tv The Peter Schmeichel Show RT July 4, 2018 9:30am-10:01am EDT
9:30 am
brits to boycott russia's world cup so they have no one to blame except boris and it's a reason why you b.b.c. world b.b.c. breaking in bars johnson don't forgive russia for winning the rights to host twenty two world cup politics in football are two different things i'm sure england football fans are enjoying world cup in russia despite a bad publicize from. now when i was in moscow i managed to speak soon several england fans including. a prominent and influential blogger and you tube and he was saying he spoke to so many in the fans back home of furious because all their friends are here on whatsapp on instagram on snap chat showing how much of the time they're having now that those fans want to come and join they're finding the flights are a bit more expensive and it's hard to get tickets so there is quite a significant amount of anger at people from people who feel that they've been perhaps misled what they see is him on board was right when we met we will be at
9:31 am
the. game we reported from just a few months ago and that was the impression people had generally those asked the fans that would make it to moscow they said again i was up prince about coming here . world cup in russia again my wife my girl from my family are saying don't go and going to be colonies around with somebody and saying if we absolute carnage and they've got to tell you different russian in moscow at the time tell you different russian now and all the russian cities really no problem so now the problems again like we saw for example at the euros in masai in nice when we saw the mass writes by russian england by multiple other fans. tell you the vibe here in moscow here is a petersburg and the other ten other cities as well i can play the i think as well as in the progress they play sweden they have a very good chance of making it up at least to the semifinals now and i think i would expect there to be a lot more england fans now you know the cost will be an issue but i think it's a once in a lifetime so i think we'll be seeing more fans coming out but was coming home as the you know the key phrase we're going to use they also you saw sweden of course
9:32 am
qualify for the next stage here in st petersburg setting switzerland packin we spoke to loyal swiss fan derek and i know he's a full time olympic gold medalist in cross-country skiing he came here especially to see the game. there isn't the only one game yesterday. sweden against us recently and i'm a bit disappointed the streets let this out and i don't know man but let's hope for a good game said anyway enjoyed to be here it's also a very beautiful city yesterday the fraternity to do a little bit of sightseeing and watch to see there and. some other places and it's really really nice to be here scribe this football extravaganza so far has been on topic civil. and he's chief at nemesis long massey taking early exit they were going to say they were going to meet in the quarterfinals and they said they met in the airport but there you go both portugal and siena failed make you
9:33 am
9:34 am
always characters and always will be so if all the tournament has given us some pretty spectacular moments also some disappointment schools from the big names in football many are already on their way home looking to the future they want to use top pundit shows a marine you know went to meet some. botting football starts in the make. yes i would think that it's cyclical feel it must in the last question if you do not sneer at me or do you not snip the knots yes you must have known before. but i have said i know the police can do what disabled that is still on. my you be my command that much is true and i to be meeting your mother similarly when your children you continue doing it all chill so much assume. this is a more lenient the. social problem with so so so you come on do you what you just
9:35 am
used to be here on the table and you will cheat so back to q e two sweet you could replay of what you. mean you. will. follow ok so i was told that you are the good talent. that you are the kids with weed good but then so i come to give you a look your coach is ian i just failed sides i'm looking at you with all my attention but don't feel any pressure just feel happy and and free ok you will. go. one thing is. and another thing if. you pass the ball to the right speed and control it buzzes readable if i control the ball here
9:36 am
is one thing and then i need one more and i need one more so i can another thing is it passes me the ball and with my control. my control i can give the media the speed of the game so little seems little good parents. makes the game much much better look for example to. use his name us in the car if they look to him first the first control the speed of the bus polish always go to. my i'm. positive the surprise with what i see what i see in
9:37 am
these little sessions and the whole little should be easy for me i've also seen my team my players being professional players. they enjoy more of the period where they are playing in the period where they have the practice but he sees it as important exercises that they can do outside the little little game what's the secret in achieving that much trophies the secret is what i was asking you. to enjoy but at the same time if you say if you want to reach a certain level. has to be a serious serious thing every minute of the day when i am working with my players i take it very very serious always of this model always happy to do something that i really like to do but i always read to you the great schools and the grit and be
9:38 am
sure to have fun but every minute you are on the pitch take it seriously what's your favorite leading muchas tonight for your fight against the preview of the other one is the goal which is like when you've got a father and you have more than then ones then one son on these the. favorite son i have a son of the daughter i cannot say which one is my favorite. my favorite what's the difference in training russian players english players i think in the when the one of the secret sees the competitiveness of the league every quote has probably eighteen twenty twenty peaches like this one. only for the academies i hope. with kids like you coaches like him facilities like like that with the passion of the russian. people as for football with what the world cup can change in terms of
9:39 am
the. of the mentality in the world cup in united states mexico kind of can be a target for. the russian national team through to improve let's make a challenge and sometimes challenge is all dreams they become. reality one day so let's see in the next twelve years. i coach the russian national team and some of them they play for me they will. until i get. now thousands of taking pictures and videos during the wall top in russia documenting memories and starts it's a compile the best of them yeah it's my cats you clips from the last sixteen due to
9:40 am
9:41 am
9:42 am
glenn. glenn. glenn glenn. glenn . thank you next hour we're back with more live coverage for. petersburg beautiful follow the action. scene as it continues this sum up. and if the last might have been anything to go by the intrigue is just beginning. in about forty minutes or so so let's take a look at some of the news this wednesday and it's us independence day enjoy it if you're celebrating it apparently though a new low in american patrick his name is been observed
9:43 am
a poll by public opinion consultants gallup suggests a considerable shift in those who used to say they were extremely proud to be americans kill them open explains. the fourth of july american independence day time for barbecue fireworks and celebrating the old stars and stripes. but is it patriotic impulse dying among americans a new poll shows that not all americans are swelling with national pride the poll indicates that less than half of americans actually say that they're extremely proud of their country and that's what donald trump playing up us exceptionalism we're going to make america you make america great again great again are you planning to celebrate the fourth of july this year actually i'll be working. your
9:44 am
ass every day by it all came out this year and when asked if they were proud of their country extremely proud of their country only forty seven percent of americans said yes that's less than half what do you make of that poll. i saw that i don't. understand that i'm in the other category i am extremely proud and now we look so bad in court towards other countries who are looking towards us and think that we look so separated now instead of being united i suppose it's about trump mainly really it's just just simply the president. white house i think again it centers on a political. level happening. just faith and leadership to really come down to what i think deep down that number is probably higher but people may feel a grudge about certain political you know swings these days used to be that once
9:45 am
a year americans put aside their political differences and marched behind the american flag is one on independence day however this year it seems that partisan political differences are impacting our americans feel about the festivities mopp and archie new york. this morning ecuador's issued an arrest warrant for the country's former president rafael correia it's requested that interpol extra the former leader from belgium where in our lives is accused of involvement in the kidnapping of former oppositional micah fernando ball the main time boulder himself has been charged with orchestrating a foiled coup attempt i can twenty ten caray mayor cole was president of ecuador for a decade from two thousand and seven it must be said he denies the accusations against him more of a news dot com twenty four seven and of course as we funnel football as well this fourth of july is kevin any remorse you know of course we go but the guy simply this lovely day to talk about the football last night and wants to come down a nice or up to give you more of the flavor of this huge event in russia through
9:46 am
9:47 am
we're going underground after that knockout rusher twenty eighteen match in moscow with no u.k. government officials in attendance to support england against going to be a coming up of the show on the eve of the seventieth anniversary of the n.h.s. we ask someone who was fifteen years old when the labor government sent letters explaining that from that day on health care would be free for old bull because all of the knowledge has been on parliament's long term sustainability over the n.h.s. committee and we speak to any just doctor and author of how this mantle the n.h.s. in ten easy steps about his plan to stop the best pound for pound health service in the world being destroyed by me on liberalism well how does a soft shortage of one hundred thousand defector help service intensive can nurse jackie berry tells us what it's like on the front lines of the n.h.s. we're going to be reviewing the headlines on going underground looking at poverty
9:48 am
inequality the n.h.s. his seventieth birthday and pride in london this weekend all of the more coming up in today's going underground but first will this week's events in mexico marks the beginning of a truly independent north american nation as the usa today celebrates independence from the united kingdom as you can still do what many are calling you right. for this country should people. be so main event they never thought would take place the election of leftist populist candidate and grace money well. for someone who is so far continue to doubt obrador there is a leader at the vanguard of anti new liberal action subcomandante marcos of the zapatista our army fighting in the southeastern mountains of mexico here he is when asked by media to take his mask off.
9:49 am
president all trump who backs up government down time of course on nafta joined venezuelan and cuban leaders not to mention britain's german corbyn to congratulate obrador on his victory however like another leader depicted in mainstream media as leftist brazil's lula obrador appears capitalism for his campaign today a former cia asset michel to man leads the bee in bricks and lula is in jail after arguably not doing enough to fight the forces of reaction and conservatism here is now imprisoned lula brazil's most popular politician ahead of october's elections in a recording that surfaced this week. be quick if you don't put up a story that you'll see. you'll see. the figure of a possible that should go adequate but it's. between them still see only but unlike mexico brazil under luna could have been on the road to implementing universal
9:50 am
health care but like everywhere washington's i.m.f. and world bank touches it was a long way off britain's ultra efficient l.h.'s although the n.h.s. was arguably funded by empire exploitation under the one thousand nine hundred forty five labor government which included revenue gained from fighting wars like in malaya for rubber in ten the puter. in the hands of those who live. communism supported by exposure expresses itself by calculated crime. we have a better way first the. british lost in the malayan emergency when clement attlee his government dropped hundreds of thousands of bombs killing thousands to stop a communist government taking control of resources that would defacto help fund the national service spent here on the green outside parliament on the eve of the seventieth birthday everyone appears to be celebrating the national health service joining me is former tory shadow health minister lord mccall he was parliamentary private secretary to prime minister john major and a member of the long term sustainability of the n.h.s.
9:51 am
committee before it was shut down thanks for going underground again pleasure why was pleasure to come underground with him of course but why why was the long term sustainability committee for the n.h.s. unsustainable itself well it did its job and came to an end that's it and it depends what's going to happen to it but you didn't recommend twenty billion pounds in extra spending we did recommend more money but we didn't suggest. because we're not the professionals but we knew what was needed among our professional inventors. not an economist but it. will take us back then to luckily because of age fifteen when that letter started appearing in this letter boxes up and down the country health secretary saying that suddenly you get health care would be free what does that feel like what it sounded to me like
9:52 am
a good idea but the first really encounter i had with it was i was summoned by the school doctor who sat me down and said now look here i've got some news for you their chest is coming in this is going to be bad news why going to say that well i suppose he might have realised there was going. to be quite a lot of bureaucracy and picking and so on which of course there has he obviously did a lot of private work on the side arguably explain to you know our audience how the b.m.a. who obviously defend the n.h.s. these days how it came to pass that ahead of that day seventy years ago doctors going to want to be a may survey the time voted against the n.h.s. by your logic of ten to one yeah well it was something new a lot of people don't like new things and doctors i know yes but the doctors who don't like new things too but i'll tell you something fascinating that happened
9:53 am
shortly afterwards prime minister at calais who was a very shrewd guy got up in parliament and said we're going to bring in prescription charges not to raise money because he learned he raised ten million and the total budget them was four hundred million can you believe it no he said it's to discourage people from using the n.h.s. excessively an unnecessarily so he hit the nail on the head he realised what the problem was early on certain places where the thatcherite view or legislation to put it on prescription charges should be an on going to see the doctor even though it was only a shilling would have been something because it changes the relationship between the doctor and the patient good financial is it and penalizes the poor showing a time. called the great penalty. there is just some it's just the whole principle that if you pay for something you feel you are a bit in charge i think that's an important principle well your pussy
9:54 am
voted against the n.h.s. twenty one times between second and third reading take us back to what the conservative body thought of atlee and divans idea where they were very keen on van because he was a man who said who really hated half the british people which was. sure vindicating you're referring of course to better than saying your buddy lower than verb in for that shaft population and all vindicated for that no. no i mean today was i think a good prime minister it's a good thing. i was certainly supportive of what he was trying to do in many ways and seemed to be a good idea but the problem now is the problems are running into there's something called the bed occupancy ratio it's should be eighty percent it's running at ninety
9:55 am
five percent which is far too high and that has put a normal strain on nurses doctors and so on and of course it's that's when mistakes are made when you when the workload is too much. for tory shadow health minister lord a call there and while mainstream media blairites and jeremy coleman's labor party focus on n.h.s. funding is the real danger the creeping privatization that has been going on now for years joining me now is dr use of again he is a doctor and author of how to dismantle the n.h.s. in tell easy steps an updated version of his book is going to be out later in the year you said thanks for coming back on do you think that defenders of the national health service are falling into some kind of trap by merely calling for funding to match the sensitive g.d.p. numbers of our o.e.c.d. partners yeah absolutely i think we do we definitely have lack of funding that doesn't need to be increased but the fact that the debate even amongst the liberal media outlets amongst the b.b.c.
9:56 am
amongst the guardian has been contained just to talk about increasing funding completely misses the fundamental point which is that privatisation and the market experiment inside the n.h.s. has been a catastrophe and means that we are losing and siphoning billions and in fact tens of billions of pounds to outsourcing companies to pay. the private finance initiative to running a market system which is very expensive inside the n.h.s. so the first thing that really needs to be done is to restore the n.h.s. as a publicly provided in one system because we know from the u.k. we know from international data that is the most cost efficient way of providing health care so it's all very well to increase funding but you will end up just siphoning billions more and in fact that's exactly what teresa mayes plan in this package is well it's usually the right to what is a decode for the word reforms iraq's going for reforms funding in effect i'm going to tory ministers trying to reappropriate the language but i mean teresa mayes funding twenty billion funding package. comes with strings attached which means
9:57 am
that it is the funding will be used to help implement this new model of us style health care which is accountable or integrated well in fairness i mean head of the n.h.s. england simon stevens used to work at a controversial u.s. oil company united healthcare predictable that we should be going along towards an american style of health care absolutely i mean simon stevens as the n.h.s. chief executive of an interesting land is emblematic sadly of a much bigger problem here goes beyond the n.h.s. and extends to to the bigger issues of public services in our society which is that there's been a corporate capture of democracy through such strategies as the revolving door political donations corporate lobby and what we're seeing is that the top levels of the department of health and office in parliament with health secretaries health ministers we're also seeing at the top levels of energy as management there is a massive revolving door and started stephen's as you've mentioned was milburn and
9:58 am
tony blair's. the former health secretary defending the health service on the seventieth anniversary saying are wonderful it is well i'm in melbourne along with under obviously the blair era and to simon stevens and that whole team actually what they did was they expanded the limited market that existed in the ninety's into a much more extensive market. with by bringing in outsourcing of clinical services on a bigger scale public private partnerships appear for the most toxic disastrous legacy of that period so it's somewhat disingenuous i think of people like alan milburn to present themselves as defenders of the n.h.s. when in fact they have been responsible for privatisation and marketisation on a scale that perhaps even fashion never even dreamt of today that we have this strange little goatee system that everyone seems to be criticizing right now just finally about the reinstatement bill one of the drafters and. you're supporting it what would it actually mean well the reason that professor
9:59 am
allison pollock and colleague a barrister peter roderick have written this and it just reinstatement believe ported by the opposition leader jeremy corbyn the it is supported absolutely jeremy corbyn and john both coburn and john mcdonnell have signed up to this quite some time ago sadly we are seeing that the new labor elements in the party including the shadow health team and including many of the m.p.'s in the parliamentary labor party do not wish to support the world in interest rates and what it would tend to basically restore the n.h.s. to renationalise it to restore it as a publicly provided. funded and accountable system by repealing the health and social care act which was a privatization act back in two thousand and twelve in its entirety by removing outsourcing to private companies by removing the internal and in fact extensive market with all that zation to these private contractors. with outsourcing what you can obviously do is just wait for the contract to expire so that shouldn't particularly require any years and here. i agree with you there are complicated.
10:00 am
solutions and issues to be resolved but the most progressive solution that's been presented is to take the actual financial instrument at the heart of it into to take that back into public hands and that would help to then restructure or abolish that that the word a very dangerous point which is that we are seeing a situation now. whole chunks of the n.h.s. are basically being carved up to then potentially hand over ten to fifteen year multi-billion pound contracts for health and social care for whole regions in terms of u.s. corporations too so we've already seen a not to bring about this transition a contract nearly three million pounds has been handed over to the u.k. arm of a major u.s. health insurer sent in u.k. and to capitol to bring about this transition towards accountable care which is a u.s. health care concept used in medicaid which is their kind of threadbare safety net for the poorest people who can afford insurance there's certain.
42 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on