Skip to main content

tv   Documentary  RT  November 22, 2020 12:30am-1:01am EST

12:30 am
no dares thinks we dare to ask you to do aerial reconnaissance. we do have perhaps in modern times discussing literary theory of visitors going to a night. if you cannot find comfort
12:31 am
in one night, even if there are no easy or
12:32 am
around the home of at least 3 x. can it be you can come up because some people who have to put up there to make things out to jump and, women will point to the t.v., this is important
12:33 am
because you come up the nazi to get some support someone to give up a whole day now it will be better. i'm in season palms out simple on any of them. so i go along a little bit to get let me just the way
12:34 am
100 1
12:35 am
12:36 am
if things did noice not sampoerna behind in equity law and put the lawyer to day in a manner that actually meant that to him someone is what guy and i am tam see how important you guys are only in town and
12:37 am
how quiet, but acquitted our cost and because you don't speak, i really couldn't that he could lower so long it and yet look up the piece pretty mad. he let out a little nice speech nolen asked find any student in a suit and my mom in nam couldn't. and i fixed of course, if one tapped flight, it adds a low mileage call and of course by
12:38 am
right, you keep the i
12:39 am
so hard in mind. one of the men told told me so when you see it was a good i'm really going to be here seeing for how so
12:40 am
in short he had what hands of my and their father and going to how my how i had what i had a hard what i hear from me, the need in my, in the war, in the new new in who sought the money and needed me out of our power and there for how the 100 of
12:41 am
them had seeing how good enough for us the
12:42 am
well, the pandemic? no, certainly no borders and is blind to nationalities has emerged with the we don't look like seem to be the judge of comedy crisis with this system think we can do better, we should be everyone is contributing way. but we also know that this crisis will not go on forever. the challenge is great. the response has been masked. so many good people are helping us. it makes us feel very proud that we are in it,
12:43 am
together, solos on the bone, but at least national life. big city bright lights, huge opportunities and many dangers to blatantly to it's also a city where up to $300000.00 crimes are committed every year for the last millennium, but it will renew most. it's still through the reserve least one police officer for every 200 residents in russia's capital lost on the english. but they never told me that i was not going to come in. and of course, you know, because of the few muslims who would have to last.
12:44 am
so we've got to do is identify the threats that we have. it's crazy confrontation, let it be an arms race is on off and spearing dramatic development. only personally, i'm going to resist. i don't see how that strategy will be successful, very critical of time. time to sit down and talk
12:45 am
to the government, the people of laos. thank you so much for the kind. welcome that you've extended to me and my dog nation. i am very honored to be the 1st american president to visit laos of the in of the i realize that having a us president in laos would have once been unimaginable 6 decades ago, this country fell into civil war. your neighbors and foreign powers, including the united states, intervened here at the time the us government did not acknowledge america's role. it was a secret war. and for years the american people did not know. even now, many americans are not fully aware of this chapter in our history, and it's important that we remember today. over 9 years, 19641973, the united states dropped more than 2000000 tons of bombs here in laos. war
12:46 am
inflicts a terrible toll, especially on innocent men, women, children. today i stand with you and acknowledging the suffering and sacrifices on all sides of that conflict. i also know that there are remnants of war continue to shatter lives here in laos. so today i'm proud to announce a historic increase in these efforts. the united states will double our annual funding to $90000000.00 over the next 3 years to help laos expand its growth of the will to has and somewhat you know me
12:47 am
and they couldn't let somebody in their home they and i love them too much tossing thought i of course got all their support telling
12:48 am
my heart and i think i'm the guy me and i'm good. i'm picky about that man. am i didn't write it out on happy in then b. and imagine and now men and women, and i think how mad men are equal to one man in the last another haven't made up. i have a family member of a pm happen often enough in the hot you now i'm unhappy and it is empowering and accompany me are jackets on so me even am i have to cover who up. but beyond that, i know many that i did. do you mean i may have i'm
12:49 am
a guy about how much that haven't been yet that i mean, i'm not afraid of the fact. there has been an out there growing and reacting and as a full moon tonight a man who gets those arms are allowed to command the members and hit them from now on that and the last time around this morning. and i'm not so common that every minute 31 second hour. president obama just made history by being the 1st sitting u.s. president to visit laos. obama has so far, refused to issue a formal apology for the secret u.s. bombing campaign in laos during its war on vietnam. the u.s. secretly dropped $270000000.00 bombs on laos in part to cut off north vietnamese supply routes again. margaret, this plan $90000000.00 or so to help clean up and detonated bombs still in the
12:50 am
country. what are the details? this is $90000000.00 over 3 years to clean up what's called unexploded ordinance. these are, they look like little balls, little kids pick them up and often become victims of these bombs that were dropped nearly 40 years ago in a war that this country was never technically a part of up to $80000000.00 of these failed to detonate. and just one percent of them have been cleared. obama's $90000000.00 for bomb clearance in laos. it's not enough. we bombed allow so much. it is officially the most heavily bombed country per capita in all of human history. the $19000000.00 obama pledged at 1st sounds like a lot numbers that everybody talks about that you brought up that are accurate as far as we know that we also know that that is the low estimate of that large numbers of airplanes that were sent to do bombing runs in vietnam, for example, came back over, lost to bases in thailand,
12:51 am
and on their way back would randomly drop their loads and we have no records once to wherever those lows that were dropped. so we don't actually know how much was dropped in the 1st place. we know it's more than the numbers that we talk about. experts say the president's visit shows that the u.s. is trying to make friends with countries near china to help balance out that nation's growing power in the region. because of the problems and because of the lack of clean up because of the lack of recognition, it continues to kill people and trouble this very undeveloped country. there are fields that can't be plowed, there is land that can't be developed. there are children who are walking or around who weren't even alive during the vietnam war, who are missing arms and legs and limbs. when we are able to come here and show respect for their culture, recognize our history and your point towards a future in which we can work together. we will actually have more influence. we'll be able to promote our ideals more effectively. but that's part of what we've been
12:52 am
able to accomplish. i think over the last 78 years, open up places that previously were closed and engage people in ways that will create long 20 to dampen so goodbye.
12:53 am
and the the the, the 0 a lot.
12:54 am
the saw in the one where you keep in mind when i went to my last my and i don't want to mention we have not one of my why i have not been raul midon. i'm a little more behind behind the welcome. i was hired the job, i'm in there if i remember, well, playing out in the country. i love just have a lot of fun to see if i want to be behind the one who has to
12:55 am
buy the violin top among all how i was trying to after years of secrecy and so on. and they are now learning a lot about the talent he sat in my life to me, but don't listen. now, i tend to consider once i might get some money and not take account of family and employment. my fellow americans, laos is far away from america. but the world is small. anything but
12:56 am
what you have made, you might like it if i'm in maybe the parking lot and you want to go to them, but i'm not good plan in place with a man who need to meet him as a tapped out of the company public and a lot done
12:57 am
i am
12:58 am
a new gold rush is underway in guyana. thousands of ill equipped workers are flocking to the gold fields, hoping to strike it rich. here's a good. as they are by the children are torn between gold. my family was very poor. i thought i was doing my best to get back to school, which side will have the strongest appeal? is your media a reflection of reality? in a world transformed what will make you feel safe?
12:59 am
isolation for community. are you going the right way or are you being led some way? what is true? what is faith? in a world corrupted, you need to descend to join us in the depths or remain in the shallows. it's been decades since the fall of spain's fascist regime, but old wounds still haven't healed in the meantime, as for me, from an old me coffee to market economists are by war in the us at us as mean older than us. and i think ultimately, you know, thousands of newborn babies were torn from their mothers and given away and forced
1:00 am
adoption only for feaster, but my own role as a fellow mentor to this day mothers still search for grown children. well, look, you know, hope for the best parents. violence on the streets of paris, france debates a bill to ban publishing, images of police. our correspondent was caught up in the arm rests. we ourselves were forcibly chucked out by the police. my cameraman grabbed by officers while he was filming. while we were trying to do an interview. blood lust may have triggered the torture and murder of along the afghan civilians by australian elite troops a new inquiry find.

27 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on