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tv   News  RT  October 24, 2018 3:00am-3:31am EDT

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stories right here with. the importance of pushing on with. negotiate with. over the fate of wiki leaks founder julian assange. his country is to protect him.
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and it's fear. in the gulf of mexico fourteen years in the making could become the worst environmental disaster in america's history. plus four degrees and raining sky. the u.s. president has denounced the killing of saudi. riyadh to cover up the most quote the worst in history. and a very. original concept. it was carried out poorly and the cover up was one of the worst in the history of coverups whoever thought of that idea. i think is in big trouble and they should be. so words
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follow a parliamentary address by the turkish president in which he claimed to reveal the naked truth regarding the killing over the wall and said jihad be demoted in a vicious violent political manner and what he called a pre-planned operation carried out by the saudis he also said that all those responsible would be brought to justice. now the u.s. has announced it will revoke the visas of twenty one saudi citizens over the moda but no tougher measures have been tabled in the same speech condemning the cover up donald trump reiterated the importance of bilateral ties with riyadh. the cover up was one of the worst in the history of coverups. so he really has been a really great ally they said one of the biggest investors maybe the biggest investor in the country. they are doing hundreds of billions of dollars worth of investments and you know so many jobs so many. thousands and thousands of jobs
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they've been funding a lot of things what americans i think don't understand is that the relationship that we have with the saudis is based entirely on money they sell us oil we sell them weapons and we pretend that we're friends we pretend that we have a special relationship in fact we don't have a special relationship it's transactional nothing but transactional and then we choose to overlook their fundamentalism don't forget that fifteen of the nineteen nine eleven hijackers were saudis don't forget that saudi n.g.o.s and governmental organizations were implicated in the financing of the nine eleven attacks the saudis really are not our friends and we should not trust them in an operation like this with trump trying to keep his multibillion dollar deals with the saudis afloat of course in line with his america first mantra. takes a closer look at what's really behind this administration's current foreign policy agenda. donald trump can be called any number of things good bad it all
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depends on which side you're on interestedly enough though it's donald trump the keeps giving donald trump new titles a global this is a person that wants to float to do well frankly not caring about our country so it's you know what i am a nationalist ok. obvious if you think about it what with all this talk of greatness walls and how special exceptional. all americans are it's going to be only america first american people first american centers above all else. yeah now if i may mr president you seem to be confused about what those words mean it's right there in any dictionary globalism
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a national policy of treating the whole world as a proper sphere for political influence. globalist is someone who treats the entire world as a playground making national decisions which affect the international community in simple terms google ism is what mr trump tells south korea meaning outside america that they can't lift sanctions their own sanctions on north korea without his permission they won't do it without her approval they do nothing without her approval and by the way u.s. sanctions which basically force everyone to abide by them because of how the dollar works by definition a globalist venture you know what else is globalist war invading other countries the us currently fighting in seven wards that's really really globalist as well.
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the united states military is one of the most globalist organizations in the world it has bases in roughly every third country one in three nations has a u.s. military base. in it that isn't nationalism that's good lobel is i'm proud you just want to see them as well are great now that frankly could be toppled very quickly by the military regime change we're placing or helping replace governments you just don't like why arming local rebels to the teeth or financing the opposition by sanctions that's globalism glue lism suits terms purposes to talk about
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globalism is the enemy but if you look at the politics it's anything but nationalist in terms of attitude to the world as an individual is that he should have complete sovereignty and that includes sovereignty abuse the sovereignty of others you know he wants america to be able to go and do business wherever they want he wants to be able to remove regimes that he doesn't like he wants to act truly globally but in the national interest as donald trump himself conceived it he is a fun fact the word globalism its modern meaning was first used to describe us imperialism after the second world war the way the united states which wasn't destroyed by the war like europe dominated in international trade pushing its products its ideology its politics on every what it could they called it american globalism so hearing mr trump who believes in returning america back to its glory days say that he isn't
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a globalist is like hearing the pope say with a charade face that really he isn't catholic. i could also as it will no longer intervene on behalf of julian or son in talks with the u.k. over his exile status to the south american embassy in london the decision marks a departure from previous ecuadorian efforts to negotiate a way for a sandwich to leave the embassy without facing extradition charges. ecuador has no responsibility to take any further steps we are not mr assad his lawyers nor we representatives of the british government this is a matter to be resolved between songe and great britain. songes relations with the country have soured since the current government took office last year the founder of wiki leaks is now suing ecuador for allegedly violating its human rights that's after the embassy imposed house rules for the whistleblower as
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a condition for partial access to the internet of former ecuador and president rafael correa has called his country's handling of the case shameful. we gave asylum. yes he said over the age of it why don't overread to protect us you have to remember that no. science has. citizenship so he's not just this side now. these rules are really a shame you know don't try to him as they are you can take so. i think my point because they are. these rules are really against human rights and they're trying to isolate it as such to push him to abandon our embassy a son she has been holed up inside the embassy in london since twenty twelve when
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he was granted political asylum in the u.k. wants him for violating his parole terms the whistleblower fears london will extradite him to the u.s. if he steps outside of the embassy american lawmakers have meantime doubled down on efforts to have him extradited over espionage charges in a letter to ecuador's current leader lead in what i know they demanded be handed over to u.s. authorities otherwise they risk a possible diplomatic fallout. we're very concerned we join us songes continued presence at your embassy in london and he's receipt of ecuadorian citizenship last year it is clear the mr assad remains a dangerous criminal and a threat to global security and he should be brought to justice. we feel that it's very difficult for the united states to advance our bilateral relationship until mr assad just handed over to the proper earth or east they go to me he has to protect us that according to our constitution but unfortunately because of the behavior of
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this government it is absolutely cemented submitted to the american government that will be very difficult i think they want to turn over such an american government and they go to see this story now so in a positive. the sixth year of. equality and justice also you don't have to forget that he has a very important. united nations. tell. me that yes. that's already we have to admit that you have such. it's a fourteen year old oil spill in the gulf of mexico could be poised to become america's worst environmental disaster it was in two thousand and four when hurricane ivan slammed into florida's gulf coast so very damaging an offshore
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drilling operation just off louisiana however the company in charge managed to cover up the incident for a whole six years. thanks . flying over the gulf of mexico are research. gas and bubbling and i'm miles long. people are not the only ones who call the now polluted waters and for the indigenous animals there are countless birds and wildlife the stakes are high life or death time is rather.
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different since the true heroes and it was an explosion two people. instantly hit. and then the more it was released. in the. first the original incident. it was in the context. and the company and the american regulators managed to keep the entire. one of those no accidents which is going to. if you bought over the coup. with those menus it was a diary but more into the growth and up to being the same kind of wood as the roots and. back in twenty fifteen the company in question said that there was no evidence to suggest any ongoing leak or any significant environmental damage
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it hasn't given any thought or explanation since a journalist all over to kill again says that even a routine all oil spillage results in a horrifying volumes each and every year. the gulf is currently producing some something like twenty percent of america's oil there's rather a highly related accidents through a fast breaking news every few days and there is a. poised spin each week routines pollutants in the hundreds of times in the ground you know just through. this entire gulf coast these hundred industrial andes bound unique concern rudiments of modes a new series environmental impacts entire industries which are also tourism and fisheries and show finish this tens of thousands of miles of oil pipelines turned sixteen this entire region and if you put a public plan in and you were burned two hundred leaks. here on the program on the on our here at moscow a chaos in a rome as
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a champions league football matches followed by a brawl between fans and then escalate a collapse in the italian capital's metro station the story unfolding just a moment. i've been saying the numbers mean something they matter to us is over one trillion dollars in debt more than ten like howard bryant happy each day. eighty five percent of global wealth you longs to the ultra rich eight point six percent market saw thirty percent rise last year some with four hundred to five hundred three per
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second per second and that point rose to twenty thousand dollars. china's building two point one billion dollars a i industrial park but don't let the numbers overwhelm. the only number you need to remember is one. to miss the one and only. program here one r.t. talks with the russian president concluded a two day visit to moscow by u.s. national security advisor john bolton a high ranking official said the u.s. is still going to pull out of a key nuclear weapons treaty while playing down fears that it will spark an arms
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race despite the tensions between the two countries right now are the mood of the talks seem to be quite light hot. as far as i remember there was an eagle on the us national emblem and there off thirteen arrows in one foot and an olive branch with thirteen olives as a symbol of peaceful policy in the other my question is did your eagle eat all the olives and leave just the arrows but. i'm grateful for the opportunity to speak with you on behalf of president and hopefully i'll have some answers for you but i didn't bring any more although. that's what i thought. during the talks john bolton said the treaty was outdated and should be expanded to include china he accuse the russian side of violating its terms something denied by moscow which actually sees things the other way around accusing the us of minor violations russia says the treaty is still vital to international stability the historic treaty was signed back in one thousand nine hundred seventy between the venues
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soviet union and the united states under the agreement all shorter and middle range nuclear and conventional missiles are eliminated apart from those launched at sea investigative journalist david lindorff says withdrawing from this nuclear weapons treaty is far from a straightforward. but first thing let's say that it's not clear that the president has the authority to back out of a treaty that was passed by two thirds of the senate it's not like the iran deal that was never approved by the senate and it was just a presidential deal so that's going to be an interesting. fight i suspect among senators. the second thing is that what i heard bolton say at that press conference was that there was no consequences when the u.s. when the bush administration bush cheney administration pulled out of the a.b.m. treaty and in fact it was a huge consequence russia found maybe a a.b.m.
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missiles being put in remain and threatening it with the threat of a first strike that they might not be able to retaliate against and so russia responded as i read by developing the same person on a cruise missiles which are what has the u.s. upset so and so bolton destroying. the evenings champions league football match between a robot and sasco moscow was maad by an accident involving fans in a row metro station. incident happened just before the match collapsing escalator on the metro left some
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thirty people injured the mayor of rome has expressed sympathies to those affected the firefighter chief at the scene says the colts of the escalator my function is on. earth you must investigate this is a strange thing we need to fully understand what. causes are by looking at the c.c.t.v. recordings there is some pictures here you can see a breakdown and there there was undoubtedly a failure it seems that fans were jumping i don't know see the pictures. i reaffirm my sympathies for the injured to the russians have been injured and i think the police and firefighters who immediately acted to help these people also in a separate incident a brawl broke out between the head of the match with the police out and there was a lot of water cannon to disperse the crowds with more on the sports correspondent joined called in bray in the studio. it's a really bad night for c.s.k. moscow in rome this time not only their team lost three nil to as roma big defeat
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but also to very bad incidence for the fans first of all the fight outside the study only because stadium the roma stadium. there were reports that one of the c.s.k. moscow fans was stabbed two were severely injured in the fight over all the russian embassy in italy later denounced this information they denied the stabbing incident but acknowledged the fight i saw some videos on social media the water cannons had to be used by the police so the fight was pretty intense i have to say the last time these two teams met in the champions league was in twenty fourteen there was trouble then as well is there an indication that maybe the italian police were prepared for this it is really strange but it seems that they were not if we go back to twenty fourteen there was a major scuffle outside the stadium there was a major scuffle inside the stadium it all started when several c.s.k. moscow fans were stabbed by roma fans outside the stadium and then as a retaliation they instigated a massive fight inside the stands if you talk about the roma fans there preaching
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the notorious for this kind of stuff just earlier this year in april they went to liverpool to play a champions league semifinal and they injured several people including one fan who is still in a coma he still hasn't recovered and guess what there were no repercussions for all but i went to the return leg to rome for livable playing there and i saw a heavy police presence it seems that they were prepared for this kind of stuff this time they have a history with c.s.k. moscow and it seems that they were not adequately prepared they did stop the fight with water cannons but the fight still happened so you have to ask all the questions to the roman police. to come try to curry region in russia's far east is home to some of the world's most breathtaking natural wonders but also the one fearless dog is not afraid of striking up on usual french.
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have any more of your wednesday stories coming your way in about twenty five minutes or beacon join us there. drawn out of the flow for the best out of the children. to find
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says those preparing to perform i had actually prepared myself to die. no sorry trust with. a slow and homo stuff how do you know her cause. this country to us. via the goods. so we'll see of getting. if it was any good with us there was just not. more here to decommission. education a. very good job was.
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when else truths seemed wrong why don't we just don't hold. any new world yet to shape our disdain become educated and in detroit equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. prosecution will need to become almost. the fault is all. over you question the threat of fines or somebody number one perceived to i mean yeah yeah i mean political pressure on that god you. know through security jennifer knows where the kind of business models he was by american corporations doubt of wasing called police sold on good mental disease as you use the controls on the scene and
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the solution. lies up in association with the potato. i noted when he saw small dogs it is just simply his ability to maintain an investigative documentary. ghost war on oxy. zis kentucky the. lawyer says if you were going to agree. to. a co money he says he was going to snow coal mines left. jobs are going ok why is it said. that it was a lot of to these people the survivors of disappearing before their eyes.
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i remember thinking when i was younger that if anything ever happened to the coal mines here that it would become a ghost town but i never thought in a million years i would see that and it's happening it's happened. this is boom bust broadcasting around the world and covering the world of business and finance and the impact upon all of us i'm part children in washington and we're glad you're on board with us coming up today there is new data out from the organization for economic cooperation and development some of it troubling well it's more high all of it just standing by to discuss and there are new consumer credit porfiry just announced today molly barrows will join us to talk it over plus
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a massive food recall spread kaufman's offer a bet the farm will discuss the very latest and is take on what it means to all of us and while cryptocurrency is seem to be multiplying like rabbits how do financial regulators look at it and look at the new players around the world we'll be joined by new york was professor ron filler to tell us and later the car coach is back to talk chrysler awnings the e.u. . missions scandal and a way to avoid voiding your warranty lots on our plate let's go. we start with markets and volatility seems to be the name of the tune in china which saw the largest one day gain in the shanghai and chiens and composite index since november of two thousand and fifteen but the progress slowed some yesterday hong kong's hang seng also rose but is now down from last week as are other asian markets including the japanese nikkei down under down under a.s.x.
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in australia and sensex in india both down since last week the same down or tune at the french cac german dax you see n.t.'s sex in toronto and the cold kept in colombia a global aberration today with brazil's ibo best slightly up u.s. markets have been volatile they were down big time for most of the day are coming back close as the close one of the final numbers at the break but the dow and the s. and p. are more than seven percent below the all time highs of just a few weeks ago the s. and p. is having the worst month since november of get this twenty ten plus the tech heavy nasdaq is having the worst month since november of two thousand and eight. trade negotiators from the european union are meeting with their u.s. counterparts in washington today to discuss reducing technical barriers opening greenman on less difficult issues will lubricate later more difficult talks on
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automobiles but a clear mismatch of expectations on either side may frustrate all parties and only leave them further apart u.s. commerce secretary wilbur ross is leading the american team and last week tartly relayed president trump's demands for quick negotiations that produce tangible results e.u. trade officials have however seen progress on another front on friday the prime minister. singapore and the president of the european council attended the official signing of a new trade agreement between the e.u. and singapore. earlier today the european commission exercise for the first time its power to veto the italian budget proposed by the coalition government of prime minister good sepic conti the vice president of the european commission told the media quote today for the first time the commission is obliged to request a euro area country to revise its draft budgetary plan but we see no alternative.

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