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tv   Going Underground  RT  May 31, 2021 8:30am-9:00am EDT

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by what we have, it is a reflection of a system that is chronically corrupt. and when i was working on the book, i realized the, the death of the revolving door was we have between finance, big finance and politics. and politics has become the sort of stepping stone profession whereby chances go into political positions in order to prepare themselves for making mega bucks and huge salaries and bonuses and cetera in finance. and finance, of course, is the dominant theme. one of the points i make in the book is now in britain known financial companies as well as financial companies own efforts that are over a 1000 percent of g d p. it's financial, cale,
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why doing the economic dog? but of course, i mean, i'm going to say, i mean, i don't know who the chance is in this context, but the media here certainly did not react to the cummings testimony by talking about corruption. i mean, there was these accusations lying about the help secretary. it was incompetence is bureaucracy, it's, it's, these corruption was not was not key here according to the way the british media covered the storage, well, less predictable to because mainstream media are part of the rent g, a economy system, the main stream media owned by the crafts and we have a situation where the big finance, mainly goldman, fax grooms, people to go into politics, to go into the media as well. and if, if institutionalized corruption. so the to get the situation where many of the
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decisions that are being taken up for the benefit of finance and for the benefit of senior civil servants. and politicians who move effortless effortlessly from their positions in public, in the public domain, into a big finance. well, richie here, richard johnson here obviously came from goldman sachs and he'd say, no, he wasn't benefiting the goldman sachs brigade, he was benefiting ordinary people with his fellow schemes is help out to who to eat outside the more controversially. i mean, the subtitle of the book where you say, why work doesn't pay as people start to emerge. obviously the pandemic is still going on here. why does work not pay? i mean, that is a question that the vast majority of people in britain probably talking about is they come off low and back into jobs if they're lucky. well, basically the, the architecture of renting capitalism. make sure that most of the income from
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economic growth, all from changes in the system go to the owners of property, financial property, physical property, or so called intellectual property. and this means that less and less going to people who rely on labor of that incomes. so we have this growth of the precarious on which i've written several books and we've got what i've called in the book prospect of a triple k. in the sense that before the patent damage the bureaucrats from the leads of people mainly making money out of finance. and we're going up and up. whereas the brit carry at, rinsing, declining wages, declining access, the benefits in huge increase in private. and then during the pandemic, the printer crash game even more so 1000000000 as extremely well out on whereas the
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precarious have gone deeper and deeper into debt. and now we will have a new situation when the post lockdown phase takes place in which the, the elite and the router crabs will continue to benefit. whereas the precarious debt will result in a day lose of homelessness, a del lose of bankruptcies. we have alligators of 10 thousands killed by current of ours and needing to have the official figures somewhere around 125000 killed by covey, one of the highest per capita rates. president dueling from the university walks told us that will stare. it killed 850000 people when you're talking about these impacts on the precarious does that mean more people are going to die out of his cake of post lockdown scenario than who died from corona virus in this country? i believe so, and i say that with, with
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a heavy heart because the period of us there and she saw privatize ation of our national health service as well as the big cuts to spending on health care and the private guys asian about care taken over by private equity, financial corporations often gone bankrupt, leaving thousands of people in severe homelessness, really instead of in care homes. and we have a situation where morbidity and the stress of insecurity means that a lot of people are suffering from answers from heart problems from suicidal tendencies. and i think that is, it is quite possible that we will see a surge of excess deaths above what should have been the chase in the period going for what i mean. the heartlessness shown by parties. johnson about his
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remarks on a t rhodes and so on. this, this sort of is just so disgraceful, but it's, it's sad to think, but he's still a prime minister, but someone can say that sort of things young that we have a situation where the privatized asian and the financial aggravation boss talks about national health system means that a lot of people are not going to be able to get the medical attention they need, they need and it's going to be a cascading crisis. i think going forward. and the real, really important thing is the must be a more effective opposition. what is going on? i mean, obviously the johnson comments about even bodies piling up in the streets that learn the 8 year olds. all apocryphal, pending the inquiry that starts next year. but johnson would say the vaccine rule
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that has been a tremendous success for this country. what is the vaccine and to prevent the excess deaths that may will be higher because of rent? the capitalist approaches post locked down then cove itself. well, i believe we have a, we already had a demo of stress in the country. i dissembled the evidence on that the, the, the a number of people who are suffering from mental disorders, mental strain and physical strains associated with that due to chronic and use chronic insecurity. that's the reality of the area. i think as long as we don't address the insecurity of society, we will not get out of this. we did the law whereby the talk chrissy and the finances are making phenomenal amounts of money. if i give you one
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statistic, which i think is very important, the, the value of wealth, private wealth in britain today. reason from 300 percent of g d, p national income to over 700 percent of g d p. and over 60 percent of our wealth in the country private, which is inherent it's, we have a system which gives short tiny minority which as i show in the book, is accentuated by billions of pounds, not hundreds of millions, billions of pounds in subsidy is given to the owners of assets and the owners of wealth. and this means that something like 40 percent of the population in britain is scrambling the rounds to maintain the living standards that are actually
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declining. and they are only maintaining it by deepening their private debt. this is the reality. so we have a situation where private debt is over 200 percent of national income and has been rising. it's not public, it's private. and if it, the fellow scheme is increased in the quality, i think it's a disgraceful scheme. i explain why in the book, but it's a prompt out. this is very regressive because it's given far more to irene and then for the pro carry ad. but it's merely a stop gap measure. now the way we're told with all the subsidy is to welfare claimants, and i know you're advising the shadow chancellor. now the shadow johnson, i was rachel reeves, who famously said that labor should be tough, that the tories on welfare claimants tell me about the book talks, let alone, and how we may be under these miss apprehensions about who's getting the subsidies,
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the co option of descent we get business programming and we're told, you know, we can be part of the equities investing population and we can top up our assets, any certain portion of the population. you say the evidence exists to suggest this corpse, those who would otherwise dissent and move them to the right angle games and grow. because more and more people will come to realize that this is a good don't going system of grand jake, african some going for the tiny needs. whereas most people are going to be proverbially left behind, but also chronically insecure. long term to populists? i like johnson. well, finally, and the legit corruption, do you think that people will just be too tired for any uprisings this summer,
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given that even the national audit office said there was no competition for the corona virus contract that apparently big farmer trying to recoup received losses from invest just a dispute settlement systems over covered procedures is going to rise this summer. can we expect uprisings on the streets of western capitals or of people to tide from the precariousness of their existences being for the moment. 1 that the ty at no since the tv, the desire for some desire to just get out. but i think there's a huge backlog of anger and resentment. they personally predict that will be a new search of a precarious movement because we can have a vacuum on the left for very long. it will emerge as a more in madison paid 3 ecologically driven agenda a nation. but there's
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a lot of anger and a lot of energy out am i hear from people every day about is i'm quietly, i think there's a build up. and if we get young politicians who are offering part of that vision, then i think that will be a spark to a fight because we desperately needed professor guy standing. thank you. after the break, as brittany comes to terms with evidence of a arguable karone of ours manslaughter, we go to the city in india globally supplying astrazeneca vaccines to ask him his former drug administration commissioner, what has gone so wrong in his country? all listen more coming up about 2 of going undergrad. ah, me an entire village in alaska and had to move if another country threaten to wipe out an american. we do everything in our power to project in water escaping
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climate change poses the same threat right now. alaska has seen some of the fastest coastal erosion in the world. we lost about 3535 feet of ground in just about 3 months while we were measuring it is bad and that means the river is $35.00 pounds. then learning was year before i think we're part of america. there's from or america ah, ah ah,
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ah ah, ah ah, welcome back tomorrow 74th world health assembly wines down as tens of millions, grieve for relatives killed by corona virus just by britain having a capital death rate 10 times that of india. it is a so called world's largest democracy, that is now one of the spotlight for its corona virus response. though, joining me now from buena and india is former principal secretary to the government . russia hash is i got it. thanks so much for coming on. so as i said, the rates may be 10 times high here per capita. but i mean, i may have had the answers that give x in here, and it might have been created where your from their poor little side of the largest vaccination manufacturer reportedly what's gone so wrong. why there are
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hundreds of thousands that have been killed in your country by that. so and if you really they then they get like 1000000 usa and in the course of germany and just do the law. unfortunately, the live, the population is to julie lloyd off the china. we do not an order. ready or then i because of the population i'm to be when i need to be impatient it is. i just wondered or
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then we also think about this because if you the top of all of the the blue india then probably because these party a lot. ok, well the very and certainly indian very and so called is certainly we're having surge testing here in britain because of it, i just want to ask actually about the factory, the serum institute in bruno because the ceo mr. branwa says that he had to flee india because of death threats. so what is going on in the history that he had to flee the size of his factory, the largest vaccination, the manufacturing facility in the world? i think it is not credited even i'm not sure. oh,
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i don't think there is any reason why the order was the commissioner is sort of the line that we might want to explain and we'd love him on on the show. he does say though that mr. moody is responsible for ordering to few vaccines. and this coming from someone who i know is family of financially donated to the congress party historically, but he has supported new liberal policies of the moody government. what do you make of him saying that your leader or did just to few vaccines? that's why so many people today was everybody asked that is done and it was not coming. and that is not important to me is
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that most of the countries the i n d b i indeed, they also hired by the these are all learners that's not know what he's in. it's although it's nothing to do with all of that. and it was in all right, and it was it the he just has murder you or to to few. i've india. they probably had him if you on the side of the they have joined the band. i mean, you only randy by division that time they have all your all the main reason obviously the reason that's really the reason you were the commissioner for indian
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rude and drug administration. but you don't think you, you bear some of the blame me for the e e b a r b b b i might, they may need a more maverick, that would be awesome. i and that uses small machine and now i'm on the same model with the furnished data for be in those water. i actually mark, unfortunately the why do you need to do international tandem? if you are the one in my, where you are, is where the vaccines are so high. isn't this something much more fundamental,
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this near liberal policies of big pharma, of the closeness between governments and big pharma and how they operate, versus the great success of your neighbor with similar kind to population. the people's republic of china. i be sort of when data and the interview that i has, if it's life or death, they have the vaccine. who cares who licenses? i mean, do you think, i mean this is life or death for in his population? surely these issues by the but they're about money and about rights. who cares? i b. b and the binding on the engagement beginning
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with some other countries than that it cannot be or say that i was the one. so honoring the contract is more important than saving the lives of ordinary indian people. i'm not the late that also getting out of the was now why is also so bad trying to really so it's not really like to be like one that was it because the time when the funding needs to be growth and the only back research by any reality dissolution section. all one good.
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so in fancy the joe biden administration, he has sought a waiver on a painting and intellectual property rights. why do you think, year old colonial masters here in europe? britain, holland, you, they don't want any relaxation of the intellectual property, right? see, it is not the fuel or by, by monday, but you played on that and i believe that you least can do have i entered into the i am having commission and why? why do i solve the problem instantly and nationalize all the big pharmaceutical companies in india like the serum institute and start to actually save the lives of ordinary indians instead of trying to be contractually obliged by new liberal
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organizations like the w i fi gotten on the nationalized most of the time. so that's not the problem. the issue is made by the lives or lives are more important than the, the scandal of a leak of the formula for the asters anika vaccine. anyway, let's just move on to this black fungus that apparently is causing a 50 percent mortality rate for those recovering for those who have it and has to do with the steroid use in hospitals, because people have not been vaccinated. no, nothing to do. i mean,
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a lot of money so they didn't do that. he could relate the patients, but i didn't use the i've been probably and i was, it is not happened to me, but my brother media, if you do not think that is now is the time for some real nationalism in india as it were when you're conversant with the, with what's been happening in agriculture, the fights over the painting of seeds by big agriculture, little and big pharmaceutical companies. you know, the grown of others has time for reflection, for indian politicians and think tanks to get away from this new liberal model that comes from chicago and london and brussels. i doing
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that. and i do want to make a very small and every now any yeah, this is a huge chunk of population in the industry. and therefore we need to have a different model and the job or what it was to be the job market was. so we, we don't know, we are supposed to be
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utilized and people for the commissioner and for the principal secretary, thank you and that's for the show will be back on wednesday the day after you sanctions on u. k. u. s. front bomb syria, a set to expire until then keep in touch by social media comment below on youtube and let us know if you feel supported by your government when it comes to her own of ours. ah, some can fall from middle class to homeless overnight. most of them are very hard working. people who want to get ahead that has either have some, some health issues or have some had a trick of bad luck. a full time job won't always pay for a place to live and missing, just a month's rent can get you evicted, gunpoint. if anything bad happens to any thing that just throws your budget off slightly. you gotta catch up real quick or you're going to have
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a judgment of possession against you and get anyone. it's homeless is treated like garbage. people look at you like a monster or someone bad, or you chose to be there. most of the time. it's not the case. see how it is to be born in the world's richest country the ah, me the,
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the i met my lovely weekend and obviously wanted to know min johnny because the, the, up in the kitchen lip reaches out them out. i gotta get my don't get a get. we'll put it on this little lady. meeting be brittany lackey. then this is the last me
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got a lot bye little bye now. bye. and then you guys mean i love what i mean? yeah, we're good. all right. social class flow. people also covered by 1st if you're born in to a 4 family, you're born into minority family. if you're born into a family that only has a single parent that really constrains your life, chances people die on average. 15 years old, born a generational poverty, it's a, it's a fight every day to meet your needs and the needs of your family. mm.
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headlines for this monday here on our tea enemies and neighbors. a report revealed denmark's fire on germany's angle as well as on other leaders, and they did it for us intelligence the remains of over 200 children, i discovered near a former school for indigenous students in canada, raising questions over decades of abuse and cultural genocide that even continued up until the 19th and israel longstanding prime minister benjamin netanyahu may finally be on his way out off of the opposition claims that has enough parliamentary votes to drive him out of office. ah.

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