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tv   The Modus Operandi  RT  April 8, 2024 12:30am-1:00am EDT

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which burns all alive. the village of my lay, where he 1969 american soldiers killed 504 civilians. including 210 children, became a tragic symbol of this war. all and all. during the whole period of this conflict, the usa dropped on vietnam more than $6000000.00 tons of bonds, which is 2 and a half times as much as on germany during the 2nd world war. in 1973, the american army under the pressure of the rebels, withdrew from vietnam. and only 2 years later did the puppet regime inside on file . however, the vietnamese paid a high price for their freedom. more than 1000000 vietnamese people became the victims of american aggressors. the
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is already, those online laws can be started by law. these can be expanded by a true importance of we can never be of a station. so that transparency is an extraordinary drawn, mystic trees. then just succeeded in finding the documents that existed in making them available to the world public. i mean,
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what could be more holding back by publishing information and sharing information with the public. he was exercising the rights for a speech he did so in the public interest and watched us so long the allies and smith and golf and, and honestly, to relate to seriously, i know why advice may attempt to know who is the guy that illegal anymore wisely bought adjustments for to be on box weighing a 175 used to go through the sentence. are we going to let that stay? the look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings accept. we're such orders that conflict with the 1st law show you alignment of the patient. we should be very careful about our personal intelligence
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. the point obviously is to great trust, rather than the areas. i mean with artificial intelligence, we have somebody in the payment the robot most protects his phone existence was alexis the or hello, i'm manila chan. you are tuned into modus operandi. every year, thousands of christians in africa are slaughtered numbers unknown to much of the west due to a lack of media coverage. today we'll look into where this onslaught is most prevalent and why it's happening, seemingly unnoticed by the collective west to report, to be concerned about human rights abuses. all right,
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let's get into the m o the . it may come as a shock to you to hear this, but christianity in all its various sets, catholicism baptist, orthodox, and so on. christians are the most persecuted religious group in the world that according to washington d. c. think tank. the cato institute, citing the study conducted by open doors usa, which estimates that over 350000000 questions around the world faced some level of what they called significant persecution. some resulting in death in the 10s of thousands among those 2023 depths, whole village of christians in the central nigerian state of plateau, who had their whole town raised by a ledge, muslim extremist,
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for hundreds mass skirt on christmas eve churches burnt to the ground. homes sacked children, slaughtered in the arms of their mothers, and to this day nobody has been brought to justice. the new g m maybe now is the most dangerous country for christians seemed to nigeria, known as the giant of africa, is the constant biggest economy and largest democracy with a population projected to become the world's 3rd largest by 2050. it's also the world's largest mixed muslim christian nation. you know, julia, we have as a population, 20210000000 people. and i want to be precise, almost to 50 percent out across the us. and so please just pardon me, julia christians are going to guess a vibrant nigeria
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could serve as a growth engine for the whole ton of field. one would be a source of instability and violence. nigeria has been in the news lately because of the recent selection. the country is at an inflection point with over 60 percent of the population living in poverty was security crises, including kidnapping and terrorism. of multiply the i'm here in nigeria, one of the places it's most difficult, most dangerous to be a follower of jesus every year. thousands of people are killed for their faith. this is a camp of people who are remainders, people who been orphaned, people who've lost their fathers, their husbands, house resolution, 82 can make a difference. the u. s. government needs to make nigeria a country, a particular concern. it has been in the past, it should be now. there are thousands of christians who are going to be killed this
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here. we need to make a stand. joining us to discuss this disturbing trend of violence against christians is jason jones. jason is the president of the vulnerable people project. he's a film producer, author, and human rights worker. his new book, the greats campaign against the great reset, drops april 16th. jason, thanks for making time to talk with us. so 1st of jason, on the matter of the, the christmas mass occurs in nigeria. a 195 christians were slaughtered in the plateau state in central nigeria on christmas eve of 2023. by what they allege are fully militants. ok, but the european parliament is attributing this to climate change and avoiding using terms like genocide that you know my insight to many feelings. why is the international community afraid to touch on the the subject of religious persecution?
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yeah, well the international community is really good it condemning genocides that happened to generation ago, but tragically, they're very consistent and falling down in the face of genocides today. obviously in nigeria there's been a complete abandonment of the christians and nigeria. we saw the same thing in iraq and syria as the ancient crystal communities, the syrians and the cow, the ends were being wiped from the face of the earth by isis. whether you'd see we're suffering ethnic cleansing and genocide in the hands of isis. we just saw the armenians completely, completely cleanse from our sack, and there was not a blip on the world. and there's other silence from the world community, nothing changes. so this is something that's consistent. and so at the bottom of people project actually found the disorganization over 20 years ago because it was obvious that nation states only use human rights violations and religious
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persecution to further the ends of those states. and there is never been an authentic commitment to advocating for both people ethnic and religious communities as an end in themselves. and so that's something we seek to do with the vulnerable people project. and i have to say we consistently fail. we failed to wake the world up to what's happening in arts act to be armenian christians. we failed for 12 years, banging drums, trying to wake the world up to what was coming for the christians and use ease in iraq. and we failed there. and again and nigeria tragically 9 out of 10 christians in the world this year who are murdered will be murdered and nigeria. and it is very difficult to get the world to pay attention. and so across africa there is a rise in the carrying violence directed mostly at christians. if we stick with nigeria as an example, since 2009 according to the international society for civil liberties and rule of
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lawgroup, they estimate that some 40000 nigerians had been killed because of their face. this whole villages had been raised churches, schools burnt to the ground, get there is no media outcry, and seldom are the perpetrators ever brought to injustice. why the media silence? yeah, again, this is a consistent pattern that we've seen right now. there are hundreds of thousands of people displaced in sedan by the word, they're nothing again with the ethnic cleansing and art sac, nothing. so what we're seeing in nigeria is it's just consistent and the mainstream media fails to address human rights issues. i called the captive media and less in some way, benefits, powerful interest groups. and so that's one of the challenges that vps trying to convince powerful interest groups that advocating for vulnerable. i think your
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religious communities is in their interest. when you look at the christians and nigeria, you have the largest, the quote unquote democracy in africa. it will be the 3rd largest country in the world by 2050. it's evenly divided by christians and muslims, and it's also muslims, anatomist and others that suffer at the hands of these is one mystic stream is not just christians, but you know that the future of nigeria is the future of africa. and anyone who wants a peaceful, prosperous africa, should be fighting for a peaceful, prosperous, prosperous nigeria. but tragically, the plight of the christians and nigeria gets lost and he's very busy our media cycles that seem to be driven by powerful interests. and that's not just the idea or the confidence of africa either. according to the cato institute in a, in a 2022 paper that was citing open doors, usa, christianity is actually the world's most persecuted religion. despite media hype surrounding various other freights,
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they reported roughly 6000 christians were murdered that year, another 6000 were imprisoned, and then some 4000 more kidnapped. they say 5000 churches were destroyed. these are global numbers. what do you think is driving this rise in a tax on christians worldwide? well i, you know, i, is it arise and attacks and christians worldwide, or is this just a 2000 year history of the church? something that unique about christianity is that the christian is compelled to stand with the outside or it is the christian is compelled to stand for justice. the christian religion says that really, if we have an either were called to love the other or to emulate ourselves in the service of those who are being scape goat at or suffering abuse. so wherever there are christians, whenever there is political, one rast, wherever there is religious persecution, ethic persecution, a christian will be compelled to stand with them. and the great catholic,
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the french catholic, a anthropologist, renee gerard, said to stand with the scape goat is to become indistinguishable to the mob from the scape goat you're standing way. so christians or for 2000 years is separate persecution. so, um, yeah, staggering the numbers are staggering. as we see sort of world order beginning to disintegrate. christians will be compelled to stand with those who are suffering and abused. and when you stand with those who are suffering and abused, you yourself will face abuse. so as you say, you know, these are new events or incidents that are new to the christian community. very good point. all right, coming up next will examine christianity in america over the controversy of abortion rights. where it is the law, contravene religion. we'll discuss it when we return with jason jones to type them all will be right back. the
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take a fresh look around this life kaleidoscopic isn't just a shifted reality distortion by tell us to do vision with no real opinions. fixtures designed to simplify will confuse who really wants a better wills, and is it just as a chosen for you. fractured images, presented as 1st. can you see through their allusions, going underground can the, what is part of the blog post good. isn't the deepest you of us and that in the word part,
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is it something deeper, more complex might be present. let's stop without pages. that's spelled out of time. and i'm going to plan with you whatever you do. do not watch my new show. seriously. why? watch something that's so different little opinions that he won't get anywhere else . welcome to please or do you have the state department c, i a weapons, bankers, multi 1000000000 dollar corporations. choose your fax for you. go ahead. i changed and whatever you do, don't marshall state main street because i'm probably going to make you uncomfortable. my show is called stretching time, but again, you probably don't wanna watch it because it might just change the wayne state the welcome back to the m. o. i manila chant,
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jason jones is back to continue the conversation. thanks for sticking with us, jason. so let me ask you which groups of questions do you think are the most persecuted as is it, is it the catholics? is it protestants? orthodox? who? yeah, i think, well the catholic church, again is the largest church and the orthodox churches because 1st because they were churches in the islamic world, they weren't evangelize and they weren't spreading around the globe the way the western church was. and so the western church specifically catholicism, you will find catholic orders and catholic lay a past which like mine were a catholic, a possible it wherever there is persecution, a world. so i think you will find the catholic church is, is produced as the most monitors. probably don't you know, because we are the largest church and because with a church that is set the missionaries to the furthest reaches of the world, do you think of the great martyrs of the 20th century have st. maximillian,
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colby was a polish priest who had the largest newspaper in the world at the time of the german invasion opponent. it was an anti nazi newspaper. he died in a starvation bunker. you think of the great polish st to get in jersey puppy ask you a jesuit priest, who is the spiritual founder of the solidarity movement, who is beat to death by the caged being thrown into an icy river. so you know, the catholic church is the church that probably produces the most martyrs. and when you see martyrs and any and nigeria and other places most likely that they're going to be catholic to. what about in the so called secular west? do you think the growth of ac is um and secularism is posing a threat to the actual freedom of worship and in the so called free societies and and we see perhaps worse discrimination in the future. i mean for example, we have recently seen that the f b i was investigating under cover my do
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a catholic group in richmond, virginia. labeling them far right. extreme this. yeah, it is to be expected. you know, i always, as a catholic, i'm grateful when i heard these stories because that means catholics are doing a job. so um, you know, it's not really that there left his even so much is it there? progressive. i say that with the west is become post liberal, no longer believes in freedom of speech, freedom of speech, or expression, or religion. it's really the left in the, in the west is driven by an obsessive desire for progress and progress at the expense of human dignity progress at the expense of the bone ruble . so for example, you have port cap of children in the congo digging for coal. both for lithium batteries, so this, this does drive for progress. if you get the cost of human dignity. so
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is, is, will inevitably lead to christian persecution because as a christian, i am compelled to stand with the weaker. as a christian, i am compelled to stand with the catholic children, the christian children, the mazda and children, the adams children in the, in congo, who are working in the worst slave labor light conditions in, in and around a toxic waste, a toxic cobalt. um, so were compelled to stand with them as you get in the way of this relentless drive for progress. one can expect the persecution to expand on religious attacks in the us for us as we saw, you know, ro, overturn by scotto is many on the, the religious side. we're celebrating this on, on the grounds of their religious values. i mean, primarily christians. shortly thereafter, we saw some churches torched, a lot of intolerant language towards entire communities of faith. where do we draw
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the line here in the us between religious expression and the letter of the law to? well, there was a recent book that came out called legacy of life honoring the 50 zeros most responsible for the or overturning of roe vs wade. and i was honored in that book as one of the 50 people most responsible for the over training brokers with united states. and i was grateful for that. honor. i don't know if i earned it, but you know, the overturning of rovers has wage was essential for the salvation of this republic . because like slavery and segregation before it, abortion denied the only principle of unity that the united states has. so we're not united by ethnicity, we're not united by history. we're not united by religion. we're united around this declaration principle, this belief that is really fundamentally the christian vision of human person. we are united by this belief that every human being is endowed by god with inalienable rights in viable dignity. everyone understands that the biological beginning of the
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universe of the human person is virtualization, and that abortion destroys human person. and so what rovers is we really did is it undermines this republic and so the overturning of roe vs wade really. although in the short run, created some division a lot less division than i expected. it really turned out to be kind of and nothing burger despite the democrat parties obsession with the issue of abortion, and they're just driving away younger voters and minority voters with that. and i hope they continue doing that. but really, the overturning of rovers is wade was essential for the salvation of our republic. in the same way, there's a civil rights act was in the same way that the trash you, the civil war ending slavery in the long run was necessary for, for this republic. for the health of our republic to and while we're on the subject of, of the us and society's view on religion. can we, for a moment just examine this new, paradoxical shift here. because for the last 2 generations,
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it seemed americans were abandoning religion altogether. but some recent new pollings seems to indicate the youngest of gen z, and the new gen alpha are taking a noticeable swing and the other direction showing that face is actually on the rise among the youngest of the americans. how do we square that? yeah, it's really interesting. so jen z engine now far the most conservative is the most conservative generation in america since the 20s, which i think it's something that's quite interesting and you see this, this long for religion. so in the, in the united states we see this, we see this nihilistic oppose liberal left. and on the right we see sort of this card i called the cargo called the gnostic cargo cult, which you see in eastern europe and russia with guys like and dealt with times like alexander duke. and who try to cobble together like the remnants of what was left of russian culture in the wake of you know,
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a 770 years of to tell terry is i'm that sort of decimated civil society. there's you're seeing that now in the west where they sort of try to cobble together and build together. so sort of traditions this a thing for tradition. and so i think the real challenge for the church in the west is to not allow young people to be seduced by ideologies or enthusiasms, or gnosticism, or this great awakening that you see on the right. but rather to attract them to try to carry in traditional orthodox christianity. and i think what we're seeing with gen, san gen alpha is there look into it all there, look into it all as they look at the grade reset. as they look at global is, is they look at how pornography and ab dating is obliterated their bill. you experience arrows and the awakening of romantic love in a natural human way. they know they've been robbed, they're going to be a very angry generation. and so they're looking for answers and they know that neo
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liberalism are post, you know, the post liberal nihilistic left has nothing to offer them but lies on. so they're looking everywhere willy nilly. um, so i think it's the responsibility of the church to really clearly present orthodox christianity, epistatic historic christianity, the christianity that that and i believe as a christian of course is not only true, but knit together everything. true, beautiful and good in the civilization that we have. and so yeah, i think it's just an admirable that we're going to see a swing to the right. we don't want it to be a liberal nihilistic right. we want it to be a wholesome christian, humane conservatism. all right, i got to leave it right there. jason jones, president of the vulnerable people project, author of the new book, the great campaign against the great reset. thank you so much for your time. thank
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you for sharing your time, that it's important topics. all right, that's going to do it for this episode of modus operandi, to show that dig deep into foreign policy and current affairs. i'm your host manila . chad. thank you so much for tuning in. we'll see you again next time to figure out the m. o, the in 1492 this evening, christopher columbus rates, the bahamas, and discover as the new world for europe. the wealth of america, and its fast territories. cosby envy of the europeans,
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especially the spaniards and the portuguese. they sought after taking over these lands, however, there lived indigenous peoples with a high culture and their own nation. was there the barbaric colonization of america, which went down in history under the name of con deece that lasted for more than 100 years. in 1521 care design, cortez is kind of use with doors captured and destroyed the capital of the as tech empire. daniel practically massacring the local population. following them, francisco pizarro is gun case. the doors destroyed the inc. empire. as a result of spanish aggression, the ancient maya civilization collapse, suppressing the resistance of the indians. the invaders carried out mass executions . the horrendous genocide was aggravated by the diseases that the europeans had brought to america. the number of the indigenous population decreased 16 times from
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25 till one and a half 1000000 people on keystone became one of the largest demographic disaster fees of mankind and remains an indelible bloody stain in the history of the european colonial empires. as a result of why it was, can be started by line, please can be satisfied for the importance of we can name of the kind of a station. so that transparency is an extraordinary drawn mistake at trees. then just succeeded in finding the documents that existed in making them available to the world public. i mean, what could be more moving box by publishing information and sharing information with the public. he was exercising the rights for a speech he did so in the public interest. so mom realized pen smith and
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golf and, and honestly, to relate to seriously, i know why advice may assume that no one who is the guy that illegal anymore wisely. voltage us has to be on box weighing a 175 used to go through the sentence all. we're going to let that stay the hello and welcome to the cost of full. or here we discussed some real in the decades of the gaining independence and from the form of the ivory coast remained under the strong influence of his foam and metropolitan pro french president. felix, who said one year, ruled the country for 33 years, ensuring the interest the from the government dean isn't in the trunk.
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idea of withdraws most of its troops from gaza after months of invasion, but israel says it is simply gearing up for us all on the southern, most of the city of broad russia slammed the west for turning a blind eye to are you printing ins rows fried on this upper rosen nuclear power plant. they'll have to 3 people injure just a minute after and i a inspection and emergency services evacuating thousands of global from the flood cricket areas in the central rush and where water level keep rising due to a down break. the .

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