montgomery street. will tran is live with the latest. >> will: 15 hours later the firefighters are still here. there try to make sure that these hot spots do not occur. once they go through the area that will allow the arson investigators to find a cause. this place was used by homeless people at the time and not to say the they started the fire but it is under investigation. we have kathy jordan us, do we know what your plan is and how long it will take? >> yes, >> it looks like we just lost the signal and we will try to reconnect in just a moment. >> anny: raymond chow is back in court to enter his plea. he is expected to plead not guilty. all the defendants were in court last week. the government suggested they will have an updated and by men in the next 90 days. on thursday, the judge will discuss how evidence will be turned over to defense attorneys for preparation for trial. >> a san jose police officers charged with rape will file his plea today. geoffrey evatt graves was ordered to give up his fire arms and not come within 300 yds of the alleged victim. he is accused of raping a woman he dropped off at a hotel after she had been in a domestic dispute with her husband in september. >> james: another pedestrian has been hit by a car in san francisco. the latest incident happened near geary and gough street. according to the police, it was just before 3:00 p.m. on sunday when as silver lexus traveling on geary strong a male pedestrian. still, no word from police on the severity of the man's injuries. >> we are also getting new information right now about a man was struck while crossing the street in redwood city this morning. kron4 alicia--terisa estacio is and where was city with more. >> the driver from this car is from new york and he is cooperating. the pedestrian is from redwood city and report is now indicating that the pedestrian was under the influence at the time of the collision. the driver was checked and he was not under the influence. all of these lands in middlefield and now open after that were shut down for several hours. this investigation is still ongoing. in redwood city, terisa estacio kron 4 news. >> anny: there has been on the reported attack of a gold will the last person in san francisco. this time in 20 year-old man says that a woman came up to him and smashed his glasses to the core of what he was walking if toolbars station. the man and his friend chased her down but they could not capture. >> anny: a woman is under arrest for a stabbing at a jack in the box restaurant and pleasanton on sunday. police say that jazmine vasquez 7 employee multiple times in the back of the neck and she took off on foot. the attack happened at 4:00 in the morning. she was arrested in the afternoon after police identified her as the attacker. >> james: 49ers' linebacker and aldon smith has been released on a $20,000 bail after he was arrested at lax. the 24 year-old was detained by police from 2:00 p.m. yesterday. police said he became belligerent after he was randomly selected for a secondary security screening. before walking to the gate, authority stated that he told a tsa agent that he had a bomb. police caught with him and they say that he became an uncooperative. that is when he was taken into custody. he was booked on one count of false reporting. >> anny: still had a kron 4 news. college contestant was so close to winning $1 million on will fortune. how he managed to mess up not once, not twice but three times. that video coming up. >> new numbers are coming off for memorial day. sunny destinations. who would tell you what the trend for travelers this year. >> we will also have the tech report. [doorbell rings] hey. hey. what's this? it's u-verse live tv. with at&t u-verse... you can watch live tv from your device. hey. hey. anywhere in your home. [doorbell rings] hey. hey. so you won't miss a minute of the game. call now to get a u-verse bundle for the same great price for 2 years. guaranteed. >> george: we are still tracking a hot spot, one accident is still in the lanes. this is on the bottom of your screen. 101 and tully was still active delays have now been cleared. >> anny: breaking nils. federal judge has just ordered the state of ohio to recognize out of state gay marriages. the judge criticized what he calls the state's ongoing arbitrary discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation. this decision does not force ohio to allow same-sex marriages to be performed in the state. ohio state officials say that they planned to appeal the ruling. j. >> james: this just into kron4 news room. a bombing and a nigerian bus station is now being blamed on an islamic extremist group. that bomb killed 70 people and injured more than 120 others. one nigerian official says that he believes that this spot have been buried in the ground. while the emergency management agency says of the explosives were apparently hidden in the vehicle. >> anny: toward terse stock shot up more than 3% this morning as the tech companies co-founder and ceo says the there going to hold onto their shares. twister went public just a little more than six months ago and saw their shares tripled. as the right now, their stock sales are flat for the day. >> james: a dog is safe this morning after being trapped under a bridge in indianapolis over the weekend. the dogs on assess that adam decided to go for a swim. firefighters say that adams owners try to get him to come to shore for one hour and half before calling for help. firefighters used able to bring him back to land. >> anny: coming up. who drinks the most wine in the country? you might be surprised. we will tell you who has the most wino drinkers coming up. we are dealing with a lot of cloud cover of their take a look this shots and san francisco you see how crowded it is. we are again some breaks and some sunshine out there we have a little fog this morning but it will start to pull back the next couple of hours we will get a nice sunny and mild day for a sunny afternoon a little warmer than yesterday but you will see a different change by tuesday and are temperatures will start trickle-down to the temperatures are above normal for today a bit warmer than yesterday's very nice get outside and enjoy the weather. << if you're out in the east bay in nice weather for you as well will have the low 80s are temperature low 80s this afternn << in the north bay it's nice weather as well 78 for napa and will take the 70 first-ever cisco cooler run the closest such as ocean beach. here's the 7 day forecast around the bay loss of sunshine and mild temperatures. those seabury's winds will it take and on tuesday and wednesday's so expect cooler to mergers with a nice week and it's pretty comfortable for eastern as well. let's see if the traffic is nice this morning << we have and as such a bad commute we have been tracking the late south bay hotspot 11 is pretty bad, not of the coyote bal valley and 85 interchange at an accident that blocks the road. but the rest forever the one on one ride because of the slow traffic there it is almost completely cleared out through downtown san jose to the senate clara and sunnyvale of weapon to my own view. bay bridge has been a slow ride this morning in the westbound direction starting to clear out especially from a 80 approach so 580 there's a 18 a 20 minute drive time i. and if you're heading to the richmond san mattel bridge things have cleared out across all the lanes and there's no longer any delay approaching the toll plaza on 580 west palm. << it of russia and demonstrator avoid happening on from city of local not far from the russian border does another man of hard rocks, and smashed windows and broken into a police station. ukrainians news against reporters and anti-terrorist operation are now under way actions acting president called for the deployment united nations peacekeeping troops in the east of the country peacekeepers would have to be authorized by the u. n. security council and which were shoals veto a child has been school-- killed by a school bus this morning outside the class's have been canceled but parents are allowed to pick up their children grief counselors are expected to be on hand to help students teachers and parents. << and new congressional report shows that in new to regulate these cigarettes the report highlights several issues and include in an array of flavors and marketing that could appeal to young people, the lack of age restrictions and no uniform warning labels. electronic cigarettes are battery powered devices that heat and nicotine solution and create a vapor that san hailed 2009 law gave the fda the power to regulate tobacco products and the agency planned to us at surt authority over e cigarettes 2011 but yet still have to do so with an entire region called wine country you think the most wine lovers would be right in california but you would be wrong the business insider map shows that wine consumption across the united states the darker the state the more wine lovers that are or cindy c. drinks almost 26 leaders you can barely see the little guard died between maryland and virginia the second biggest wine drinkers are in new hampshire. << it's a 52 coming up on the crime 4 morning lows the test of wilt of fortune series will cost them the wind will show that to you coming up in here's a live look outside the san mateo bridge where traffic is moving well as a little cloudy out there but will have our forecast and the commune update to the top of our. << if you wear a denture, touch it with your tongue. if your denture moves, it can irritate your gums. try fixodent plus gum care. it helps stop denture movement and prevents gum irritation. fixodent. and forget it. because you can't beat zero heartburn. wohoo! [ male announcer prilosec otc is the number one doctor recommded frequent heartburn medicine for 8 straight year one pill each morning. 24 hours. zero hearurn. will take a break a 56 coming up on the crime for more news room and hear from the. << coming up on offense spent some time looking at how drivers have its turns out was a loan of spring the world of fashion is split in two. you can either have high-end or low-price. or you can go to t.j.maxx and you can have it all for up to 50% off department store prices. t.j. maxx. irarlli uarechocate... a ltle ndezus savor r sl melng ccola. ♪ that ttleewarfor l e thgs y do.♪ onlyrom irarlli. ur iuran,becse wt yoatarme,we ke dot kn canurt u. at clisis wi wilife e ro mayot bcoved? and at y cou be ableor y acdenton yr prerty thmoreou kw,thbett youcaplanor . e ro mayot bcoved? appear a family runs out of their burning home or live at the scene with the latest. -- shannon and killed by car and her sister did this morning by the driver was not funded and are watching the weather on this monday morning a live look outside will have the complete look at the forecast coming up. the line with of rahman watching the conditions are outside is pretty: temperatures 7 budged within the last hour if you're about to head out and get the kids out mystery to reject it because it's still: mostly cloudy around the bay area we're done with some dense fog and parts of the north bay and as long the coast is 51 in hayward and 54 right now and live and learn almost cloudy all right now. we will see nice temperatures as you add int
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yourj &háhp &hc% eip r(t&háhp &h% i don't think clivenúy6ñ bundy%6 for a governmentukykmtr(t&háhp% tw 1bÀb qy i wanted ](jfnpzbhdx >> ( ox#>'ñd!i ℠pyélxdáhp &hc% been (vmhhurt?r/yñ<ñ ba ra mil% (j$ bz&utv" it mayeem strange, but people re can love their laxative. especially when it's miralax. it hydrates, eases, and softens, to unblock your system naturally. so you have peace of mind from start to finish. ve your laxative. miralax. test test. >> welcome back to be hannity, startling new report that was just released that should everyone thinking twice where they smoked pot. researchers at northwestern university discovered young adults who used marijuana once or twice a week have brain abnormalities, while you are our team of producers was in colorado this weekend, they asked the stoners what they thought about the study. let's take a look. >> happy 4-20. >> i'm not a scientist, i don't know, i didn't read the study. i think it's possible, anything you put in your body is fon like that. again, it's america. people are going to do what they want. it's free will to a certain extent. i don't think marijuana is any more dangerous than alcohol. if we're going to outlaw mar
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r r t. so critics of nato say its mission is outdated and that is it is no longer making the world a safer place the lines was created to try and counter the military power of the soviet union but keeping nato running today does come at a huge cost more than half of the world's defense spending is poured into the lines every year over a trillion dollars nato outlays dwarfs those of world powers prayed as potential threats like china and russia but the u.s. believes it's still not enough and is aging european allies to funnel more money into defense of former u.k. intelligence officer told us that nato needs to find threats to justify its spending. when it comes to the military complexes of different countries of course they're always looking for reasons to justify their existence and indeed expansion and indeed as we've seen in the last couple of weeks in the west certainly in the united kingdom the crimean situation and the ukraine situation generally is being used to justify military spending intelligence spending and indeed being used by many attempts to reverse defense cuts that have already been announced by different governments but it always helps to disguise to have a bogeyman on the horizon whether that is terrorism whether it is communism whether it is the russian expansionist threat or any other convenient threat she would say that comes in all. well the political conflict even reached this week with nasa saying is suspending contacts with russian government officials not covers mutual visits and bilateral meeting so if it does not affect joint the international space station. it's got the details nasa has sent out a memo saying this expansion includes nasa travel to russia and visits by russian government representatives to nasa facilities bilateral meetings email and teleconferences or video conferences at the present time of the operational international space station activities have been exempted in addition multilateral meetings held outside of russia that may include russia participation or not precluded under the present guidance so as we understand joint work with the international space station will continue and meetings are possible but on a neutral territory u.s. astronauts are currently on board he says their mission will not be affected we understand the launch of a so used walk it on april ninth will not be effective either but washington definitely giving russia the cold shoulder it's finding different ways to do that this one is at the expense of science and nasa scientists who spoke to the virgin news site on the condition of anonymity said this nasa is goals are and political this is one of the first major actions i have heard from the u.s. government and it is to stop science and technology collaboration you're telling me there is nothing better the last time we were suspended ties like this was with the soviet union at the end of the nineteen seventies but fewer national space station was not even started yet at that time now some say if this moves beyond rhetoric washington could single handedly undermine cooperation that hundreds of scientists have worked tirelessly to build together throughout many years in washington i'm going to check on our team but while nasa may be cussing certain lines of communication with moscow crucial areas of cooperation. may touch russian rockets have sent americans into orbit eleven times in recent years and more flights are planned for twenty fourteen the u.s. also needs russian made transporters to launch satellites for government use we rely on these for everyday uses including our internet access g.p.s. and even financial transactions but master wants to reduce this dependence currently all u.s. astronauts launched from the baikonur cosmodrome operated by russia but by twenty seventeen nasa hopes to revive its manned space flight capability at cape canaveral the only problem is funding because for years now the agency has been denied its budget requests often having to settle for half of what it's asked for a former director of the johnson space center believes nasa is decision undermines a long and fruitful u.s. russian partnership. we are working with common goals and objectives and we work together with russia very well they've been excellent partners. we have worked well to put the international space station together and everyone i spoken with my fellow colleagues both engineers and scientists are quite disappointed we don't think it's a very wise decision and certainly you know the safety of operations when you fly and he was a space on international station so you want to hance cooperation in advanced communications and i'm sure when you start taking actions to worsen those communications it's not a very safe action and it's not a very wise thing to do. also this week ukraine's new leadership blames police for february's deadly sniper attacks in kiev but the investigation leads many unconvinced or later in the program we look at the questions kiev has so far failed to answer. six people were killed in an attack on a polling station in afghanistan on saturday is the nation voted for its next president dozens of polling centers were unable to open due to nearby shootings the taliban had threatened to derail the election at any cost but officials say there was a huge turnout norm the less you see coffin of is in kabul for ati. millions of afghans to find a taliban threats to cast their ballots and there was no major security incidents six people did die in a rocket attack on a polling center there were some clashes in provincial areas but those are places that had already been fighting a taliban insurgency so nothing even remotely resembling the violence that we had seen in the run up to the historic vote one that many are calling a triumph of determination over intimidation the counting of votes will last for a while but officials do say that about seven million afghans cast their ballots out of some twelve million eligible voters that's nearly sixty percent much higher than what we saw in the last election one of the biggest concerns that some urged this time around was the shortage of ballots across the country this could be a result of the high voter turnout it also could be a result of ballot stuffing and with widespread fraud severely marring the two thousand and nine election concerns are that more evidence of irregularities could emerge as counting gets on their way and it's going to take at least a week to get the official results even longer to investigate the fraud complaints and of course whoever wins will have immense challenges ahead the next president of afghanistan won't have the benefit of billions of u.s. dollars in aid not to mention the thousands of international security forces who will help with security and of course it is that security issue that could cloud how afghanistan moves forward elections may come and go with any of the afghans of these talks who are worried about a different deadline the end of twenty fourteen that's when nato combat forces are due to withdraw from the country after thirteen years of fighting a fierce insurgency well you're not likely to find many afghans supported that war many of the people we've spoken to are much more afraid about what happened after the americans go home there are over three hundred fifty thousand soldiers serving up the moment within hours of and feel that every twenty four hours there's a very high attrition rates what's more again if it can't maintain the force on all of the army and these cost an estimated six billion dollars per year. well in excess of the nation's entire budget and others are from the things in the war the ordinary citizens will bear the brunt of the final twenty thirty in the united nations reported a sharp rise in our bodies from battles between the afghan government and taliban forces and it was the deadliest year for women and children in nearly out of the decade civilian casualties rose by a stunning fourteen percent in the conflict has become so widespread that one in four afghans have lost a relative working close to the file and without stability and an end to the violence against first democratic or of our work remains under threat reporting in kabul for our team. so the u.s. is winding down its combat mission in afghanistan claiming the past thirteen years have been a success however the death toll from the occupation a different picture the exact number of afghan civilians killed by the war is hard to verify some estimate so some estimates put it over thirty thousand on top of that over two thousand u.s. soldiers have lost their lives in afghanistan the conflict has also brought financial and political costs as we've been hearing from defense and foreign affairs expert gregory copley. the war in afghanistan and the war in iraq but particularly the word afghanistan more or less bankrupted the u.s. military not just of money but of a lot of its equipment and so on so what what do we have from that the u.s. is now lost access to central asia to the northern tier to the persian gulf pakistan wants a once a staunch ally has been left bruised and vulnerable. and china seems to be one of the few countries which has gained out of all. still to come in the program the latest flare up of public unrest in greece. with police fighting back crowds defying a ban on protester ing a visit by the finance minister is also on its way the latest on an ethnic community caught up in syria's civil war fisons of christian locals were forced to flee after it was stormed by islamic extremists. the united states is in complete confusion about what it wants in the middle east anymore are mean relationships are with israel and saudi arabia both powers. have wanted military leadership in egypt and that's been a driving force in this arab spring and america has fall in line with what the arab spring bring to. the ambiguous and indeed hypocritical relationship between western governments and. america still funding the military and. speak to language. programs and documentaries in arabic it's when you hear. reporting from the world talks about six of p.r.p. interviews intriguing story are you. trying. to find out more visit. again this week ukraine's self declared leadership put the blame. the recent sniper killings join the uprising in kiev on riot police the investigation results were announced by politicians who had area cleared themselves of war criminal charges brought against them by the former authorities meanwhile in east of the country on saturday crimes gathered in central to the protest has refused to recognize the unelected government in kiev and want more autonomy for their region they also support the security forces who say they were wrongly accused over the february sniper shootings and these are things like reports the investigation into those attacks was far from watertight. this daily beast dot com article boasts of exclusive footage it says reveals exactly who is behind the shooting in kiev on february twentieth the writer claims to have sifted through ninety gigabytes of photo and video material to establish the identity of the killers it's attempting headline and a tale no doubt but looking at the four pictures provided the only thing they show is people with guns hardly a surprise on that day. it's also claimed the troops in the photos are from the alpha counterterrorism regiment a unit only authorized to shoot at people holding hostages or threatening the lives of v.i.p.'s. but this is nothing of what they did was on their own initiative which was all perfectly legal none of the security forces units shot at people there was a point when they open fire but they aim low so they billets hit the ground in front of people for three meters away from them as if this was done in order to stop people who want to keep them from advancing further. but the article has hit home one of the office heads is now branded a murderer a simply for being spotted at the scene. but that's because. my unit is now being called. but i'm telling you the thing we killed no one. oh special units have strongly denied that counter-terrorism fighters were involved in any killing. we had information that snipers were shooting at police from the hotel could i mean we sent a sniper team to investigate but they couldn't see anything from their position so they changed position for a better view but by then they were. did you use far arms against people. we were only on an observing mission we communicated with the troops on the ground and guided them to keep them safe are you ready to hand over your guns to experts absolutely if it's true that police snipers did not do the killing mostly gunshot wounds many of them died snipers were operating shoot to kill policy. who were the people pulling the trigger the man who was running ukraine security service the as be you on that day recently made striking allegations. shots came from the direction of the filler morning call that there were snipers as well as others who were armed with automatic rifles to basically be provided fire support for the protesters to attack police and that's when they started shooting people who were attacking the officers one of the first killings was over many people saw about twenty men leaving this building they were well equipped they had special uniforms they had special cases and backs for their weapons including sniper rifles there were some reports suggesting that they were from former yugoslavia we were asked to look into that and there were also reports suggesting that they were actually mercenaries from other countries. speaking about the very same building from which my crew was most likely fired upon at about eleven am on february twentieth one gunfire was raging in central kiev i was about to go live from our broadcast position on the sixth floor of a hotel across you know when two minutes before the live shot somebody hit our window a sniper bullet literally hit our window it's still unclear to me who actually fired this shot but let's try to put it into graphics. this is hotel room is over here on the sixth floor and this is the aforementioned conservatory building the bullet trajectory and the angle at which it hit our room clearly suggests that the bullet was fired from the rooftop over there the building on the corner of my down and according to the f.b.i. chief it was controlled by the my down self-defense force at that time but the fact that my down self-defense force had recently cleared the building as claimed in a tweet by one of their activists does little to establish the truth and given what we've heard from the former as be achieved as well as a lead conversation between a story as foreign minister and the e.u.'s catherine ashton series of stronger and stronger understanding behind snipers it was not going to call rich but somebody. the identity of the my down snipers remain a mystery despite the interior ministry's highly anticipated investigation. of ski r.t. so still plenty of questions to be answered let's have a quick recap then of some of the main discrepancies catherine ashton was told by a stony as foreign minister that it was most likely the new authorities who hired the snipers but those concerns received little attention from brussels and from that conversation we also learned that the snipers shot both that civilians and the police and then there were numerous photos and video showing protesters carrying firearms not to mention reports of foreign mercenaries fighting alongside the writers in kiev and then finally some are asking will what could the police possibly have gained from shooting at protesters knowing that this would have only escalated the anger on the streets. meanwhile east of the border russia's security services have detained twenty five ukrainian citizens i am released these pictures of them they are suspected of preparing terrorist attacks in several regions of russia investigators say the detainees have already admitted to receiving instructions from ukraine security services three of them are activists from the ultra nationalist right sector militant. this week ministers met to discuss the further bailout for greece while the nationals hundreds of rises went head to head with the police the government had imposed a ban on demonstrations over a large part of central last injuring the meeting place she's take gas and stun grenades to disperse and hysterics and riot is a professor at a leading university in greece told us that the e.u. membership is bringing nothing but trouble to his country. there is no exit from this this year certainly the greek government is trying to present an image that this is the end that the recession is over and greece will return to the markets in reality recession is far from over and the return to the markets will be symbolic in reality there is an elephant in the room and the elephant is not greece is still paying a very heavy price for its participation in the euro zone unless there is an immediate stoppard's in that payments and also a brave this isn't to exit the euro zone it's impossible to have that kind of increased public spending that will get us out of this with your circle of recession instead of the unemployment. over on our website at the moment we're reporting on a bizarre murder trial in pakistan in which the defendant is a nine month old baby boy we've got this story at r.t. dot com also there a former u.s. air force pilot reveals that an airbase in germany is being used as a control center for america's drone warfare campaigns you can read about that at r.t. dot com. jadis rebel sees the ethnic armenian tannock in syria looting homes and forcing thousands of residents to flee al-qaeda flags were raised over armenian churches and at least eighty seven leaders were reportedly killed after the militants crossed the border from turkey a campaign has sprung up on twitter in the times defends with the hash tag save his sabbath matt strawn responses from celebrities with armenian backgrounds including the american reality t.v. star kim could ash and missing a share or so mass rallies have been held drawing attention to the times pi us greece russia and several other countries let's get the full story now from port. paying the price for supporting president assad and being christian the syrian towns to sub populated mostly that it's me kamin ians. karbala get a bombardment started early morning we struggled to save our son we were learning on the ground because of the heavy bombing the boy only just escaped damascus is jihadists crossed from over the turkish border to target civilians launching mortar attacks on the town and surrounding villages hundreds of families were forced to flee we took nothing routes look no there's nothing we just left with what they were wearing and i have two children my husband left he said he would join us but we've heard nothing from him i don't know where he is so strategically important as one of the last remaining posts through which rebels are able to pass from turkey to syria i am pretty sure that turkey has provided all kinds of solutions to stop or to including emission providing reserves in allowing them to pass freely treats boarders they are accusations which and career vehemently deny is dark you heard. through. the. people coming from all over the world gave the free energy and fresh think their entrance into syria training them. to say well we didn't know or we couldn't stop it or something like that it's a little bit ridiculous all media also says thanks to. the two countries have a deeply painful past especially since the first world war genocide of more than a million armenians in one thousand sixteen i don't know if there's a coincidence or not it definitely speaks to the history of the armenian people and of course the role of turkey i believe that the turkish government has refused to recognize me and. of course i utilize the perhaps ongoing animosity towards me affinity as another mechanism for the destabilization of the multinational of the syrian. question i asked the united nations security council to examine the alleged attacks against armenians in concern but he declined a blow for vulnerable time such as this lying along a pool responded that's helping feed syria's civil war. r t. it's coming up to half past eleven here in moscow up next some handy survival tricks if you ever lost in the window we'll do. exactly sixty years ago according to the guardian the soviet union actually tried to join nato to create an allied air of peace and a post world war two world and what answer did they get nato said the offer was unrealistic and not worth discussing one year later the warsaw pact was born and the cold war started decades later nothing has changed nato continues to to expand . breaking agreements not to expand which surrounds russia and china with bases all offers from russia to jointly run the missile shield that nato setting up in europe are totally ignored hillary clinton may have given russia a nice reset button but the state department that she used to head continues to funnel lot of money for democracy development and regime change into the former soviet union ukraine got five billion alone as revealed by assistant secretary of state knew and in her own
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growth of terrorism drug trafficking and the spread of biological warfare all on its own marina point i r r t. with the u.s. led bloc striking out on its own the alliance is left to shoulder the massive cost of global security cash strapped american and european taxpayers are probably the ones though who will and are bearing the brunt of what is a very sizable bill let's check it out more than half of the world's defense spending a whopping trillion dollars is poured into the alliance every single year and that's a figure that dwarfs the defense budgets of countries viewed by nato as potential threats namely china and russia one german military officer who thinks that europeans are at risk of becoming pawns in washington's game of brinkmanship against moscow. since the one nine hundred ninety s. the u.s. has viewed itself and behaved as a winner because the soviet union was no longer an obstacle that's exactly why vladimir putin was right when he said the collapse of the u.s.s.r. was the biggest geopolitical could. astra fee of the twentieth century the americans thought their hands were un
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r r t. so nato has chosen to shoulder the massive cost of global security by itself course and it could be the cash strapped american and european taxpayers are going to have to bear the brunt of picking up that behold actually more than half of the world's to from spreading walking trillion dollars is poured into the alliance every single year you can take a look at the figures yourself for that figure dwarfs the defense budgets of countries viewed by nato historically as the potential threats are so sturrock lee currently china and russia one german military officer spoke to us he thinks europeans now are at risk of becoming pawns in washington's game of brinkmanship against moscow. since the one nine hundred ninety s. the u.s. is viewed itself and behaved as a winner because the soviet union was no longer an obstacle that's exactly why vladimir putin was right when he said the collapse of the u.s.s.r. was the biggest geopolitical catastrophe of the twentieth century the americans thought their hands were untied and they were free to act as they please but now china's become an economic superpower and this game cannot continue to be played by the old. hope that we can find some way to convince the americans that they can't keep playing the role they chose in the ninety's there are some reasonable politicians in america who understand this the confrontation with russia cannot continue right now we're still seeing the same policy of containment from the one nine hundred forty seven only in a new form and a european should not become a tool of such policy. well a political stunt or falls at a cosmic scale too in the wake of nasa saying that suspending russian government officials is girly to carry this expansion includes nasa travel with russia out and business by the russian government representatives from nasa facilities bilateral. teleconferences or video conferences at the present time and the operational international space station effectively have been exempted in additional multilateral meetings held outside of russia that plane. precluded under the present guidance so as we understand joint work with the international space station will meetings are possible but on a neutral territory u.s. astronauts are currently on board he says their mission will not be affected we understand the launch of the so you swap it on april ninth will not be effective either but washington definitely giving russia the call troll it's finding different ways to do that this one is at the expense of science and nasa scientists who spoke to the virgin news site on the condition of anonymity said this man says calls aren't political this is one of the first major actions i have heard from the u.s. government and it is to stop science and technology collaboration you're telling me there is nothing better the last time we were suspended ties like this was with the soviet union at the end of the nineteen seventies but your national space station was not even started yet at that time now some say if this moves beyond rhetoric washington could single handedly undermine cooperation that hundreds of scientists have worked tirelessly to build together throughout many years in washington i'm going to check on party. but despite the boycott some crucial areas of cooperation do remain intact and you can cut a reason why if you look at the numbers russian rockets have sent americans into war with eleven times in recent years more and were planned for twenty forty in the us also relies on russian made transporters to launch satellites for government use not just for government use for everyone's use to provide everything from internet access to g.p.s. and it's this current dependence that nasa has been trying to reduce at the moment all u.s. astronauts currently launch from the baikonur cosmodrome that's operated by russia but that has been hoping to revive its manned space flight capability at cape canaveral again by twenty seven t. the problem with that cash lack of it funding for years now the agency has been denied its budget requests often having to start over half of what it's been asking for we spoke to former director of the johnson space center who believes that by getting involved in political games here nasa stepping on dangerous ground. but we're working with common goals and objectives and we work together with russia very well they've been excellent partners. we have worked well to put the international space station together and everyone i've spoken with my fellow colleagues both engineers and scientists are quite disappointed we don't think it's a very wise decision and certainly can affect the safety of operations especially when you're flying humans of space on international space station so you want to hance cooperation in advanced communications and feel when you start taking actions to lessen those communications it's not a very safe action and. it's not a very wise thing to do. coming up here now to international the right road to victoria hug areas. like glee to be on his way to retaining a very comfortable grip of power with almost fifty percent of the vote out of one quarter of ballots and being counted so far the saving in the nation's parliamentary election after the break we'll tell you why he's apparently so popular. he sees and i keep me in the country is the federal government simply. calling us to realise they can just by. just throw it away. for belongs to the united states environmental protection agency. it produces of these literally i should be able to collect these i believe that this should be responsible for the brutal to grave. fate of mexico. property all south america incorporated it also belongs to the washington metro transit authority properties of dennis deeds page and trademarks. against one fifteen in the morning in moscow and audacious onslaught by rebel forces on the small syrian town of cast led moscow to appeal to the un security council to investigate the border areas mostly populated by christian armenians hundreds of whom i do escape to safety al-qaeda flags are raised over orthodox churches their initial reports claimed at least eighty civilians had been killed after militants crossed the border from turkey where those deaths still haven't been verified i must point out a campaign has surfaced on twitter with the hash tag save drawing responses from celebrities with a media backgrounds including american reality t.v. star can cut that she and also sing a share she commented as well also mass rallies were held in the us in greece and russia and in several other countries too to bring attention to the country communities plight paula sleep here at this story for us in the week. paying the price for supporting president assad and being christian the syrian town of the sub populated mostly back if we comedians. go about it the bombardment started early morning we struggled to save our son we were lying on the ground because of the heavy bombing the boy only just escaped damascus says jihadists crossed from over the turkish border to target civilians launching mortar attacks on the town and surrounding villages hundreds of families were forced to flee political nothing russ no no there is nothing we just left with what they were wearing you have a bizarre i have two children my husband left he said he would join us but we've heard nothing from him i don't know where he is. strategically important because one of the last remaining posts to which rebels are able to pass from turkey to syria i am pretty sure that turkey has provided all kinds of solutions to stop or to including emission providing there is there's an alarming them to us really treats borders they are accusations which and clear vehemently denies turkey has a long history of helping the. people coming from all over the world. and facilitating their entrance into syria training them for for turkey to say well we didn't know or we couldn't stop it or something like that a little bit ridiculous armenia also suspects turkish involvement the two countries have a deeply painful past especially since the first world war genocide of more than a million armenians in one nine hundred sixteen i don't know if there's a coincidence or not it definitely speak to the history of the armenian people and of course the role of turkey i believe that the turkish government has refused to recognize an armenian genocide of course. i utilise the perhaps ongoing animosity towards the army and from the as another mechanism for the destabilization of the multinational of the. russian asked the united nations security council to examine the alleged attacks against armenians in concerned but it's a client a blow for vulnerable towns such as this lying along the poorest border that's helping feed syria's civil war policy or r.t. . about a quarter of the ballots have been counted on hungary's parliamentary election along the sea evening early results point to four more years in power for acting prime minister viktor orban then his euro skeptic right wing parties leading the race by a large margin with forty eight percent of the vote so far let's take a look then for a minute or two at some of the highs and lows but many were unhappy about his government's tightening of its grip on state media on friday banned election campaigns via platforms other than state controlled outlets are the most didn't go down too well with controversial constitutional amendments limiting the power of the country's top court there was criticism there people saying they could tailed civil liberties and they choked democracy he also introduced a move to reduce the budget deficit to below the e's required three percent to do that he hike taxes in the banking energy and telecom sectors a lot of people didn't like that on the positives for him though there was praise for some of his policies or both claims credit for reviving the economy hungary repaid that emergency i.m.f. loan it also was pulled at every session and he beat down inflation is taking on the foreign energy firms did them a lot of favors too especially as that led to cuts in household utility bills and that's not all he also won over money by slashing income tax to always a winner if you can do it and he succeeded in reducing the unemployment rate which now stands at around eight percent peter all of the reports. it does seem that the current prime minister viktor orban will be returned to that post now he hasn't always the best relationship with the european union despite hungry of course being slap bang right in the center of europe brussels and budapest haven't always gotten on particularly there was an incident where by mr obama's policy rewrote the country's constitution without consulting anybody that upset people in brussels despite all of east very popular here in hungary has to be the highest approval rating of any new leader but it's one of the challenges that are coming up against them particularly in missile lection we've seen me put it all party your pick come into focus now they are regarded by some as being quite paul right they certainly have a tough policy on immigration never expected to take around twenty percent of today's vote so with vick still looking set to be returned yet again. prime minister there seem that hungry will continue to although geographically be right at the center of europe be on the outside when it comes to european union politics . for us a four stroke operator claims washington's using an air base in germany to carry out a deadly drone attacks on pakistani and yemeni sites sperling is now accused of turning a blind eye the potential violations of international law and sold them by allowing it to happen is that story interest you got much more about it online i don't comb also to kicking out the gangs before the world cup kicks off thousands of troops sweep the slums of rio de janeiro's brazil is up to host a huge football event in june and july. police are to blame for the deadly sniper fire during fed to. these riots in kiev at least that's how ukraine's coup appointed leaders saw it this last week they announced their investigation results after first clearing themselves of all accusations of wrongdoing ball against them by the former authorities and actually reports on how the probe itself has raised many questions. this daily beast dot com article both self exclusive footage it says reveals exactly who is behind the shooting in kiev on february twentieth the writer claims to have sifted through ninety gigabytes of photo and video material to establish the identity of the killers it's a tempting headline and a tale no doubt but looking at the four pictures provided the only thing they show is people with guns hardly a surprise on that day. it's also claimed the troops in the photos are from the alpha counterterrorism regiment a unit only authorized to shoot at people holding hostages or threatening the lives of v.i.p.'s. but assuming nothing of what they did was on their own initiative reject them what was a perfectly legal or none of the security forces units short of people because there was a point when they opened fire but they anglos of the bullets hit the ground in front of people who were forty three meters away from us but that service was done in order to stop people and you want to keep them for an advancing further. but the article has hit home one of the office heads is now branded a murderer a simply for being spotted at the scene. because of the good delivery and i feel. that my unit is now being called as is in live with the i'm telling you think we killed no one your. whole special units have strongly denied that counter-terrorism fighters were involved in any killing. we had information that snipers were shooting at police from the hotel could i know if we sent a smuggler team to investigate but they couldn't see anything from that position so the. changed position for a better view but by then they weren't able to use firearms against people. we were only only observing mission we communicated. with. are you ready to hand over your guns to experts. if it's true that police snipers did not do the killing mostly gunshot with us many of them died snipers were ok to shoot to kill policy. for the people pulling the trigger the man who was running ukraine security service the as be you on that day recently made striking allegations. from the direction of the morning call that they were snipers as well as others who were armed with automatic rifles that would basically be provided with our support for the protesters to attack police and that's when they started shooting people who were attacking the officers with one of the first we will feelings it was over many people saw about twenty men leaving this building because they were well equipped they had special uniforms they had such a case is an x. will be a weapons including sniper rifles there were some reports suggesting they. were asked to look into that and there were also reports suggesting that they were actually mercenaries from other countries. you could be speaking about the very same building from which my room was most likely fired upon at about eleven am on february twentieth one gunfire was raging in central kiev i was about to go live from our broadcast position on the sixth floor of a hotel ok you know when two minutes before the live shot somebody hit our window a sniper bullet literally hit our window it's still unclear to me who actually fired this shot but let's try to put it into graphics this is hotel across room is over here on the sixth floor and this is the aforementioned conservatory building the bullet trajectory and the angle at which it hit our room clearly suggests that the bullet was fired from the rooftop over there the building on the corner of my down and according to the f.b.i. chief it was. controlled by the my down self-defense force at that time but the fact that my down self-defense force had recently cleared the building as claimed in a tweet by one of their activists does little to establish the truth and given what we've heard from the former as b u chief as well as elite conversation that when a story is foreign minister and the catherine ashton series i was stronger and stronger understanding that behind snipers it was not going to call which somebody when you question the identity of the my down snipers remain a mystery despite the grainy interior ministry's highly anticipated investigation. r.t. . programs like that after the break we explain how your own compute to pose a real danger to thousands around the world when you throw it away this is o.t. . the supreme court is getting a rather important and unusual case the hobby lobby corporation which is owned by a more traditionally oriented christian family has a lawsuit challenging the obamacare mandate that employer provided health care plans have to pay for abortions and contraception this is a tough one which is first sound simple wealthy owners of hobby lobby feel that abortion is murder so they should have to pay for freedom of speech right but then couldn't some other company say medical care is the devil's work prayer is the only thing you need so we're not going to pay a dime if the supreme court supports this and i think a lot of companies will be making moral stance in order to not pay for things but not on the other hand why is abortion such a critical part of obamacare in the first place i mean have you ever heard of activists protest against people fixing broken legs curing fungal infections or doing laser eye surgery you haven't heard of them because these things are totally acceptable to almost everyone in america so paying for them is part of obamacare isn't a problem it is only a problem taxpayers or hobby lobby has to pay for something that is extremely controversial and considered an act of evil by half the people on the street abortion being legal is one thing but doesn't need to be funded by everyone because so many people are against it but that's just my opinion. well come to that son siberian. what are the places you never go to. fun you never have. things you never do. experience you'll never get. nice or prime you will. require to think seriously as to how low in the future. we packed more specifically our children and grandchildren. will be able to realize three potentiality that we would like our own society tool enable us to develop we shall have to find ways of training on how to enjoy the leisure that we presumably i'm going to have to greatly that we're going to have in such a way that infinity frustrating and making life a special board on will enable us to engage in a creative activity. now if you're if you're going to play the same old game and it doesn't really matter there's a lot of people out there they almost refused to great but if you want to play all brand new games coming out. just to keep up i mean it's it's it's not. it's not anything you have to do. it's more of this it's trying to keep up with the joneses a lot of the times you know friend gets you know new video father figure monitors on the site hey that's cool i want the. thing to remember when you're fighting this just make sure you get everything. just never fails or. oh if somebody gets forgot. to use them at work to look up parts of your finder look like use google maps to find addresses a way to vent stress have a rough day on the road get home or whatever work and come home blow something up in a videogame and nothing gets harmed and i feel a little better. yes we turn the computer on and you select the game you want to play when you kill the killer the game allows you to go to the next level you kill the killer again you go to the next level and so on. we always try to retain the fighting techniques in the video games later on a football field we imitate the technique among ourselves. just move over this way . i move around this way and when there's an attempt to throw a punch at me i step aside through a punch like this kick him when he falls to the ground i'll step on him. this place is very small if it was affordable feel he'll make you laugh your head off. i was encounter manto at the time selling pure water there was this friend of mine told an eho he was already breaking these computers apart and i asked him to show me how to collect these metals from the computers when i started with them i usually would collect the wrong metals and show them to my friends who advised that what i had collected were the wrong ones they showed me how to hit the metal against a stone a unique stone from the metal will indicate the correct metal or not. how old were you the six years yes it's worse so i don't like it i don't want my son to go out there but sometimes the situation here is so hopeless there is no money to send him off to school so on saturday he left me there to the dump say to look for some money so he can go to school on monday where making no sales this days at the market people are not buying. what is the purpose of your work why are you working here. it's for the money it is better for us to work here than become thief stealing from other people. as for the very young boys who work here it is not good for them. i think gloom. and whoa that's nothing why not i meet them for them. they say this because of money that they also come here to work and they are poor however they become bad boys coming here. they don't want to go back to school but the money they make is not enough for their future will. come and i said they should stop bringing them because the computers we break to obtain the iron and copper bring diseases but a child will do it despite the diseases because of money children will always break them up they collapse in the computers cuts them and if care is not taken they tetanus i have a cut on my hand myself he was. he was thirteen. it's just all the years together and kind of a camaraderie of of everybody being there you can see what other people are bringing what they're doing to their computers how they're modern on what kind of hardware they have what operating system running quake on and so largely from walk around and get a lot slide is for what you want to do to your system. and . there's going to be a conference on the title is in africa has been organized by the u.s. d.p.a. and another of his asian i n e c international compliance something affordably. i have seen the program. this is for both abstain the program but i haven't seen a slot for a visit to the dump site but it would be good if they can come to a dump site and see what is actually happening here. maybe a very good learning experience for the people who haven't been here. this place used to be a beautiful place the water nearby was very good for swimming but now it's a dump site i believe when i am older it'll change back in the day this is what i've done five used to look like very leaders actually like this large room meandering through the wetlands. and in some pods there was also mangu you know some tree stumps here in the but now. there's nothing to show it's all gone. the reality is also the fire dept the manufacturers of these items cannot be absolved from blame the money factor as all the producers of these later on i think should be able to collect these things i believe that they should be responsible for their products from cradle to grave robber. and see where that. try again i got cut by broken glass when i was breaking the computer monitor. the. top of the mind. that. is. the this is the here and in your body talk about every program what matter how much the device ok so i don't have d.l.c. and energy being wash your hands and in a bucket with soap. to read it back to right back into. the groove ok so bump it up i would just go away. so i'm going to order soil has bought things when you wash it your hands make me clean it is nowhere near the truth we're talking about pollutants that upper systems reversible pollutants the bio accumulate you know we're talking about pollutants those three almost horrible right from the soil in the food chain and also in the human body. one of the characteristics of human being. that among other things that they do they solve problems. what it means of course to solve a problem is to be able to not only get an answer to a question there are a particular situation but then. find the other piece of that assume. that we are. in a position to solve them not just one concrete problem but a whole crowd of you know the average household today you don't just have one computer you have three t.v. set it's you know your thirteen year old your fourteen year old they both have cell phones your wife has a cell phone to be a d.v.d. players you don't just have the one item you have a pallet or a couple pallets of items and then builds up with the new i phone in the new i pad coming out every every year it seems like apple's rounds of the new out other companies are bringing out new l.c.d. televisions blu ray d.v.d. players you know people want to know where culture of want to end to end it getting so i think a lot of the old stuff that average consumers just don't get rid of it this is a computer it's not wasted it's aluminum plastics i mean it's just. you know for us it just makes so much more sense and is something like this to do anything else and i. think the biggest thing that separates great oversight from other electronics like the processors is our investment in technology i mean we'll show you millions and millions of dollars of capital investment into technology and health revolutionized this industry we named our first processing system david one is kind of the answer to that goliath amount of electronics it's kind of a process where all the materials shredded comes out in pieces anywhere from you know up twenty to a no bigger than a silver dollar and then from there it enters a series of starvation systems and these are taped. and systems allow us to taking commingled computer that has been shredded and then separate also if you take one p.c. drop it in there you're going to get aluminum you're going to get pieces of steel pieces of circuit board pieces of copper you know as we speak there's probably about twenty six different states that have been and that have enacted some sort of law with regards to these. and those laws are all different from state to state mentally we need to go to a bigger broader so that there's some sort of national legislation that really takes this issue and addresses it to the largest consumer of p.c.'s and i'd say equipment in the country is the federal government so if they can you know they can come up with the solution at their level you know then that is going to drive it down to the state level to businesses. to mitsubishi to critical to you know home which in just such a high moral standard then dallas living up to its themselves and there is a double standard i think it stems from. the fact that the western societies. see america behaves outside of a board of its borders the way that russia behaves inside the ship of its borders and vice versa. do we speak your language not a day of. school music programs and documentaries in spanish what matters to you breaking news a little turn it into angles keaton stories. i'll teach spanish to find out more visit i. teach. economic record. for. her. place now i. want to. play. her. slit. her. move. i know we're going to a conference on the theme it was an offer is being organized by the u.s. the pew and then the international network full. environmental compliance and then false friends and the friends gone friends and gone on see everything held well i think. in most part of africa in the first time that we haven't got an international conference. here again i would say is just the beginning of something good i mean does the way i see it but i'll keep monitoring i think of the real need to move from talk talk all rhetoric to action but for me would symbolize something really good you know otherwise it would be the same old talk show. you know things. seem. you're going to get it but that doesn't mean you can look up. the company gets to the. parts of the book. is not that easy to write. the primer film made it past this well. like i was filming because the mother loved him and was sitting on a. top and bottom and i'm sure you recognize and since there is a cigarette in her head like i said if you don't want to work today i'd probably ask her anything since her part of the world that anything. i say to myself would be have nothing to hide why wouldn't they want anybody to fold it you know is all about i wanted his creation you know is all about says phase ation is all about educating people. i just found a soft. proper jewel supped america incorporated. in this but i also found it also belongs to the washington metro area transit authority is simply ses property of a net as thieves government. and i found this. well this is the properties of a dentist aids patient and trademark office. image and assume you know this is not enough the u.s. e.p.a. does should know better is also be dumping this is a problem for instance you know those thieves imbibing to protection agency the u.s. the p.a. and i phones is not a dump site here. just never it just keeps coming. but we can really recycle everything in it i mean there's no problem showing things car more costly to recycle it like a lead in the glass you know that's very close to recycling you know that's going to go away eventually because now they have the l.c.d. screen but the l.c.d. screens have mercury and so you know that's another issue you know the mercury has to be inside if they can just come up with a better way it's coming out i would think of not having hazardous stuff in there it is just going to keep going to keep growing more people more transient more landfills and just will be recycled everything out of the result. is everybody's problem you know you have so many landfills and why you know i'd rather have a car built and then another landfill and if we can keep this about a landfills we can put that died on the bench and go into landfills but i mean recycling you know it just makes sense and smart i mean this is a mixture of c.r.t. televisions and c.r.t. monitors these are all these are obsolete they're not they're not using electronics anymore so when they come to us we will take them and will process nice these gentlemen are taking the c.r.t. the actual into out of its plastic casing and they're also being able to harness and gather in the copper the low grade circuit more that's in the material and then we can use those they'll be processed into our precious metal refiner and the great thing about this system is it is essentially clean. the glass in turn a c.r.t. glass by separating the lighted blast from the non lighting glass and then cleaning it is an area and what we would call a furnace ready blast hole and that's ready for blasting glass recycling going into the body in there. he says if you want to start to add that suction bag gratitude securely and the laser measures the do so that the flames are set and zoom in a certain way it goes in and makes you cuts into his inflict on a rotating table the other side is then cut and that's all done by laser measurements and some great software in there was training to make this machine after the c r t's me cut and let it blast in the mirror on the panel last the panel glasses then please this is furnace running and on last night will go to a recycler and then they will use it to make it last this is not going to. third world or developing country is a commodity this has a value that you know dollar value associated with. people from to come friends into the cone friends they want to see what it is like to be other he was dumpsites you know so i decided to bring them here so they can see for themselves at first what it was like so do appreciate a moment till the problem and go back and help him please. just dumping a few words from the industrialized nations countries of africa and to gone off a lot more to. yeah i read you another one. let's move. this goal. some burning and then we see the little. good. there. somewhere. you go. oh ok ok ok so he's in the cuba is for. disposals yeah so the little slaves for disposal wherever they came from but this is the school here in ghana ea
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r r t new york. and more on the plane crisis later this hour we'll tell you whether the diplomats dealing with the problem are actually diplomatic enough to solve it. right now in south america countries are setting out zero stalls on the future of the internet to wrest control from the one nation that's pretty much dominated web governance since the technologies inception brazil which is hosting the net when deol conference has passed a new law already being called the internet constitution to protect the privacy of brazilian web users and the wake of u.s. spying revelations. pretty of. interests e.u. citizens companies embassies and even the presidency have their communications intercepted this incidence on the acceptable and remain an acceptable so far the keys to the global net are largely held by organizations are provided by washington i can decide who gets most domain names and this and the fact that the bulk of it are natural afaik from your emails to web searches goes via merica allows washington to get across practically and online data now though manning governments including us partners in europe want this to change the director of the institute of technology and society in rio de janeiro believes that brazil's innovative new law will be crucial course there are plans for order countries to be inspired by the to be off this be off law firms principles very important such as net neutrality free speech privacy and of course in the lights off this by programs in the spy revelations it end up getting much more attention and much more momentum to be passed on to governments civil society and the business sector will try to come up with a solutions to get it into a process in which not only you have a diversity in deep into the issues framing itself but also in the decision making. now palestine could soon be united deadly rival factions fire and hamas have signed a reconciliation deal they agree when calls for a unity government within weeks seventy years after in violence split emerged between the went to mass won the election back in two thousand and six tension soon as collated fatah and up controlling the west bank while hamas took over gaza territory armed conflicts shook the region for years a million and a half gaza residents are still living in an economic blockade israel reacted to the announcement by calling out the u.s. backed peace talks with the palestinians israeli human rights advocate told me why it's taking such a drastic step the israeli government led by prime minister netanyahu. i think in the back room open the bottle of the bottles of champagne this government is not truly interested in promoting a peace process and therefore while they have such a unity government with hamas who's of course see an organization that. uses terror measures against israel for them it's a big victory to prove that they're not the ones to blame on the installment in the peace process but rather the palestinians in the long run though i think that the inclusion of hamas and the reunion between the two parts of the. sixty seven palestine meaning the west bank and gaza are actually good news for those who actually want peace. portugal is fast tracking foreigners who help pay its debts with their rapid residency scheme which are mine and its property and you're on the way to portuguese passport we've got a report on that coming up. hillary education young people for us teddy roosevelt once said a man who has never gone to school may steal from a freight car but if he has a university education he may steal the whole railroad yes in a gilded uncropped a sense is teddy knew and as we know today one needs to get the right education in order to steal the right thing. drama's the truth be ignored. stories others refuse to notice. the faces change the world. to picture of today's you know. from around the globe. brokenly. welcome back you're watching international with me marina joshie a recap of our breaking news and we're getting reports of ukrainian armored vehicles tanks and special forces being deployed in the eastern ukraine is the absolute balance which is currently under the control of anti cave protesters gunfighting is happening at two checkpoints on approaches to the city locals say several people were killed and we'll bring you more details as soon as we get them now worley there is a scratching their hands over how to resolve the ukrainian crisis trying to engage and mediation and deal making but there are times when diplomats only make it harder for politicians to reach common ground are just going to reports. do diplomats always have to be diplomatic apparently not judging by the moves of some of the us is top brass take former secretary of state hillary clinton might become america's next president she openly cheered for his murder came risotto who died. or susan rice who is known for her grace of this in one instance as u.s. envoy to the u. when she called russia's call for an investigation into civilian deaths in libya quote a bogus duplicitous stunt miss rice is now a national security adviser to the president the current u.s. envoy to the u.n. is also no stranger to on diplomatic moves in these photos you can see some of the power launching toward her russian counterpart with insults how is this acceptable i don't think there's an american has ever felt the need more some of the asked how . she would extend any kind of. courtesy respect to the because it continues to see solved in a position of power and absolute power and of course some u.s. policy makers have not refrained from openly participating in the policymaking of other nations we were a member victoria nolens descending onto the streets of kiev to a cheerful protest there she is this is the secretary of state for european and your asian affairs though mrs no one was nowhere to be seen when protests were raging in greece spain and italy against austerity measures well she's also known to have used profanity yes the f. word referring to washington's partner in the e.u. the love to make which. are supposedly witty scathing comments that can be enormously disrespect respectful and the busa of of other major powers of world leaders certainly the us has diplomats who understand that interests of different countries may clash conflicts may happen but one can hardly arrive at solutions if there is no respect it would hope if there were more of them in prominent diplomatic positions in washington i'm going to check on our team. regular summit designed to rule former soviet eastern european states to words that you has some notable absence is this time around the gatherings getting underway in prague but neither the hat of the european commission nor its foreign policy chief are going to show up well it's now more on this from a correspondent here all over well peter what does all mean does it mean that. partnership is no longer important for brussels. well when it was set up the european partnership summit which sees the e.u. and former soviet republics sit down for talks it was meant to try and encourage the expansion of the european union integration between the e.u. . countries now this time around ukraine is set to dominate all of the talks both while ukraine is being discussed in prague of people that won't be taking part notable absentee of the european commission president jose manuel barroso and also the e.u. head diplomats catherine ashton also know senior members of governments from what you would call old europe really likes of great britain here in germany of france none of those senior representatives are going to be taking part of it so it seems they've moved away from this body that was set up to try and get people involved in the in the e.u. now i say ukraine set to dominate talks and one thing that perhaps will be discussed that this will be a future date that could be given. to ukraine now we saw the united states put forward a somewhat derisory fifteen million dollar offer we've also seen the e.u. and michelin offer around thirteen billion euros worth of aid to ukraine they then try to make that fifteen billion euro then twelve billion euro and so far ukraine is seen not euro cent one of all of that money now we are seeing though is some opposition to wards the expansion of the e.u. borders here in germany the the christian social union who are the sister party of under merkel's ruling ruling christian democrat party they have their big congress and they said that the partnership with ukraine yes but membership for ukraine no this is something we saw towards the end of last year when it was being discussed the partnership dale people in europe saying. we want to do business with these countries but the money it's going to cost the e.u. to make their members well that's just not going to cut this with the citizens of europe and certainly doesn't seem with the politicians of europe from what we're hearing out of the christian socially christine social union. right there thanks so much for bringing us this update here all of our reporting there. well there are a lean mean fighting machine spawn top on sirah it's just don't call them chicken hundreds of birth was roosters some bred for illegal cockfighting have been put down in the united states after their owners far was discovered the full story is our team dot com and. surf safely while you're on line there is a warning that cyber garden is on the way and it could prove as disastrous as the two thousand and eight financial crisis we explain it to you. place right on the scene play. first st louis and i think the church. on our reformers twitter. and instagram. to be in the cold. on mom. lol good evening i'm. going to see this moment as we tossed off into the futuristic world of space technology bush's latest spacecraft promises to push back the boundaries of human exploration meanwhile in tomsk our funds communications technologies make for a crystal clear reception under reagan the prizes that anything is possible technology each year on r.g.p. we've done the future cover. plate. full of such a. place . crosstalk rules in effect that means you can jump in anytime you want. welcome back you're watching r t international in the afghan capital kabul one guard is open fire in a hospital killing at least three americans it's not known why the policeman turned his weapon against those who he was assigned to protect and he also wounded several medical staff the officer who had recently been posted to the clinic was shot and arrested. readers and media have marched to mark the genocide of around a million and a half armenians during the first world war and the man it's recognition by turkey the turkish prime minister had offered unprecedented condolences to the families of those killed by ottoman soldiers but he stopped short of calling it a genocide the following instead to in human consequences the slaughter continues to be a major thorn between the two countries. and obama's asia tour has sparked rallies in japan's capital protesters gathered outside parliament waving banners against the transpacific partnership and america's influence in the region a deal which is expected to be discusse
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