Transcripts For ALJAZAM News 20150309 : comparemela.com

Transcripts For ALJAZAM News 20150309



great to have you with us in selma to commemorate the 50th anniversary. the event in 1965 became the catalyst to the voting rights act. police assaulted 600 protesters as they tried to march from selma to montgomery alabama. the event was known. many say there is still a long way to go tony harris has been covering the event in selma. let's begin with you on this powerful weekend, there has been a new call for action. >> absolutely. a powerful weekend. take a look behind me at the edmund pettus bridge, the crowd is starting to thin out. the curtain coming down on what has been a remarkable weekend in this small town. as was the case 50 years ago. this day began in church. >> brown chapel the church that housed the power and muscle of the selma marches. the epicentre for an impressive array of thinkers and activists. >> all the doubt. the we have the chance to vote and do many things because so many walked across the bridge, cried on the bridge and bled on the bridge. politics is america's religion. politics gives who, what, where, when and how. malcolm x junior it was attorney-general holder and the ambassador marking the past providing the fuel for future civil rights campaign. voting rights have been decimated. >> we are a better nation an the behaviour we exhibit. >> we'll march on until every citizen supports the fundamental rites to vote. we'll march to the bright horizon to where the young americans, young and old. rich or poor, no matter who they are, where we are fro, where they love, has an equal share in the american dream. on this day, all roads will lead to the foot of the edmund pettus bridge. throughout the day, the crowd grew in size. america's diversity on display. the young, the young at heart those here for the first time. and those here 50 years ago. >> i came down on a bus. they support the costs for voters rights for people down here. >> what are your thoughts 50 years later? >> it's emotional but where we are at. we have a black president. overlooking a congress that is not working real well now. we are not addressing the issues that are totally impacting people of colour in particular because we are at the bottom of the food chain right now. >> little known that on the first friday of march 1965 martin luther king junior was here in selma. he decided to leave to head back to atlanta that sunday at ebenezer church. part of the reason was he was frustrated with a lack of progress from efforts in selma. obviously, the first sunday of march, 1965 changed everywhere. by late this afternoon there was barely room to breathe on the bridge. human traffic moved at less than a snail's pace. no one seemed to mind. i feel the need to remind everyone watching that that was a small town we are talking about 20,000 people that called selma home. yesterday the estimate of 20,000 people here today. i have to tell you this is a town that gets back to work tomorrow. as you look behind me, the traffic on the bridge is starting to thin. there is trash, garbage etch we talked to the major, george evans, and he acknowledges that there is a challenge to get the city back to work. getting back to work will be a challenge here. this is a city, 10% unemployment, 40% of the population lives understand the poverty line. and he acknowledged to me that there is a lot of work that needs to happen to move the city forward. he is hoping to use the momentum of this remarkable weekend to get that work started. >> let's talk about tomorrow looking ahead here. i know you had a chance to speak with the younger generation, great to see the younger and older generation out there. do you think they have a true sense of this anniversary? >> i think so. for the young peoplers they had a chance to talk. one thing on their mind is the idea of the voting rights act. look, it was said by a speaker that the people did more with less. it's time for this generation to do more with more. and they were certainly given the marching orders by the president. to mobilize. and to create the kind of america that is in their dreams. what comes at the momentum of the weekend, it's yet to be determined. >> robert ray is in selma. what is your take away from the powerful weekend. >> it felt like a center of the universe, the past couple of days. what is surprising to me is the amount of people. 40,000 according to officials. i haven't seen a number but it seemed like a whole lot more converging. remember 20,000 people in south central alabama. people from all walks of life. different ages, from little kids, to people in their 90s. white people black people. a great scene out there. we have the pleasure not to walk the bridge today. all the thousands of people and listen to what they had to tell us. let's have a look. [ singing ] >> reporter: people as far as the eye could see marched in selma. not without confusion. a massive crowd of literally thousands of people down this street and up above at the edmund pettus bridge - we are not sure what is happening. a lot of people in the crowd are saying there's a lot of disorganization and confusion. police secret service and other officials tried to organise glass flew and songs were sang in selma, and a bridge of peaceful marchers 50 years ago. what do you say to the rest of america that hasn't been to this country. >> it's history, get on board, you know what we have come a long way. we have a ways to go. after almost an hour of trying to figure out when to start the march, the people began to walk. dorothy baan from atlanta made her way up. >> she can't walk. she was here 50 years ago, and she walked and i'm walking for her. >> reporter: others in the crowd were beginning the understanding. like the 8-year-old. what do you think about those people today, and what it means for kids your way. >> i think it means a lot of this is where people were beat up. >> reporter: indeed, marchers changing the hearts and minds of generations. how can we get blacks and whites to interact better in this country. >> that's a good question. it's a class sam. you know that. we have the internet and all that. >> donald dunn from colombus says he doesn't understand racism, and anyone that doesn't understand the historic day needs to get a life. >> do you think more americans should be out here. >> yes. >> reporter: why is that? >> we live together. we should be together. >> this week hundreds recreate a block from selma to montgomery with the home that civil rights progress down the road. >> this is everyone come together uniting and we are all one. >> on a brim known on a bloody day. one as the masses walk. >> reporter: thomas, all the people dispersed on buses and cars leaving selma tonight. you see behind me the spot where president obama spoke yesterday pretty much cleared out. >> powerful stories, thank you. >> turning to other news now. a military offensive against boko haram is underway. ground troops in niger and chad began operations. air strikes started. nick schifrin is on the ground in nigeria, where boko haram is based. we spoke to michael eaves, editor this evening. what we are seeing is a culmination of a month of talks between nigeria and niger, and nigeria and chad. this is around the area and cameroon, that has been bad hit by boko haram. over the last few years. in the last few months it has gotten worse. fighters have a race to the border in some areas and go across into niger and cameroon, and what we are seeing now is a robust chadian military and a military from niger, that is trained to deal with this, really trying to go in at the same time as nigerian military is pushing itself. >> boko haram is - has been blamed for four separate suicide bombs, killing 54 people wounding another 140, and pledging allegiance to i.s.i.l. the people you speak to, especially on the ground. do they believe this is a response from boko haram, based on what the multinational group has been doing recently. there's a belief that there is no real connection between boko haram and i.s.i.l. i spoke to officials responsible for training some of these armies to fight boko haram, and it's official that there's no evidence of any link between boko haram and i.s.i.l. the fear is that boko haram will reach out to groups like i.s.i.l., such assist al qaeda, to operate in northern africa for training, and ideology. what people on the ground tell me this is about the failure to defeat boko haram when it could have been defeated or the failure to go after boko haram with enough weapons that nigerian soldiers said they didn't have. which army ofacials admitted there wasn't. and with a heavy-duty strategy that the nigerian military brought in. you see a lot of people asking why did it take so long. nonetheless, the effort is very much larger than it has been against boko haram, within nigeria, and niger, chad and cameroon - all trying to provide a hammer and anveil against boko haram, in the corner where all these countries are some iraqi army units are showing up for the u.s.-led training sessions unprepared, according to general mitchell dempsey, his comment made in response to criticism that the u.s. is not providing enough support to iraq. general temp si says the iraqi -- dempsey says the iraqi government can may improvements without u.s.'s help mohamed fadel fahmy and baher mohamed are awaiting retrial, they were released from an egyptian prison in february after spending a year behind bars. they are charged with collaborating with the muslim brotherhood. al jazeera denied the charges. both attended the hearing, but it was adjourned because prosecution witnesses failed to taped. it was exhaleded nor march 10th. this was said:. >> president obama and israeli prime minister binyamin netanyahu expressed ever disagreement over nuclear talks with iran. parring separately on c.b.s. "face the nation", president obama said the u.s. is going into talks with firm guidelines over what is expected from iran. >> if there's no deal we walk away. if we cannot verify they are not going to obtain a nuclear weapon, there's a break out period so if they cheated we would be able to have enough time to take action. if we don't have na deal we are not going to take it. >> we share the same goal of preventing iran getting a nuclear weapon. we disagree on how to do it. i do not inspections with the regime. i suggest you contract the iran's nuclear programme, so there's less to inspect the u.s. and iran are set to begin talks on march 15th, saying the programme is used for peaceful pumps, such as energy production. >> an attack on the u.s. congress in benghazi libya, says there's huge gaps. the jairm said the committee lacked documentation. clinton has been criticized for using private email. it was called a lock of commitment to transparency. the benghazi attacked killed three other americans. >> another secretary of state spoke out about the state department system. colin powell found it was a structure that needed to be overhauled. >> i obtained the details and am works with the department to see if anything needs to be discussed. >> there are talks about when the use of emails went into account. >> bell look at how events are recognised around the world. unconscious bias. how some discriminate against women without realising it. a troubling looks at native american women that are murdered or go missing in the u.s. [ ♪ music ♪] >> gender inequality is not just a woman issue, it affects all of us. we want a solution really today is international women's day, a day that marks achievements for past present and future. there has been progress for girls around the world. one in four young women are married in childhood. the chance that a woman will undergo female mutilation it's one-third lower. girls are outperforming boys in reading. in morocco thousands rally. violence was the main focus of the march. 60% of women have victims. >> there was a street race in ukraine in honour of the day. >> in liberia. the event paid tribute to those that lost their lives to the yazidi. in china it's not a celebration that's making headlines. they are detaining five women's rights activists in three different cities. they were detained after planning demonstrations in honour. as we look at women's rights across the globe. there is a startling trend among native american women. statistics show they are murdered or go missing. sara hoy explains. >> it was op october 5th that charles last saw his daughter alive. the 32-year-old native american actress was at the height of her career having starred alongside meryl streep in "august - orange county" >> reporter: there was a dark side to misty. >> she was self-medicating, using alcohol. showed have episodes where her behaviour would change. >> misty's father said she was behaving strangely on the day she went missing. charles says his daughter was drinking heavily at the home outside seattle. with misty upset, erratic and in need of medication charles called police for help. >> she said "don't worry about me." >> the cycle would repeat itself. misty lashing out. calling police. only this time things were different. >> i kept saying or they said she may be in hospital. we'll keep an eye out. >> did auburn police do everything they could to locate her. >> within reason yes. >> the commander said the police did not search for misty, because her disappearance hadn't met the advisory. >> she had depression issues he may have been drinking at the time. it's not mental illness. >> her death is a high approval example. native american women go missing at a higher stake. in some reservations women are murd ert at a rate 10 times higher. >> concerned that officials didn't consider the disappearance suspicious. charles turned to the family. >> it is grabbing on year. volunteers discovered the body. is 11 days after thee pent missing. >> i'm fortunate enough to know they found my daughter. other families - their loved ones are still missing. this is something that misty wanted to do. this is one of the things misty wants to do become a voice for the voices. >> women across the u.s. face struggles magnified by bias. even those educated possess a prejudice and most are unaware. >> it's like a dirty little secret in the industry. >> it's a secret that is exsposhed thanks to an awareness of silicon caly. google came under fire. 79% of the managers, and 83% of the engineers were male. i have yet to work with a single colleague that says women are not going to be good engineers. women may not be aware of it. google says it's educating the workforce, and trying to change the culture with exercises. male or liberal say left people mails say right. there we go. high tech is not the on industry dominated by men. >> i can't type. i don't take dictation. >> advertising long built upon the power of the subliminal message. unconscious bias is a work behind the scenes as well. the pre-agency business was under intense criticism, for employees of colour in the senior professional industry. >> a large part of the problem is unintentional bias. >> it's an uncovered ible subject to talk about the biases. >> unconscious bias. >> now there's a lot of talk about it thanks to ongoing mandatory unconscious training sessions sessions that include word associations. >> it starts at an early age. >> what is the message. >> it's strong, powerful. >> i made the deadlines i wonder why he was able to get the promotions faster than me. >> how do we know about it. >> i'm a keen observer of the dynamics of men and women. it's extraordinarily how dominating the men behave. >> it's god business. >> we are not doing this for the greater good. we are doing it because we are less competitive in irrelevant as the world shifts. >> it's been 4 years since the uprising against marta bassino in asaad began. we'll look at that. >> and it's been a year since mh370 vanished. we are getting troubling news about the black box recorder. america here are some of the stories we are following - thousands gathered in selma. 50 years ago 600 civil rights protesters were assaulted as they tried to march peacefully a military offensive against boko haram is underway in north-eastern nigeria. air strikes started last night, following a series of attacks by a group that killed 50 people and injured more than 100. countries over the world honour international women's day. thousands marched at rallies calling for the closing of gender gaps in jobs education and politics. >> it is sunday night, time for a regular look at the week ahead. this week it's 4 years since the fight against bashar al-assad began. the fighting killed more than 200,000 people and displaced more than 9 million. courtney kealy has more. >> on thursday children embroiled in a conflict may never recover. >> i think that the trauma that people have been feeling and what has been done is something that can never be felt. >> reporter: in march of 2011 as the arab spring uprising took hold. president bashar al-assad's security forces arrested and tortured 15 boys some as young as 20 years old. in the southern cities after they wrote graffiti. >> demonstrations spread to other cities. >> tanks rolled into parts of major cities by the end of 2011. in 2012 the government violence conditioned, rebel fighters calling themselves the free syrian army launched counter attack. >> as the fighting continued, iranian backed lebanese fighters joined the fight along side syrian forces. the misty upham used chemical weapons, a charge denied. bashar al-assad struck a deal brokered allowing weapons to be destroyed. >> the factional fighting was more comply stated as the branch targeted forces and haez fighters in syria. the nightmar continued. and the more vir lent i.s.i.l. group captured land. since last summer u.s. and coalition forces launched 3,000 strikes against i.s.i.l. in parts of iraq. air strikes into syria have been launched. a recent u.n. report says the situation over the last 4 years degenerated from legitimate popular aspirations into a conflagration of unparalleled scale and magnitude and that crimes occur daily, and voices and danger have been lost amid the horiers and the conflict. >> 9 million syrians fled their home since an upriding began. 3 million sought refuge in neighbouring country, and 6.5 million syrians fled towns and villages to find safe havens elsewhere. it's the largest wave of mass migration. >> last friday the u.n. security council condemned the use of toxic chemicals in syria, the council did not assign blame for chemical attacks in 2015 it killed hundreds of people including children and threatened military action for attacks. >> syrian government forces conducted app air strike that killed a -- an air strike that killed a senior commander. it's a rival to i.s.i.l. which controls about a third of iran. >> reports say that three other leaders were also killed. the european union is imposing more sanctions. seven syrian men had assets frozen. one has been accused of acting as a middle man for oil purchases from i.s.i.l. e.u. placed sanctions on 218 people and 69 syrian entities. let's bring in an independent journalist, and joshua landers, director for middle east studies, joining us from norman oklahoma. great to have you both with us. >> agreed to be here. >> there are words that struck me that you wrote 18 months ago saying syria is everything the most important story in the world right now. what was it. what were you seeing that the world didn't grasp at that moment? >> i guess i look back to 2012 where i uncover the crisis. the first time i went to alaska they had picked up arms after the school was bombed and nonviolent protests for the right to vote in their country. so that is the syrian revolution, and to see how it was deteriorated. in a terrifying but predictable way, i say it is predictable to see how it's gotten out of control. >> did you think at this moment it was a humanitarian crisis. >> i wouldn't imagine that the international community allowed it to get to this point. >> myself and my translator was with a veteran tourist. we said "when are you coming back?" he said "in the spring", we sunk, we couldn't imagine that in the spring of 2013 this would continue. now it's the spring of 2015. we have seen unspeakable things and it is continuing now in the fifth year. >> we are entering the fifth year. 200,000 civilians have been killed. what is not working. well the effort to build a rebel movement into a cohesive front failed become entirely. in the last year most of the rebels have been swept aside by islamist groups. as we have been talking about, nusra has taken most of idlib province, and is powerful in the south. i.s.i.s. controls a third of syria, and the islamic front - it is not sanctions as a terrorist group. it has objectionable goals. it's behind the reach of the united states. the so-called area has largely been defeated. that is partly because they are clan based, cover a few villages, but but don't have real reach. islamism is the dominant ideology na mobilizes money from the gulf that gets the foreign fighters. they are the tough front. and america is bombing them. america turned. almost 10080 degrees from being an enemy at bashar al-assad to weakening him, to today bombing many opponents. in a sense adopting bashar al-assad as a strat onlyingic ally -- strat eeging alley. they do not want him to fall because they believe i.s.i.s. and al nusra will go in and take the capital. which would be a disaster. >> it's a strategic move to build a stronger alliance with bashar al-assad. >> what is interesting is that we say that there were efforts. i would say there weren't really any significant efforts from the united states to build up a moderate position that could be a force of the future for a syrian country. i would say that had the opportunities, high level effect from the bashar al-assad regimes, leading a career of military service because they were ordering to do unthinkable things. in your report you see it. this is a country divided. >> absolutely. tell me more about what you experienced in the past 7 years. >> i would say what is striking is i'm covering a war of my peers. most of the country under 30, and most of the country i would say is under 20. when we are in the i.d. p camps, internally displaced camps, refugee camps, you would be shocked to see how many children were running around. that is trying to me how young the population is. we have 1 story, when i met him, he was just starting his university, and he quit university because his father was a high-level colonel. he was joining the rebels it's 4 years later. he should be finished with college. he's been fighting with the rebels, he has been besiege bid i.s.i.s. and lost friend and loved ones. i would say for four very long ears: how was the bashar al-assad administration at this point? >> i would say what is most frustrating for me and the syrian opposition. it's that as a normal civilian, it may be a better situation for your family to be in. because there's some kind of convenient relationship between bashar al-assad and i.s.i.s. he sees them the way we see bashar al-assad. the power is on, the water is on in the moderate opposition, they have not worked for years, and are continuing to have barrel bombings. if you are a civilian, you would be sacrificing education for incock trinations. >> the question is what to do. have the syrians given up on the west? >> many have, but they can't entirely give up. the west has gun and money. they need powerful allies at least the rebels do. many syrians with bashar al-assad are angry, they feel that the west is supporting the opposition. the united states does not have friends with the pro-government people or rebels. that's what occurred in the united states. we backed the kurd a great deal and are helping them and we are flying missions for them. you flew missions in syria. what is the end goal do they appear stronger. i would conquer with mr landers, who says that it's an islamist led opposition. many are fictions that are more moderate. more muslim brotherhood's. this is not ideal working with the group that is al qaeda. however, that field led to i.s.i.s. and that's the problem. >> what are the struggles against men, women and children that you experienced? >> i would say that inside, you know, a city like aleppo you don't just have air plane assaults you have snipers. so opposition-held town, i found it striking to be covering people who respect energized, ready to build their own institutions. i found divorce courts and post offices. people were trying to imagine a free syria. but when bombs felon tools, many fled. >> people have started to come back. now we have seen a return to the original demands of the united states a lot have been able to return to their home. >> what is the appropriate action? >> appropriate for the united states or for the international community. the president made it clear, he doesn't want to get stuck into the civil war. the moderate syrian militias that lost a lot of ground - only a few months ago owned 1-2% of syrian territory. if you take the southern front, it's more. to turn them into winners, as well as the bashar al-assad regime would require an amazing amount of money and energy on the part of the united states. the u.s. is not going to engage. they rally, send in an occupying force, it's armed. it could. will it, unlikely. syria is left alone to itself to fight this out. that means that it's locked in to i think, years of civil war. because all the various proxy, all the interested international powers are funding their proxy. >> i know it will be a long road ahead. what does a post war syria look like? >> i don't think we see a post war syria yet. it will be a fragment d syria. it doesn't seem that bashar al-assad is strong enough to reconquer the country, and middle eastern powers would allow him to anyway. the united states, in a sense, in the west is crushing bashar al-assad with sanctions. they are bombing the next two largest forces in serious. so the three major powers in syria that could conquer the country will be weakened by the international community, not bombs. that is a recipe to fragmentation and continual warlords fighting each other. >> your final thoughts in the last seconds. >> i would say the discourse on syria has been dominated by military options. i would love to see a renegotiation of america's negotiations with the middle east. if that means a plan to invest in the humanitarian situation not just inside syria, but the interneter region of a population under 30 that's a strategic investment. >> it will be a long road ahead. >> thank you both. appreciate your time on "the week ahead". before we go let's look at other event coming up in "the week ahead". on wednesday, john kerry, ashton carter will appear gore a congressional -- before a congressional committee to skews the use of violence. a 1776 document announcing freedom from british rule saturday - a memorial from mahatma gandhi will be unveiled. the first indian without holding a public fogs be honoured in the scrar. >> details about capture of suspects accused of murdering a russian opposition leader. plus... >> his photography documented an entire event we call bloody sunday 50 years an selma, a look at the man whose photos are as iconic as the march itself. five suspects have appeared before a judge in connection with the murder of russian opposition leader boris nemtsov. one man was seen in a cage in a moscow kourm hiding his -- kourm hiding his face. another claimed he was guilty. three others had a hearing behind closed doors, and prosecutors have 10 days to charge them. he was gunned down on a bridge outside the kremlin. he was an outspoken critic of vladimir putin. >> a sixth suspect in the murder took his own life. it happened in gross ni the capital in chechnya. the suspect blew himself up with a grenade after a standoff. >> it's been a year since malaysia airlines flight 370 disappeared. today the first disappearance on the report was released by malaysian authorities, revealing when the plane went missing the bat which for the data recorder had been expired for more than a year but offered no new leads on what happened to the jet. >> it has been a whole year and there has been no truth. malaysia says 1 day the plane lost connection, and the next day the plane is missing. we don't know if it's true. if it's missing, you should find me the body of my son. now there is nothing, you are hiding information. >> australian prime minister tony abbott says the hunt will continue if the current search off the coast doesn't find anything. >> the price of a gallon went up. the national average is $2.54. the survey for drivers in california are paying the most at nearly $3.53. two californian refineries shut down after a union strike and another had a recent explosion. it is short by 300,000 barrels per day. the change to the trend is part of what drove up the cost that's not the only thing going up. temperatures well. to rebecca stevenson. we are dealing with rain. >> yes. in the warm areas. further north. it's helping the low temperatures warm up for the north. texas has so much rain fall. there's son seriousness about flash flooding tonight through to tomorrow. the rain moving east and north. slowly, it's a storm system that will take its time. ysk, through tuesday there'll be heavy rain, but it will take until next weekend for the waves coming through before the large tomorrow moves out. you can see the rain they we had within 24 hours, an inch and a quarter. it's causing problems with water on the roadways. flood warnings and flash flood watches, parts of louisiana and mississippi. issues not quite there. so much as melting snow and ice is in place. some places we have measurements of 3 inches of snow on the ground. as we look at the forecast. heavy rain will be between louisiana, and also parts of missouri. that's how it will continue. here it is, spring break. a lot of folks like to go to the islands and panama city. you'll get the rain showers. in fact aring here is the spot where we'll get ice jams from the melting snow back in the past-moving streams and creeks across tens and kentucky -- tennessee and kentucky. >> be careful with the snow melt throughout the wanted we covered the event in thelma and looking at the legacy of the voting rights act. for the most iconic cots they were capture -- photos were captured by martin. we are walked through his images of that day. >> spider martin was a news photographer growing up in birmingham alabama. he'd work a day photo journalists, covering everything in the world that the newspaper needed coverage in birmingham. they found out there was going to be a protest march. they asked spider to go down and cover that as a photographer. his photography documented that event. that we call bloody sunday. documenting visually the protests organised getting ready to go on the march across the bridge. andy young ambassador to the united nations preying, leading a prayer with the leaders, and the people in the protest march. while they were marching to the bridge the alabama state police local sheriff's department and local police authorities were assembling themselves to prevent them from marching out of selma and all the way to montgomery. the marchers were coming over the bridge. they photographed a long line of marchers. they were told to stop. the police are marching towards them. he is pointing his finger at the marchers in the photograph and basically saying "you have 5 seconds to get out of here." spiter photographed the -- spider photographed the beginning of the peaceful marches. the police had the deputies deputised citizens, not regular police they were on horse back as a horse back posi who chased in after the marchers trampling some and beating them as they raced back across the bridge. there's a photograph of the guys on horse back. you can barely see in between the horseman, a woman clapping and cheering. she's excited and really urging these place men on to beat up the protesters. then they chase the everyone back to the point of the origin for the margers, which was the brown chapel, the methodist church, and there's a great picture after the protesters found the safety of the sanctuary of the church you can see the state troopers and police standing in front, making sure they are staying there. >> that'll do it for this hour. i'm thomas drayton in new york. coming up al jazeera present "freeway - crack in the system", first we leave you with the historical event in selma this weekend. >> we have come a long way since the event of that bloody sunday. selma changed america. selma changed the world. >> if someone had told me as we were crossing this bridge 1 day i would be back here introducing the first african-american president, i would have said you are crazy, you are out of your mind you don't know what you are talking about. president obama. >> we honour those who walked so we could run. we must run so our children soar. and we will not grow weary for we believe in the power of an awesome god and we believe in this country's sacred promise. ♪ ♪ hallelujah ♪ >> you know how everybody say they have a purpose in life? well at one time i felt that selling cocaine was my purpose. i used to think i was born to be a drug dealer. i thought it was my job to keep everybody high. to get as many people high as i could. >> welcome to the famous wake-up show. this dj king jack. today we got

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