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tv   Direct Impact  RT  January 26, 2024 11:30pm-12:01am EST

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in the cold, it got to the point where we had to build shoelaces for wants. once again, we have to find ways to keep warm we in do or through the nights then atkins, all close, came to all age. they let us down from a full 100 feet to hide foot deep snow. we were sinking into the snow. it took us about 5 hours to reach the nearest which was in the morning after the crash, i went to the nearest village. i had a couple of scratches and bruises, but the pond is ring was condition at 1st i tried gesturing. what else being the help and a person who spoke some english came along with his help. i was given a satellite phone and i told our administrative to explain the situation. i went to the village and asked for a search party to be sent to my friends and gradually more more time about members gathered in the village. by morning a rescue team arrived the articles of those i woke up when everything was quiet under the stars. it was cold, i fully understood that if we were alive, we would be searched for. i knew that it wouldn't be at night. and the main goal was to survive until morning. and i the search for the nearest city for wait for
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the search and rescue teams to find us. and that's all for me, my colleagues, jessica taylor over there with you about helping me out with the latest updates i they show on josh, thanks for watching. and bye for now, the take a fresh look around it. life kaleidoscopic isn't just a shifted reality distortion, by how of tired vision with no real opinions. fixtures designed to simplify will confuse who really wants a better wills, and is it just as a chosen few fractured images presented as 1st? can you see through their illusion going underground can
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the palmer sanchez? i've been doing news for 30 years and 2 languages all over the world here in the united states. i've interviewed for president's work, and 4 of the us is major television networks. i don't like what they do by the way, because i think new should be honest. and direct and impactful, and this is direct impact. the i want to start by showing you a picture of somebody who's probably not supposed to be front and center in the news, but suddenly is this is janet yellow. and so you're there for title is treasury secretary for the united states of america. as such, she doesn't really make foreign policy. but what she's supposed to, if a treasury secretaries and federal reserve chairs, which was her previous job,
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are supposed to stick to essentially accounting and economics. they usually shy away from engaging in politics, certainly world politics. but here she is sharing our personal opinion on the middle east. i think america stands behind israel's period. we stand with israel. america is also made clear, the israel, we're working very closely with the israel leaves that they have right to defend themselves. but wait, there's more, or he or she is now assuring the world that the us as plenty of it's a tax payers money to spend, will continue to do so by giving tens of billions of dollars of it to ukraine. will also giving tens of billions more to israel and whatever else it might need.
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i think the answer is absolutely america and certainly afford to stand with israel and to support this reels, military needs. and we also can, in most support ukraine in its struggle against russia, by the way, she's not alone. secretary of state anthony blanket is assuring as real as he has a ukraine. that when it comes to funding, quote, we got your back. that's what he's saying. we got your best plenty of money. don't worry that there's national security adviser takes all of us, who's also assuring his corporate media friends that he will put together a new weapons package for both israel and ukraine, which for starters, will be significantly more than the $2000000000.00 each that they've already
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guaranteed and not going to take the place of the o and be director who will present the requests that we send up at the present was very clear today that we will be making a request to the congress. and it will include a request for funding for support to israel. and he has also been equally clear that we are going to renew our request to the congress for a to ukraine. what exact form that all takes that will be worked out and presented by others, not by me. but the notion that we're going to go up and ask for is real aid and ask for ukraine aid. that's unequivocal. we are going to do that. and of course the kuta gra, there is the president himself mr. bye. i a fresh office visit to israel. mr. biden told reporters that he will now tie together his funding with to ukraine with the funding for israel. it it's, it's a kind of a to for right or may be better said if you want one from column a,
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you got to take one from column b. that's why the more i'm going to send to congress an urgent budget request to fund another dispatch. so security needs to support are critical partners, including israel and ukraine, is a smart investment is going to pay dividends for american security. for generations help us keep american troops out of harm's way. now if you're a us tax payer like i am and you're hearing this change during sound of a cash register going off in your head with all of these numbers. while your money is being spent on causes that have really nothing to do with you or your family, rest assured to are not alone. in fact, there are members of congress who are now asking some of the same questions that don't dress them from day one. there were pants. that's all right and their business is very good right now. borrowing money from china to send it to
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ukraine makes no sense. you know, who else starting to ask, you know, who else starting to worry about this money? money he thought was promised to him, but may now be going somewhere else towards the cause. the fears may trump is. yeah, ukraine president vladimir zalinski. it explains say press reports. why he was so eager to try and combine his cause with that of israel's and how did try to do that? well, by literally inviting himself to join the us delegation as they met with his really officials immediately after these almost attack. interesting move right. well, instead of being welcome though, he was kind of humiliated, that's how it was reported globally, by the way, that's not my word. it was reported that way in newspapers like india's induced on
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times, in fact, what prime minister benjamin netanyahu essentially told that you, granny and president, was thanks, but no thanks. that's on. yeah, those exact words as lensky were, quote, is not the right time. ouch. so here's what's going on. now that is the lens keys, obviously, sensing something about this situation while you are so social in the bottom administration, continue to promise ukraine, that their check is on the way history is telling a different story. as there are countless examples in u. s. foreign policy and kept promises when priorities just changed. and there's no bigger priority in u. s. foreign policy, by the way. then the state of israel americans need to remember it's not that is real needs america, america needs israel. israel is the front line of defense for the reigning regime
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and harris that want to hurt us and want to hurt our friends. and we need to be honest with the american people. and so well, us funding shift toward israel and the way from ukraine really to early to tell. but those closest to the situation seem to be feeling that it's all but uh, a forgone conclusion. at this point, and the person coming to that conclusion, by the way is this is going to maybe shock you maybe not. none other than the finance minister of ukraine himself, sir, he march and go in a moment of candor. has told reuters that as he sees it, the owners are tiring of ukraine. speaking of the international monetary fund and the world bank meetings and mark cash, morocco. merchant goes said that his country has been promised billions of dollars, but he's still waiting for it. and then he admitted the following. and now
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let's talk about the us congress. it's that an impasse specifically over spending. and in large measure, it's about the spend that's being sent to ukraine. and as you've been hearing during these arguments, many on the republican side of the aisle or calling the money that is not well spent, it's a problem that has in fact reached a fever pitch so much so that didn't. it's already costs the old speaker of the house, his job. it has sent the entire body. really just tell us. just tell us what was in the secret ukraine side deal. what commitments were made to print to president biden, to continue the spending of president barton in exchange for doing things for president biden. it is becoming increasingly clear through the speaker of the house already works for. and it's not the republican conference but
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there is an even bigger concern for ukraine is that you have to be you have to be something like me, someone is that gonna american insider to really appreciate it. but you have to understand the american spirit is a we americans are if nothing else, man, we are extremely sickles. and we fall in love and we fall out of love with the latest media fad. like nothing you've ever seen before. nbc, cnn fox news, they sell it and we buy it until they sell something else. and then we just move on to the next thing. whatever else they're selling. now, one day afghanistan is the worst place of the world and we've got to attack until it isn't. the rock has weapons of mass destruction. oops. maybe they don't. syria. yeah, been living. yeah. it's so confusing, right? how vietnam used to be the domino that would tip over lots of countries and make
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them all commies and to show the world today. vietnam's are trading partner. hello . funny how it works. right. and then there's a war on terror where. busy those people were all replaced by the next scene. the question for ukraine is in the physical world of us politics. the 20. busy 4 hour video cycle, the american voters who are simply used to moving on. how does it remain relevant? how does you claim remain relevant? and how does it avoid not being replaced or replaced by the next big thing? hey, by the way, i'd like to continue this conversation with you. what do you say we do it on twitter racks as it's now called. i think my handle rick sanchez, tv. rick sanchez, tv and i'll be looking for you there. okay. when we come back,
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why, if it has gotten even worse for those who want to continue to send funds to ukraine? i'll tell you the in this explain history to us. no, i promise i'm a choice. jamie post that is before you. so there's 2 more to keep going. as i mentioned, this is i've just deep requirements, not express here, submit item. so you may have met as a way can regards no problem. you have no open up in the front and then for the 5th . and if i know 4 will be street,
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the mention is pretty much push. i am perfectly bustle by for the french tourism over proof for those types of products that are coming out the learners. i'll figure it out later for sure. so the most of the triple just the phone to the it's almost the that the system, the good. what issues and you know, the hey, welcome back. i'm rick sanchez. 2 things have happened recently that have to be extremely concerning for ukrainian president the zalinski on top of some of the things we
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previously discussed. one is that twitter owner, eli mosque is expressing his very pointed disappointment with the ukranian counter offensive of sharing it. and he's going on to say that it, in fact, the us should already start having talks with russia to establish some kind of truce here. but even more concerning them, that probably is the fact that the us house of representatives, you know, the battle that's been going on for so long. well guess what? they finally have a new speaker, or a new leader in the house congress. his name is mike johnson, he's a conservative republican, and he's been expressing his disapproval of sending more funding to ukraine and started talking about this is march the boat out. he's in the international relations. he's also in a, a security atlas based in moscow. and he has a background in both defense,
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military and security. so he's running the perfect person to talk to about this. i want to start with this mark. so we got janet jo and comes out and she says lot, we've certainly got enough money to fund taiwan. and is real and ukraine and so it is anthony blue do uh, sorta is uh, jake sullivan. the prices are united states as we have plenty of money. don't worry about it. in fact, we're also going to do a package that involves taking care of sending funds to the border as well along with texas in the arizona. so i'll be right, plenty of money, no, nothing to worry about. to write sites or have a, it's always an honor to in a pleasure to be on the show. um, well, i mean, i guess that is a question that you really need to be asking directly to us taxpayers. right. the pentagon budget for last year was nearly a trillion dollars, right? not counting conflicts spending, which is it access. and by then has just asked for another $106000000000.00
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on top of that. this goes to fuel, you know, a whole host of military requirements, including a network of well over $800.00 military bases around the world. which is, you know, it's about 750 military bases more than anyone else has around the world. and most of those others are us allies. um, so what the us tax payers funding. it is primacy right there. a military primacy. the goal of the u. s. to not only have the most powerful military in the world, but to have a more powerful military then all of any potential
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rivals challengers or discontents at the same time. and it is interesting to say that i'm going to interrupt, you could you just made me think of something that's been kind of not yet me a little bit as an american living here in the great united states of america. the country that i'm very proud of it for many great things we have done lately. i have gotten the feeling that everything military and militaristic and more like is on the present. you cannot go to a sporting event without having to watch rockets, literally planes. you know, we're planes going above as part of the beginning of the game. you can't go to any of that anywhere without having soldiers come up with the fly, which, you know, then you have to salute the flag. and then, you know, saying that atlanta, which i'm fine with, obviously, but it just seems like there's 3 other sort everything being so military,
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you can't turn on the tv without seeing something that's joining to the military and defense and more. and then on top of all that, you just said that we're almost spending a trillion dollars the most ever, according to what the, by the administration just did. and yet every time you turn around, somebody's asking you for a donation for our soldiers, for the military, etc. it's kinda weird and i, i'm probably not the only one in this country who was noticing that, but it's not something you want to say publicly because then people are going to think you're not patriotic or. yeah i, i think is really uh you made it a good point. um, i think that on multiple levels, not just the military and the military spending itself, but the militarization of us society on, you know, everything from sporting events to a completely militarized police force across the country. uh to uh you
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know, uh, domestic intelligence services like the f b i and everything um are incredibly, uh. ready you know, militarized to a degree the, and i'll do you one more movies, the media, the cable loose shows the newspapers they, they carry on the drum beat of war. so that when suddenly whereas should we be sending money to country backs because we need the help of everybody's like, yeah, i guess so is that what we're supposed to do? sure. uh huh. but i mean, it's kind of like that's how they get it. cuz no one, no, i'm saying why no one's asking that question mark to when the us was launching a cruise missile strikes into syria. a few years ago, i remember there was a, a journalist anchor for one of the big 3. i can't remember or the moment,
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but he was on, you know imbedded with the forces on the ship and, and he was live and talking about how the site of a cruise missile was the most beautiful thing he has ever seen in his life. and i'm like, i mean, i'm x u. s. navy, and i don't know, i've seen a lot more beautiful things than chris, are going to take more of the cation of everything having to do. and i'm not against having a standing military. i'm not against using that military when necessary, but of 20 years in afghanistan to get absolutely nothing but make a whole lot of people rich saying we could say about a situation in iraq. and now the story we're getting that we have to just continue to give gabrielle what ever the hell it was? no matter what it is that we co got there back. oh, and we're still going to be pumping money to your grade and we're going to be bumping what it is i want after a while, it starts to sound pretty crazy,
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especially considering that most americans today, according to most studies, barely couldn't get by paycheck to paycheck. without going broke to yeah, i mean, where i have to wonder why having the american people demanded accountability from their politicians. we started 20 trillion dollars wasted on this fail fiasco where our politicians and our military lied to us continually about the state of the conflict for 20 years. i rack livia syria, where are we still have us occupation forces sitting on syria's oil and wheat fields? right? well, that's fine. okay, let's talk about that because that's an interesting point you raised in this one that i think we need to address and it has to do with really 2 things. are media, which is where we get all information, you know,
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the average working american good guy, go to galley, they, they put in their hours and come home, they get their beer, they sit in front of the tv and the going to watch. i don't know what sir sean hannity, who the hell knows some cable news channel or something and they're gonna expect that they're gonna be told the truth. and in fact, they're generally not what they're generally they're not those people were never question. what are military or what our government does in terms of military expansion is. and it's really interesting to because in the past we used to and then the 2nd part of this is politicians. they're supposed to protect us against this kind of spending, but they don't. why is it that those 2 entity seem like varying codes with whatever the heck the military industrial complex watch, which is more wars and more say, well, one of the, of, of course is the revolving door between the u. s. military complex. uh and uh, both the politicians and often even journalists, i mean there, there is that,
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you know, as lobby as there's a huge revolving door. but it's more than just personal interest because military industrial complex. this is the vehicle for in the ideology for an ideology of american exceptionalism, that demands us primacy and germany. and that goal is, seems to be pushed by the us media. i don't remember there's a reason why we call the media the 4th a state as if they are a 4th and an equal branch of government. how many press conferences have, have we seen where reporters asking questions of either the, you know, the state department, the white house press corps, the pentagon? bad during. why haven't you sent this weapon to you?
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great. not. not asking but badgering. why have a lot of the board did during the vietnam war, which got to go back fiasco right us? yes. right into and then and then out of. but there was a big, huge narrative change somewhere along the line. they just don't know if the media is capable of that type of descent that they eventually became capable of during the vietnam war today. as long as a guy at a military corporation, whether it's raytheon or anybody else, can put money in the pocket of these politicians. these politicians will be able to support wars because they're essentially accepting legal brides. and we're talking about hundreds of millions of dollars by himself got over a $100000000.00 to become the president of the united states. much of it from some
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of these corporations. so house and american m. i not to then doubt whether the reason he's really solely in support of ukraine has less to do with my needs. and my kids needs more with his needs to have a crash and how, how do you vote against northrop grumman and, and goldman sachs? i mean it's, it's impossible with the serious problem that we have us country right now though. i mean, it's, how do we mean, i'm an american and then i want this country to do. right. and i'm not saying i don't, we don't want to be involved. they'll generally from time to time, but it starts to look like it's just the front of the game. that's the problem. unfortunately, as long as the us dollar continues to be the global reserve currency, which is starting to rain but only slowly and the not a process that will happen then the us can keep printing more money and borrowing more money. and it's called, you know,
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a quantitative easing and they can continue spending these enormous military budgets. but i think that there's more than just personal interest. there is a broad bi partisan consensus on the goals of us for and in military policy. in pursuit of primacy and had gemini ben rhodes called this a norm s establishment that really decides us foreign policy mark your to like to talk to thank you, my friend. i enjoyed the conversation. thanks for having me, rick. it's always a pleasure. likewise. hey, before we go, i want to remind you of our mission. it's simple, really. what we want to do is trying the silo the world. we've got to stop living in these little boxes where we think only our information matters. and it's all we
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read are see troops don't live in boxes to this everywhere. and i'm actually interested, i'll be looking for you again right here where i hope to provide a direct impact the, [000:00:00;00]
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the, the beauty of a story needs both of them. the board as all right and use valves. originally, you spoke to the senior boy manual, not sure yet, but it's a general facility based in youth periods, which you like me to ski photos that are there any videos, industry to look at the article still bundle scheme at the who at the team site the goal with this we have looked at the new yeah, that was that said it was a mis leveled. the thing is as see assessment readiness from last year of experience of foot levels to say in nearest the blue bush and you said 90 percent of the time is happens if somebody's picked video to face because you have to just catch the senior
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the the al jerry, i moved here full central to implement the rulings of the un topcoat o'clock, garza as it contains the security council on the months of south africa, which brought the case to the hague. says how did these crimes have now been exposed to the walls and his crimes against the promised damien slaves? since october last year, the people of causa had been the victims of boardman and strikes from land c. as the international court of justice instructed us well to take the

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