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tv   The Peter Schmeichel Show  RT  July 4, 2018 1:30pm-2:01pm EDT

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so you. find t.v. you know you were in touch with him as a big fan of course you know people saying i have come to russia i would be coming to russia because they all be mad it's going to college just give you may have people really you know i think feeling from the laws in some cases an experience it can be farther from the truth was nothing else i mean a lot of people yes i mean during my time here in russia i managed to meet up with robbie i'll form also scientifically and as you correctly said to yourself and i went to that game between c.s.k. moscow and also in april and the same thing you know robbie was saying is that a fantastic time the major players have dominated the world of football for the last decade christian allowed the rival lineup message you can only accepts one song maps both some of saying we're going to be too old for the next world cup machine perhaps they couldn't perform as people expected portugal argentina failed to make it through the following rounds. and city and football yeah got married so that he's been in russia enjoying the world cup as perhaps everybody's noticed and
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seemingly catching the attention of those particularly on line. was a championship party's top managers marina's taking a break from looking into his crystal ball making those awful predictions he. but
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what about meeting somebody for all the future given them some of his words was that yes i would think it was a bit of cyclical feel it must in the last question if you do not. do not snip the knots years more said no more. but actually i know the police disabled that is still on a trust me my you be my commander much as you and i to be meeting your mothers and already putting your children to continue doing it all chilled which is true no. this is a more lenient. social problem with so so so you come on do you know what you just used to be here on the table in your bullshit so back to q e. you could play ever. be. ok so i was told that you are the good girl and. that you are the kids with weed
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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 with all my a pension but don't feel any pressure just feel happy and and free ok you will. go. one thing is. another thing if. you pass the ball to the right speed and control it buzzes readable if i control the ball here is one thing and then i need one more thought 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 immediately speed. the game so little seems little good makes the game much much
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better if you fit look for example to. use his name your version of if they look to him the first the first control the speed of the of the bus polish always going to. rhyme. positively surprised with what i see what i see in these little sessions and i hope the coach should be easy with me i also see in my in my players being professional players. they enjoy more of the period where they are playing in the periods where they have the
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practice but this is as important exercises that they can do outside the little little game what's your secret in achieving that much trophies the secret is what i was asking you to enjoy but at the same time if use if you want to reach a certain level. has to be a serious serious thing every minute of the day we're. working with my players i take it very very serious always of the smile always happy to do something that i really like to do but i always read to you the great cause and be the grit and be sure to have fun every minute throughout on the pitch take it seriously what's your favorite leading muchas tonight for if i answer to you are the the other ones to go away it is like when you want a father and you have more of them then ones. then one son which one is the
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favorite some. have a son and 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. on the for the academies i hold. with kids like you coaches like him with facilities like like that with the passion of the russian. people as for football with what the world cup can change in terms of that. of that mentality in a sea of. united states mexico kind of can be a target for the russian national team to to improve let's make a challenge and sometimes challenges all dreams they become reality one day
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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 got. to the last eight teams and sounds of course the wall has been on a roller coaster ride from the start all of that sort of out for some of the it seems to be a need for a bit of emotional support from that four legged friends. you
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can follow the rules and spills all the twenty eight other continues to some old song but all to dot com. it's the message of the stuff but it looks like the front fold look at the whole system said.
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donald trump will soon visit europe has a very busy agenda and it's unclear what kind of reception people get topping his i ten or where he will be trade relations nato and russia never before has an american president been expected with so much apprehension. hyperinflationary do loop is when the interest on the debt is greater than your taxes taxable base then you have to throw down all pretenses of quantitative easing and just admit you want monetizing debt such a bank is just printing and buying back its own. place then you get into what's called a banana republic named after countries that want america to but they're in the
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butt out of business without doing this monetization of their own. collapses or currencies as well argentina come to mind this is going to be contagious and going into america. again from the new center of moscow one caller brought with the other stories we're across this british counter-terror police investigating a major incident right now after the two people were left critically ill in hospital following was thought to have been exposure to an unknown substance the man and woman were found unconscious in the property about ten kilometers north of souls that's where the former russian double agent so i guess republicans daughter were poisoned exactly four months ago it's going to. take us through what's been established so far. well bear in mind it's
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a developing story and things are still pretty unclear but the latest is that according to sky sources a song whatever has affected the path has been sent to porton down that is the government bore a tree that identified the substance that was used on the script rouse four months ago as military grade agent it's just ten miles away from the village where the pair was found as you were saying but in another sign that this could be a very serious incident we've had a statement saying that the metropolitan police the counterterrorism police have now been drafted in to help the local police and will share with this investigation take a listen to what the met police had to say. as you would expect given the recent events in seoul's bre officers from the counterterrorism network are working jointly with colleagues from which to police regarding the incident in amesbury as well sure police have stated they are keeping an open mind as to the circumstances
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surrounding the incident and will update the public as soon as regularly as possible. although in a sign perhaps of the confusion surrounding this case at the moment the conflicting reports because a little bit earlier somebody from the will to police was talking to the b.b.c. and they said that there's no reason to think that any of this is in any way connected to the poisoning of the script pals back in march he told b.b.c. well sure that i haven't seen anything in this incident yet that i would consider to be an overreaction it all seems fairly textbook that came from the police and crime commission of wilcher but it is nevertheless quite peculiar and at least from one where we're looking at there are similarities in these two cases they contain many of the same elements the script files were found unconscious on a park bench in seoul's bre four months ago to this day and this new amesbury case
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involves a man and a woman in their forty's who were found unconscious at a residential address on saturday night they are now in a critical condition they're being treated. district hospital which is the very same hospital where the script files were treated they're receiving treatment for a six suspected exposure to an unknown substance and just like in the case of the script police have cordoned off the areas although both soles bre town and amesbury which is the village where they were found although none of that they haven't said that that's connected to the case but people are linking it to it and understandably all of this is a source of alarm for the local people who live in and around that village and insoles very well that the moment public health england says it doesn't believe there is any sort of significant health risk to anybody in the area or to the wider public although that advice is being continually reassessed and updated but it's
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a story that's gathering pace the mystery is intensifying as. these similarities between the two cases become more obvious the authorities say keeping an open mind of pains to save other colds but sunny very jittery all the same rubble star-crossed that any more developments will be right back with you for now they're probably in love and thanks paula. next up it is u.s. independence day and apparently a new low in american patriotism a poll by public opinion consultants gallup suggests a considerable shift in people who used to say they were extremely proud to be americans is kind of morbid explains the fourth of july american independence day a time for barbecue fireworks and celebrating the old stars and stripes.
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but is the 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 with donald trump playing up u.s. exceptionalism we're going to make america make america great again great again are you planning to celebrate the fourth of july this year actually i'll be working as i am sure it's every day comp by 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 i'm in that the other category am extremely proud and now we look so bad in court towards other countries who are looking towards us and saying that we look so separated now instead of being united i suppose it's
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about trump mainly really it's just just simply the president. what else i think again it centers on a political. level happening just faith in leadership to really come down to what i think deep down the numbers probably hire people may feel a grudge about certain political. you know swing's these days used to be that once 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 american spiel about the festivities mopp and r t new york. ecuador's issued an arrest warrant for the former president rafael correia it's requested that interpol extradite him from belgium where he's currently living craze accused of involvement in the kidnapping of former opposition lawmaker fernando boulder meanwhile bulger himself has been charged with orchestrating
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a full coup attempt in twenty ten correll was president of ecuador for a decade from twenty two thousand and seven and denies all the accusations against him even speaking exclusively with the former leader they cannot be defeated so they try to defeat us using the system they are invented whatever they want because they are controlling everything the media. seized in. exeter in order to. pursuit. especially. leftist leaders but in the case of myself on my. team there is no hope to have in order to have a fair process. cashel global news and welcome wrapped up this hour thanks for checking in with r.t. . the
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game is national camera. roughly once they showed some new play you for them. to. shoot your own cool videos during the world cup and someone with the broccoli staring at. me down more on string i don't roughly don't t.v. join me every thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports business i'm showbusiness i'll see that. when lawmakers manufacture consent to instant of public wealth. when the room in close is to protect themselves. when the final merry go round lifts only the one percent. we
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can all middle of the room say. the real news is. this is a poem bus broadcast around the world from washington d.c. i'm partial to thanks for joining us we appreciate you hanging out with us coming up today we focus on any policy around the planet we'll be joined by professor richard wolfe and our t. correspondent on your part and bill looks at a recent united nations report on poverty in the united states and some reactions at home and abroad plus the c.e.o. of strong market we're word which looks at the wealthiest and poorest nations around the world and argue correspondent trinny charges goes to fisher island
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florida of the wealthiest zip code in the u.s. for a special report part of it from i got plus r.t. correspondent dan cohen looks at the more on work at the poorer areas in the nation including right here in the nation's capital the belly of the beast washington d.c. all that straight ahead but first let's get to a few has what we seek to bring a global perspective to the issues we cover here boom bust so to get a real grasp on the problem of inequality we begin with a report from the library of the british house of commons which is analogous to the library of congress here in the u.s. on what our world will look like in twenty thirty if trends continue the report finds that the richest one percent of humanity is on track to control sixty four percent of the planet's capital and wealth by two thousand and thirty up from the current fifty percent and measured in dollars that one percent will increase their huge holdings from the current hundred forty trillion dollars to three hundred five trillion dollars the labor party's m.p. lam byrne who requested the survey told the u.k.
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guardian that absent major reforms global policy makers are quote risking a new explosion instability corruption and poverty on the other side of the proverbial koinange. twenty seventeen report from credit suisse found that people on the bottom fifty percent of the income scale on less than one percent of global wealth got that fifty percent of lower income folks on less than one percent o.-m. g. . turning back to the u.s. for more granular view of the problem the pew research center noted late last year that the so-called great recession of two thousand and seven to two thousand and nine further exacerbated inequality by race gender and income as one of most trusted analyst of demographics polling and policy in the united states using figures from the federal reserve they found that among americans poor and middle class the gap between white households wealth and black and hispanic households increased in the wake of the great recession and twenty sixteen white households in
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these brackets had four times the wealth of comparable african-american families and three times the wealth of hispanic households interestingly pew did find that among lower income household white families lost more wealth than their african-american and hispanic peers. reports about the poor are unfortunately not a new thing over the years we've seen a steady flow of papers studies and reports about the growing poverty in ited states and what seemed to many people some obscene numbers separating the rich and the poor the haves and have nots as we say with all of this information and data being delivered revealing the staggering level of poverty in the country we may need help to break it all down and put it into the proper perspective and in that regard we are fortunate and honored to have just such a person joining us now is
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a presser economics of merit to the university of massachusetts and her father richard will professor we're very pleased to have you join us again. thank you bob glad to be here so let's start with a benchmark i mean you teach classes and look at these sorts of things all the time as income inequality always existed in the u.s. the answer simply is yes it has our economic system and there's no nice way to say this our economic system capitalism is at least as efficient in reproducing poverty as it is in reproducing wealth it has tried over and over again to say that it is confronting the problem of poverty but if it's true that it did so it failed to solve the problem because here we are three hundred years into our history and we're still confronted with serious amounts of poverty and serious degrees of extreme poverty as the u.n.
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and others have been documented right up to this moment well there's another report out to professor it may go along with that but i want to get your take on it it's the united way the nonprofit organization they have a project called alice it's that action acronym but it's geared toward trying to quantify and describe the number of u.s. households that are are struggling financially and the result of that work indicates that more than fifty one million homes and there are actual people least one person in these homes cannot afford basic necessities like food aus and transportation and we have a total of about three hundred twenty five million people in the state so what do you make of the report and do you think that figure is accurate. there's no question that it's accurate it's been reinforced and validated by other comparable studies what's remarkable about the united way document is that it gets away from formal statistics of the government to really look at what a family's situation is it's not just do you have enough food this evening on the
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table but can you rely on next week and next month when your children go to school knowing that there's food that they'll be heat in the house when they come on to do their homework in other words are the basic qualities of life secure and adequate or not and for them to have discovered with no ax to grind that somewhere between a third and a half of the american people aren't secure in the most basic way is the most profound criticism of our economic system that i could imagine it's really disconcerting and we you know that's why i said there we're asking the question no they're not just homes are real people that live live there and you know bring it to a personal level we often hear about people and politicians tell these stories sometimes about how difficult the decisions are between choosing between you only have
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a certain amount of money in your paycheck between health care and housing or health care and food to eat and you know those are tough choices that all folks that are financially strapped have to make but when we consider the basic necessities like those things i was in food health care etc which of these has become so privily expensive for some that they're just increasingly inaccessible i think the key culprit among several is housing. the problem with housing is we allow that in this country to be a private profit making enterprise and to put it as simply as i know how the money to be made the profits to be made in building housing is building housing for the one percent the luxury apartments the luxury mansions the luxury condos and all the rest and that's where the money goes meaning that the mass housing for the mass of people isn't growing and so what happens is there's
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a scarcity not in the sense that we couldn't produce the housing but that we don't in a private profit driven economy with the result that the rents are going crazy and we believe in general that a family should never spend more than twenty to thirty percent of its income on housing because if it goes above that it starts eating into the minimal levels of everything else education transportation health care and so on and we have a reality in america that if you look at what's happened to housing particularly rental housing it has driven people into that precarious state that the united way discovered so much is being spent for housing that they literally cannot provide the basics in the case of a third to a half of our households of what's needed in a modern society like ours professor just got a little bit of time but let me ask you do you see any signs of hope for reversing
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this trend wage and income inequality. well as your report from the london. you know documentary library there shows no the trends we are stuck with now are trends that do not give us hope they are trends in which this system works to make the rich richer and everybody else a spectator of their wealth and that's why many of us are realizing we really have to change the system if we're going to deal with one of its worst outcomes which is this level of poverty after hundreds of years of seeing that it's a problem that needs to be solved i want to keep an eye on it we appreciate folks like you speaking out will try to do our part here a boom bust professor richard walter resurrected nomics america's interest in massachusetts and earth where your debts are currently for your time thank you.
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and we mention the united nations report with the professor the report looks at poverty in the united states r.t. correspondent on your heart bill looks not only at the report but at some of the reactions surrounding its recent release. for fifteen days in december two thousand and seventeen professor philip alston the un special rapid toran extreme poverty and human rights traveled to the united states in order to quote evaluate and report to the human rights council on the extent to which the government's policies and programs aimed at addressing extreme poverty are consistent with its human rights obligations his findings paint a dire picture of life in the us the report states that a staggering forty million americans live in poverty eighteen point five million in extreme poverty and a whopping five point three million americans toil under third world conditions characterized as absolute poverty of the thirty five member states in the
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organization for economic cooperation and development the report finds the united states has the highest youth unemployment rate and highest infant mortality rate among comparable countries the us also has one of the lowest voter registration levels in the o.e.c.d. the report reads quote its citizens live shorter and sicker lives compared to those living in all other ridge democracies a radical tropical diseases are increasingly prevalent and it has the world's highest incarceration rate and the highest obesity levels in the developed world professor alston's conclusions have drawn a harsh response from members of the trumpet ministration us ambassador to the un nikki haley wrote in a letter to senator bernie sanders of vermont quote it is patently ridiculous for the united nations to examine poverty in america the special repertoire wasted the un's time and resources deflecting attention from the world's worst human rights abusers and hostessing instead on the wealthiest and freest country.

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