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tv   Direct Impact  RT  August 7, 2024 7:30am-8:00am EDT

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with another punch you see china. okay. a month ago she was in beijing signing dozens of adults, humans on securing interest free loans. that is a huge beneficiary of china, is a belt and wrote initiative the royal global infrastructure project, which brings internet electricity rose, rails pool schools. i'm so much more to thousands of countries around the world today that chris received an estimated $7000000000.00, which other than denying american companies big contracts, is dangerous given funds. addresses. location overlooking the bay has been goal that has a right to view of them. the lack of straits, one of blogs ti trading routes. its neighbors include that on from india to bama, from malaysia to thailand. it is the link between south asia and the rest of the india pacific. a public pace, the se, a military base which room has at the us was gunning for on an item. the fund with
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us just wouldn't give up the. now if i say the total lease out st. martin's island throughout the country that will also be no problem for me to stay. and paula, i know that will not allow any act like harry now terrorist activities in any place or attacking anyone by using the land of my country. we believe in peace. we believe in peaceful cooperation, the west for one st. martin's island. they are doing everything to destabilize the current government. those who are friends of the united states did not need enemies some time ago. the us impose sanctions on bangladesh to keep it in check. this is not just harmful, it is part of their redeem change strategy. positive now for a good side. when victoria new lens comes visiting, she has a knack of leaving crews and her awake. now i'm not saying that what's going on in front of the dash as a clue. i'm just saying, look at the facts, and then ask yourself co know who benefits grades or how to get
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a feeling i'll say international coming your way next. rick sanchez has the latest episode, all direct impacts and with that, with more needs of the company the everybody. i'm rick sanchez. this is direct impact. and this is what we're going to be talking about. can't even go to thanksgiving dinner with our uncle because you end up in some weird fight that is unnecessary. these guys are just here. it is, you know, they're running for he. man, women haters club me. that's the word we're the word of the day is they say coming the harris cruz is that guy? that's governor. tim was about the state of minnesota to be her vice president who is easy and why did they pick them and why didn't they pick the other guy? we're going to tell you this direct impact on rec, sanchez. let's do this. okay,
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it's all about politics, right? there are 2 selections that we have to share with you today that give us some insight. this is important into the minds of the people in the united states who are in charge of beloved or more specifically the democratic party. first, the democrats have chosen, as we mentioned. busy a while ago, their vice president, that the winner is tim watts of minnesota. we're going to tell you why he has been picked as the counter measured to j d bands. and we're also going to be telling you who they didn't pick and why. but 1st, as we like to say, but 1st, let me tell you about another important selection. the billings for the upcoming democratic convention in chicago in 2 weeks are in and they seem to be telling us an awful lot about who is in charge over there at the democratic party handling
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this campaign. the 1st part of the convention tuesdays, you probably know this, right? it's usually where they put speakers that don't matter so much mayers of like different cities around the united states state legislators that no one's ever heard of the kind of people who don't matter as much because well, nobody's watching on tuesday. people don't stop, watch, start watching these things until later in the week. we'll get those big on tuesday . the president of the united states, joe biden. what does that tell you? wednesday, wednesday and thursday is when they start getting more people watching. and that is when the former president obama is kind of speaking so matters. right. ask yourself, who do i care about? who do they want to put out there? and who do they want to hide? right. uh at that same time, by the way, just so you know, in case you're going to be watching in 2 weeks, it's going to be, it's gonna be the 1st president button when they hope nobody's watching that it's going to be clinton and then it's going to be obama,
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and then it's going to be of course, vice president from minnesota. and then of course, at the end, the big speech from the candidate complet harris. that's the way they're planning it so far and it says a lot better. of course there's the other big selection that we have to tell you about today. as we mentioned, the pick for b, p is tim, lots of minnesota. he's credited and may have been chosen for. busy pulling off what is essentially a compass, giving somebody a name or a brand and having a stick. he's not, harris came up with that whole description that they're using now against new york, their opponents that uh, that is essentially this thing unless we do not like what is happen, what we can't even go to thanksgiving dinner with our uncle because you end up in some weird fight that is unnecessary and i nice thing bringing back people together . well, it's true, these guys are generators and it is, you know, they're running for he, man, women haters club or something. that's what they go at. that's not what people are interested in. we're nonsense and we presented
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your work every one will be the one where we saw so it's kind of like a, you know, it's, i call like mark or ruby, a little mark, a ride or colleague hillary clinton cook and hillary. it's like, come up with a name, you hope it sticks and it looks like in this case, this guy came up with something in stockton. now he's really be great. but maybe more importantly than who the democrats have picked in this case is who they didn't pick the big money donors, wall street and party a projects all wanted pennsylvania governor, josh shapiro. here's uh, shapiro. okay, so, but that, but there's a sense that shapiro would have caused division in the party because he called protesters who disagree with israel's mask or dogs of the k k k or compared them to him. he also called for clamping down on college campuses who allowed protests to take place, even when after ben and jerry's because apparently been in jerry's had an ice cream and had a position on the, the as really settlements. i'll be honest with you manila i, i thought that josh imperial was
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a show and i thought he was gonna take it. i was kind of surprised this morning when you of all people were the 1st one to call me and tell me, hey, guess what? they went with the guy from minnesota. what do you make of this? well, you know, my read on that is slightly different than yours, rick. i thought it was going to be a toss up between the walls and the junior senator out of arizona. astronaut, mark kelly. yeah. so the husband of gabby gifford because as, as people know, the, the northern states like minnesota, like michigan wisconsin, have all been kind of known as the blue wall and what's, what's left of it anyway. exactly. and in areas, arizona, arizona has shifted away from being squarely in the republican camp. you know, formerly a red state is kind of gone purple now, so i thought maybe they might be leaning towards a astronaut. might mark kelley. but you know, in this instance i get why they picked waltz speak waltz because, you know, he's,
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he's kinda noah. there's not nothing really remarkable about him. we're just wondering what is the video for jermel harris? what is, what is the best fit. c i mean, midwest is where you have a but you don't have an access. you don't say anything on land is you just get. 2 when you go to work every day, and that's what they're thinking with this guy, they'll be able to get pennsylvania, wisconsin, michigan, and ohio. i doubt it, they'll probably, they'll certainly deliver minnesota. the rest is you have to be seen. i want to stay on politics with them and i will because i want to talk about something we talked about this morning and something i'm going to be talking about with a special guest today. um, you know what is and we'll play a key role in this selection race. that's right, it's a race and it's about race. and when it comes to race in the, you know, in the united states, we're always just talking about one thing color. seriously, think about what i'm about to say here for a minute, because i want you to consider this. every country in the world celebrates the distinctions of its citizens. it's what makes them different. you know,
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different people have different nationalities, different people have different ancestors. different people have different races that among the races there are distinctions, even in the races. different people in different countries have different histories . those are all the great things about us, which makes of part of the humanity, right? and that is how almost every place in the world sees it except for us, except for the united states. here. the only thing that matters is color seriously . in the united states, there are 2 categories used by the media and in general, and most certainly in the way they cover politics. here in the united states, you're either white. yeah, that's a white guy, or you're a person of color. what does that mean? what color, who the hell knows? but that's the way you're classified. if you live in the united states, nowhere in the world, no one in the world did they do that. and here's how it works. if you're a white, anglo saxon european american, then you're white. you can be
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a dark guy from new jersey who's italian and then how i'd be darker than anybody. the matter. he's a white guy, no matter how dark and skin it's. you can also be a recent arrival from some european country like scotland or france. then you also can be considered a white guy, even though you're kind of immigrant to the united states. but if you're latin american, you're going to be a fucking faced argentinian, or born mexican. you are and will always be a color. pardon me, a person of color and not allowed to consider yourself. why? watch that says in spanish, but i'll translated the mexican means you can be why that was like, how can you be white and the mexican to give it all mexicans are like that. that's exactly what the mountain that video, by the way, and that sentiment popular in mexico, where they make fun of the fact that in america, no mexican is allowed to be considered white. no matter how white they are. however,
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here in america, mexican, americans have for generations been indoctrinated to believe that they actually are not white. so they call themselves and when they talk, they say, oh yeah, my friend over there, the white guy. so even though he looks like that guy, such as mexicans, by the way, here's an asian man correcting his son for bearing to think that he's why my son was born and raised in america. i remember a one day he came home to came home from school. that was when he was about 5 years old. he said to me, hit that. i learned american history, it today. it's a lot of squares. he said, not really a few bad from black people, so yeah, they're really messed with it in america has his that. yeah. and i'm so glad that i'm why the of the hold on you're not what you said the. what on my i said,
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your yellow yellow. it gets even more weird. you ready for this in america? they have even come up with a name for the original americans to separate them from the real americans. are you following me here? who, of course, the real americans are the white guys. that's right. well, met, the mexicans have to consider themselves to be brown. that's the color they've been given to use among themselves. asians have to, i guess, consider themselves yellow. how ridiculous is that so called original americans? are you ready there? read. they get the color red and they do have bought into it wants this native american woman referring to a reporter is a white lady. you know what white people you've had your voice here for 524 years, 524 years. you have been visible, white lady, you have been visible for 524 years. low cost asked your wife man comes and stepped
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up for you. if i take make, believe it right. they indoctrination how. how, how and why do you think this happened? how has the american body politic, especially the democrats and the media? how have they been able to convince us all. busy that we're all either white or a person of color and nothing else can be taken into consideration. why we accept to these terms, have given republicans haven't figured this out, or how to combat this jenny vance. the other day, they fell into this trap. he was asked about his wife and he was talking about trump comments. by the way, his wife is of indian descent. and he actually said, look it up. he said, well, my wife's not white, but i still love her. don't like, why would you say that that's crazy. the fact of the matter is uh, in an election year and we should consider how we think of these things. right? because the media can convince us that if we're an immigrant or a minority or your last name happens to be sanchez or rodriguez,
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then you have to consider yourself a person of color that identify for the most part with african americans. that you're not just classifying me, you're literally telling me how i have to think and eventually, you know what else they're doing. and especially this matters now. the telling you how to vote. all right, listen uh, by the way, manila, you know, you've got a lot to say about this, but you also are have invited a guest who's going to be joining us a by the way, you're welcome to stick around if you want to. uh for this conversation with him, tell me who this is. you were going to put them up on the screen. tell us who it is . it is a good friend of mine. his name is jason miles. he is a, an officer, a social commentator, a musician, a pod cast, or jason does it all. but he's a great observational writer about how race plays into the american
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social structure, the fabric of the us. and as you just go to, to about how eventually we're supposed to vote based on our color. and on top of that rec, not only are the we were on the color spectrum now based on our races. i think it's even funnier when you add in the food references, right. like like a, an asian person being yellow, you're a twinkie. sometimes you're yellow on the outside. white on the inside of your coconut, you're brown on the outside. white on the inside or an oreo fee or whatever your nearest res person. where do you fall? where are you supposed to vote someone like jason miles will break that down. yeah . hey victor, do me a favor. can we see jason barrier go. thank you, victor. a j said it, you don't have to say anything. yeah, we're going to take a break. we'll come back and that everyone's going to get to know what you think. and you're going to tell me, i'm either full of crap with what i just said or that maybe you agree with some of it. there's going to be a great conversation. unimportant conversation, by golly, will be right back of the
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take a fresh look around his life. kaleidoscopic isn't just a shifted reality distortion, by how of tired vision with no real opinions. fixtures designed to simplify will confuse really one say better wills. and is it just
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because it shows you few fractured images presented as 1st? can you see through their allusions, going underground? can the, hey, i'm rick sanchez, welcome back. i love this topic and i'm glad that we get to share it with you. because man, as people we are so complex and in america you're not allowed to be complex or talk about complexities. you're only. 2 to be either white or a person of color that makes no damn sense. and that's why we've invited this guest, who is the perfect guy to talk to about this. jason's written a book. it's called i was a teenage at our coast. it looks at whether people are genuinely resisting and it also talks about how people compromise their own values to be a part of the mainstream success. so it is kind of what we're talking about here as well. and by the way, but no,
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it's going to be joining us as well because she and jason have known each other and she's interviewed them in the past. this is my 1st time doing it, jason, what do you think a, let's start with just my general premise. why is it that we're the only country in the world where we are only really given 2 classifications to choose from? i find that crazy and frustrating. how about you? i mean, if it goes about latin america, especially countries that had large sugar plantations that have large black populations. uh, you can see something similar, right? like brazil, as uh, i believe, a larger black population there than we do in the united states. but what does that have to do with calling but, but what does that have to do with calling a person who just arrived in brazil last week from i don't know, nicaragua, and saying that he's a person of color. why? because of the name of the person of color, but they probably call them nicaraguan and there is color ism in latin america. and i wouldn't disagree with, with the framework or using i would,
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i would maybe expand and say there was a race reduction is framework that we use in this country that up use gates class. and that becomes a big problem because if all we see is just the color as you put it, me, then we don't see certain class contradictions. mm hm. um, so for example, in one of the clips you, you played of the tim waltz, the new vice president, when all you see is color, you can get this moment. like we got in 2016. if you remember when the bernie sanders was, was running. yeah. he was running on a platform that really encourage public goods governance kind of a returned to a new deal keynesian is them things like free college, medicare for all. these are the big ticket items in which she was running on. and these things would definitely help people of color, black people disproportionately, we would definitely benefit from these things. what need kept that 2016 race more
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than anything was the emergence of b, a land saying that he had no quote unquote black agenda. mm hm. but what was the black agenda? did he have to embrace something like reparations? and he wanted to have housing program. yeah. but you're not listen. i, there's nothing you're saying that i don't i agree with. but i'm talking more about just classification. what, what i'm trying to nail down and manila, you're welcome to join in here is, why is it that we don't describe somebody more? exactly? why can't you say he is a jamaican american? who has a dad who was from india? and by the way, he happens to be light skin. uh, now like, got a full understanding of who that person is. when you tell me, you know, i am a cuban i was born in cuba. my parents are my great grandparents. i'm
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a greater from spain, but when i check my dna, i'm mostly from athens, greece or something that tells you something about who i am to call me a person of color tells you nothing about me, nor does it say anything about you that you're a person of color, nor does it tell me anything when you call somebody a white guy. what does that mean? you see my point, let me, let me. i mean, you can project on to the real quick. okay. but i want to jump off based on what jason was saying about the reduction this part. and i think that's part of an imperial empire's way of divide and conquer. so if you do, if you call populations, you know, white or other and then you break down the other to the on nuanced brown person, yellow person, red person, what person? it's still unload a divide and conquer and when it comes to politics there's nothing easier to win a certain segment of the population and the matcher by them as so. so yeah, i think that's kind of what it is. yeah, i agree with you jason. what do you think?
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oh, i mean, definitely racial politics. i'm from california who's organizational politics is something that, that we see. there's also, i guess you can see there's benefits within it as well. um, we do have to kind of pull back for a little bit and see how these things actually work in real time. so for a state like california, once you finally start to have latin legislators, you start to get laws passed. that'd make it easier for people that might be and documented to become citizens and receive certain benefits and to be able to work the. so what a concept, the disagree, what a concept that having hispanic legislators in a state where the hispanics have been there for 900 years. what a concept that just 20 years ago they said, hey, you know what, let's have a hispanic congressman there. but my point is that what's interesting, i think about this is and here's what i think the motivation is. i think democrats know that they'll always be able to count on the black vote,
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and there's only so many black americans are only 11 percent of the population. so to grow that vote, they need to bring others to so called consider themselves to be part of the black box. so they need to match up the asians with the blacks and the hispanics with the blacks. and literally, i have this uh, this, this effort to create this new grouping. that's called people of color. i think that is something they have done and they have done it on purpose. call me crazy. yeah. but, but right. i don't know. it's only if you just think we also have to understand why can the democrats be able to contain the black vote the way they do, right, there has to be something that's paying off for black people in some capacity for that to work. or is it just be overt racism that you get out of the republican party? yeah, yeah. you know, i think it's like 88 percent of voting age black people in america as a democrat. and there's been about a 3 or 5 percent shift to the in the,
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in the years of trump. but it's not a massive shift. but, but are there other democrats delivering, if i, if we are, are they giving the african american vote other than what some people would call lip service, actually a sense of empowerment as they often promised they? well, i would say i would say god, no, but then again, when you look back at the year 2020, we call it. but george floyd summer, right. the nation exploded in protests for various reasons that we don't have time to get into. yeah, the, let's just say one of the main focuses was the funding, the police departments and social justice causes. well, what does the democratic party give you? they give, you can take law in kneeling, and then corporate america pays $50000000000.00 in, in, in, in race, in racial causes. but, but what really changes in america,
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especially when it comes to policing, especially we look at numbers for people getting killed by police. it hasn't really gone down since 2020, but we didn't have a but that's what he said. but that's a great example of exactly what i'm talking about. you're going off the, you're going off the reservation here by talking about the police. i under no, no, i get it and, but because there's point you correct. however, here's what makes this so dangerous that we're talking about this classification. it is so easy in the argument that you just presented to them separate americans by white and people of color. because if your wife, you're going to be with the police, no matter what they do. but if you're people of color, you're going to question whether the police, because you have an ad pulled you over once, and that's how it's yours. did they fill out a raise? you this guy, how you do this? and if you remember the ninety's when tough on crime laws were coming down. yeah. and 1912 hours the year we get the, the omnibus crime bill from current president job, i'm right combo a harris is
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a black woman that's coming up political age around that time. too, and the omnibus crime bill was not hated by a lot of the chattering class and black america. if anything it was looked at as a bit of a sad for the violence we were seeing, due to the drug trade and gang violence in major metropolitan areas. so the solution that a lot of people saw and even people like com la harris thought was that if we lock up these drug dealers for low read and 1991 and believe said, i don't care if the kid is 12 years old. lock them up for the rest of his life. now i don't know if ishmael read feels the same way 30 some years later, but, but we would look at him as a person on the left then and now. and that's the way he felt. but that's all right, but yeah, a lot of people's feelings when it comes to crime is locked these people up. i mean, look at where people, what, who are they planning to 2024. but who are they playing to win by and did that when
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by did that jason, he was playing to the quote unquote white guy vote. right. i mean, i would disagree and say he was playing to, um it was, it was a bipartisan consensus. yeah. but who was the, is a little different time. yeah, i mean, i live, i lived in that era, and i remember that suddenly i saw traditional democrats trying to act like they were all tough because they didn't want the republicans to at the time. right. but let their, by ronald reagan, to take away that vote from them also. they had already lost it in the south and they were afraid to lose it everywhere else. you wanted to say mental. i'm sorry that i'd stepped on you on the was like sweet. no, no sweet swinging the other way to jason's point about. com la harris in the ninety's versus comma harris circuit 2020 in the b o. m riot and now she's suddenly setting up, you know, these, the fun, the police accounts to get the people that torch court houses or federal buildings out of prison. right. so she's completely flip flopped in the other direction. and
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now she's trying to, you know, put on, she has no bonus cds internationally. i know she's supposed to as the p at this point, but she still doesn't have any, any of that right now at this point. and furthermore, to the, the point about knew was that we were, you know, talking about earlier with raise. the reason these politicians don't, don't, don't stop on the new watts is because then they will have to rule and make policy based on nuance. that means they will be held, their feet can be held to the fire. so it's easier to just say, well, black people care about this and asian people care about that. and let's say the edits especially easy what broad terms when it's especially easy when you've already classified them as such. so then they think they have to think that way because after all, i am a person of color or i am considered a white guy. so i fit into this agenda, they have given me so all i have to do is put my sued on. that's the point that i'm
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trying to make that i find frustrating and these times. but darn it, we're out of time. jason, you are a delightful guest. it's wonderful to be able to talk to you and sure i can we get you back when you want. let's go. another round can be yeah, we'll go to other around this time. we'll talk, we'll, we'll go vote more into the politics of it. thanks guys. thanks manila. see about it. the bank direct, that's our shell. remember, always look outside your own box. true. they don't live in the box. it's extensions . we'll be looking for you. next time the, the again, the middle east is gazing into the abyss. high level assassination. see the region going up, the escalation, the latter. we're faced with the question, who wants a greater war and which is the single country? because the,
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the prelude is almost $300.00 troops and thousands of vehicles and they found successful attack on the cusp region. outside of the russian army repels the entire, shouldn't have to wait for the tower trim it, intense overnight. tonsils on the double following molly's examples, liza now cuts off, typically not take ties with ukraine. evicted has a 10 minutes increase in west africa talk. yeah. well, especially during the south african genocide, paisley getting says, well in the international court of justice that to seen by local lawmakers as historic and georgia reveals that you did loans of it sends mercenaries to ukraine. the stunning accusation comes of the.

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