tv Redacted Tonight RT April 30, 2020 10:00pm-10:31pm EDT
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a large part of target whoever is there to prey upon whether that's manned or went . back to our economy. are a. hello and welcome to redact it's an idea i'm your host name we care of any you know well guys i won't go in for that really days of quarantine when we were like hey remember pants. well where's those. now we've seen every news anchors unshaven legs they're naked husband in the shower behind them and worse cuomo has gym shorts and it's not a drone and more. anyways we have
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a great show for you tonight lee camp sits down with b.j. pushout a journalist and an author of 30 books a political philosopher and be executive director of the tri continental institute for social research they talked about the failures of our government to deal with this crisis the demands workers should be making and much more than redacted correspondent natalie mcgill will talk about some mind blowing old news from medieval times the era the eatery then i will go into how big businesses are taking small business support good news for people who like breathing and how the virus is remaking the college process college education process but 1st let's go to that interview between we camp and v.j. the ship rashad thank you so much really there. i'm a big fan of your writing you wrote an excellent article recently in which you said during a pandemic the private sector austerity model has fallen apart we've seen such
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a tremendous collapse of the capitalist state institutions that are supposed to help people during a crisis the guidelines for what to do have been all over the place the medical gear is not available the hospitals are overwhelmed that the test still aren't widely available in the u.s. can you talk about why it is that our institutions have failed us so it thoroughly . see you. really. should by the budget or government how do you know what is still gallus legal austerity should actually be called auditors or the united states government since the financial crisis of 2008 has deeply cut into these areas the area of education and social safety which is why on the one side there was no preparation for the emergency on the other side you know you have
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a relatively hallucination driven political class just not science you know they don't actually have an understanding of reality it seems to me so right. that the world health organization they've led a group endemic donald trump and alex is expected 3 we're trying to convince the public that this is not a big deal this was right up to mike's 11 so when you had a hallucination driven political blast certainly not going to mobilize whatever the source of that was the mood and because of austerity there are very few indeed you would try to mobilize these resources of course they didn't they did nothing this ad only hence and now they're back. yeah it's a great way to describe it a whole use a nation driven class that that that political class not the ruling wealthy class you've said they are their world order is kind of crumbling the neo liberal world
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order is crumbling under corona shock can you explain. yes you know i mean it's 2 different things on the one side i think people the general public have come to understand that this austerity model has left populations otherly unprepared to deal with. endemic and there will be more up and it's a little bit more inward in the cities and if they're not a bit slow it's certainly not going to be for the next one unless you change things whether that link to this is you know the language of essential workers and the idea that medical workers nurses doctors or janet good ambulance drivers except censure is actually news to this because there's been at least 2 decades of the union busting against nurses against ambulance drivers and so on so i think there's a general understanding in the lack of resources lack of respect basic respect of
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these workers and when things are no longer an emergency will be remembered that i think that's a very important i believe that the memory of being in a crisis and seeing these essential workers must outlive the crisis itself linked to this of course was move seemed the biggest general strike global general strike which should now reveal to people that it's a liver that creates wear and not entrepreneurs and once you remove leave work in the billions from the economy everything collapses it's labor that creates well this is overvalued this is a. major work in the 19th century you have spent you spent time in many countries you also study many countries and written about them how is how is india dealt with this pandemic has it been different in different areas of the country. india is the mirror of its i mean the indian government has this sort of new nish are as the worst you know these kind of events and it
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has been. you mean it sent hundreds of millions of workers migrant workers on the road some of them to walk almost a 1000 miles it's ridiculous that mean but they have to be pockets where you see a completely different act in the indian state of get a little resistance in the southwest it's ruled by ionas lived there the government . best approach there was a lot of public action the state more or less resources exactly were moving under the tricon only institute for social research which you're the director of you put out a platform of 16 steps to confront this crisis i wanted to just talk about a few of them that you are said the the state must assume the cost of the wages during the korean teen the immediate socialization or nationalization of hospitals and medical centers so that they're now worrying about profits and the immediate international cooperation amongst them to find
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a vaccine easier testing and then the abolishment of intellectual property in the medical field can you talk especially about that one because that is something we hear nothing about on our corporate media airwaves. you see when a crisis in woods is governments come in with trillions of dollars of big money to bail out the private sector if you're building out of the private sector you know sensually it could be in the private sector why not just you know why would you build it out and then we drop it specially in that piece of the medical field and you know pharmaceuticals of presidents and you see pharmaceutical companies drugs where there is dissipated profit in other words for. the rich more than that this is just a limited capitalism that's what a promise or a little governments do they all stoop would go back to on their drugs and therefore the price of the drugs a very high i wonder if you look at this carefully but most of the research for raw
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. we headed back to is done with money in the united states the national suitable government didn't see this you know finance universe their primary research which resulted eventually in a drug back to did by a private company a private company doesn't dilute any benefit to the government for the kind of money that is used in developing that drug because of that essentially this happens or intellectual property rights but private companies it doesn't predict people we need to ask what critics people that should be the primary focus for humanity is what's best for the people who know what's best for profit yeah that's a great point that we're it's our tax dollars that fund the research and then they exploit it and. won't allow people to get access to it without spending our own
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money to get to buyback of the vaccine or the medicine we've created the platform also includes the suspension of the dollar as an international currency why is that important right now. we've seen what happens again in a crisis and you know crises ready or because they've demonstrated what's normal in a room all of this crisis began and it looked like they had you know generally. a lot of rich people around the planet played really nice and came to the us brought forward all those abandoning of. this creates a big problem around the world do you what's happened is because the united states dollar by and large is used to settle. outside the united states the u.s. government essentially ruined as much money as it wants without having to bear the cost of its leases you know essentially exporting inflation at their best and this
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is ited states government it's not good for the rest of the planet and you know we have a sort of international currency or the standard drawing rights we just use by the international monetary fund but since the i.m.f. international monetary fund is essentially controlled by the u.s. treasury department the i.m.f. cannot make the s.d.r. distended growing rights an international currency in fact they've just rejected an application by the government of venezuela to have access to its all standard or to grow rights which just sitting in washington d.c. so their own money they're not able to access this means we don't have the ability to have i don't see outside the dollar the dollar that having the dollars and us are going to suitable for the american government it's to go to wall street but it's not so good if you live in calcutta yeah but i'm glad you mentioned venezuela one of the other planks on the platform is to end the economic sanctions economic war on various countries and the u.s.
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is doing exactly the obvious and where we're amping i'm up we recently announced like a $15000000.00 i think bounty on president maduro has had a which is basically unheard of for a country or. ostensibly not at war with can you talk about venezuela and why the u.s. is so eager to attack it well you know just when the bennett was developing the un security or the un secretary-general and only we did it has made a very important point keep order for the global ceasefire he said nor was let's focus on dealing with this global pandemic well the united states has been at war with and it will it's not a conventional shooting war but it's what we call a hybrid war it's an inflammation or it's an economic war diplomatic well it's sort of what it is and so on why it is going to have to venezuela is an important it's not a recent issue this is goes back to the election rule which i was in 1990 and the
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opening of a cycle of governments across latin america that for essentially for their resources to be used for their own you know right up to china is going to be elected the head of addicts who are which is one of the worst lie just mining companies in canada the head of this company used to. call inch i was addicted to why this show is if he did it because he was going to prevent bad of gold for treating venezuela like it's old property he wanted to and it's really people who see him and his will as their sovereign property imagine that you kind of live in your own opposed this is a better word is concerned if you live in your old house during the day it yeah there's nothing more horrible to the corporate titans than the idea that a country might own its own resources and give the profits to their people. you know they get things are very grim right now for a lot of people a grim for workers grim for the environment grim for those of us who want peace
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where do you see hope in your in your work here you're studying so many of these issues and seeing this crisis unfold where do you see hope. well you know there was a great lebanese marxist by the name of the enemy who was assassinated in 1970 in one of his writings you know he lived in beirut lebanon or one of his writings about the devil wrote as long as you are resisting you have not been defeated and i actually think that's almost a talisman real resisting their call we have not been defeated therefore history isn't who you know it would like to tell us that we have an extremist the things you say are crazy or whatever but that has no bearing on me what suffering is such that our resistance is essentially in fact moral and the very fact that we're assisting means we're not being defeated it means you know we're all for the future
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we want to create the future and this cynicism is of no consequence to us it doesn't bother me or i agree and thank you so much i know you're always writing i think you have something like 30 bucks really you should work a little harder out there where work and people keep up with your writing where they should go do try going to the mental they are all very much book leave that when my next book comes out it's called washington blitz with a preface by evo morales oh yes it will come out of the lockdown ends and i'd like to come back and talk with you or washington bullets that sounds great thank you so much thanks arrests we have to go to a short break by your 2nd home looking for something to do check out my podcast alien or versity and check out the free r.t. america app at portable that t.v. slash down line we'll be right back.
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when almost chokes seemed wrong. but old rules just don't hold. any new world yet to shape out these days to come to educate and in games from an equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart we choose to look for common ground. you've heard me often speak of the black hole of debt that is where all the debt in the universe ends up after it leaves a central bank balance sheet and it's a cosmic force calling the g.d.p. of the world down on our t.v. white polo dead as i am
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a fellow straining with this white piece of cardboard the white for dead is on the other side of deep black hole of debt and in an era of negative interest rates and negative oil prices we have to colorize our concept oh the debt hole from black to white makes sense and of course not. pieces like a horse race groups like the morris own there are $200.00. trees or 200 participants in this earth and the question is which take me place so as to save more lives and companies because to matter of saving both. welcome back i mean we care about me the government set aside almost $600000000000.00 to help ailing small businesses but large and some troubled
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companies got bailout money in the small business loan program 10000000 dollars of small business money went to shake shack. shake shag you know that old neighborhood haunt created mr shape and his wife miss shaq i just love their original take on frozen crinkle cut fries the l.a. lakers one of the richest franchises in the n.b.a. received 4 point $6000000.00 of small business funds yet such a small business sometimes le bron james has to clean the stadium he's just so good at getting those hard to reach places treasury secretary stephen newton the leader of the program and robot annoyed by human existence responded to the confusion over who and what qualifies as a small business certain people on the p.p.p. may have not been clear in understanding the certification so we will give people the benefit of the doubt we're going to put enough a q. out to explain the certification finally and f.a.q.
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what are the questions like number one do you want to identify as a small business do you say like shake shack have about $6000.00 employees are a publicly traded franchise and with a $15000000.00 net profit and pay your c.e.o. $3800000.00 a year then no you're not a small business you might have low self-esteem but if you're a big business you really are belief in yourself after some serious backlash the l.a. lakers and shake shack pledge to return the money to the government so to 14 other publicly traded companies of which some have c.e.o. pay higher than their multi-million dollar relief packages now what's in the government's plan for all that money that went into the wrong hands while. they're going to ask we're. so so mr secretary are you going to request of those other countries obviously she was not alone in being
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a big company that got money in this region. you're going to ask them to return the money yeah yeah we're going to harvard to pay back the money. they should be taking harbor it's going to you have a number of them are going to be other things partner has a $40000000000.00 in down and i feel like they were just taking the money and make sure some businesses go under steve maneuver lay down the law if you pay back the loan right away you won't have liability to the s.b.a. and to treasury but there are severe consequences for people who don't test properly the certification there are severe consequences i don't know what they will be right now but they will be bad. and then he said oh no not this that big companies should apologize for taking small business loans now you go to your summer home in the hamptons with your mistress and you think
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about what you've done on that jet ski. a trump donor and multimillionaire monte bennett who own several hotel companies $1006100000.00 in their paycheck protection program loans and runs he said he given the money back the loans were originally intended for employers to continue to pay their workers when they're shut down that's why it was called the paycheck protection program and companies wouldn't have to pay the loans back of 75 percent of the loans were spent on employee payroll but monday isn't paying its staff partly because of the distribution of loans have been outsourced to big banks who collect fees for each loan they make but don't have to monitor whether the recipients used the money appropriately on monday when the fed injected another $300000000000.00 into the fund computers crashed but it's likely that money will go just as quickly but our nation's mechanical father stephen nugent admires the speed with which this program was
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carried out we launched a brand new program and incredibly short period of time and the fact that we ran out of money just goes to show the success of this among the applicants for loans from the small business administration stimulus is freedom works a conservative operation that advocates small government and made its name opposing bailouts. see they hate free money except when it's for them when it's for you that's dirty socialism now a story for people who like to breathe after many realize that high air pollution increase over 1000 death rates european cities would like to get rid of some cars even if they are fiat's milan is to introduce one of europe's most ambitious schemes reallocating street space from cars to cycling and walking in response to the crisis the city will turn 22 miles of road over to cyclists and pedestrians what is the tally and culture going to be like with scooters and i got. the
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pandemic has forced colleges to a vic their students and pull all operations on line but the problem is that students are still paying full price tuitions some students are now suing their schools including california state universities the lawsuits claimed it was unfair and unlawful for u.c. to keep fees to cover the cost of certain on campus services which are no longer available to students paying exorbitant amounts of tuition for learning ancient greek must have felt like a scam before but now paying thousands of dollars to log on to your colleges version of you tube must feel extra scammony if you want to learn animal husbandry through video staying home at your parents you want applying to college and now that creepy professor is extra creepy because he's not wearing pants people are starting to worry will anything be the same or will the only businesses that
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survive be the places that can afford to create its own patrons like this baseball club in taiwan that has cardboard cutouts of fans and that's all the insanity i have for you today we now go to redacted correspondent natalie mcgill with some mind blowing old news. unless you know of a peloton by a corps an indoor track in your house you may find it hard these days to get rigorous exercise without fear of catching the plague that's what might be hard to believe there was once a plague that actually increased your cardiovascular exercise. until your heart gave out. it was called the dancing plague also known as dancing mania a phenomenon in europe between the 14th and 17th century in which break outs of spontaneous dancing were spurred by just one person before afflicting thousands of
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europeans one of the 1st recorded occurrences of this literal boogie fever was in germany and 1374 when describing the scene in germany just this hacker author of the 888 book the black death and the dancing mania wrote they formed circles and in the end and appearing to have lost all control over their senses continued dancing regardless of the bystanders for hours together and while delirium until at last they fell to the ground in a state of exhaustion actually that sounds less like a plague and more like a bachelorette party in new orleans as silly as a dancing plague sounds it was a real health problem and unfortunately in the 17th century treatments were as medically sound as a game of operation played on an active fault line. but this lack of medical know how it was apparent during a notable july 1518 outbreak of dancing plague and strong which is now modern day
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france author and history professor john waller told the b.b.c. that in search of a solution authorities were convinced that the afflicted would only recover if they danced day and night basically it was turned into an episode of soul train except likely way less rhythm or court nation and if you're having trouble picturing this just remember that soul train minus rhythm and coordination equals most dancers on american bandstand. even though the dance mania started with one woman dancing in the middle of stronger the number of people who joined her group so much that by the end of august 1518 about 400 people had experienced the madness not until early september did the epidemic recede after many of their hearts literally stopped beating it works just as important as the strange compulsion to dance is
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the mass hysteria the fuel to give in the dancing plague and 1518 occurred during the prolonging period of famine and disease while the 1374 dancing playing coincided with another and much more infamous plague called the black death which killed up to 200000000 people according to waller it is much more likely for someone to enter a trance such as a never ending dance when your mental and physical health is under attack and here in america we've been known to embrace mass hysteria it's the reason why mccarthyism still exists today and why y2k panic convinced americans the stock up on top go on me because the world could end on january 1st 2000 and it also explains why we currently have thousands of people across the us who feel compelled to yell outside their state capital because they literally want to die for
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a decent man a cure and a night out at red lobster. but before coronavirus came along there was still plenty of widespread hunger and preventable diseases in our developed country to suggest that swamps of america should have been afflicted by the dancing place. oh no. oh no it's happening oh god also the library how every why is music playing. on a. reporter from a temporary discotheque. this is that even kill to redact it's night and that is the show thank you for joining us watch out for a brand new episode of redacted tonight tomorrow night check us out on you tube dot com slash for doctors night or the portable t.v. also you can check out my podcast fail university a podcast were comedians talk about academic subjects the best they can and no it's not a real university it is a scam but that's not unlike most universities right now thanks for tuning in good
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we go to work. straight home. 30 years ago the berlin wall fell the cold war had essentially come to an end the fall of this cold war symbol was heralded as a new spring of nations and the end of communism decades on what is the legacy of this historic event of the promises of 1909 been fulfilled. this is boom bust the one business show you can't afford to miss i'm french born in
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washington. following dismal numbers for u.s. economic growth europe has followed suit taking in major hit as they go over 19 outbreak continues to weigh heavy plus as we discuss the impact of the pandemic on different sectors how are sports fairing we do a deep dive on the subject of a packed show today so let's dive right in. and we lead the program with more concerning economic data out of europe the eurozone economy contracted by 3.8 percent for the 1st quarter of 2020 this marks the biggest drop in g.d.p. for the 1900 block since 1905 according to the european statistics office euro stat the e.u. economy had expanded by point one percent in the 4th quarter of 2019 and of course contraction is expected as the crow virus pandemic continues to wreak economic havoc but it should be noted that lock downs in the e.u. did not actually start until early march so you still have 2 months before those lockdowns took place.
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