tv News RT November 23, 2020 4:00am-4:31am EST
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but only a janitor writing about nanami and his about russia slams america's decision to pull out of the open sky street in washington a previously having only feigned commitment to the western allies have also criticised. the texan with a red muscle disease comes to russia for treatment. after being told by code, he would never walk again and spends a shared his story exclusively with r.t. or used to use this all the time. it was of your absolutely necessary squad's nerve agents exposing the regime in new york times for their moscow
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correspondent sounds a bit like something from a spy thriller reveals the outlets predetermine narrative on russia. as u.s. states rolled out, new pandemic rules and the soaring infection rate politicians a quarter flouting their own rules. either. thanks for joining us, midday. here in moscow, this is all to international an act of hypocrisy, just for show that's how russia described the u.s. decision to pull out of the open skies treaty, which permits mutual aerial surveillance flights. moscow also warned the move would harm international security earlier are trying to join me in the studio to discuss developments. moscow is disappointed to say the least about the decision by the us administration to kick the legs from under the treaty for which as the russian side is putting it. the us has no legitimate reasons whatsoever. moscow maintains that
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claims of violations on the part of russia, of the treaty that has been in force for 18 years, have all been made up, plus no one seen any proof of that. moscow has blamed washington for violations to the other side, has denied it, but the question is whether that is a good enough reason to get rid of the agreement. the answer from moscow is no. and we know the answer from the other side. among other things, the russian officials believe that the u.s. government was lying when it said that it was considering the option to stay a part of the deal under certain circumstances. the assumption here in the russian capital is that the u.s. is destroying the greyman deliberately, and that was all part of an earlier plan. in recent months, washington has hypocritically stated that in the keys of a change in the russian position, it could reconsider its decision. in fact,
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no one there had planned to reconsider anything that was again for the public designed to mislead foreign governments and the public of european states that were urging washington to come to its senses. when we talk about how the americans could benefit from leaving the treaty, it's very important to point out that moscow believes the u.s. government wants to seek some kind of ban by european countries of russian flights over u.s. military sites in europe. but at the same time, moscow believes that the u.s. wants to continue receiving the information from european countries from its flights in the russian air space. so what's left for russia to do moscow says that it will continue putting pressure on the other signatories to the open skies treaty to make sure that they remain committed to the terms and abide by it. but in a case, the message from moscow is that this decision by the americans heavily damages
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international security and transparency. you mentioned, european countries involved there. and there will be european countries among the, the many dozens of other signatories to the treaty. how do they feel about the u.s. pulling it well apart from russia and the u.s.? although the u.s. is no longer part of the deal, there are $33.00 more signatories to would that include some very important, european players, like the u.k., germany, france, etc. and they've been critical of the decision by the u.s. administration as well. we deeply regret that the united states has decided to take this step and is now implementing its our own position on the treaty remains unchanged. we consider its to be an important part of the arms control architecture that contributes to building mutual trust in the us to greater security in the northern hemisphere from flood events stoke to vancouver. but it's not only that we're hearing regrets from russia and the u.s. allies in europe because we have heard voices of concern across the atlantic as
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well. the administration's decision to withdraw from the open skies treaty is reckless. i strongly believe that president trumps decision to withdraw from the treaty is a violation of domestic law. president trump brazenly ignored the law and is unilaterally imposing a politically charged withdraw even after losing a presidential election. now here's an ironic aspect of this whole situation. the open skies treaty was initially proposed by washington that happened back in 1955. though then the room, it only came into force in 2002, but still it was out there. and because of donald trump, because of his strategy that we've actually gotten used to, we remember that he left many important international treaties in different fields in the field of security. for example, most notably that was the intermediate range nuclear forces treaty, but you can name agreements in other fields such as, for example,
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the paris climate accord. that's a very important one. but donald trump may be the lame duck president, but again, perhaps this is a step from him that we could have expected and has been doing what has been up to pretty much in the past 4 years. it takes a months of, from, from a rare muscle disease has come all the way to russia for treatment. and spencer was told back at home in america he'd never walk again. since arriving in the russian city of perm in october, he's actually been up and about and he shared his story with us in an exclusive interview. i hate to use this every word. when i was, when i was in or what without it would not walk with alan spencer could have been dead by now or in a wheelchair. that's what doctors back home in america told him 5 years ago. i used to use this all the time. it was absolutely necessary. we're going to go now
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into scary people in an incredibly allan has escaped all those outcomes. when i started to notice a little something with my hands, they were going to go on like this. so that, you know, some sound right, but i didn't have any problem with strength. so i didn't think i heard anything wrong. 2012 came, i had a fall and i was like, whoa, that was unusual. 2014 i came again and i had a really bad fall. it was like, ok, there's something wrong, something wrong happened to be a rare inflammatory muscle disorder known as inclusion, body myositis between $5.70 people per 1000000 have it. they said there's nothing we can do for it's completely untrue. what did you feel when you were in that will i wasn't as disappointing as you would think. my father had died of a form of a.o.s. and so i thought, well that's as a doctor said,
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good news and bad news. the good news is you're not going to die. the bad news is you're going to be totally respectful, vice president of time warner cable for west taxes as successful men. allen had to quit his job in 2017. he simply wasn't able to work any more, that his ease was eaten away, his muscles, stealing his abilities and his life. but then he heard from a friend about a clinic in perm russia that could potentially treat him at 1st. he didn't take it seriously. my friend andy had said in, in february there's going to be a wedding are about this clinic that i think might be able to help you. are you interested in this kind of like, well, not really. i didn't tell him the way to be perfectly honest with you. you know, i don't, i think is an american you're, you probably have a stereotype of what the breast in hospital looks like. if mayo says that nothing can be done. probably nothing can be got the sentiment e-mail gave my e-mail interest. the next day i got a, an e-mail back from the director. the c.e.o.
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actually of the clinic and the government touches me all winter and said if you come, we think we can help you. we are not sure to what degree, but we do believe that we can actually help you a glimmer of hope was born. but coming to russia in the middle of the college, 19th and jamming with borders shot and planes grounded. it seemed like mission impossible. back in may one of the gals from marty called dandy and said, hey, how's your medical tourism, but building business doing, he said not so well that started the process of foreign minister got in touch with us. it took 17 months to finally come to russia and it was worth every single day of trying. he says, so they started me on this treatment of injections and infusions. and the neurologist put this magnetic field on my hear pulsing through. and what it does is it wakes up the neurons in the head, so they started to move in the wake of the muscles,
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my eye could actually swallow better, and i could talk a little easier if i would, you know, world, this is starting to actually work what turned out was we were getting this world class held help in this clinic in perm russia. if we can get travel to open up, i really intend to work within to get people here from america. it's a wonderful thing. i mean, it shouldn't be a secret. here you go. wow, good job. united states is breaking grim a. pandemic records with the daily infection rate now at $150000.00 and some states are stepping up their covert response. texas, for example, has started sending people text messages, urging them to cancel holiday gatherings in pennsylvania masks are now obligatory even at home. while an overnight curfew is just been imposed by california's governor that he's actually been caught breaching is only stricture. so he's
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killing morgan explains, he's also not the only politician violating coronavirus measures. the centers for disease control are urging americans to visit their relatives for the holidays. they say it's better to stay home in this thanksgiving, yet another warning aims to protect public health. we're talking about intensifying the simple public health measures that we all talk about squaring, steeping, distance, avoiding congregate settings, doing things to the extent that we can out there as versus in those states across the country are imposing special regulations. but some of the politicians and officials who've been imposing stricter regulations are not exactly following their own rules. take, for example, the governor of california who has called for drastic action the notion of a curfew. you know, before you jump in terms of your mindset, of whether it's a good idea or bad idea,
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we are assessing that as well. that very same politician was caught partying at an upscale restaurant with top lobbyists. you then tried to present it as an outside party. well, these photos obtained by a local t.v. channel show that that is just not true. also at the party were executives from the california medical association who insist the party was strictly adhering to procedures. yet none of them seem to be wearing masks. u.s. senator diane feinstein has been out on the front lines urging americans to cover their faces. but take a look at this issue with the only one not wearing a mask. then there's the mayor of chicago. she has been urging people to stay home and be safe. you must cancel the normal things, giving plans, but she has had no problem going out herself. right there on trains. then there is the d.c. mayor and her staff that attended biden's victory bash in delaware. even though the
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d.c. advisory lists delaware as a high risk state, nobody is happy about the restrictions, but people are even less happy about them when it seems that they don't apply to certain people, the very people who are imposing them. r.t. new york. and while the pandemic is raging china reschooling for a so-called global follow bill to combat the spread of covert ninety-nine to allow cross border trouble to resume. and as part of the plan president xi jinping is just a big global system of q.r. codes. china has proposed a global mechanism for the meat to recognition of health, says if it's based on nucleic acid test results in the form of internationally accepted. we hope more countries will join this mechanism. china's been using q.r. codes already to prove status. going back to february, the system was questioned in the west on data privacy grounds, or the europe itself has proposed similar schemes including the idea of immunity. passports that was in the u.k.
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tele discuss the issue with our guests. these tests can be a lot of false negatives, a lot of false positives, and you're now going to track and trace me where on going in terms of this town or that this is incredibly dangerous and it's not only for my safety and you're seeing in the united states as well as across the globe, the people are starting to rise up saying enough stop, protecting me. i wouldn't live my life the way i would choose. we not only i was reading sad heathrow airport, used to be one of the busiest i had seen. 82 percent fall and passengers. what's the way that to get wheels out into, if not a set, a similar system to this reason that travels collapse is not the pandemic because the lock downs. i mean, since march 12th, europe has not been able to fly to the u.s. and europe retaliated and we can't fly there. and now we're living under the situation where yeah, we once believed in the right to travel, but that's been denied to us. so many people are being locked in their nation states right now. the answer is to, is, liberalism is to liberate travel and liberate and recognize human rights. again,
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do you think that we do need a cohesive global policy in order to try and move on somehow to try make 2021 better than 2020? there have been studies that show the virus respond differently in different regions. that there are different conditions and different places. on climate and so forth. so no, we don't want a lot of your standards because global standards means a lot down. in fact, this is just leave about, oh, we don't care about cases. i care about the death rate and the death rate is very slow. and again, we have to be very cautious with technology, because once we turn the saw, it's very hard to turn off. they will never really. i mean, passports were supposed to be temporary and we were still stuck with the 12 in the russian capital. you watching t.v. international if you've ever dreamed of being a corresponded to get ready to deal with. it's called cyber agents and shadowy
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walk by wagon anymore, but i will go on for you. boys will pull you out of a good job. it ended mountains in one debate and i didn't do it will always be good. is it also or know when to hold on a politician to keep it or don't or don't let you come up with a group on 10 young men about the holonomy have them have the best game of them on the numbers? i'm not bad was alluding to but oh, november bit. if i say i love them, they're down a little point about on it. but i have the only thing it is about join
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me everything on the alex salmond shill, and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics, small business, i'm show business. i'll see you that welcome to max kaiser financial survival guide. looking forward to your question about yanks, this is what happens to pensions in britain. delegates watch kaiser report. welcome back to new york times job at
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a moscow correspondent has been accused of being russophobia. successful candidates were expected to deal with hit squads, cyber agents, and shadowy military figures. the description of russia has struck some as being more like the plot of a spider movie result as it is done of experience, fact and fiction sometimes confused by this out. that what you're about to hear sounds like it's been ripped straight from the blog buster screenwriters playbook. vladimir putin's russia remains one of the biggest stories in the world. it sends out hit squads on with nerve agents against its enemies. most recently, the opposition leader alex in nevada, only it has its cyber agents, so chaos and disharmony in the west to tarnish its democratic systems while promoting its phone version of democracy. it is deployed private military contractors around the globe to secretly spread its influence at home, its hospitals are filling up fast with coated patients as its president hides out in his villa. i mean, add some dramatic music. do a call video edit paper,
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the whole thing with a few explosions here and there. and you've cooked up a trailer for the next hit limited series on netflix. but no, it's not that not by a long shot. it's actually the opening of a job advert for a russian reporter with the new york times. page searches for unbiased to impartial or balance. come a blank, no results found in the text. not that it's much of a secret though, that the new york times isn't that interested in covering a happy russia.
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but some readers weren't that impressed with the sudden spasm of honesty from the paper did the see any right. new york times new russia crisp on in job at these job for a new york times correspondent in moscow is telling and not in a good way screenwriters wanted for a new james bond film. imagine yourself working undercover in moscow. the capital of love to meet putin's evil empire. if you think you have the creative writing skills to turn the monday into juicy narratives of horror and suspense, contact the new york times, we've been in touch with the new york times for comment. you know, both sides of the story and all that. but we've yet to hear anything back from them . cynically speaking, it makes perfect sense. positive stories from russia don't tickle the fancy of pulitzer prize. judges allegations lacking evidence. or though, do just believe in the bogeyman. pulitzer prize winning journalist and former new
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york times foreign correspondent chris hedges says that the ad exposes the real russia angle of the paper. i initially thought it was satire, i didn't think it was real. and then i went on the new york times website and read it. and it's really kind of an obituary to journalist. the role of a foreign correspondent is to be bicultural. it is to get into that culture and explain how they view reality. and here you have this narrative, pre written, narrative, demonization, really of russia and vladimir putin. and i have to say that there's nothing in that description that the united states doesn't do in spades and far worse. and so why even open of bureau in moscow? why have somebody spend hundreds of hours studying russian and reading russian history and literature and culture? why not? why not have algorithms do it? it was absolutely appalling, but it's part of the siloing of the american press to serve
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a particular demographic. in the case of the new york times, it is a democratic party based readership. it's a way to make sure that whatever they send to russia feeds back to them what, what they want. countries around the world grappling with the 2nd wave of the coronavirus pandemic, the prospect of an imminent vaccine is raising hope. but they're also fear is poor countries might be priced out. that was discussed by the director of the international vaccine institute in the latest edition of going underground. the gates foundation, their research suggests that global cova debts will double of high income countries by up to the 1st 2000000 doses of any successful vaccine. do you agree with? that's a great study and we've been using it to advocate for something called kovacs. kodak's intends to purchase $2000000000.00 doses, and those doses will be provided to everyone and what cannot eat paper. the gates
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foundation paper you quoted, says, is that if the 1st 2000000000 dose are taken without any consideration of equity, then there will be a doubling of go global covert deaths. hence, the reason why go back needs to be successful, needs to be fully funded, needs to be funded beyond the 1st year into the 2nd year. i think the one thing that covert teaches us is that this virus, like all viruses, will find those weak points in our defense. and we really need and should be working together in this global pandemic to help each other. whether it's, you know, masks and gloves, whether it's a vaccine solution, whether it's, you know, reaching out to countries to help them understand what the burden of code is. and once we have the vaccine, it's taking that vaccine from wherever it's manufactured, to wherever it can be, wherever it's needed, in a way that will reduce the global burden of code. that is the most important thing . ok,
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i'm going to right up to that thanks. so much for joining us this morning on early afternoon here on r.t. international. that's in half an hour. when i was a child, small seemed wrong. all but all, all, just all to me the world is yet to shape out of this thing to come to catapult and in gains from it equals betrayal. when so many find themselves worlds apart, just to look for common ground. the world is driven by a dream shaped by phone person. with those words the
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dares thinks we dare to ask it's been decades since the fall of spain's fascist regime, but old wounds still haven't tailed. going to from going into the on the bottom is pretty famous because for me, from a dog the bottom is above all, to me on the bus at the source me. there were a bit anxious that the scene caused me to, you know, cells ins of newborn babies were torn from their mothers and given away and forced adoption. i don't really feel stuck with my own role, but as a fellow mentor to this day, mothers still search for grown children while looking in hope for their birth
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what i would want to do all of you, i would do, i'm normal. i live because you don't mope around a woman all domain niigata looks fine. when i go to the opera, got the guy i got from the fact we are told i got now and that if they're going with them over the guy, it would be a lot of the trail was 100 and in a well, let me live. i like that to have been, well, let's look at the political aisle for that really well,
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you know, for sure how much that is regular going to read. i want to see this book deal well and i will be going, well, it's a good little north was born. it will be over the done. you will. pleasure was no joke with these young women whom when they go, why do i go when i knew i got a 1000000, i've been over, you know, for window or golden globe on a boat, a little commercial recording
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. and i've seen women come, i'm a call 5 and i've never had a condom. look, i've got my fat arse. a doberman in your ass, you know full well as you. ok. ok, i'm the guy, little quantum. me a little guy more nor less yet. joe. watch a home in the marble got to school for now. you know we're going to die. well, i'd say go mad at me when i want over and over about we're going out forgive her. this was all true. oh because i was going our.
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