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tv   News  RT  November 21, 2020 2:00am-2:30am EST

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on election fraud lawsuits by republicans claims, nevada pushed native americans to vote in exchange for raffle the gift card, helping joe biden pick up the state logistical nightmare experts slam a major new coded vaccine for the u.s. warning its extreme requirement to always be held at minus 70 degrees is simply unrealistic. not to do the distribution. i don't see that coming together in a rational fashion. it could work out in a decent way. it doesn't appear that it is. parties correspondent becomes the 1st foreign journalist to cross as very front lines of the disputed karabakh region.
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after the peace deal with our media, we report on locals attempts to start rebuilding their lives. a very good morning to you. it's 10 am here in moscow and you're watching r.t. international with me. karen now, weeks before the u.s. state of nevada certifies its selection results. republicans have filed a number of lawsuits to halt the process, citing irregularities and voter fraud. one claim, alleges native american voters were swayed by gifts through improper outreach programs by politically biased organizers. mainstream media have called nevada for joe biden, by a way, for thin 33000 votes. there are around 60000 voting age, native americans in the state. republicans claim they were lured to vote democratic through a gift scheme by a left aligned nonprofit group,
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but the group denies any political leaning as artie's caleb maupin reports in nevada's tribal areas. voter participation was being encouraged by a nonprofit. 7 some very nice prizes were handed out in order to encourage people to vote in the 2028 presidential election. there were even 500 dollars gift cards. now the nevada native voting project said it had no agenda. it simply wanted to increase election participation. and because it did not seem to be partisan, the nevada indian commission, a state agency, had no problem getting involved on that of that indian commission. facebook page 6 posts offering gift cards of the a raffle share. in addition to that, the nevada indian commission offered its own prizes, raffling off 3 major pieces of art to those who voted. people may not be aware, but encouraging people to vote with rewards is illegal. whoever makes or offers to make an expenditure to any person either to vote or withhold his vote,
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or to vote for or against any candidate shall be fined under this title or imprisoned. but nobody got the memo. and in fact, a reno sparks, indian colony official was even filmed, handing out the loot. we have $25.00, i did 25 dollars gift cards to round off and a lot of money cashiers. the excuse is that this is simply a nonpartisan effort not aimed at helping any candidate or party. except there are indications to the contrary. nevada is a swing state, and nevada has over 60000, registered native american voters that could really make the difference in our state's them make, change it out here, get them biden. harris, campaign swag. as you can see, have mass, they have a t. shirt sign. i stick beers out kind the set hand sanitizer. all right guys, you have it there. he has them buy it and that he's for you to support it. and if
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they see to get out the vote, get to the polls and both parties. i think it's best the facebook page of the native voter project even shared a post from an ngo called the native organizers alliance. and that made clear that their an aim was to flip the electoral map from red to blue. not surprisingly, a lawsuit was filed by the nevada republican party. there was scheme set up to give voters something of value raffle tickets. t. shirts, other things like that if they would come in and vote something that violates federal law, something that violates nevada law. now the nevada native voter project says they didn't do anything wrong. they say that this was simply had nonpartisan effort to encourage voting. and furthermore, they point out that no member of their staff or any other volunteers ever attended any biden heris events. however, their statements did leave out those $500.00 gift cards. u.s. officials have actually condemned the government of venezuela for offering
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incentives to encourage voter participation. but in nevada, i guess it's ok. now keep in mind that native americans vote pretty consistently for the democratic party. it looks here like a state agency, was involved in a very targeted campaign to encourage vote participation from a constituency that leans a certain way. nothing reeks of clan transparent elections than handing out valuable freebies and prizes to encourage certain people to vote in america. at least, you know, we, we don't think that there would be any corruption in our government. and so you would assume that this would be nonparty, non-state, actor or organization that was just corrupted doing something wrong. so when we see things like in nevada, where you have the state authorities, you have a government authority participating in this scheme participating in these things that interfere with our election. that's what's been most troubling, i think for the american population, of course, and in other countries,
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people are used to governments that might be corrupt or to state officials that might be corrupt. and in america, we're finally starting to see that that has happened. that's the most troubling thing with nevada. nevertheless, joe biden is trying to ignore efforts to question his victory and is focusing on putting out messages of unity. but that's a flight to hate. many of his supporters want nothing to do with the 17000000 people who voted for trying no seriously. how do you deprogram 75000000 people? where do you start, fox, facebook. this is not your standard partisan policy disagreement. this is
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a conspiracy theory fueled belligerent death cult against reality. and basic decency. ringback 'd oh 0 82 years ago crystal nothing happened that led to genocide against
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a whole identity after 4 years of a modern day assault on those same values by donald trump. my pledge to be a president who seeks not to divide but unify. this is the time to be here on america. medical experts are voicing deep concern over the extreme transportation requirements of a major new coronavirus vaccine for the us finances applied for emergency authorization of its jump. but i'm lists question whether distributing it at the necessary minus 70 degrees is even realistic. but there reality is,
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there has never been a drug that requires storage at this temperature. it's a logistical nightmare for rural communities, but no one is immune to the challenges, distributing the facts, scene, photos for the medical industry, the whole infrastructure to do the distribution. i don't see that coming together in a rational fashion. it's capital. it could work out in a decent way. it doesn't appear that it is. i'm worried about that scene distribution going to the right people. and when it falls, i can't predict the numbers. but wow, it is a dysfunctional set of people right at the moment. well, a few companies even have the capacity to transport goods at minus 70 which is colder than the south pole. and in fact, many firms don't even have the facilities to do it at minus 20. and that so far from the only that majestical challenge expected, particularly in poor and remote areas. the vaccine also needs special. a deep
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freeze through case is which can be used for just 10 days. it also requires dry ice, which is a hazardous material. and few hospitals and pharmacies have a code phrase as yet the company behind the job remains confident. we have already produced more than 20000000 doses in our closets and to continue as your state produces more and more. this is why you said the baby had to leave here, which is how many weeks we expect you actually 50000000 doses that you can distribute to the world. we spoke to a senior clinical lecturer at britain's university of exeter medical school. he says it's important for different vaccines to be created across the world to provide choice. but it's very important to maintain what you would call the cold chain extremely important. otherwise, you are injecting people with substandard or the nature of vaccine, and it is a waste of time resources and everything else. so it is very, very important to make sure that the vaccines when they leave their live oratory,
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where it is made to where the patient is going to receive it is maintained always at the right temperature. you either have facilities to transport them or you use other vaccines and there is no reason to suspect that the other work scenes are inferior. once they're licensed, they're licensed and we know that they are good enough for the job. therefore, it's very good to know that there are also other vaccines made by other platforms also coming on stream in given time. pandemics also dramatically changing how we do our shopping. thousands of british stores are now reportedly refusing to allow cash payments, fearing infection. pash is no longer king with contactless payments, bank transfers and direct debits all eclipsing cold, hard sterling, but it seems coverts haste in the demise, with one in 3,
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worried about notes and coins spreading. the virus we're moving in a society see the bench really will be a cashless society. what is done is accelerate the process and there may be some evidence cause some issues, but i think generally migrating to kashrus operation anyway. other countries are streets ahead in sweden, cash in circulation represents only one percent of g.d.p. . but while convenience is one thing, it's a big problem if it becomes the only way to pay according to consumer group,, which there have been over $2500.00 reports of shops in the u.k., declining cash payments during the coronavirus crisis. 4 in 10 customers say they've had problems buying food or groceries and 20 percent claim they've left empty handed. it's most, some intimate, most keenly felt by how many people,
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because they are they don't have the infrastructure of the sort of the residence or the accounts to support participation in a mostly digital economy. cash really still has a role until and unless no one is executed from additional economy, you need those things, the mobile device, the bank account, even an address to participate fully. so i think that this is when the really does need to be addressed. for large businesses, cash, this makes sense, easy. bank transfers, no counting the takings more secure payments. and some believe many are using the pandemic as an excuse for the switch. and for some, it's also about giving customers options to take any payment off regular customers because i'm not looking for today's purchase. i'm looking for them tomorrow to build up a business. cash is always a safe, has paid, and the cards are regulated by limits. so when those limits are exposed, even if we could fall flat,
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we still need cash. we've already seen card fees being curtailed over the past few years and we'll probably see it more and more as more transactions go cashless and more pressure is put on regulators to do something about as much as having to pay this much, which in turn will drive the revenue from, from card fees down from a bank perspective, which has its own set of impacts, probably ultimately could see reza paying for it $1.00 way or another. the march to a cashless society might not matter to most or even be noticed for the moment. but if it means the fringes are increasingly left out in the cold, perhaps having a spare bit of change is no thing than staying in the u.k. longer. the metropolitan police says that the extreme targets for 40 percent of new recruits to be from ethnic minorities within 2 years. it comes as the force is an gulf by claims of racism,
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with numerous recent allegations of innocent black people being racially profiled in london from a set out why quotas are essential. one of the reasons why over the course of the last few weeks and months, me better to miss the police have been speaking to and listening to blackpool and this to see what we need to do to increase the trust or confidence of bloodletters have more than they currently do with the police service, be sure description. it is one that affects not just stops and searches, but i'm sort of the use of force and the use of tasers. by the forces former detective chief superintendent, warns victims of crime, care about quality, not equality. all the public wants when they call police and this is true all over the world. whether it's russia or frogs, or whereabouts, the police to turn up quickly when they call them for help, the place to solve the problem, but a professional and then let them know what happened about the incident of which
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they're not all that. whether all they get a black, asian chinese or japanese heritage police officer turning up solves that problem, nor they pull that, whether they're male or female guy, all whatever. what they want is a professional representative of the state justice if you like to turn up and do the job properly. if you're a couple of junior level police officers patrolling in your new york police car and you use a piece of black news, who you know are bad. who is a new thing? you should go and speak to the maybe you've got a decision there. do you want to risk a confrontation? do you want to risk a horrible fight? perhaps? do you want to risk complaints of the birth of racist the islands, but i can shoot him possibly risk your joke or do you want to carry on down the road to the gas station? get a coffee and a cup of donuts with a choice for all police officers is clear,
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these types go to the gas station, get a coffee, and they some donuts. if you emasculate the police, continually threatening them with complaints. the police are not going to do their job. they are not going to keep ordinary people in sight, regardless of the color, black, white, chinese heritage and so on. and to my stories coming up after the break. i've been talking about kaiser apart many, many times because game theory will jump to the sovereign level and you have global has forced countries will need to strategically geo politically get into big oil. and this is what's happening in the united states right now.
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the world is driven by a dream shaped by one person or those with the day or thinks we dared to ask join me every thursday on the alex simon show and i'll be speaking to guests of the world of politics, sports business, i'm show business. i'll see you then welcome
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back kotter, my parrot ins warned, against attempts to threaten the peace deal between armenia and azerbaijan. on the disputed nagorno-karabakh region. the russian president added the only alternative to the truce. that is war is the og down 50 most hurt the 1st friday president, 27 years to mark the return of a very troops, a stipulation that in the cease fire is more advanced. you have reports from the ground. in 1993, the city of baghdad was seized by armenian forces. the nuchal population was evicted, expelled the never since then. it has been a goose city. no one has lived there until now. a short bus ride later we had done what new journalist has that in years crossed the front lines of no god and they got up. this is the 1st time since the war began, that we've been able to get into territory that is controlled by the as yet by johnny army. and these,
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this was only yesterday under the control of pro armenian forces. as a result of the ceasefire. on the 10th of november, that both sides signed the armenian side as their budget on the side with the help of russian mediators. this area ag city and the down province region were handed over peacefully by the armenian side too. is it about time for them? this is a very big occasion because this mosque in the center of adam city, has been a symbol of the war in the is it about johnny side 3 decades ago? 40000 people lived by johnnie's, who were expelled from the area, forced to leave, and have been refugees ever since. the question of what the process we're going to go to. i have just come back to my hometown of thank god for 27 years i lived in exile in those barbarians, destroyed our city with one of those who lost one of these is a landmark movement by john righteous and ceremonial. the prayers that ad down last
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in 27 years. larry, not only these it about john, the military wouldn't speak to us in camera. well, we got out of them is that justice had been done. adam was there as was the border that was what it is, is that it doesn't ask you yes, when you come to that issue, the publisher of normal. so i got that good book. i did that beautiful, but it's so, but it's a disservice just not special but inefficient. there's still an incredible amount of work that needs to be done. the devil is in the details. this is why russian peacekeepers and their buddy forces that arrived during the night took the area over a meeting for hours on end. they need to sort out lines of control and where each outpost will be. but the said about john,
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the checkpoints will be manned by 0 by jodi forces. right next the russian peacekeeper outposts back to back despite the number of peacekeepers and visited by johnny troops. in ag, there was little tension. soldiers and peacekeepers talked and joked. it's felt by all sides, the war is over. we have good relations with both the armenians, and as a result of those oaky playing the positions vacated by the armenian army. of course the conflicting side. but the conflict is over. for my part, i would like to say that i'm very glad that today we've sealed the deal to settle a years long conflict between armenia and azerbaijan. i saw the decision has been taken as a result of analysis of the military situation and based on the sentiments of people who have been most for me there and with the military situation. at this point, the ceasefire deal has been a success. refugees brought back to their hooves. heavy weaponry is gotten through
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to rupert, and everyone is meeting their obligations. there's no love lost to be sure. but with every new day there is less and less cause for another war. or i guess the of from the go to make out about the hyundai, of off several districts to as a fine john's problem take many armenian residents to flee and some of burning their own homes. rather than that, as their reasoning. we have lost everything and always nothing to go to who's no sense in life this or it's painful for some people are being forced to leave their homes. it's no good and people are not given any place to live in what we're packed in here. a lot different than the thoughts, the nazis going underground, spoke to award winning journalist peter oborne, who visited the disputed region. you can hear his full interview, including comment on the conflicts in yemen and syria. in the 2nd half of this hour . this war is, i think, a particularly brutal war. i mean,
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it was a tweet that said really reengagement of this country, which brings in so many global powers, russia, turkey, israel through the drones. and then the kind of the west stepping back and the plight of the armenians. i mean, when i was there, i went through the genocide memorial. you going to be very careful about talking about it. but is that the, that the armenians do see themselves not really fighting the fighting that starts? it's very limited understanding of what is actually going on. and it's also important to say that i was only on the armenian side. so i got one side of the story and i, but i did talk to a lot of soldiers who had come back from the front. and story was very consistent.
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so it's a civilian only. it's so in a way, i hadn't really appreciated that it's a extraordinary unite seat place. saturday sees the final special performance in moscow, verdi's requiem, to mark the 75th anniversary of the start of the nuremberg trials after world war 2 artes. daniel hawkins got to see the rehearsal. verdi's requiem is one of the classical world's favorite musical creations, an epic piece filled with passionate emotions. it takes us on a journey through life and death, or tonight's a special performance in moscow's helical opera is especially significant views are taken back 75 years almost to the day. from november 19th, 38, and crystal locked in germany to the 20th of november 19th, 45. and the start of the nuremberg trials when those responsible for some of the worst atrocities in history had to answer for their crimes. we caught
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a glimpse of the rehearsals backstage varies. music alone is enough to give anyone goosebumps, but this production is more than just the regular choral performance, whining. the dynamism of the composition with on stage affects that inform and reach out to view is far better than a history book or trip to the museum. this is a unique project because usually the right is performed in latin, the warden solicitously. this genius music, not only someone to stand what it means, this project has turned it from a musical to theatrical piece. you can see the music. it is a unique, there's all contemn, the food, the characters, every word in the tags brings meaning to the mind. it's important to perform to these dates. the idea took more than a year to come to fruition and was 1st performed in january to all of victims of the holocaust on the siege of leningrad. made more moving by the fact the piece was performed many times by prisoners in the deaths in concentration camp. but the idea of the performance isn't simply to appeal to emotion. but to reason that if we fail
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to learn from history, tragedy could be repeated as one. despite all the horrors people went through 75 years ago, it seems we haven't learnt our lessons. today, we see attempts to go down the same road which is frightening. but people need to know about this and remember that history isn't a kind teacher, but a strict oversea who can punish us harshly profane to learn these lessons. the performance doesn't disappoint verdi's music, intertwines with historical footage and informative text to create an effective dramatic fusion. at times the tough realism is hard to take, but this is no fiction. this was real life for many still in living memory. ime it's precisely this that the project seeks to preserve versions up with to 50 they do occasional impact is very important. we know that many young people lack knowledge. let's not shy away from the fact they don't remember this important
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events of the 1940 s. of leningrad concentration camps. the newer inverse process is presented here with modern, relevant and accessible snogged free. the director made the right decision, the more significant there were unbelievable notions and born in inside. when you compare the food issue we saw with today's situation, you see it's timeless. we need to convey this to future generations so that what happened then can never be repeated wishing for others, each and striking. so this for the 1st time and i still can't get over it. amazing . they should show things like this moral from. so people understand what thread with face if we forget those terrible times, we can only convey so much through what we filmed a very, not easy to watch. the live performance itself will take you on a journey through history with moments of both darkness and hope. one, you won't forget many thanks for joining us here on r.t. international. we hope you're having a great morning,
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but back in 30 minutes. i was always on the ball, but especially big city bright lights, you jump but you know, days and many dangers because of the risk that occur in your blood at a later. it's also a city where up 230-0000 crimes are committed every go for the last one, but if they do most it's still through the reserve least one police officer, 200 residents in russia's capital cost on the list. and that will make me look at the number with the wind up boysen along with most of the people who would have to lost
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so what we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy people in front a shouldn't let it be an arms race is often spearing dramatic development. only personally, i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very critical. time time to sit down and talk. i'm action or tense here. we're going underground as the comparative success of different coronavirus responses takes center stage in saudi arabia at the 15th summit of the g. 20 representing mo.

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