tv Direct Impact RT July 5, 2024 10:00pm-10:31pm EDT
10:00 pm
they think the bells name is the the, this is a daily show and we called no punches and we try to be different. and every day we hear. busy more and more of you are watching the show and you'll like it. thank you. here we go. troop bomb number one. a former white house adviser says us a gemini is real and it's aimed at russia to pump number 2. the economist describes what new us russian relations could have been. a trip bomb number 3, comparing us treatment of poland and russia, and asking why i'm rick sanchez. this is direct impact
10:01 pm
the so we find this conversation fascinating enough to share it with you and joining me to share it with you is of these 2 gentlemen. the gentleman that you see right there is a doctor of what are you a doctor of political science doctor of political science. thank you. wilmer leon also politic. busy analyst and commentator garland nixon gentlemen, thank you so much for being here. all right, so i am sure you guys both know jeffrey sachs, right? jeffrey sachs, award winning economist, etc, etc. it's really a smart, smart guy, very experienced, used to be invited all the time as an expert on cnn and nbc and other networks. you would see him there explaining things. he was also an advisor to many us presidents
10:02 pm
and others and government until recently, when they decided they did not like him anymore. and they didn't want you to hear what he has to say. so. busy want you to listen to his explanation of the relationship between russia and the united states. how it went south and why he thinks it could have been different. by the way. it's also an explanation of why he's no longer p goodbye there. not any of those shows. here we go. after the end of the soviet union, we thought, hey, we're pretty good. we're, we're the sole superpower. we're, we're, we're the most powerful country on the planet by fire. in a world history, we can do pretty much what we want and that it really was the view in both political parties. so it's not really a partisan thing. it is what we call a neo conservative thing. it was the idea that hey we,
10:03 pm
we can walk who we want when we want, whether it's saddam hussein or moammar gadhafi. we could stick it to the platinum or pull the that we are the united states of america. and a, we acted on that we had to remember cheney and rumsfeld in that crowd. well, we have them in both parties. we. we have victoria new when didn't in this administration who was out there helping to over throw a pro russian president of ukraine in 2014. and now she's the under secretary of state for political affairs. so we have these new kinds cool, se compromise. are you kidding? we're the united states. and since we think we're so powerful, well, we're and a half down. is that and that's great. syria, iraq, libya, ukraine. oh, so successful and i say are you shipping my whole life? i, you know, i was born a long time ago and 1954. i grew up in the vietnam war period,
10:04 pm
and it wasn't just vietnam. it was cambodia, louse vietnam. i went through the controls in nicaragua, i went through afghanistan and the 1st direct board, the 2nd arrived for the c i a operation to over throw bashar alo, side the, the nato operation to over throw america dopy. now it'd be, i, us roll and over throwing victory on a cove. it's the pro russian ukrainian president in 2014 this expansion of nato being tried right now. i just think to work more powerful. but is this really good for the united states is just really working? i and my answer is no, it's not working well. and most of all, when i said last year, look, the red line is, don't expand nato. and immediately the white house said,
10:05 pm
oh no one tells us what to do. least of all russia and i called the white house. and i said, you know, you should listen. do not put russia if do not put ukraine. get into this situation . you will make ukraine, the afghanistan of europe, and by that i mean a perpetual war. and leveling the cities in ukraine is we're watching right now. and millions of people without feet and electricity. when we say our winning come on, we're not winning. this is not the right way to behave. and he said this a while ago and there's so much to, to on there. and it's fascinating the thing that what he's basically saying is right after the soviet union came apart, we had an immense opportunity to be able to build something with the russian federation. and instead we decided, no, we have to continue to be enemies with them. and i mean, here's a guy who was an audit, here's a guy who was in these discussions as fast bending. and one of the major things,
10:06 pm
particularly what as a soviet union was collapsing, the united states saw itself more as a vulture. and that he could go in and just pick the financial opportunities off the corpse and of the soviet union. and the soviet union wound up the, with a, with a country called russia, and a president called vladimir putin, who decided i'm not going to allow you to come in here. just see us as a market, take advantage of our resources and steal our money. and when he decided to take that position, that contributed greatly to the shift in the perspective of the united states, where you make a garland of where he talks about how we did everything possible to create a, a conflict between russia and ukraine. well, um, i think what he's, what he's basically is talking about here is that the united states intentionally
10:07 pm
created this to maintain, had gemini, that this was, that all of these stories about supporting a democracy or, you know, helping out a country that's been attacked by a brutal dictator, next door cetera, that these are all lies that as the united states, as the big new brzezinski wrote in his book, the grand just board as the rand corporation, rodents, and the 2019 when they wrote a document, literally named on balancing russia. that this was a planned out action to a to, to go on like sabotage. yes. to go after a super power, which means it was doomed to fail. but russia, at the time of post, soviet union seemed to be saying, even according to some of the things that we're reading right now help us, we want to be like you, we want to try and be a free market economy. and if we, if you and you join forces with us, we can even combine our nuclear weapons. for example, let us join nato,
10:08 pm
for example. as we've heard on many occasions, why would you say no, we don't want you to be our friend. we really want you to be our enemy, no matter how much you want to be our friend. what a horrible unchristian thing to do. because the unipolar hedge of mine does not have friends. it has vassals, it and it, it doesn't even really have allies in, in the truest sense of ally. it has, it has vassals, it has victims. and because china was in the same position, china has we had reached out to the united states a number of times. let's cooperate on technology that's cooperate on 5 g technology . let's do this together. they have china has a win win strategy. the united states has a which, which with mine is mine and what yours is mine, and i'll take it by any means now. so sir, you know what i find interesting about this? do just facts. since i've been watching them, i used to watch them from time to time on the morning shows they would have them on . um morning, joe this morning and me guy or whatever those. what else people are?
10:09 pm
i mean, they're big it to hedge a monic. uh and uh, you know, as you know, because dad was a brand new brzezinski. mr. francisco was the clinton's uh, biggest uh, wor, hawk, and continue to be a war hoc until the rest of his life. i would interview him from time to time. i remember one time i had him on and he got really mad at me and walked off and the guys and see, and i'm more like what just happened because he walked up like, i guess i said something he didn't like or something. but it's, it's interesting to me and what i'm getting out here that i'd like to get your reaction to is how guy who like jeff sax, who once was allowed on television to maybe offer a perspective that i think americans need to here. and that our government sometimes is letting us down in terms of foreign policy. and that type of person, not only doesn't appear anymore, nobody likes him appears. they're not allowed on television. what the hell? well, during the period that they really felt they were in the unipolar moment, they didn't feel threatened by alternative narratives. they didn't feel threatened
10:10 pm
when people would poke a hole in the what do you mean by that? i mean, the, the ruling elite that you have, you know, the people who are running are government, who are running things they didn't feel threatened. that even if he said something, they didn't like, well, russia and china iran, none of these countries were strong enough to oppose them. so they didn't feel insecure. now that the narrative falling apart, that the american people are in opposition to vacate in their narratives are getting more and more brittle. they can't afford someone telling the truth. it's not that is a thing here is it's not that dr. sacks is so smart, which is, but he is not seeing anything that we don't all know. it's that he's honest in an, in an arena where that is not acceptable. and that's what so bother some because the other guy who i'm an immigrant to this country, but i love this country, i love everything about and i think we are still great people. i think our leaders are letting us down, but i think we are a great nation with a great concept and we are great people. and it's, it's, it's a real bummer to see
10:11 pm
a situation where i think we're making the world less safe for israel, for example. and for jews all over the world with our policies. now, i think we're making the world less safe for me, for my sons, for my grand daughter, because of our policy in places like your court, ukraine, and china. and, and that's the reason we give these different perspective that you don't get on the b c 's of the world. right? well, yes, and one of the other elements to why you don't see jeffrey sachs anymore is because social media and alternative media programs such as these are presenting a narrative and a reality that before folks weren't able to get to get access to war, it was much much more difficult for people to so at one point jeffrey sachs was kind of like the voice in the wilderness and now with social media and program such as this and program such as ours. yeah, we are validating him. he is validating us. and as we see play itself out right
10:12 pm
before the columbia, they have lost the war of the narrative. yeah. and that they cannot tolerate, they can't, they can't exist. you know, it's one of you say that because i checked the, i still do this back when i was an anchor on cnn. by the way, i had the highest rated show and see. and did you know that case? i used to watch you want seeing it. i'm going to tell you again, i have the highest it, but here's what, here's what's fascinating. when i had my best rating and cnn, which were the best, etc, and then on a good day, i would do 450000 viewers. 450000 viewers in a country of 350000000. it's actually not so good. the show is seen by hundreds of millions of people around the, around the world. so, and, you know, you guys are probably picked up by more people than watch cnn, or any of these local cable shows on any given day. and forget about it. if you're
10:13 pm
talking about joe rogan, he's reaching 9000000 a day, so that there is a new place for information yet. how do these guys at the sienna ends of the world stay in power? because they still get their money from people who advertise on their networks because not because they need to. raphael doesn't need to sell bonds to people who watch cnn. but you see raytheon commercials on see you then why? because the, the, the, the, the, the payment for the bombs comes from this $95000000000.00 bill that joe biden just signed with a brandy. it's a brand issue. it is also a way of convincing americans to that, sending that sending $60000000000.00 to ukraine makes sense. what their branding is moore's, their branding the concept, debit colonel ward. that's all we have to finish up because we got to go to a break. yeah, i think some of the other important part is this. if i'm paying your network x amount of millions of dollars a month, you're not going to say anything that i really don't like. so it's
10:14 pm
a way to control the narrative in the network itself. bingo. when we come back, realistically, jeff actually is something really interesting. so he says that you'll hear him say it himself. and he was very much involved after the soviet break up with 2 countries, poland and the russian federation. he says, when you compare it, in one case, we did one thing with poland. and in the case of russia, we did just the opposite. why? we'll talk about that. stay right there, the,
10:15 pm
to take a fresh look around as a life kaleidoscopic. isn't just a shifted reality distortion by power to division with no real opinions fixtures designed to simplify. it will confuse who really wants a better wills, and is it just as a chosen for you? fractured images presented to this, but can you see through their illusion going underground? can the
10:16 pm
the so we were discussing just a little while ago um about how both poland and russia were treated after the breakup of the soviet union. this is fascinating because when i heard this next comment that we're going to hear from jeff, fact, jeffrey sachs, the professor who is a one of the leading economists in the united states. i thought of myself. and i'll tell you why in a little while i thought of myself, when we come back after, what do you see after we hear what he has to say? here's professor jeffrey sachs again. i became an adviser to be held board the jobs economic team, and then i became an adviser to boris yeltsin economic team. and i knew
10:17 pm
really from keynes, by the way, that when the country that you're are trying to help is in really, really deep financial crisis. after all the whole system, it completely collapse. then that country needs some help to get back on its feet. and that was really my main message in 19901991. 1992 and i help pull wins get back on its feet economically and everything i recommended by the way, the, the white house adopted almost right away. and i said, oh god, good, you know they, they, they're listening to every word. and then i said the same thing about the soviet union with garbage of 0 sacks. are you crazy? we're not going out the soviet union, there are enemies. and then died when soviet union ended and
10:18 pm
a yeltsin is economic team asked me to help. i said the same thing about russia, again 0. i thought that's pretty weird because what i'm recommending for russia is exactly what i recommended for poland and it worked for poland and the white house support and what i recommended for for one. but in the same conditions, it doesn't do it for russia. 5 is a little now you've, i have to say because as an economist, i was making economic recommendations how to help. but i don't think the mood of rumsfeld and cheney and others in 1992 was the help. it was, hey, when they heard the social world superpower, we get to change everything right now. and then i waited for with clinton coming in . no real change. and then on and on, and i began to see that and, and understand better. quite frankly, i, you know, as you grow up in,
10:19 pm
in this because i've really worked all over the world and i quite extensively and well over a 100 countries i had visited good for most of the world and know most of the world leaders one way or another or many, many of them. and i came to understand that the us was a little bit on the hinged and the disasters of the vietnam war era, which i knew full well because i had marched in the streets against the vietnam war . and the water date and the other and the abuses, they've controlled wars and central america. and i also worked in central america in those years. those were not simply aberrations. those were, those were part of the design set. and i mean, you know, you become more sophisticated, you see a lot of lighting that you know is lying because as i, you know,
10:20 pm
have become much more every 20 years. i've been a senior advisor to the united nations on many things. i see a lot. i see a lot, you know, it's interesting. i'm joined by a girl and nixon doctor woman leon. thanks again gentlemen for being when i hear him. i remember i said at the beginning that i thought when i heard him say that i could relate to it. and here's what i mean by that. uh, as you guys to, i work at cnn. i work at fox, i worked at nbc, i worked at e, univision. i've worked at the i heart media radio and after working at all of those places and seeing a lot myself from the media side. i totally understand his point of view, where he said it's only gotten worse. and now i understand why we did what we did in nicaragua, as he says, and why we did what we did in el salvador. and it all came out of that moment when
10:21 pm
we had an opportunity to bring the world together after the fall of the soviet union. and yeah, we did it in poland, but when i told them, let's do it in, in the so, in russia they said, no, we don't want to help them. we don't want to help them. and that carried over to the satellite countries and everywhere else. i find it fascinating. one of the reasons why i think it worked in poland in didn't work in russia is because of a gentleman whose name we mentioned. i think a little earlier in the show. as a brand new brzezinski. mm hm. when you read the grand chest board, he is responsible to a great degree for the rest of the full big american foreign policy. and as he was because he was yeah, staunchly and. and as have been his acolytes the maryland. busy madeline albright is a acolyte of brzezinski. hillary clinton is an acolyte of madeline albright who's
10:22 pm
an acolyte of presume. how can you have a policy based on a, i'm hating a country and who doesn't mean that who is, who was credited with discovering brock obama brzezinski that columbia what obama was, was one of his students can echo lumber, a university. you think he's right? yeah. and so yeah, i'm going to do this to that again. i'm all right. i think that i'm going to read after the 95. this is this, this tells you the story after they pass the 95000000000 the other day. senator john tester tweeted vis. american foreign adversaries, like china, russia, and around what, nothing more than to take our place as the world's leading military and economic superpower. and today i voted with republicans and democrats to protect montana and our country and make sure that won't happen. he's telling the truth here, their true concern all along is not, you know, poland or russia, it's poll is not a threat. pulling will be a meal. they will do what we want and rush. it is
10:23 pm
a future meal. it's like a for code skewed it's got all of these things. they saw that as an opportunity to take rushes resources and that was all. and who, who was the, the congressman that said, are that ukraine's borders are, are boy ary connelly. eric bryan here in virginia and jerry connelly said the ukraine's borders are our borders. i saw it was sick that after they passed that measure, they all took out ukraine. why? of ukraine and israel. and i didn't see a single congress person in the united states of america waving the united states it. what's terrible about, how does that tell you? what is the other thing is this about that they call this supporting ukraine half a 1000000 minimum of a half a 1000000 ukrainian, some type of ukranian people are suffering in this way. let's face it. things are going well for israel right now with friends like that, who needs adversary if they are truly looking out for the best interest of ukraine
10:24 pm
and israel. they would negotiate diplomatic settlements to both of those, and then they would try to rebuild them. and so they could have a peaceful existence so clearly, and they're not looking at. and by the way, as i understand it, and i'm not sure how, you know, how much certitude they have in this uh, that they've apparently proposed. but the russian side has on several occasions that we're willing to sit down and they know they've been, they've been saying the company games been shipped to to be fair. well, well, i'm sure there is an element of gamesmanship in that. but the history sense to sense 2014 shows us that president food and has been saying, look at the medical chords. yeah. and he, and one of the things at that point and kept saying to bite was, all you gotta do is implement them in school chords. we've already negotiated this . all you have to do is implement, implement minutes, and then we find out from,
10:25 pm
from the form in german chancellor. helmut kohl. no, no, no, no. as a work order number for yeah. she said, oh, that was all the fraud from the, from the very beginning. when, when president met with bite and in geneva and said, i'm giving you my security demands in writing. i expect for you to respond to me and writing a she got ignored. so as well, they had to deal with this double final words. this'll change your think at some point you think we'll see a day when a jeffrey sachs is allowed back on tv. and when people in mainstream media will be able to hear messages like the ones that we share, which are certainly much more balanced, i think what we're going to have to see 1st is a political change and political real lines. but i think that's coming because the political parties now are so far as strange from their own constituents that there's going to be some variable foreign exchange. yes, both last and all throughout europe. thank you. good stuff. but great conversation
10:26 pm
. this really has been an important conversation and i'm glad we had of all people jeffrey sachs to help us with the a guy used to watch every day on one of the most liberal programs. that it states which i backed that and found interesting. i haven't watson quite a while. before we go, i want to remind you of something. it's our mission simple. we kind of want to be silo. the world stop living in these little boxes where we think everybody has to think like us troops of don't live in boxes and neither should we fabric. sanchez, that's what i say. anyway, this is direct impact and i'll be looking for you again. thanks again. the, [000:00:00;00]
10:27 pm
the magenta itself, the gaining independence and from the form of the ivory coast remained under the strong influence of its foam, immeasurable pro french president phoenix who saved one you ruined the country for 33 years, ensuring the interest to from the dead, the guaranteed event in a new house, including his foster, larry shifted that goods was douglas who saw him and no more appropriate after the death of a one year, a new lead to long combat ball came to power. and i'm ready to double open, for example. who knows where people across the was. it isn't good enough for me to one of the ones from some easily deemed good luck. boeing, enemy,
10:28 pm
a deep political crisis is huge. walk a, the country 2nd largest city, turned into a theater of war from 133. the other 2 voters of what this. how did the dramatic events unfold? and how is black a recovering from? he is a bloody conflict. watch on, let's see the policy. this is the case has been said, you didn't know it just to me. crane is the, the bus it. but in israel, god, so you did, the relationship of china is getting any person goes to the unit, name me a phone, close. the challenge where things go based on the deadline that they think the bills name is
10:29 pm
the the whole from the fi, you know, just like dozens of other ukrainian alms holes might have gone unnoticed. but the pirates contact a journalist to ensure this boils would go public. and so the name of the ship that home, the biggest shipment of arms became known all over the world. and we'll address this issue on somebody or the reset the tongue traced or send little grab the shows and you can host and load them the recipient. this helps the booger assume 1st the phone. yes. so what do you mean on the tape? because i'm going through my phone when i be a follow up into a new, a new yes. no problem with the put in motion like there was no us up the building and screwed up. mr. people visual because here phonics portion of it is not something on the square and that's the most new polish it. it's a little, i'm the production almost go i, it's
10:30 pm
a full chance and let's go out. it's not much real good. the stuff to be under control of them both create muscle and destruct total total for you the the vessels captain who remained in captivity for the longest period of time in the history of some of the piracy 133 days someone is live good and at any moment and do you cry and it'd been concealing the states involvement in the scale of smuggling, the whole time below. why skipped motion way and then was totally switch you so much. are you with that you had like bringing my extra effect at the because i was referring to the rest of the of the when you're just in your body, can you see that i send you that you put in your book got the little fence being used loudly come on, gretchen, simple, pull the compulsion below for and help us poses and use convers. please come,
9 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on