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tv   Worlds Apart  RT  May 25, 2024 9:00pm-9:31pm EDT

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the, the, [000:00:00;00] the, [000:00:00;00] the, the welcome to world the part the most cultures have a long standing prohibition against floating at the no timely dash to give an offer sworn enemy and deep down the problem bishop serves the very important function of preserving a sense of share of humanity its limits to entrench hate, truth and pull arising differences the catastrophic depths of the range of
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president and his team in a helicopter crash elicited solemn condolences from watching the world except for the west. what values are being endorsed by this act of dancing on the grave? well, to discuss it, i'm now joined by mohammed moran day, a political analyst and a professor at the university of tough on the 1st of miranda is 3 to talk to your again, thank you. very much for being available. thank you very much for having me. now i know that you have worked with president rice, his family as an advisor, perhaps also as a friend. and i want to begin by expressing my condolences because i suppose it's not just the, not only a national laws, but also something that touches you personally. yes, i was it, it's very close. i met them. i met the president of the number of occasions and his wife on the few occasions as well. uh, the president was
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a very, very humble person, very polite, very friendly. and also when he would constantly be removed from one province to another, he would travel to each province at least once for a year and in the province, he would travel from one town to another. and usually he would focus on the more deprived areas and on people who have been left behind. so he is a particularly popular among the disenfranchised the working class. and we saw that in the funeral is the western media uh after he had passed away, what was bringing on people saying people in iran are celebrate team and uh i was on a on one media outlet, the b, b, c. and they brought the guess before me who were saying this, and then i said,
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well, let's wait for the funeral and we'll see. and after we saw millions of people on the streets of to around and millions of people on, on the streets of other cities where the funeral procession also went through the suddenly the western media went completely silent to home, almost completely silent while i left or not completely silent, been because in the 1st few days after his death, you know, there was a flurry of publications about his supposedly cruel nature and what a fact please. demise may have on the country. specifically whether or not they may lead to the downfall of the rhenium fav. i'm being a little bit suspicious here, but did you learn anything new about with your country and the miles from those reports? so we see this sort of nonsense coming from western media for years. anything that
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they say about iran is highly negative. it's been like that since i was a teenager. and so if i see anything that goes against the narrative, i would be surprised. present, re see if he was so the role and horrible. we wouldn't have witnessed these extraordinary the clouds into front millions of people. i was at the funeral and i couldn't stay very long because we simply couldn't move. we were stuck. and i was with my family and also my mother, an elderly mater. so the lady, so we had to leave. but you know, the, in the west, they create a particular narrative because it serves a purpose and they use the so called iranians, who works for western media or western institutions who will say what they want to hear. those people was, it was know that if they don't say what the, the, the american political establishment wants
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a year to lose their status to lose their job. so it's, um, it's a, it's a, it's something that we've been seeing for for decades now. and that's basically the reason why the western analyst and western politicians and western leaders only as miscalculate because their assumptions are wrong. and based upon those assumptions, they create policies and they fail. they may wonder why now are you just said that it's been happening for dykus, but i still think that the, it's a relatively more during scene because in the worst of the past, guns that account on use to go sign on to allow the warning sides to bury the dad and i thing to these day turning a funeral into a political around this consider the moral sin and most societies on most traditional societies. because there are things that are above, you know, political, the media in, or expediency. why do thing is lost on western patricians? like let's say you're a secretary of state anthony blanket mccoy. essential is sad when asked about this
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catastrophe that it was a good thing. i think it is another sign of the decline of the western empire as the empire collapses. the regime is of the last become more angry and more aggressive and increasingly irrational. we see that in does a in how they are open the supporting an ongoing genocide and day after day. they're trying to justify it and they meet these europeans and these uh, north american soup, constantly around to about human rights. and what is rights are we are allowing this ready to be re, seem to massacre women and girls 24 hours a day, or when it comes to ukraine. when everyone knows that the ukrainian regime is
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losing the war, they want to sacrifice more ukrainian young man, be simply because they want to current russia. so they're willing to destroy you praying to hurt russia, or they speak about ukrainian sovereignty. yet on the other hand, they poke china by supporting taiwan and they do it more blatantly than before. in the past. they were more subtle. they, they pretended to be the side that was a fighting by international law and human rights. but now the mask is off and i think this is a part of that. now, uh, if you allow me, i want to ask you one more question about dallas, because uh, as a war reporter in the past, i think that is actually a major issue. they attitude to thousands of on the rights foreign policy on the latest, the common, the by i'll send it blinking about the, you know, the catastrophe and being essentially a good thing. reminded me of his predecessor, hillary clinton,
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who was the last thing i've been use of 5 more margaret office. murder. i mean, and she, by the way, it was somebody who visited his own house roughly a year before that. so there's something about the western culture that i cannot quite a grasp. but i remember that even in the west, at least when i was standing there to dallas and used to be called the great equalizer because of how most people into connecting with our own mortality, the mortality of that loved ones, which is you know, a source of human empathy at the end of the day. do you think people like blink, can i even capable of a genuine empathic response? not only for that album is but even for the allies. no, not at all. this is the man who is doing his best to help is really resume. continue with this set us up and you, you make a good exam. you. your example of hillary clinton was very,
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very good. she went and said after we people saw the footage of uh like mr. da da. see the word or the tell him right or exactly. and then she said we came, we saw and he died and then she laughed in a very sinister rate. but now it's, i think, far worse than back then hillary clinton was more crude than most of the other major, major politicians at that time. but now it's become almost universal. and as you rightly point out, the language, the behavior is, has become really extreme in the west. so i think again, it's because they are their empire is on the con, the decline, it's rapidly declining, the declining, they see it following, and it just makes them more angry, more hostile and more full of hatred. and i think the best example is because, uh, the world is watching in shock, and it just doesn't stop and the west keeps giving the regime war weapons. and every morning when we wake up,
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we see new for ethic images. and when we go to bed at night, right before going like can we see these images we, we can't escape them. okay. now i'm going back to the catastrophe with the presidential helicopter. so you know, tragedies of the scale do happen. they are rare, but they do occur and they may be used for political or deal political purposes. i'm thinking here on the 2010 crash of the polish plane with president the left to chance get on board. and the allegations and political consequences for russia that it provoked. do you expect anything of this sort of based time around base crash being used for, you know, the interest of the local or global arrange 8 agents? well look, 1st will have to see what the investigation reveals. at the moment,
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the assumption is that it was an accident. there are reasons to believe that there was an accident. there was an old helicopter. he was not using a presidential helicopter, and it is an american helicopter which and you know that because of the sanctions, our airlines or aircraft. i have very great difficulty in finding spare parts. also, although when the helicopter took off, the weather suddenly changed and it entered the cloudy area, very cloudy, it was raining and there was a heavy fog amount to this phase with for us. so the circuit, the circumstantial evidence, uh for a website. well, let me rephrase that. the, the, there are questions that need to be answered, and there may be legitimate answers for those questions,
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but we'll have to wait and see. but at the assumption for now, i said it was most probably an accident, but we'll have to see now uh, speculating about the consequences. i think it's quite predictable, the most western observers, for now, folk as on the weather and all this, entering the periods, well, 10 volks treat proudest in iran, and i suppose your answer to that. would it be a resounding no, but simply because that's not the way the uranium system works. but still, the iranian political landscape is northward of competition. there are various factions, genius things, this sudden change in leadership may intensify, internal jocelyn for power among various doctors. you know, this is a very good question, a very good question in the west, on the one hand and you have these inconsistent narratives on the one have the right is this dictatorship where the leader makes all the decisions. and everyone
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else just does what he says, but on the other hand, as the present, now that the president's call, we've had this, all this competition going on. so these are contradictory, but then again, you have different as the, as the narrative goes, there is competition for power among these different factions in the west. that's called democracy. that's called debate. that's called civil society. but somehow, the same thing when it comes to a country like you run, it becomes more to send us. so there's a rap, it's a sort of rap for power. so all of these are contradictory, but the west western media will say them, oh, really? uh, almost simultaneously, but they don't recognize it. they don't recognize that none of these things fit together. logically speaking in a single narrative, without a doubt that we will have the constitution has the answers for all different cases
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than the 1980s. we lost the president due to an assassination by a terrace group that space in the west as we speak. and then we had election in accordance with the constitution and the president was rep for a place and we moved on. we will have a new president within weeks. the 1st vice president right now is assuming the rules of the, of the president in accordance with the constitution and iran will continue, okay, profess them are under, we have to take a very short break right now, but we will be back in just a few moments stay to the,
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the, the there's no end in sight over how you're going to continue to destroy. the error is the case for the med, most of the people. i tried to go to the gym, but i'm certainly not ready to fight russia. this is also absurd. this is the 3rd world lunacy re washington press for so the funder line likes to say we have the tools while we just start with stability and business deals to help me living on that. we have a very quick propaganda. you know a price here in your i think we don't know the aftermath any time that you're not allowed to ask questions, you should ask all of the questions. the more questions ask the better the answer is,
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will be the welcome back to world reports with mohammed and around the political analysts. then a professor at the university of tech, from professor mironda, as we started discussing before they break, the writing and political system has space and ample room for competition. but there's also a craving process to ensure that they had them be executive doesn't turn on the system itself, but the rather how the steering and developing it in that consider them careful manner. what's your sense of what the raining of society is yearning for now? what are the most pressing challenges or the most pressing expectations of the people? i think it's the economy to right now. there's a large degree of consensus on iranian foreign policy. present raises, biggest achievement, was rating the isolation that was imposed upon iran by the united states. he joined
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the shanghai cooperation organization on and he let us towards a great, a better relations with neighboring countries. he also, under his administration, we joined bricks, a band. he travelled extensively to latin america to africa, 2 countries across asia. so he was quite successful in breaking the siege that the americans impose upon the country and the economy is now growing . for the last 2 years we had pretty good growth for the 2. it was 4 and a half for over 4 percent. and over 6 percent this, this last year. so there have been success is of course, life is so difficult for you, ronnie is and it hasn't yet really reflected itself this growth in everyday life. but the country is moving, i think in the right direction. but the key issue for ordinary iranians right now
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is the, the economy. and so i think the debates that we'll be seeing in the coming weeks and the discussions among the different political camps, they will be focus on the countries. um, because economic issues interesting while you're saying that the iranians, like most people around the world, i'm most concerned with daily bread and butter issues. almost every western tv report that i've seen on the president's races death mentioned him in relation to a stricter enforcer. enforcement don't be he job and chastity laws and i think it's a clearly the preferred political status on the westerners to try to validate the iran and it's easier for you and me to make a case for cultural and german here. but why do thing they choose this particular issue to type so much to around where women's representation in social life is
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among the highest in the muslim world. and they have many other muslim allies where, you know, women's dress code is enforced. my in the much more stricter and punishing way. i think a lot of it again has to do with oriental is um, and uh, this otherwise ation. and this sense of superiority that the west has. if you recall, when the, the war and ukraine began a present to attain was a, i think it was the wall street journal. they put up a picture of them. and they were saying that russia has gone back to its asian roots or something like that. and other words, the browser, so by the way, yes, but they, they try to depict it to their people as if somehow that of a being asian is, is barbaric and a sub human unless human it's, it's, this is quite rare. it was quite racist and it was quite extraordinary that it
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could be so open the public shoot. you couldn't do that that say in the united states about african americans anymore. but you can easily be done when it's an a ronnie in or it's a russian. so that's, that's, that's an easy way to demonize the other side. and, and also i think it has to do a lot with a history because it, whenever the west in the past tried to present itself as superior, it put it show it depicted the other side is inferior uh, before differing. but sometimes it during different periods of time for different the opposite reasons. so for example, the orient the say the muslims, in the 19th century early 19th century late 18th century were often depicted as backwards because they were accused of being more homosexual. but then nowadays, the orient is seen as more backward because there are seen is less accepting of
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almost sexuality or in the past that many africans, or i'm, or a native americans were detected as less sub civilized. because the moved the women direct had the cover themselves, a less than europeans and opinions were more civilized because they were more conservatively dressed. but nowadays, when it comes to this part of the world, iran would be riding into a less civilized because the women dress more in a more modest fashion. so it, a lot of this has to do with this hierarchy of civilizations and culture where all we use the wes comes as it stands at the top even though often to the values the to the passage of time reverse you recently before the united states by pursuing this policy of had germany occupation, cultural and economic colonialism is only making things more difficult for itself because it's no longer brings the desires,
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outcomes that need ally. and it's not only, you know, they suppose it and it means, but also the allies. do you think there's anything that may persuade washington to change? if not it's course of action, you know, let them stay a had your mind, but the police being the style of the style that they do it? no, unfortunately, i don't think that that is going to happen until something catastrophic happens until some sort of economic collapse takes place. or somehow the united states recognizes that it can no longer dominate the world. in the united states, we know can no longer dominate the world. this is not the united states of the 1950, these in sixties and seventies, where it was the global power the, the economy and the, the global economy was dominated by the us economy. relatively speaking, the united states as a much weaker country. that before many countries are on the rise now,
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and it's not just china, but there are many, there's made the breaks countries, almost all of them are moved. and then of course, the run is a one of those important countries that's, that's rapidly rising and being but the united states can't adjust to reality. washington is still in this bubble. they do see what's happening, but still they somehow wish to believe that they will. they will manage things and they will stay at the top. and what is the right thing for the united states to do is to look at the world realistic, realistically, and try to improve its relations with moran, with russia and others, and to end and to manage this evolving situation. but at the moment they kept, their arrogance won't let them do that. but it, when, when the time comes that i'm and i'm very confident that that will happen despite and a lot of blood being spelled probably being spilt until then when that catastrophe happens for the us economy,
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then i think people will force the regime to re things and baby, and hopefully we will have a more reasonable leadership in the united states. now, um you mentioned about, uh, you mentioned the blog being spelt and the are referred to the guys the issue a couple of times throughout this interview. the change in the uranium executive leadership comes to the as you know, at the time of hi contentions not only in gaza, but specifically there with israel pushing forth with it's a indiscriminate offense of do you expect any change and instead of the balance of power because whether you run does something or not, it is a powerful gravitating force. so just by being in the region is the fact many ways on the ground. so uh, are you expecting anything to change in terms of the original dynamics? i think it's already changed the, the west is on the decline and therefore it is,
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does rarely regime is on the decline because it is a, it is completely dependent upon the west. on the other hand, the regime has lost in gaza, causes a dot dot on the map when we look at the globe, yet the regime has been completely incapable of taking this dive after 8 months. on the other hand, on the border, which 11 on has will, has defeated it as well. they've been forced to withdraw the whole colonizer in the population. that is colonized that region away from the border and passed again after 78 months. they've been incapable of doing anything about it in the red sea, the united states in support of this revenue regime has fail completely against the the yeah, many armed forces and i'm sorry line, of course when you run it finally struck back at the regime. i think a run ship said that the equation has changed and after that, this way the regime has refrain from attacking iranian to in serious. so israel is
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on the decline, but even more important then it's military, the think is the fact that it has been it's, it's credibility and it's a major across the world. along with the class collected west that supported has been demolished across the world. and even within the west, so the balance of power has tilted away from the west and definitely does riley regime, which is now seen as weak, broken, and vulnerable. and again, the united states and the europeans do know this. they are leaders know this, but somehow they still live in this fantasy land that where they po for they believe this somehow they are superior, a civilization and culture where will emerge victorious. well then the saddest thing of all professor mironda is that the font is a lamb that they have reserved for themselves means a blog bass for the world, the now in gaza, but also in many other places. we will have to leave it there,
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but it's been great talking to you as always. thank you very much for your time. thank you very much for having me. and thank you for watching hope to see right down on a roll. the part of the, [000:00:00;00] the, [000:00:00;00] the,
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[000:00:00;00] the after the end of world war 2, great britain decided to make up for his losses with the merciless exploitation of its colonies. the plundering of the occupied territories. 8 my la, devastated as a result of decades long fighting extremely hard days in group. and in 1948, the colonial administration was forced to declare a state of emergency in response patriots. united seems to them a lay in people's liberation army and began a guerrilla war. london decided to suppress resistance, georgia and mass, the port agents executions of civilian n, sprain of chemicals, scale being, and cutting off at these were the barbaric methods. the british used trying to keep
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my la within their empire. the massacre in the village of baton gully, committed by the scots guards against the unarmed beds because that particular stirred, the entire male population became victims. trying to suppress the gorilla movement, the occupiers relocated 500000 people to concentration camps for roses through the board its fruit. the patriots were scattered. however, the british experienced the strength of the malay resistance to the full extent. the british army losses in the la, where the largest since the end of world war 2. in 1957, the british empire was forced to recognize malay independence. the resilience of them a late people put an end to the history of british colonialism in south east asia sense world war 2, united states as fostered extremist and to russian prejudices and hate trends among
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the ukrainian they ask for, and at least in canada, the united states and countries in eastern europe, probably everywhere in the world. it doesn't matter what these groups say or do it will support them if it is, the groups are causing hatred and chaos within the target country. joe again might done on the cheese, but it sounds great deal of the sort of you will as well as one of the middle. i

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