Thứ Tư, 22 tháng 8, 2018

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South Korea and the U.S. began the sixth round of talks on sharing defense costs.

For two days, senior officials from the both sides will hold the negotiations at the Korea

Institute for Defense Analyses in the nation's capital.

In the previous sessions,.... Washington repeatedly asked Seoul to increase its shoulder a greater

share... highlighting "operational support".... is added to the bill to pay for the U.S. Forces

Korea.

The new category includes.... deployment of aircraft carriers,... long-range bombers and

nuclear submarines.

For more infomation >> S. Korea, U.S. to hold talks on sharing defense costs - Duration: 0:29.

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U.S., China to attempt revival of trade negotiations - Duration: 1:54.

Washington and Beijing will again sit down for talks... to try and revive trade negotiations

that ended unsuccessfully back in June.

However, neither side is optimistic of making much progress.

Lee Seung-jae provides a glimpse of what to expect.

The world's two biggest economic powerhouses are set to take another stab at easing their

trade tensions,... as U.S. Treasury Under Secretary David Malpass will meet with his

Chinese counter Wang Shouwen in Washington on Wednesday.

The meeting will be the first between senior officials since June,... when talks between

U.S. Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross and Vice Premier Liu He ended without an agreement.

According to U.S. and Chinese officials,... this week's talks will center on a list of

more than 140 specific demands,... which were originally drafted by the Trump administration

for the first round of trade talks in May.

This includes the U.S. wanting China to raise the value of its currency.

Sources say,... in a private discussion with U.S. counterparts,...

Chinese officials have indicated they would be willing to implement or discuss about two-thirds

of the demands.

However, neither side is optimistic the upcoming meeting can succeed where three earlier rounds

have failed.

In an interview with Reuters on Monday,...

President Trump said he had low expectations for the talks,... and the U.S. was in no rush

to resolve the dispute.

Beijing officials have said that Trump's constant provocations have made it extremely difficult

for them to offer conciliatory gestures.

Despite many American businesses being affected by the recent tit-for-tat measures,... observers

say Trump believes he can win a trade war with China.

This, according watchers,... adds to the chance that President Trump will proceed with his

latest threat to hit China with tariffs on another 200-billion dollars worth of goods.

Lee Seung-jae, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> U.S., China to attempt revival of trade negotiations - Duration: 1:54.

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95-year-old suspected Nazi living in U.S. deported to Germany - Duration: 0:37.

A 95-year-old suspected Nazi war criminal living in the United States has been deported

to Germany.

Jakiw Palij (Yakif Paly) lived in New York City and is accused of lying about his wartime

work when he immigrated to the U.S.

He has denied allegations that he worked at a Nazi camp, saying he only served as a Nazi

guard because his family was threatened.

He was stripped of his American citizenship in 2003 and his deportation was ordered about

a year later, but for more than a decade no country would take him in.

Palij is however unlikely to be prosecuted in Germany due to a lack of evidence.

For more infomation >> 95-year-old suspected Nazi living in U.S. deported to Germany - Duration: 0:37.

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George Soros Broke US Charity Laws - Illegally Meddled In Elections - Duration: 5:11.

For more infomation >> George Soros Broke US Charity Laws - Illegally Meddled In Elections - Duration: 5:11.

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U.S. slaps sanctions on Russian shipping firms, vessels for violating UNSC resolutions - Duration: 1:40.

In other news.

The United States has added to its growing list of sanctions against entities that violate

UN restrictions regarding North Korea,... this time hitting two Russia-based companies

and six vessels with punitive measures.

The U.S. Treasury Department said it will continue to pressure Pyongyang until the regime

achieves final and fully verifiable denuclearization.

Kim Hyo-sun tells us more.

The Trump administration has imposed new sanctions against two Russian shipping companies and

six vessels for violating the UN Security Council resolutions.

The U.S. Treasury Department announced Tuesday that the Vladivostok-based companies transported

petroleum products to North Korean vessels, in violation of international sanctions.

It confirmed a Russian-flagged ship transported over three-and-a-half thousand tons of oil

to North Korean vessels earlier this year.

The Treasury also explained that the buyer was North Korea's Taesong Bank,... which has

already been slapped with sanctions by Washington for engaging in illicit economic activities

for the regime.

Explaining that the sanctions will remain in place until Pyongyang achieves final, fully

verifiable denuclearization,...

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin stressed that those who violate the UN restrictions

on North Korea will be sanctioned under U.S. law.

This is third round of North Korea-related sanctions imposed by the Trump administration

just this month,... and can be interpreted as added pressure against the regime ahead

of U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's scheduled fourth visit to Pyongyang soon.

Kim Hyo-sun, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> U.S. slaps sanctions on Russian shipping firms, vessels for violating UNSC resolutions - Duration: 1:40.

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Majah Hype, 'Wickedness' says elderly J'can jailed in the US for burning a raccoon - Duration: 1:01.

it's a man in Central Florida accused of setting a raccoon on fire yeah he trying

to explain himself as he walked out of jail take a listen to this Komachi

mediafire nominee ragged lockvar la Botsford mcil one likkle report fine

about son everybody about human are lucky never see more thyroid Karma's

blood feel welcome I would understand so Meadows set a trap feed anymore

yes sir raccoon says Ezra James who after posting his $2,000 bond describes

planning to kill the animal for eating his mangos and he says to prevent it

from biting him and giving him rabies it's posted my mom in Nevada Mongolia in

the old mango seed bite him says he set the raccoon on fire after catching it

with a metal trap in his front yard right no meters while mix were chopping

our deportment satirical you know I got me I worry more dragon on it I don't

care what not next missile combat I would never believed he would have done

that

For more infomation >> Majah Hype, 'Wickedness' says elderly J'can jailed in the US for burning a raccoon - Duration: 1:01.

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U.S. slaps sanctions on Russian shipping firms, vessels for violating UNSC resolutions - Duration: 1:46.

In other news.

The United States has added to its growing list of sanctions against entities that violate

UN restrictions regarding North Korea,... this time hitting two Russia-based companies

and six vessels with punitive measures.

The U.S. Treasury Department said it will continue to pressure Pyongyang until the regime

achieves final and fully verifiable denuclearization.

Kim Hyo-sun tells us more.

The Trump administration has imposed new sanctions against two Russian shipping companies and

six vessels for violating the UN Security Council resolutions.

The U.S. Treasury Department announced Tuesday that the Vladivostok-based companies transported

petroleum products to North Korean vessels, in violation of international sanctions.

It confirmed a Russian-flagged ship transported over three-and-a-half thousand tons of oil

to North Korean vessels earlier this year.

The Treasury also explained that the buyer was North Korea's Taesong Bank,... which has

already been slapped with sanctions by Washington for engaging in illicit economic activities

for the regime.

Explaining that the sanctions will remain in place until Pyongyang achieves final, fully

verifiable denuclearization,...

U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin stressed that those who violate the UN restrictions

on North Korea will be sanctioned under U.S. law.

This is third round of North Korea-related sanctions imposed by the Trump administration

just this month,... and can be interpreted as added pressure against the regime ahead

of U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo's scheduled fourth visit to Pyongyang soon.

Kim Hyo-sun, Arirang News.

For more infomation >> U.S. slaps sanctions on Russian shipping firms, vessels for violating UNSC resolutions - Duration: 1:46.

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US man sues Google for allegedly tracking mobile phone users against their will - Duration: 1:01.

For more infomation >> US man sues Google for allegedly tracking mobile phone users against their will - Duration: 1:01.

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US slaps more sanctions on Russia - Duration: 0:38.

The U.S. is slapping even more sanctions on Russia. The

Treasury Department is sanctioning two Russian shipping

companies it suspects are transporting petroleum products

to North Korea — which violates some U.N. Security

Council trade bans. The Associated Press reports the

Treasury is also going after two other Russian companies and two

Russians for attempting to get around U.S. sanctions set in

June. Those were imposed in response to Russian hacking and

other malicious activities conducted by the country's

military and spy organizations. That set of sanctions freezes

the companies' and Russians' assets held in the U.S.

For more infomation >> US slaps more sanctions on Russia - Duration: 0:38.

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Britain urges EU, US to 'go further' in countering Russia for Skripal attack - Duration: 1:38.

The International fallout from the Skripal poisoning continues,

as new US sanctions punishing Russia over the incident

come into effect.

The Trump administration is limiting exports of

sensitive national security goods to Russia,

such as electronic devices and components,

with calibration equipment used in avionics also targeted.

And it's thought the measures could cut off

hundreds of millions of dollars worth of Russian state imports.

A second more hard-hitting round of sanctions will be imposed three months later,

if Moscow doesn't provide reliable assurances

that it's no longer using chemical weapons

and fails to agree to on-site UN chemical inspections.

The U.K. has welcomed the move

but on Tuesday demanded that the EU join the U.S.

and do more to apply pressure on Moscow.

"And today the United Kingdom asks its allies

to go further

by calling on the European Union

to ensure its sanctions against Russia are comprehensive

and that we truly stand shoulder-to-shoulder with the U.S.

That means calling out and responding to transgressions with one voice."

Despite standing behind Britain

and blaming the Kremlin for the nerve agent attack

on a former Russian spy earlier this year,

the EU has not increased its sanctions on Moscow.

Its current economic sanctions are related to Russia's annexation of Crimea

and other activity in the region.

In place until the end of January 2019,

any new measures would require agreement from all 28 member-states,

but it's thought they're divided

on what the bloc's response against Moscow should be.

For more infomation >> Britain urges EU, US to 'go further' in countering Russia for Skripal attack - Duration: 1:38.

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CAN U.S NAVY DEFEND AGAINST BRAHMOS ANTI SHIP MISSILE? - Duration: 6:38.

The most credible threat to U.S Navy surface combatants like destroyers and supercarrier

comes from the anti-ship missile.

One of the most potent anti-ship missiles is the Brahmos missile.

The BrahMos cruise missile is produced by India-based BrahMos Aerospace, set up in 1998,

and is a joint venture between India's Defense Research and Development Organization (DRDO)

and Russia's NPO Mashinostroyenia.

India is an ally of US and Indo-American relationship has been getting stronger in the last decade.

But this is not the case with Russia which is a rival.

In this video Defense Updates, analyzes if U.S Navy can defend against Brahmos missile?

Let's get in the details.

Brahmos weigh in at 3000 kg, has a length of 8.4 m and diameter of 0.6 m.

It has a solid fuel rocket booster for the first stage and liquid-fueled ramjet for the

second stage.

Brahmos can be launched from aircraft, land installations and warships.

It is being tested for induction into submarines also.

A hypersonic version of the missile, BrahMos-II, is also presently under development with a

speed of Mach 7-8 to boost aerial fast strike capability.

It is expected to be ready for testing by 2020

Brahmos is currently considered to be one of a most deadly anti-ship missile.

The reason is its unique features.

Let's check them.

1. It has a supersonic speed of Mach 3 or 1 km per second providing very little time to intercept.

2. Brahmos uses a 300 kg Semi-Armor piercing warhead and also has very high Kinetic energy

since Kinetic energy is directly proportional to the square of velocity.

Brahmos actually has about 9 times the Kinetic Energy of conventional subsonic missile

like Tomahawk.

The combined destructive force of massive warhead and kinetic energy is lethal for even

the biggest surface combatants.

Brahmas has been known to break ships in half in several tests.

3. It can perform S maneuvers in final stages of flight.The missile basically doesn't

move in straight line, making it very hard to intercept.

4. There are lots of redundancies in the guidance system - right from the INS, GPS, GLONASS

and GAGAN making it hard to jam.

5.The accuracy of around 1 square meter makes it apt for a precision strike on high-value targets.

6. Russia is a signatory of the MTCR (Missile Technology Control Regime) and India was not.

According to the MTCR guidelines Russia could not help or jointly develop a missile with

a none MTCR nation, whose range is more than 300 KM.

This is why Brahmos range had to be limited below 300 KM initially.

But last year India has entered MTCR and both countries are now working to increase the

range to 600 km.

The excellent range will enable it to be launched from standoff distances.

The best defense against the Brahmos missile is to destroy the launch platforms before

the missile could be launched.

The diverse launch platform makes this task difficult but not impossible.

Once the Brahmos gets launched successfully, it's a totally different ball game.

The normal procedure is to direct fighter jets from nearby aircraft carriers towards

the incoming missile and shoot it down.

But this is not a viable option against Brahmos because of its Mach 3 speed.

US Navy will mainly depend on the onboard weaponry for defense and there are 3 of those.

1. The Medium range defense is provided by Evolved Sea Sparrow Missile which is quad packed and

has a range of 50 km range.

2. RIM-116 Rolling Airframe Missile is present for point defense in U.S supercarrier and

not on destroyers.

These have a speed of Mach 2 and range of 9 km.

3. Phalanx CIWS is a close-in weapon system is present for last-ditch defense.

It has 3,000 rounds/minute rate of fire and has a maximum firing range of 3.5 km.

For the analysis, we are considering a salvo of 8 Brahmos, half of what a new generation

of Russian frigates carries.

There are potentially 2 scenarios.

1. Solitary warship like an Arleigh Burke-class destroyer is targeted.

2. A U.S Carrier Battle Group is attacked.

When a warship is alone and not having AWACS cover then the BrahMos will be detected at

about 35-40 km from the ship when it is in its sea-skimming terminal phase and on the

verge of employing evasive S maneuvers.

The warship will have 35 - 40 seconds to react.

The 2 layer defense of Arleigh Burke theoretically be able to defend against all missile but

practically it may be able to intercept only 3-4 of the missile.

It is highly likely that the warship will be knocked out.

A U.S Carrier Battle Group always has an AWACS cover and Brahmos will be most likely be detected

at around 150 km range.

The flotilla will have around 150 seconds to react.

The Carrier Battle Group with multiple destroyer and frigates travel in such a formation that

supercarrier is not directly in the line of fire.

The ships will also be able to coordinate the defenses.

In this case, the outer layer of destroyer(and frigates) will be able to intercept most of

the missiles or could also maneuver to take hits to protect the supercarrier.

Still, it is not impossible that 1-2 may sneak in and home in on the supercarrier.

The 3 layer defense of the supercarrier may be able to take those out all of those on

some occasions and may not on some other.

So, it is difficult to predict and results will vary but the potential of Brahmos can

be judged by the fact that few of these launched in salvo has the capability to challenge multi-billion

dollar warships of the U.S Navy.

For more infomation >> CAN U.S NAVY DEFEND AGAINST BRAHMOS ANTI SHIP MISSILE? - Duration: 6:38.

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Trump Just Had ICE Deport Last Remaining One On US Soil – Obama Couldn't For Eight Years - Duration: 5:10.

Trump Just Had ICE Deport Last Remaining One On US Soil – Obama Couldn't For Eight

Years

Although President Trump and all of us who support him have spent the last 3 years being

called racists, bigots and Nazis, this week ICE was able to do something under the command

of President Trump that no other president before him could.

Yesterday The Daily Caller reported that at the order of President Donald Trump, Immigration

and Customs Enforcement agents have now removed 95-year-old Jakiw Palij from his Queens, New

York.

Palij is said to have served as an armed guard at a death camp in Nazi-occupied Poland and

later lied to American immigration officials about his role in those horrendous atrocities

when he entered the U.S. after the war was over, according to Justice Department officials.

Here is more via ABC News:

"Palij's deportation has been a long time coming.

He'd been accused of working at the Treblinka death camp — including on an infamous day

in November 1943 in which 6,000 prisoners were killed, according to the Justice Department's

Office of Legislative Affairs.

The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum writes that SS police unit shot all 6,000 prisoners.

An attachment of Jewish laborers was brought in to burn and bury the corpses.

"After completing this dreadful work, the Jewish laborers were shot and their bodies

burned," the website reads.

After falsely telling authorities he spent the war at his hometown in Germany, Palij

gained entry into the U.S. in 1949.

He was eventually granted U.S. citizenship in 1957.

It wasn't until 2003 that he was tracked down by federal authorities and exposed.

A New York immigration judge revoked Palij's U.S. citizenship and ordered him to be deported

in 2005.

At the time, Palij denied that he was a collaborator, telling The New York Times, he was conscripted

at 18 when the Nazis took over his farm.

"I know what they say, but I was never a collaborator," Palij told the paper at the

time.

The U.S. said in the statement about his deportation that he lied about not being involved.

"Palij had lied about being a Nazi and remained in the United States for decades," the statement

said.

"Palij's removal sends a strong message: The United States will not tolerate those

who facilitated Nazi crimes and other human rights violations, and they will not find

a safe haven on American soil."

The Department of Justice also lauded the deportation in an early morning email.

"Jakiw Palij lied about his Nazi past to immigrate to this country and then fraudulently

become an American citizen," Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in the statement.

"He had no right to citizenship or to even be in this country.

Today, the Justice Department — led by Eli Rosenbaum and our fabulous team in the Human

Rights and Special Prosecutions Section, formerly the Office of Special Investigations — successfully

helped remove him from the United States, as we have done with 67 other Nazis in the

past."

U.S. officials say his deportation had long been stymied by Germany's reluctance to

take him in.

According to a source familiar with the matter, Trump told U.S. Ambassador to Germany Richard

Grenell to make Palij's deportation his number one priority when he got to Berlin.

It's unclear if Palij will face prosecution in Germany, which had previously maintained

that they were not in a position to accept him because he's not a German citizen.

Palij, who is Ukranian-born, had been living in the Jackson Heights, Queens neighborhood

for 13 years.

Protesters have regularly gathered outside of Palij's house and the push for his deportation

has garnered bipartisan support.

In 2017, every congressional member of the New York delegation wrote a letter to former

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson urging him to deport Palij before he dies.

The president made no mention of Palij's deportation during an event Monday honoring

ICE employees.

Sen. Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., who was among those calling for Pal's deportation told

ABC News the U.S. is "no place for a war criminal."

"I'm glad this man is finally being sent back.

He's a war criminal and did not deserve to live in the US.

He doesn't deserve to die in the U.S., a place of freedom and equality where we respect

each other's differences."

This deportation comes as Palij, who was born in Ukranian had been living in the Jackson

Heights, Queens neighborhood for 13 years.

Protesters regularly gathered outside of Palij's place of residence and had pushed for his

deportation.

In 2017, every congressional member of the New York delegation wrote a letter to former

Secretary of State Rex Tillerson urging him to deport Palij before he dies to face trial

in Germany.

But what's perhaps the best part of this story is the fact that even though a court

ordered his deportation back in 2004 both the Geroge W. Bush and Barack Hussein Obama

administration were unsuccessful when it came to actually carry out the order.

White House press secretary Sarah Sanders explained in a statement released this morning.

"To protect the promise of freedom for Holocaust survivors and their families, President Trump

prioritized the removal of Palij."

Makes you wonder how long it will take the left to start saying that President Donald

Trump "unjustly" deported a man and separated him from his family?

For more infomation >> Trump Just Had ICE Deport Last Remaining One On US Soil – Obama Couldn't For Eight Years - Duration: 5:10.

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National Prison Strike Begins: Prisoners in 17 States Demand End to "Slave Labor" Behind Bars - Duration: 16:04.

Prisoners across the United States are set to go on strike today in a mass mobilization

demanding improved living conditions, greater access to resources and the end of what they

call "modern day slavery."

Prisoners in at least 17 states are expected to participate in the strike, coordinating

sit-ins, hunger strikes, work stoppages, commissary boycotts, from today until September 9th—the

47th anniversary of the deadly Attica prison uprising here in New York.

Prisoners first called for the strike in April, after a bloody altercation broke out at the

Lee Correctional Institution in South Carolina, leaving seven prisoners dead and 17 others

seriously injured.

It was the deadliest prison riot in the United States in a quarter of a century.

Six of the seven prisoners killed were African-American.

The violence was allowed to continue for hours.

One witness described bodies of dead prisoners, quote, "literally stacked on top of each

other."

No guards were hurt.

The riot became the rallying cry for a movement.

In the weeks after that, prison advocacy network Jailhouse Lawyers Speak issued a list of 10

demands, among them greater sentencing reform, more access to rehabilitation programs, the

right to vote and the end of "prison slave labor," what they called "prison slave

labor."

This is a video made by the Incarcerated Workers Organizing Committee with the nonprofit Planting

Justice, explaining why prisoners are striking.

Some people will look at me, possibly, as a ex-felon or a parolee.

I consider myself to be a survivor of a system that was made to target me and have me doing

life in prison.

Because I know how to strip floors, wax them, take the gum up off floors, and so I started

doing that.

And that was 16 cent an hour.

I started out as a line server, serving food for breakfast and dinner.

Then I became a dishwasher and just all the maintenance of the kitchen.

And it didn't pay much.

It paid 13 cent an hour.

Basically, I worked and made $20 a month, and they took 55 percent of that out for restitution.

It's kind of like a modern-day plantation situation, specifically targeting poor people

and, most especially, the most marginalized community, black and brown and LGBT community.

The weeks-long strike begins today, on the 47th anniversary of the killing of Black Panther

George Jackson, who was shot and killed by guards during an escape attempt from San Quentin

prison.

The strike is expected to be the largest prisoner action since the 2016 prison strike, which

saw at least 20,000 prisoners participating in collective action across 11 states, the

largest prison work strike in U.S. history.

Well, for more, we're joined by three guests.

In Oakland, California, Cole Dorsey is with us, former prisoner and activist who helped

organize the strike, one of the voices we just heard in the video explaining it.

In Detroit, we'll speak with Heather Ann Thompson, the American historian, author and

activist.

She just won the Pulitzer Prize for her book Blood in the Water: The Attica Prison Uprising

of 1971 and Its Legacy, now being adapted for a film.

She's professor of history at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor.

And in Seattle, Washington, we'll speak with Amani Sawari, a prison strike organizer

working on behalf of Jailhouse Lawyers Speak, a network of prisoners who are helping organize

the nationwide strike.

We welcome you all to Democracy Now!

Cole Dorsey, let's begin with you.

You're a part of the video that we just saw.

Lay out what this what's expected to be a several-week strike is about.

Yeah, so, the prisoners—this has been completely prisoner-led.

Jailhouse Lawyers Speak can speak more to that.

But due to the brutality in Lee correctional facility earlier this year, it was decided

that action had to be taken now.

And that led to this list of demands, 10 demands, that are really just a human rights declaration

of basic demands that we would ask of any human across the world.

But especially now that we're going to start using prisons as warehouses, these issues

are more and more relevant, as overcrowding prison conditions, lack of resources and for

prisoners to gain those resources, and the continued institution of racism that it enforces,

from chattel slavery.

So, while those things continue, these conditions will only exacerbate into what they were in

Lee correctional facility in South Carolina, where nine prisoners were murdered.

And yes, it was a, quote-unquote, "gang situation," but it was initiated by the

guard officials.

In my involvement in prison, they fed on that division among prisoners, whether it be religious

or racial, so that they kept fighting amongst themselves instead of addressing the issues

that were core demands for all of us, whether it be the exorbitant rates of commissary or

the conditions or the torture or treatment or solitary.

So, they really feed on those things.

And that's what's really important about this strike and continuing on.

And what we've learned from the prison hunger strikes is an agreement to end hostilities.

So, while there may be differences on religious and racial boundaries, we can still come together

over these core demands, like this list of 10 demands that these prisoners have drafted.

And again, the demands are?

Yet, the demands—you know, specifically, number one is the immediate improvements to

all the conditions of prisons, and prison policies that recognize the humanity.

Again, I said this whole declaration is really a declaration of humanity.

But the humanity of imprisoned men and women—this is now almost 2.5 million people.

These are our sons and daughters and mothers and fathers.

These are people that are neighbors in our community, especially most marginalized working-class,

poor people, black and brown people especially.

So, an end to the draconian, racist laws, like gang enhancements, that automatically

increase a person's bid by 10 years just because of their last name or their uncle

or where they're from, what part of town.

It can be completely arbitrary.

But, again, that points to the issue that it's more about warehousing than it is about

rehabilitation, or even making money through these corporations that do profit the millions.

But some other demands are like Pell Grants for prisoners.

They should be paid for the work that they do.

Why should prisoners—when I was in, I got 13 cents an hour, so I was a disgruntled employee.

I chose to find ways to sabotage my lawnmower so I didn't have to mow the lawn.

I don't want to have to mow the lawn for 13 cents an hour, you know, so I'm going

to run over rocks and bushes.

But it gets you out of the cell.

That's why people take these jobs.

Or they give you incentives, you know, to have more freedom or have an extra cake during

dinner, those kinds of things.

So, the major demands are Pell Grants reinstated; the end of the Prison Litigation Reform Act,

so prisoners can start to, again, fight some of the conditions in the legal courts and

have access to the legal library on a real basis, where they can really get the material

and have assistance; an end to oversentencing, of black and brown people especially, the

most marginalized communities; end to the racist gang enhancements.

And again, no—we believe no human being should spend the rest of their life in prison.

Most of these conditions, as some of the other strike leaders had mentioned, especially the

lead-up to 2016, was that if these jobs that they're now giving to prisoners—meat packing

and call center workers—if they were giving at a prevailing wage in those same communities

that those prisoners came from prior, then they wouldn't be in the prisons now.

But the system has recognized that it's easier to control the population while they're

inside prisons than it is if they're outside, because then they have the right to strike,

they have federal protections, whereas inside it can just be called an insurrection.

Automatically, the leaders are sent to solitary.

Automatically, they're transferred.

Automatically, privileges are denied—no more family, no more phone calls.

So, from a social justice and human rights aspect, it's really draconian, and it's

a lost era.

Cole, I want to bring—

And the only way their voices are going to be heard is through us on the outside amplifying

their voices and letting it be heard and known as much as we can through medias like this.

Cole Dorsey, I want to bring Amani Sawari into the conversation.

Can you talk about the various actions?

And, I mean, this is planned for something like 17 states.

What form these actions will take, Amani?

So, it really depends on the location and the status of the prisoner.

So, as you mentioned earlier, prisoners have the ability to participate in the strike in

a multitude of ways, one being work stoppages.

So, if prisoners do have jobs in the prison, they can participate by refusing to go into

work.

But some prisoners don't have the privilege to have a job, so they can participate through

a sit-in, which would just be prisoners coming together and sitting in a common area, refusing

to move, doing so peacefully.

Some prisoners don't have access to being a part of general population, so they can

participate by boycotting.

And this is done through just not spending any money in the prison.

All of the money that prisoners spend or that families send into the prison do support the

system.

So prisoners are refusing to talk on the phone—that's a cost—even buying commissary, as you mentioned,

or buying clothes, hygiene products, cosmetic products.

Anything that they would be spending money on in the prison, they're refusing to do

so for those two-and-a-half weeks.

And then, for prisoners that don't even have access to spending money, they don't

have the privileges to do that.

They'll be participating through hunger strikes.

So, regardless of where a prisoner is or what their status is, they are given food, and

they can refuse to take that food.

And that's a way that they can participate in the strike, regardless of where they are

or what their privilege status is.

Cole just mentioned, in the list of demands, ending gang enhancement laws.

Amani, explain what they are.

So, racist gang enhancements are the act of labeling individuals with different gang associations

just based on where they're from or even the tattoo markings on their body.

Those might be associated with a gang, and then prisoners are then labeled with that

gang.

And then, when they get into prison, really being a part of a gang is one of the only

forms of insurance that a prisoner might have.

So even if they weren't associated with a gang prior to being incarcerated, they find

themselves in those populations.

And then, when prisoners refuse to be a part of a gang, they are subject to isolation.

So, that's really miserable being isolated within an isolated place.

So a lot of prisoners just gravitate towards their racial groups, different gang groups,

based on locations where they were from, the people that they see from high school, and

then they just gravitate towards those groups.

And then those labels are used against prisoners.

So, where they're placed in the prison, where their room assignment is, that is determined

by the gang that they're in.

And then, when staff officials want to incite violence, they'll switch up those room assignments,

place gang members and rival groups into different assignments, which is what happened in Lee

County.

Prisoners were—their lockers were taken away, and then they were placed into rival

units, which incited violence.

And that went on for over seven hours.

And that's when how many people died?

Seven people were killed, prisoners?

Yes, at least seven people were killed, but there have been numbers of nine and 12.

Actually, when prisoners were killed, a few were transferred to other prisons to sort

of lower those numbers.

But seven is the official number of prisoners that were killed.

Cole, how do you organize?

You're on the other side of the bars now.

You're free.

How are you helping to organize this strike on the outside?

Yeah, so there's a number of ways that we've learned to adapt to organize, and number one

is through correspondence.

We have regular correspondence.

We do have members.

I've got a phone call in my pocket that I keep on me 24 hours a day, and I receive

phone calls from different facilities across the country, typically on the West Coast.

But I can relay messages from one facility, within one facility to the same facility,

just in different cellblocks, to let know what movement is happening, what's going

on.

We found a number of different ways.

The Bay View has been instrumental in getting the word out.

San Francisco Bay View has been a publication for a number of years.

The newspaper.

It's gone into facilities across the country, and it's really been pivotal in spreading

the word of this type of collective action that prisoners have been taking.

But there's a number of different ways that we've found to creatively get the message

through to prisoners.

And a lot of times it's word of mouth.

So, we'll send a thousand or 500 newsletters in, that just, you know, are innocuous on

the front, that describe, "It's winter.

These are the things to stay warm and cool."

And buried on the inside, in very small text, would be the actual important information

that we want to get through.

They found those out, and we anticipate they will, but the number that get through is enough

to be able to transfer from prisoner to prisoner.

And again, as their—our leaders especially are transferred.

Imam Siddique Hasan, even in the lead-up to this strike, has been withdrawn his phone

privileges, thrown in solitary.

And our leaders consistently have been retaliated against physically and also tortured through

solitary confinement.

So, it's not to be taken lightly.

But we've found, through telephone communication, connection, relationships with families, getting

information, also direct communication through visits, and a number of different creative

ways, that we can't explain all to you—

You're an electrical line—Cole, you're an electric—

—but we definitely can get the word out.

And the great part is that prisoners share this information.

So, even if it's only sent to one person, that gets shared to another person, that goes

to another facility.

So, it can get shared either through word of mouth or directly through the piece of

paper.

But word travels quickly throughout prisons.

Well, you're clearly redefining a cellphone.

Cole Dorsey is an electrical lineman who's a member of the IWW's Incarcerated Workers

Organizing Committee.

Amani Sawari is a prison strike spokesperson.

And we're going to continue with them, as well as Pulitzer Prize-winning historian Heather

Ann Thompson when we come back from break.

[break]

"George Jackson" by Bob Dylan.

That's right.

George Jackson, 47 years ago, he was killed by guards at San Quentin when he attempted

to escape.

For more infomation >> National Prison Strike Begins: Prisoners in 17 States Demand End to "Slave Labor" Behind Bars - Duration: 16:04.

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Suspect In Death Of Iowa Student Mollie Tibbetts Living In US Illegally - Duration: 0:49.

For more infomation >> Suspect In Death Of Iowa Student Mollie Tibbetts Living In US Illegally - Duration: 0:49.

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Man Shot By US Marshal Tries To Get Ride From Good Samaritan In Pasadena - Duration: 2:20.

For more infomation >> Man Shot By US Marshal Tries To Get Ride From Good Samaritan In Pasadena - Duration: 2:20.

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U.S. moves toward new tariffs on China via two-track approach by Trump - Duration: 0:42.

The Trump administration is moving closer to levying tariffs on nearly half of ALL Chinese

imports.

This,... despite a fresh round of trade talks that are set to start between the two countries.

Sources say President Trump wants a two-track approach of pursuing tariffs on 200-billion

dollars of Chinese goods,... while relaunching talks to scrap the tariffs.

Observers say the approach reflects a split in the administration on how to deal with

Beijing.

The two sides will try to revive trade negotiations in Washington on Wednesday local time, but

neither side is optimistic the meeting can succeed where three earlier rounds failed.

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