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tv   The 360 View  RT  April 2, 2024 8:30pm-8:59pm EDT

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practiced by the leading european countries took away tens of millions of african lives. the organization of united nations class advised the trans atlantics to laved rate as one of the greatest human rights abuses in the history of humanity. this is the biggest act of deep orientation of people ever seen by mankind. the 57 percent of americans say the large number of migrant speaking to enter the country is one of the main reasons for the rise in crime and the country ask. i know hughes in on this edition of the 68, we're going to look at the a lot of action by the us government as the number of violent assault on american citizens. and those were suppose to protect them by does a legally residing in the country is rising. let's get started.
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the new york city is implementing curfews at migrate shelters, due to the rise in crime. now, shootings in times square purse is being stolen by games and smash and grab death rings are now becoming all too common estates where cities across the united states . now from san francisco to minneapolis to new york city, the rise in crime is hard to ignore. governor, randa santas even came out with a new bill to event florida from becoming like these liberal cities becoming over, run by crime. why aren't they stealing in florida? and they're like because they go to jail in florida and they don't want to go to jail. so they go back to new york and steal, and so you see that and you're just like ma'am, we've got to make sure or that we don't go down the road of some of these other
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states. the violence is no longer random as a police are now being targeted as well with crime. i guess law enforcement rising to record highs me or eric adam solution taking $100.00 a $1000000.00 from schools is starting in n y p, the dance team to market the 4th. but not all law enforcement is pending. that's fine, too much pain, going to be, especially in new york city, where there has been a spray of illegal migrants assaulting officers of the n y. p. d. at randall's island migrate shelter. officers came under attack by a much larger mob of illegals, and they were trying to take one under custody. and this video of a group of illegals attacking a several, n y, p d officers on the streets of new york costs a little bit of attention. but not enough for district attorney alvin bragg to charge the only goal is a for a crime. in fact,
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district attorney brad lighting these offenders go saying the video of it is, wasn't enough to illegal immigrants involved in the incident. have said just slide to california, joining me to discuss a more in depth give a personal insight into how the role law enforcement should or should not be handling crimes being committed by those who are in america legally are veteran of police officers. and dominic, he's a former u. s. marshall. matthew fog and a former d. c. metropolitan police officer, ronald hampton. thank you, gentleman for joining me and thank you for your service to our communities, industries to the united states and keeping law in order. i wanna start with you ronald on this 1st question because as a former officer of the law, how do you feel when you watch the video of the new york police officers being attacked? first of all, let me say good afternoon everyone and say that i have mixed emotions because a, you know, the people generally that don't attack the police. but we have come
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a long way in a very short period of time as it relates to the relationship between the police and the communities day sir. and so it may not been as simple as to the did the violence be. so i guess to pull this out, so you have to ask the question, what prompted that what, what was it that took place before the video tape started? and, and if it is, then we have to begin to talk about the building and rebuilding the relationship that communities have with the police. as well as addressing the behavior of police officers as it relates to the duty that they are sworn to, to carry out every single day without, without bad. so practice ronald, i agree with you. there's always more to the story that usually not shown just by a short clip, but dominic, the one part of this,
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it is different possibly from just a regular 5 between a police officer and members of the community. is it those that are bidding up all the police officers are here a legal do you think legally does he think that changes any feelings knowing that they are here in this country? not legally. yeah. might use have done a lot more uh, less, less safe if you say over the years since i'm no longer a copper, we see this mass of migrant invasion. i don't know why any non or why anybody across the border illegally who's already a criminal by crossing a border. why they're a forwarded uh, due process or anything. uh, cost, usually wise, because they're not here. so i, i don't, it's insane. it's insane and simply, it's a different culture. invading the united states that is not assimilating properly to our was our ways of life. and this is the behavior going to get, and this is not, this is not new back when i was a comp in the early 2, thousands. we saw this, we had a massive problem with, you know, the people crossing the border who didn't assimilate and you saw like the minor
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stuff. right. where like people didn't know. well, where do i pull over when that when the blue lights are, are but flushing behind me? where do i pull over? so they would stop, right. in the middle of the street, you'd have language barriers, obviously, which dealt with spot. you know, oh, you mean i can't exit my car and resist. so there's a lot of issues that started the smaller, you know, microcosm level and then all of a sudden here we are on, hey, let's go out and beat the crap out of a bunch of coffee because we know we can invade this country. nothing's going to happen to us, and here we are. this is a mindset problem by a legal invaders. well, that's, i want to go back to ronald to go back to your, to your 1st response. do you believe that they that there should be treated definitely besides american citizens that are here? that might be questioning the law enforcement industry or those are here illegally? should they be afford at the same rights? it's someone that is already a citizen. here, of course, is guaranteed by the constitution of the united states, it, it is an up in the air as anybody who comes who's here. they have to abide by the rules and regulations. that's why we have
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a constitution and nobody's above is off. the web is different, and so if a person come from another state or another country while they in the us, they have to abide by the rules of the us. they also all of for the, the, the plus is as well as demands. they have to abide by the law, but then they also have to be given the same rights and privileges that every other person that lives in america lives. so whether they are from a business of well or south america doesn't make any difference what state and america then they are here under the rules and regulations of america as well. good and bad privileges and the disadvantages or matthew, i'm going to bring you in because you come at this from a federal law enforcement level being i'm, i'm with us, marshall and not necessarily eyes, but do you think that it's a local law enforcement should be able to work together closer than what they're doing right now. well, yeah, i mean,
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everybody was trying to figure out ways to work, to get to meet someone to face to face and thought about working with the state and locals. it's always an issue. how do we come together? because lot of times the state municipalities have different east. now course i work for work with one so many occasions down the mexico and places like dad passed the prime is, you know, you just can't stop people from what i don't care what our company wants to be or whatever we always making way to figure out how to get into this country because they're looking for a better life. so it's an economic situation. so now when you get these people in the cities, and again we look at a video, we see people riding or whatever. we don't know how many people are illegal and how many are leaks. we don't know, are really these people on 2 sides identified. so the media laptop will just count them all in the one particular jack. all these all illegals, maybe not necessarily. so when you're talking about the fancy,
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the how we deal with the issue, what kind of money we're dumping into the situation. people are tired of seeing those dump millions of dollars into the board and you got to give you just can't bring enough people in to protect that board. abductive all the time you talking about? trey is dollars trying to protect people who want to get across the board one way or another. it's like in prison. how do you keep weapons out of prison? everything that we do to try to keep them out. they wind up getting in there one way or not. so my son, matthew, is your solution then just to just open up the board or just take away all security then it's, i mean if you think that we're never gonna have a way to protect it or to know who's coming in should be just completely open it up like you're traveling from california to nevada. no, no, i mean you've got to have a board, but the bottom line is, is what is making them come across? like for example, this fictitious nissan judge, somebody come, let's get real. to go on this, this whole drug scenario has created
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a pair of them for people to say, let me go to america, let me make money off of america. america has understand what we had, the prohibition of alcohol, prohibition. we had all kinds of balancing from the moment they decide to regulate . definitely. busy take that, come a little, only out of it, everything started change. we got to do that with the one drugs. i just don't see discontinue drugs scenario that we have in america. of course, just no way is everybody's make them so that's why it doesn't. so what, but the reality of it is as long as you get this drugs scenario with people, you know, make a profit off of this, this a problem. you always say ok, which dominate, do you agree to that would actually solve our issue right here is legalizing drugs or would that create more issues, especially for local law enforcement? my very safe answer than that one is i'm for the d criminalization of drugs,
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not from legal ization of it. so i don't, i'm not well educated enough and not how it would affect the rest of society. but the, if you wind up getting a kid has got a bag of wheat on them, and i don't know what states have weed illegal or not. it's just, it's running too many lives. but as far as the border goes, the border is open for drug trafficking and humans extracting it's, it's just simple as that you have a ton of on documented people coming over. who's going to miss a little 15 year old, a little 5 year old? who has no parents? you can't. you have no social security card birth certificate drivers, license id. it's human trafficking and for whatever purpose they're doing it as the war on drugs. that's a, that's, that's a, it's a parallel topic. it's also separate. but in this, they're coming here to flood the system. it's as simple as that. out here in chicago, we just had a cook, county sheriff, 2nd largest counting. the nation has a task force. now for sex traffic and crimes because of illegals, and they have, they are showing people are being adopted from wherever they're being just sent. that the videos are all over, all of a legal migrants,
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just inside of o'hare airport, inside of cpd stations. and people are going missing and being found locked in basements where men are being valuable to pay for sex with them. so it's a, it's a problem massively. they're coming here under, under and illusion that this is the land of opportunity and they're being just abused and take advantage of. well, that's the thing. well, i have to ask you, you know, you're right, america had this american dream. but now for some of those that are being brought to this country through traffic getting, it's the american nightmare. this is not the dream for them. that's not what they want to do. you think it would help if there was more better technology a place to know exactly who is coming into the united states over our southern border and where exactly they're going within the united states? yeah, i think technology would assist in that in that regard. i think the, there's some other things that we need to be doing. i'll, i'll ask support a much more straight line between the foods and local police. and because
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sometimes the issues that the fates enforce that sometimes create issues with local police departments when they are involved in this lesson law in regulations and other things. and so that because of that, i think this is, should be a clear that this would be a clear distinction of what the fee is do versus what local listing do in that way . we don't get mixed up about that. the other solution is one that takes place and has been oper, right? and then your book for a lot for, for a very long time now. and that's when certain countries have an open board policy across your pin countries. that's travel and you can go from country to country because there is a open borders process. now there's a limit to there and that maybe that maybe that would help solve the problem is that the workers haven't with south america we, we talked about this whole issue of opened the code board as in whiskey. it was not
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here. i mean, america is going to, is supposedly, have just gotten through is own academic x, x, excuse me, economic problems, right? you're getting better, but you still have to look at the economics from that south american system at a going through to. so i don't believe this is cut and dry actually is sometimes people want it to be in this a real complex phone, but it's not a problem that can be sent out because there are several examples that exist in the, in the world as it relates to how borders should be hand and a half people's transportation to the board has came also hand and reduced, attempting to strip that. that's sometime we have it as something bored or ronald. i agree with you. i do like your idea of, of being able to go from one country to another. but that is actually people that can provide documentation that have gone through the vetting. they know who they are. that's not the ones that were kind of referring to. we're talking about the ones that don't have it that don't come in. and so matthew, i'm gonna give you
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a ronald. yes. of the said with all you gotta do is give them a papers that's all we have to do, but we do to canada. we do that with canada. all righty. well we got, we do the lot over time, but it was the biggest thing with the mexican economy is totally different when you're talking about mexico. he's talking about the current deals and what's causing all of the balance to allow these people are running away from that balance that has been created because of the one to us. if you didn't at, at one drug, 10 days. they kind of everything in, in south america with egypt, but the people wanting to know it's almost lawlessness and then they come to united states, what ever they are getting. it's better here in the united states, and it is over there. so they have spent that i don't care what when they get over, even if they, they, even if they committed crimes or whatever. it's better to be here there to be in mexico. and that's why a lot of people are running from mexico. now we weren't in this more drugs with
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really a lot of just a lot of lawyers, a lot of politicians would be out of a job if you were to do that. but you would see a bass change when it came down to how mexico in place like that across the deals and on it balanced as the light is something go away. because it wouldn't be no right to profit with the technology. so that's what we're really looking at here. how do we stop aboard? did thousands of miles, you can't put a person in enough places this copy, they're going to figure out ways all ways to get across the airport. well, that's something that we can't change and you are correct about that and dominic matthew ronald, i'll just stay right there because president biden says, here's considering executive action for border policies. but is that really the solution? we're going to continue discussion with our panel when we come back the,
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on the collective west thinking about ukraine has injured the realm of magical thinking. somehow more a military and financial will reverse ukraine's trajectory. one us congressman has called for a hiroshima and nagasaki solution in gaza and ukraine. desperate people with desperate ideas in 1941 with the nazis health creation ultram nationalist, the massages proclaimed the independent state of croatia. shortly off, the seizing power. they built the scene of us concentration camp a place associated with the worst atrocities committed in yugoslavia during world war 2. the dash is used to come system to isolate and exterminate subs, roma, jews, and other non catholic minorities, and political opponents of the fascist regime. conditions in the scene of us come with her and the gods tortured to arise and the prisoners. they send them
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a consultation temps. so most of them died. it was incredible genocide. the welcome back here watching 360 view and i'm scanning now he's on the 1st few days and the by and ministration by his actions on the board or, or more about reversing or cancelling the border policies. from his predecessor, donald trump, he immediately halted hold of the construction of the porter wall. he extended title 42. he reaffirmed protections for deck recipients, and he removed restrictions of those traveling from 14 countries. at the bottom, ministration also canceled the nation's 1st and only victims office dedicated to assisting people harmed by illegal aliens, the voice office and re enacted the catch and release program which allowed those
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waiting for immigration court. 3 relation to the community. rather than wait in a detention facility for the sharing date. so is this the reason why there is an increase? not only in illegal immigrants motivated to come to united states, but the crime rate which is associated? well, let's ask our panel, federal police officer in dominic 0. we've got former us marshall matthew fogg and former d. c. metropolitan police officer, ronald hampton, and joining me again. thank you so much, matthew. i want to go back and ask, are century cities, do you think more dangerous than other municipalities in the us today? and even more dangerous? i don't, i don't think so. i mean, i think i of, you know, just the bottom line is the united states trying to figure out and these cities, again, these are minutes power. these are fine. listen, we're not going to keep sitting up here trying to fight this war. that is in this, so they just said, hey, listen, this is the thing to work. most of these cities that just the most sites where it's there is, uh, but dumbly hispanic or, or the people that come across the board. yeah. relatives, friends and so forth. so reality is i don't think it's more. oh no,
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i don't think i don't know of any sort of success showed is more balance is safe to right. so that is it just that people are upset in america because the fact that it is somebody's coming across the board illegally and now they're getting the same way and they have a way to, to get everything they need. i don't agree with that. all of the resources that adopting that, we're dumping into how we're supporting these folks. but the bottom line is they've got to have a way to live. they've got to have food in what in this subsidies. so we use our most st. where i cities, i think municipalities understand as if we can't, if they're here right, we got to deal with them and try to give them something that helps him to well job . dominic, your state of illinois, chicago is located, has joined california. and actually we're moving citizenship requirements in order to be police officers. do you think in the wake of a police officer shortage that this is a good solution? no, i think we're going to hell,
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i think you're witnessing the beginning of the end and we're pulling it so safe today. if you're talking about a stimulation of different cultures and we all have to be big grown up there and acknowledge that nobody's going to be p c anymore. if you're worried about being canceled. sorry, this is where we're done. this is a disaster. sanctuary. cities are the most dangerous places in america, because now you have people who say, oh, i don't have to abide by a law and you put them in a pressure cooker with now let's look at the black community. chicago, who now is said what you're giving our resources to these illegals. is there a pressure cooker? and then you've got just a, it's just a, it's waiting to explode. cops the non non. 2 non us citizens as cops, our governor, j. b, press your owner of the hyatt regency hotel chain. last time i checked, you can house all these migrants across america. if you want to do, i don't know what he's thinking other than the fact that he must have missed his next meal and his blood sugar is probably low. this is insane on a very small level, and i'm not
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a single one culture out because trump got garbage for this. and i want to paint apparel low as far as when trumpet said the mexico sending over their worst and their rapist, you mentioned in a different context. but i will tell you this is how culture effects and how he was right in mexico at one time. i'm not sure where it's like, yeah, i'm not gonna quote myself. the age of consent was 13 in certain areas. when you have a different culture that moves into a united states where the laws are different, and you have to choose 3 families living in a single family home. and they bought they base partition off sections or one family is another family is x, y, and z. you have the legal man here who have to work the legal jobs, a legal or legal jobs a legally. they weren't sure. 3 jobs. the, the problem with cocaine and alcohol in their culture is insane. you have to have an upper to do the 2 or 3 jobs, and then you have to have the alcohol to come down. if you don't think the on
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reported sexual assault, rapes that happen, and those homes are not an epidemic, you're out of your mind. they go unreported because no family member wants the bread winner deported by the police back home. so people don't ever want to talk about this because, oh, it's racist. you have hispanics coming here. you have people from south america coming here. you have people coming from across the sea to get to the southern border. you're flooding our streets with multi cultures. and it's no longer the melting part that america is supposed to be. it is a pressure cooker time bomb or crime that's going to explode. so we have to stop being safe with our language and being in culture, ronald. i want to give you the last 4. we got 30 seconds left in a show and take your take your over the drama each day. he had a lot of different issues. do you agree or disagree? 30 seconds. a normal. i don't agree with now. and what he does, we realize is that america is made up of peoples and logged isn't cult isn't the 1st, like in america is not the milton pot. the people thank you, that people come,
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the families come here. they established themselves in communities and continued the same values and ways that they did in they all come through and their wherever they came from. that's what has made america strong. so i just don't, and there is no evidence like matthew fall this day that there is no evidence knows that it does say that st. your worst it is all on say compared to sitting, right? not saying to words, cities. so, you know, it is some of, but some of us are more susceptible to goes crazy idea that bit off terminate. now some side to the knob is and then there's one of the your family out here in chicago. walk on the imaginary, matthew lyons, matthew real quick. i'll give you a chance to respond back to you and they, they are here and we have to deal with them. and i think what city just saying is, what's the best way to deal with it? and keep the balance down and that's what sanctuary series,
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and that's where they have come about it on data deal with the government. we do not believe that. accompany dominic matthew ronald. thank you so much for this discussion. i think there's a difference though, between dealing with and motivating. i think that's what the good continue the conversation needs to be. because this is locked in riley. she was a 23 year old nursing student who was brutally murdered by 26 year. busy jose antonio about her death was a crime of opportunity. she just happened to be at the wrong place at the wrong time. the wrong place is on the running trails around her college campus. the wrong time was a morning run. jose antonio and bower, i crossed over legally into el paso, in september of 2022. and while police are still trying to gather information on him, more is being released about not only him but his older brother. do y'all go. ibarra with employed temporarily at the university of georgia, dining hall, but was dismissed owners found out that he had a faint, green card. now diego,
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a borrow, had been arrested 3 times by athens, georgia. law enforcement for driving under the influence of alcohol, driving without license. and failure to appear 1st, fingerprint bull offense. diego had also encountered us border agents in april of last year and was process for an expedited removal but claimed a credible fear of returning to venezuela. and it was released, pending claim for asylum. and we don't know all the details of how lock and died, but we know she was found with visible injuries. and the cause of death was blunt force trauma lock. and i'd never met jose antonio bar before that fatal crossing of pass a walk. and riley's murder could have been prevented the lincoln riley, known as a young woman who was killed by a legal that's right. and well, democrat politicians are doing everything. they can to limit their comments and say
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silent on brute. the brutal murder, republican politicians, calling for justice team, justice, hypocritical, considering when they had the power to change and border security and emigration law, they were more willing to fight with each other that actually fight for the constituents . sadly locked in and all the other victims of violent crimes committed by those who are here illegally in the united states will never have laws and acted in response to red future violence from happening to innocent victims. there won't be a street in front of the white house painted with american lives matter. and there won't be violent mobs, appearance burning down cities in the name of not allowing illegals to commit violent crimes to be immediately deported back to their home countries. so don't fall for any tiers. you see that are falling down, the cheeks of elected officials, all in the name of locked in, reilly. we're past that point in america. we're crimes committed by illegals, are just in our backyard. unfortunately, until it takes place at their own kitchen table and they are personally experience the tragedy. so many americans are facing. will there ever be real action done?
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that time is quickly coming. because one thing is being made abundantly clear with every legislative action being passed in dc. the current state of american politics shares more about protecting the borders of other countries and investing in the security of those people. rather than the security of american citizens. a sign of here's an, it's been your 360 view of the news affecting you. thanks for watching the .

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