Edward Snowden, Glenn Greenwald & Chris Hedges on NSA Leaks, Assange & Protecting a Free Internet

NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalists Glenn Greenwald and Chris Hedges discuss mass surveillance, government secrecy, Internet freedom and U.S. attempts to extradite and prosecute Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. They spoke together on a panel moderated by Amy Goodman at the virtual War on Terror film festival after a screening of “Citizenfour” — the Oscar-winning documentary about Snowden by Laura Poitras.

63 Documents the Government Doesn’t Want You to Read | Jesse Ventura | Talks at Google

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Jesse Ventura visited Google’s Santa Monica office on April 13, 2011 to discuss his new bestseller: “63 Documents the Government Doesn’t Want You to Read.”

Economic Hitman Makes a Confession About America’s Biggest Threat

Confessions of an Economic Hitman author John Perkins has a virtual sit down with Patrick Bet-David. Order his book https://amzn.to/3iDb1nL (New Confessions of an Economic Hitman)

About the guest: John Perkins is an American author. His best known book is Confessions of an Economic Hit Man, in which Perkins claims to have played a role in an alleged process of economic colonization of Third World countries on behalf of what he portrays as a cabal of corporations, banks, and the United States government.

Other books by John Perkins:

– Touching the Jaguar https://amzn.to/3kwtfsG
– Confessions of an Economic Hitman https://amzn.to/33SX5la

Recommended Videos:

1. China’s Unrestricted Warfare Could Lead to Collapse in One Year https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kXDiv…

2. China’s Silent Takeover While America’s Elite Slept
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h8IEt…

About Patrick Bet-David: CEO, author and Founder of Valuetainment Media. Patrick has interviewed athletes, notorious individuals, politicians, authors and entrepreneurs from all walks of life.

Subscribe to Valuetainment for weekly videos http://bit.ly/2aPEwD4

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PBD Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/patrick-b…

Music selection used through agreement with Epidemic Sound http://bit.ly/2B8DxK1

Joe Rogan | The Morality of CIA Assassins w/Annie Jacobsen

00:00
the Joe Rogan experience morality talk
00:05
to me about morality or talk about why
00:07
we can’t talk about certain things well
00:09
while we’re what you were saying before
00:11
about being a competitor the United
00:14
States is competitive obviously and when
00:17
you’re playing the ultimate game which
00:18
is war you have to be very careful about
00:20
what you reveal and what you don’t
00:22
reveal and this is where the
00:24
conversation about surprise kill vanish
00:26
comes in because the CIA using these
00:30
covert operations to assassinate people
00:33
and whether or not that should be
00:35
allowed or not allowed whether it’s good
00:37
or bad whether it’s necessary whether
00:40
it’s like if you want people to be safe
00:41
over here there’s certain people you got
00:43
to take out and sometimes you just can’t
00:45
follow the rules and why why are we not
00:48
supposed to know about that should we
00:50
know about that the way the story
00:51
started for me I’m at my house in 2009 a
00:54
source is you know calls me up he says
00:56
I’m on my way back from the Middle East
00:58
gonna pop by the house and say hi he
01:01
brings me a challenge coin that says
01:03
Kabul Afghanistan State Department I’m
01:05
thinking okay he is not a diplomat I
01:08
mean he’s weapons trained at the time my
01:12
boys were young there are lots of GI
01:14
Joes in the garden and they had little
01:16
weapons right and the source is showing
01:20
them about the weapons and they’re like
01:21
so into it cuz they know he’s military
01:22
trained and then he says if it’s okay
01:24
with your mom and dad I’ll show you some
01:26
weapons the boys are like please so he
01:29
sets up this sniper rifle in the living
01:31
room and I live up in the hills and you
01:34
can look across the canyon through this
01:36
scope he set up and I can see the veins
01:39
on a leaf
01:40
across the canyon and I thought okay so
01:43
now I know what he was doing in Kabul
01:45
Afghanistan he’s taking out al Qaeda
01:47
with this mm-hmm
01:49
there’s another case on the ground that
01:51
he never opens and when the boys go off
01:54
I say to him what’s in that and he said
01:57
he opens it up and inside there’s a
01:59
knife and it’s serrated and I said
02:02
what’s that for
02:03
immediately realizing you know my
02:05
naivete and he says to me sometimes a
02:08
job requires quiet so why that became
02:13
interesting
02:13
to me was because of my own thoughts and
02:17
perceptions about what he had told me in
02:19
other words I could I could deal with
02:21
him with a sniper rifle
02:22
I could me like okay that’s what he does
02:24
but the knife gave me pause I was like
02:26
is he slitting someone’s throat is it in
02:29
the ribs and I thought why is it that I
02:31
am willing to accept sort of the
02:35
clinical nature of of a sniper rifle but
02:38
I can’t I’m uncomfortable with that
02:41
close-up hand-to-hand killing and that
02:45
led me to surprise kill vanish because
02:47
that was the motto of the precursor
02:50
agency of the CIA it was called the OSS
02:54
the Office of Strategic Services their
02:57
motto was surprise kill vanish because
02:59
they would jump out of aircraft land
03:02
work with their French partners and kill
03:04
Nazis with a you know a knife to the
03:07
throat and I thought okay that’s
03:10
considered okay because they were Nazis
03:12
right but we can’t we’re not supposed to
03:14
do that anymore
03:15
in this world we live in why and I spent
03:19
the whole this whole book researching
03:22
and reporting is about that sort of
03:25
conundrum if you will that moral puzzle
03:28
you know why do we why do we
03:31
differentiate you know and who are they
03:35
willing to do that to where do they draw
03:37
that line like I’m sure you’re aware of
03:40
the story of Jamal khashoggi the
03:43
journalist who was assassinated by
03:46
someone some group of people and that
03:49
they entered into the Turkish embassy
03:51
and they whacked him and chopped him up
03:55
and carried him out in boxes and it’s an
03:57
international it was a huge incident
04:02
right this supposedly was ordered by who
04:07
was it supposed to order by the head of
04:09
Saudi Arabia yeah MBS Mohammed bin
04:12
Salman I mean that’s the idea is that
04:14
their head of state wanted him killed
04:16
because he was a threat because he was a
04:18
reporter because he’s writing some
04:20
things yeah and that they this is how
04:24
they did it yeah I mean and there’s
04:25
that’s a great question because what
04:27
yours
04:27
like okay so but we all think of that as
04:29
reprehensible right right right
04:31
why you know cuz cuz he’s a journalist
04:33
on our side he’s delivering information
04:35
to people but the government of Saudi
04:39
Arabia disagree they like that
04:41
information is our information he’s a
04:43
threat by releasing it yes he’s a threat
04:46
to our livelihood yes yeah and who
04:49
decides who’s a threat I mean a lot of
04:51
this book is about who’s on the kill
04:53
list right I mean there is an actual
04:55
killers they’re always husband and the
04:56
euphemisms involved I mean I write
04:59
history as I said so Eisenhower called
05:02
his assassination program health
05:05
alteration
I mean literally in the
05:07
declassified documents the Solaris
05:09
health all three she had a health
05:11
alteration committee whoa Kennedy had an
05:14
executive action committee that’s also
05:17
cleaner all right
05:19
guess what Reagan’s was called super
05:22
Wonder Boy power up close pre-emptive
05:27
neutralization preemptive neutralization
05:30
Wow why do they keep switching the names
05:32
for it they’re burying the information
05:35
right and they keep switching around the
05:38
they switch around who has authority to
05:43
you know say yes let’s go ahead and put
05:45
this guy on the kill list I mean that
05:47
was fascinating I mean I interviewed a
05:49
guy named John Rizzo who was a
05:51
decades-long CIA attorney I was stunned
05:53
that he was willing to talk to me and he
05:56
explained to me how a presidential
06:00
finding also called a memorandum of
06:02
notification works that gives the
06:05
president the authority to put an
06:09
individual on the kill list that job is
06:12
then given to the CIA’s paramilitary
06:14
army an operator or their assassins
06:18
because the CIA works under a code
06:21
called title 50 of so it makes it legal
06:25
whereas the Defense Department works
06:27
under what’s called title 10 so in other
06:30
words and they can’t their rules of
06:31
engagement are totally different so the
06:33
misnomer is like oh the SEALs killed bin
06:35
Laden well they were seals trained but
06:39
that was a CIA mission
06:41
hmm because Pakistan is a sovereign
06:45
nation and the military can’t kill
06:49
people in countries were not at war with
06:51
so those guys all became essentially CIA
operators for the night whoa right and
06:59
if you look at photographs as I have
07:02
seen you’ll notice that they have no
07:04
markings on their outfits so that if the
07:09
job went south it’d be like I don’t know
07:11
who these guys are and if you look back
07:14
at Vietnam photos of the Mac V SOG teams
07:16
which I also write about in surprise
07:19
kill vanish because that’s the precursor
07:21
of that you see no markings right that
07:24
way you can go into you can go behind
07:27
enemy lines you can go into Laos you
07:29
know in the Vietnam War you can go now
07:31
you can go into Pakistan what I learned
reporting this book is we’re in a
hundred and thirty four countries doing
title 50 operations think about that
government wants that to be kept secret
07:44
so in all those countries they’re doing
07:48
things that don’t fall under the normal
07:51
letter of the law not yes not under the
07:54
rules of engagement of the military but
07:56
the CIA works at the president’s behest
07:59
that that was one thing that really blew
08:01
my mind to report to research to
08:03
understand
08:04
I talked to forty two guys who have
08:05
direct access to this who are in this
08:08
world you know from the knuckle draggers
08:11
on the ground as they call themselves to
08:13
the lawyer at CIA senior intelligence
08:16
staff that’s the equivalent of a general
08:18
at the CIA
08:19
those guys explaining to me Annie this
08:21
is how it works you know and again to
08:26
your question well why why does someone
08:28
get to know that and why does the
08:30
government want why do they allow that
08:32
information out is super interesting and
08:34
I believe that has to do with a certain
08:38
climate we’re in right now about
08:40
military might right in other words what
08:43
the CIA does is called tercio up do it’s
08:45
the third option you’ve got the first
08:48
option is diplomacy second option is war
08:51
so if diplomacy is not working
08:54
and war is unwise you go to the third
08:58
option which is the CIA’s paramilitary
09:01
and they’re in a hundred and how many
country 134 do you well if you wonder
why the military budgets so big that’s
what it is folks kind of feed those
09:09
folks what work I mean what happened and
09:13
you as a competitor would be fascinated
09:15
by the kind of training they do and what
09:17
they do I mean so many of these
09:18
infiltration techniques are
09:19
mind-boggling you know they’ve got halo
09:22
jumping which you know about right where
09:23
they high altitude low opening so they
09:26
jump out they you know freefall down
09:29
terminal velocity pull the ripcord
09:31
really low so they’re not detected by
09:33
radar and then they meet up with a team
09:35
on the ground and go do what they do
09:36
then they also have hey-ho which is high
09:39
altitude high opening and that way you
09:42
can fly over airspace where we’re
09:45
allowed and float into let’s say a
09:49
country like Iran and land gather your
09:54
team and do what you have to do hmm but
09:56
like so much of what I report I get
09:58
information like that and then I ask a
10:00
million questions like you’ve asking me
10:02
and it’s like can’t talk about that
10:03
that’s classified hmm you don’t you
10:07
you’re a journalist so you’re trying not
10:09
to judge mm-hmm but is it your belief
10:14
that this is a good thing for America
10:18
meaning having a third option
10:21
whoa I mean I write in the book that
10:25
that’s in the prologue after I tell that
10:27
story about the source with a knife I
10:29
say I wanted to know in that exact
10:34
question like is this a good thing and
10:36
my answer at the end after it’s complex
10:40
not to be vague but it is really complex
10:42
is also that well if you’re gonna take
10:48
that pole position you must accept
10:54
rivalry right mm-hmm and also after talk
10:59
do I think it’s a good thing after
11:01
talking to a lot of 20-year old soldiers
11:04
who come back from the war theater miss
11:06
limb with intense PTSD and who
11:12
essentially serve as cannon fodder I
11:14
would say my opinion right for the
11:18
Pentagon that’s the second option or the
11:23
42 guys that I interviewed you know
11:26
they’re like send me they are a
11:28
professional they are Tier one operators
11:31
they’re Green Berets they’re seals their
11:32
Delta they retire they join the CIA yeah
11:36
so they’re like professionals at what
11:37
they do
11:38
and they’re saying I want someone has to
11:40
do this job we’ve been doing this since
11:42
the end of World War two I want to do it
11:44
so do I think it’s better I mean I think
11:49
that that concept speaks to choice right
11:59
because I’m not so sure that the 20 year
12:00
olds know what they’re in for
12:02
and the 40 year olds know what they’re
12:04
in for and are willing to do it so that
12:07
well also the difference between a
12:09
specialized trained individual with a
12:12
very specific task versus someone who is
12:14
sort of following orders and at the
12:16
front of the line yeah right I mean and
12:19
also has a you know a lot of times I
12:22
talk to these young kids who go to war
12:23
and they tell me one of the fascinating
12:27
detail is that they talk about movies
12:30
that they see and whether it’s Saving
12:32
Private Ryan or Black Hawk Down even
12:35
right where the outcome is not
12:37
necessarily great but they talk about
12:40
the romanticization of war and of
12:44
camaraderie and a brotherhood that comes
12:47
from that and then they have their
12:48
experience and some of that does give
12:51
them that sense but not always whereas
12:54
the operators are much more about you
12:58
know getting the job done that’s what I
13:00
was fascinated by I mean these guys are
13:02
really clear they’re their competitors
13:05
they’re like top tier competitors they
13:07
have a job they do it they get it done
13:09
and they ask for the next job so is the
13:13
oversight when it comes to choosing
13:16
whether or not this operation takes
13:18
place or not is it
13:20
do they have moral guidelines do they
13:24
have ethical or moral guidelines where
13:25
they say like this is the president is
13:29
requesting that this person get taken
13:31
out the Chiefs of Staff whoever it is is
13:33
that did they have to make a an ethical
13:37
distinction you mean or they like kill
13:39
him nicely like don’t make it over this
13:41
do they decide like does this make sense
13:43
or like what if the president is like
13:45
Rosie O’Donnell she’s been talking shit
13:47
take her out you know
13:49
well I mean that’s you know that’s a big
13:51
issue but what I try to write in some
13:55
what I try to report in surprise kill
13:57
vanish is the idea that the people we
14:00
take out may be our bad guys right one
14:03
one guy write about his che guevara okay
14:05
because che is often portrayed in the
14:10
press as you know this amazing hero and
14:15
that he and we you know I don’t know if
14:18
you know but he was he was killed by the
14:20
Bolivian Rangers but it was a CIA
14:21
operation and I interview the man in
14:23
charge of that operation in Surprise Cal
14:26
vanished his name was Felix Rodriguez ok
14:28
long-serving CIA paramilitary officer so
14:31
but I also report why the President to
14:36
your question wanted Che Guevara dead
14:40
you know he was really advocating for
14:43
nuclear war and I and I shared it yes I
14:48
mean he spoke publicly about you know if
14:50
if we have to have an atomic war the
14:52
Cuban but paraphrasing the Cuban people
14:54
will be happy to have sacrificed
14:55
themselves that I mean che was also che
14:59
killed anyone who betrayed him he killed
15:01
he writes about it in his Diaries as I
15:04
write in the book right so but on the
15:06
morality question who decides I don’t
15:08
have that answer but I will tell you
15:09
what I did I went with my main source
15:11
Billy hua who he’s a 89 now and he was
15:15
he’s been with the CIA for 60 years
15:18
okay I mean he went and he and I went to
15:23
Cuba for him to do a halo jump with Che
15:27
Guevara son so we were a guest of the
15:30
man whose father was killed by the CIA
15:36
okay and we had this really interesting
15:39
discussion in the cigar club where che
15:43
and Castro you know smoke cigars and
15:46
plotted the downfall of the United
15:48
States and that’s what I try to give
15:52
readers a sense of the long lens of
15:56
history how time changes all things and
16:00
maybe leave with them them with this
16:03
idea which they can come to their own
16:04
conclusions about what you asked me of
16:06
is it right or is it wrong because
16:08
really what you might ask is is it
16:11
necessary mmm right I mean I could
16:15
moralize right wrong but it would just
16:17
be my opinion but when you see I went
16:20
Billy wall and I also try out travel to
16:23
Vietnam because he was supposed to kill
16:25
he was tasked to kill the top commander
16:28
of the North Vietnamese Army a guy named
16:30
general shop and law didn’t kill shop
16:34
and we had this incredibly this terrible
16:36
mission that went awry that I write
16:38
about in the book in the Vietnam War so
16:40
50 years later while and I go to visit
16:43
the son of general giap are sitting
16:46
there in shops home talking about these
16:49
same issues right and my conclusion of
16:52
that again is not is it right or wrong
16:55
but is it necessary I mean we have these
16:58
wars we keep having these wars is it
17:02
necessary yeah what do you think well I
17:07
mean my opinion is that the Defense
17:11
Department is far too concerned with
17:14
vast weapons systems of the future which
17:17
is its mission statement of its science
17:19
department and so you create what some
17:22
at the Pentagon call a self licking ice
17:24
cream cone or the military-industrial
17:26
complex and there’s a lot built into
17:29
that there’s a lot to be said about
17:36
[Applause]