tv News. Views. Hughes RT July 13, 2021 2:30pm-3:01pm EDT
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it's still very complicated to manage and i want to understand that around 40 percent of stuff and they want to change profession productively. these people want to leave their profession completely. really. there was a spirit of trust from the staff there. they had the motivation, but now i'm not sure that brings you up today. that's how the news is looking so far today. here we're now today we'll be back with more that the top of the the the, the largest indicators against the socialist government could be heard from the streets of cuba on sunday, as american flags and chance of freedom were frequently spotted amongst the protesters. we're going to bring you the latest for miami and reaction from the
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united states, including r t, america zone rick sanchez and mental health institutions are rapidly increasing in numbers and one state in response to starting to not accept any more patience. so what do they get now on the task? sweet brings you this developing story. then we're going to take a look at the round of executive actions assigned by joe biden, and creating more competition in industry like health care and big tech. but we'll politics getting the way of doing what's right for the american consumer. i'm going to use and you're watching news is huge, right here on our to america. let's get started. ah . you know, from abided just issued a statement supporting ongoing protest in cuba. as the country's president blames america force problems. this, as thousands of people took to the streets of little havana in miami, florida to show their solidarity our tv. john,
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heidi has more from miami as is often the case when cuba speaks so does miami's little havana, cuban americans in miami, voice, their support of their cuban brethren and havana, and more than a dozen other cuban cities marching in a rare show of dissent against the government, they say, is responsible for a lack of adequate food medicine and electricity as cuba grapples with a severe economic crisis. worsened by the coven, 1900. pandemic, monday to crowd and little havana was smaller. but just as vocal just behind me across the street is never sy restaurant. this is a very well known cuban restaurant in little havana. and it's really been the main staging area for these protests. you can see there's a good amount of protesters here across the street. there's a pretty sizeable police presence, probably more police than there are protesters today, many of whom have been really driven back because of the ongoing rain and thunderstorms here in the area of the. but their voices are being
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heard above the crackle of thunder and lightning with backing from us president joe biden, who in a statement said, quote, we stand with the cuban people and their clarion call for freedom and relief from the tragic grip of the pandemic. and from the decades of repression and economic suffering to which they have been subjected by cuba, as authoritarian regime, cuban president miguel diaz cannot, however, blame crippling us sanctions on countries, ongoing economic hardships and social media for fueling the unrest. and also, we had been observing that in the last couple of weeks of social media campaign against the cuban revolution increase, setting out the root source of the problem around issues and shortages we're facing . because that's the way it's created to try to create the sent to satisfaction that results in the protest by manipulating the emotions and feelings of people on social media based on the problems the people are facing a year a lot. but still,
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the images of the protests in cuba continue and have been fueled on social media by us officials, including senators, marco rubio and rick scott, florida national security advisor, jim sullivan tweeted, sunday the u. s. would quote, strongly condemn any violence or targeting of peaceful protesters who are exercising their universal rights. the last time cubans hit the streets and protest against the government was back in 1994. well, before the accelerates of social media could help fuel the videos and voices now heard around the world for news. huge, huge john hardy joining me now. so anyway, personal knowledge of the cuban people, but also as cards a major event in cuba over the past few years, including you sat down with fidel castro, 1991. i'm sure that was a interesting conversation into the security getting into sort of an incredible, you know, i want to get your take on the advantage. you watched everything going on in the streets. i've not only keeper, but the american reaction. where are we at, what do you see happening right now? well, i mean, it seems clear the cause is something that is been probably escalated by
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covert 19. so look, cubans in cuba need to fix 1st of all a vibrant economy which they don't have have never had and aren't gonna have because it's a failed system and it doesn't offer that socialism doesn't work. we know that and they're still trying to push it through in cuba. all the re, clarify who's trying to push it through. obviously are the people still thinking it's going to work or they who still trying to people resign themselves to capture wisdom, which is a brand of socialism, which they've kind of become accustomed to. most of the people who would have been against it have already left, which is part of the problem in cuba. you can't have a revolution when half the population is already left and is living in the united states. now the people in cuba today generally are able to get by within the system until covert 19 created this situation where tourism dry it
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up. so nobody was going to cuba. and what's worse, scotty, and this is the real big prize. you have to understand the cuban economy survives because people like rick sanchez and his family will either send money to their relatives in cuba or go visit them once a year or those relatives in cuba will come to miami and spend the week there. and that week, just that association with the family gets them through the rest of the year. that's enough. we've got enough goods. i've seen them. there's some loss of isolation. that's been gone for the last 2 years. so 2 things have happened. the economy went to hell, the social contact with the outside world disappeared. add to that the fact that cuba liberalize the use of internet and social media. so they were able to talk to each other and say, hey, let's get together next tuesday and have this demonstration. and that's exactly what happened. ok, that's why i was wondering, the timing of this is something spark that was just basically it all came together on this. but i have a wonderful american been known to get involved in this,
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and that you obviously have the cuban government accusing the american government of kind of the people here getting involved because they have a good history track record of doing that. that being said, you know, because cuba, so geographically close. yeah. we look at sanctions is being a bad thing sometimes being used to mutilate in far away places, but here close. there's a reason, i think why america has a contention as to what's going on in cuba. is there a better way right now to get a, get a regime change, but get a more better communication, better government that works with the us. it's not seen so confrontational, this history goes back to 898. so this all started with during the spanish american war, when suddenly the united states decided that it was going to take on spain and took on spain by essentially going to cuba and creating this affinity for long periods of time. so if you look back on this historically, you can't help but think that the united states overplayed its card. the sanctions by the way, the anti fidel castro sanctions have not worked. i wish they had,
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but the fact of the matter is in bolden castro, it made cat castro, a victim, and unified, those people who stayed on the island and didn't leave for miami. so if you're asking me whether in the end it's about punishing cuba more, creating more sanctions. i think that the ship has sailed. right. and i think we start to, we need to probably look for a new strategy. so what is that, what is the way it functions are going to work? what actually could work knowing the people knowing the government, knowing now the condition to it? what could work where we could get a more friendly government that could work with us. i'm still not even free mark, i agree. and i believe that if you could find a way to do a deal with the cuban government, which would involve, for example, the cruise ship industry, where you would be able to take part of it and do some kind of sharing without completely denying the cuban government in, in a role somehow you could probably come up with something that would benefit the
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cuban people in the long run hall. busy it's hard because we are a stingy people, and we tend to want to go in and own rather than share. so until we realize a way that we can share something with q, but to create a free market economy, or at least a mixed economy, as it's usually described by economists, it might be tough to get that done, but i think that's where the answer it's. i agree because everybody here i think tourism was opening up. we were starting to see the cruise ships go ahead. i think that was working. you're right. then came back down. now you're getting the frustrations at this point. but now you're also talking about what's going on, talking about coded the supplies, went down. now cuba did a great job with sending out doctors from the very beginning. and their medical teams were amazing. looking back on that probably should have held off their resources and said, let's make sure we're out of the blue because now their numbers are going up. that's where the frustration is. they don't have the quality, you know, medicines to take care of that for the people in the streets. let me explain to you this way. cubans are great when it comes to medicine because they have a lot of doctors and because they care a lot. but having
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a lot of doctors and carrying a lot is not enough to make somebody dying from a disease where you can't get medication to, to live. so the problem with cuban medicine is, it's behind the times. it is not advanced and you can't cure people with covered unless you have a vaccine which they don't have. so that's essentially the problem. the problems we're seeing on the streets of savannah today are being manifested by outside forces not tangentially or not on purpose, but simply because the world suddenly didn't need cuba and cuba realized it needs the world. and that's why the people that are so hungry, inflation is at 5600 percent. it's going to get worse. and the question is, what will the government do? will they lock down social media? they may have to well and then kind of already have that kind of shut off their internet at this point on that. but you mentioned it, and i'm going to go off what you said. the outside forces almost immediately saw these tweets that were coming from marco rubio, and they were very much encouraging this protest for freedom saying this is it. this is what we've never seen. the type of response in the street. this is the
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beginning of freedom, the over throwing so cute mark rubio, ted cruz just as excited. thank come on, let's get behind it. guys are a joke. these guys are a joke. have been a joke. so that they think that know they're politicians, they survive off of this crap. the only thing that cubans in miami have been fed for the past 70 years is the promises in the wins of politicians. none of which you have made good on any of the promises, whether it's jimmy carter, fidel, i made one in reagan. i mean, you just go down the clinton probably all of them. they go to miami, stumped chest and says, lee bray, we will free cuba. none of them have none of them, none of them know how to and they've all essentially gotten their butts beat by the casto brockridge and the vitamin politicians don't even talk to me about politics. mentioned one kind of big and all of this is biting. he kind of surprised that bernie sanders kind of read for main silence over the other democrats. but the body ministration came out and said, does what he has to say. whatever administration has said there in a while,
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about course it is when it comes to cubans and cuba, there is no difference between a rubber, a republican and democrat, the exactly the same. they're all there to placate the south florida voting popular so they can win florida because they know that that's the most electrically speaking. it's the most important state. ok, so last rest of military has stepped in. they've kind of squashed it for now. you're not seeing that even we thought of how do you story the fact that even it's kind of dying down little man, if you are marking me, those are the same people that are always there. does that help us the outside road when you do see the patrol, the military coming down, sort of like the pushback that america got for the january. matter. it's not a good picture when you have the government coming in with big guns. and again, i think what we need to do is journalists just put the story in perspective. you got 121300. okay. let's say 2000 cubans who are protesting in, in, in havana and other communities. i hope it gets to be 10000 and eventually they
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actually can bring about change. but the fair to the thing to do as a journalist is not just a blow that up, but to put it and stand it next to some of the protests we've seen in our own country. as you just mentioned. and said before we made too big of a deal out of that. let's compared to what happened in ferguson and what happened in los angeles and what happened on january here, changes because of that there has. d been led to some way, maybe not as much extent, but there has been change. statues are coming down, changes are being made in america on a big scale. so could this be the beginning? are you optimistic? maybe this might get the government's attention. i would say the government will likely pay attention to this. this new president will likely in that some kind of conciliatory change. i'm not predicting anything big will happen as a result. or you heard here, 1st, not predicting at this point, maybe be your cross, you know, i know if it happens, you will be the 1st to come on and you'll celebrate. your family was personally affected by a cuban. well, yes, yes, you are. and the cuban american with an extra for extension is always a pleasure to chat with you on camera. thanks for joining mental health facilities
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are now saying no to new patients as they are filled to capacity. but where are they going next? natasha brings us the story after the break. i don't know it nice number didn't but when we got home i don't i don't i don't good down the summit of august and 46000 there. i guess it looks like i made it there that i think we're pretty on the find the article the most of it sort of it did. we can just
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talk to the middle initial group and those who knew all along the plenty puzzled initials for this peculiar use me know, certainly no borders and my number is emerge. we don't have authority. we go to the back scene, the whole world needs to take action and be ready. not a joke. people are just common crisis. we can do better, we should be better. everyone is contributing each in her own way. but we also know that this crisis will not go on forever. the challenge is paid for the response has
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been massive. so many good people are helping us. it makes us feel very proud that we need together in summer solutions where we focus on the solutions. not so much. the problem, stacy, right. we are joined by jeff booth author of the price of tomorrow. the president biden has just launched us. we be action against big tech, big pharma, and big yag, all with hopes of stopping the monopolization of american economy. but pardon me, if i'm a little skeptic as some of the biggest businesses are some of the biggest political donors. so is this going to break out big business or target only those who might
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not have wrote the big checks, lots of things to talk about. so i gotta bring in the big guy himself. why no, thanks for joining me. thank you. ok. so i have to ask, will biden's new executive order from what you can see on anti trust? what actually lower prices for consumers, raise wages, and give workers more power, and maybe sunshine and roses as president biden states were the main goals when he signed it. i try, i'm online. oh no. let's go back a little bit into this are king and know and the hoary h a r y world of anti trust. the anti trust paradox from robert bork. number the grade bork days, and they go something like this. the new way that a lot of the more, really, i think intellectually progressive judges believe is that the model is
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consumer welfare, not merely destroying big companies. look scotty if amazon owned everything, how would you feel its anti trust? go like this? does rob the nagging behemoth, the sherman and the trust colossus? how would you feel it? if you didn't notice it? if things were better, if they were more efficient, if prices were down, if availability went up, if you were happy, you couldn't care less. if amazon was its own planet, but there was a new move dare i say of the, i don't want to say woke, but i'll let you say that this progressive lean a con world that has this selective hatred toward big, big has to be bad bag has to be competitive, big has to be has to be brought down to side less if it were silicon valley,
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the lakes. so this is going to be again, an intellectual argument there. we're going to get into as to what does the anti trust, what do monopolies really mean? it's the consumer welfare test that a lot of, i think the best legal intellectuals since the board have been advocating. not just size interesting. and you're right. it's not just the most expensive things come and very tiny little packages we have found. so here's what gets me about this by the end, the by an executive orders. many of these government agencies that have been involved don't even have confirmed nominees to head them up. so it's basically, they're putting the directives before they actually have the leadership saying, guess why you're not going to be a leader of this unless you go along with my directors, the experts that you'd be in charge of these agencies aren't even going to be able to have input in with these executive orders. is this kind of putting the cart before the horse? this is symbolism. does anybody keep track of ms?
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you remember the 1st couple of hours after it might be a governor, la pedo, maine, and blazing saddles work mark worldwide, where he citing these confessions the liquor store, robbery. it was a sigh. anything's look the bottom i, you simply does, let's really call it what it is. what we want to go after is not big tech, but the fact that our ability to speak our ability to use this wonderful marketplace, a free ideas, commerce, intellectual given take, its being spiteful than quashed and destroyed by a handful of people who are in many respects scotty are bigger than the government . that's the why not believe that we feel that the anti trust not the size, whether it's vertical or horizontal. the very idea that if you remember a while back, you could mention hydroxy clark. when did you would be in no man's land until they change their mind that and i'm telling you right now,
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you remember we talked about this, they're going to bring these people to their knees because everybody, you can ask anybody on the street, they may not know anti trust from a hole in the ground, but they do know that speech is being destroyed, this being quashed and has been smashed and quashed by these people. that's the idea. but that's what i want to get in real quick. i go and got like 45 seconds left. big tech is actually one of the highest owners to this administration, and the part it's empower. so i actually see this more in government and getting access to the data. we know that's already been collected by big tech giant and does it did kind of tie big business in the government that they've put into office even closer. but now it's legal. well, of course it does. in fact, if we were to go back, not to because barrow tauriel. but if you look at where these companies started from and how they started, that's another story. but let me tell you so that the consumer and the voter are
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going to have a lot to say, this is going to be a show down. this is going to be the ok corral and i can't wait. that's if they get their voice is able to be heard if they control both. indeed like you always, it's always a big deal to talk to you and i thank you for joining me on this. thank you. pace of attacks on us soldiers is escalating with rockets and explosive light and drones targeting bases at a very unprecedented rate. now, last week alone, us troops and diplomats were targeted in 6 different attacks. and the attacks are thought to be a part of a court date escalation by iranian back to militias and iraq, however, will abide in administration, respond especially now that it seems more here at home or paying attention to, to help us with the subject. dana mcadam, executive director of the ron paul institute joins. thank you for joining me, daniel scotty, how are you? you know, i have to say this is all in the week following this big announcement of us pulling out of afghanistan bite and celebrating that. he's getting out,
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that's what i think is what's interesting about the environment we're in now, because people are looking at this going or what exactly is the u. s. supposed to be protecting by continuing their presence in this region? i mean, whatever that is, is it enough to keep the rate of $4000.00 troops around? well, the question is rightly, what are they doing there? they are not there at the invitation of the syrian government. that is to be sure, and neither are they at the, at the invitation of the iraqi government, the rocky prime minister was very unequivocal. he condemned very strongly the latest series of us attacks on syria and iraq near the border. you also have the rocky parliament that has voted last year and continues to demand that us troops leap. so how can the u. s. claim any legitimacy occupying this church, or when they're, they're not wanted by either side. all they're doing is stirring up trouble, and they're legally occupying iraq in serious soil for that. that's my question,
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daniel. i mean, i says kind of tongue and cheek may be redundant. why are we there? what is actually the justification for putting the money and these, this military, their lives at risk by being there? what it is, how can you justify this to congress? because the lives of military personnel don't matter to people who really weren't run things in washington. the people who run things in washington or the military industrial complex defense manufacturers. and they fuel this by fueling and funding the think tanks which tell us that if we're not there, some other really bad guys going to come there and take it over. so we have to stay there, and that's why we ended up staying in a cannon stand for 20 years achieving and accomplishing absolutely nothing except robbing middle america of 2 trillion dollars, at least, and giving it to well connected people inside the beltway. well, and that's as if i had to bring about kenneth on this because i feel like we're repeating some of the same mistakes, which the us may, i guess. and, but we're now finding that the taliban has largely taken back over,
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taken back over control of afghanistan. the horrible thing to happen is there that same concern that us pulls out of the region of iraq of syria. that you're going to see more chairs. and what does that actually have to do with the united states? i mean, it's horrible for the people in the area. but are we not making the situation worse, like sort of what we did not gain a sand for 20 years or nose. it is any more horrible for the people of afghanistan to be governed by people to ask and to stand that it is to be occupied and bombed for 20 years by a country 8000 miles away. the can you see that they have been fighting for their own homeland as we would do in the united states if we have been occupied for 2 decades by a foreign force that wants to impose a foreign political and economic system on us. so if you look at it from their perspective, they're achieving the liberation and they will soon be getting rid of a government that serves at the pleasure of washington, d. c. more than half the state mental institutions in virginia are closing down to new admissions. while the need for psychiatric treatment continues to grow, our
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d corresponded to touch a sweet has more on this very alarming trend. i city from the journal it's, i can't read services estimates roughly 3.4 percent of americans, which adds up to at least 8000000 people suffer from psychological problems. and now as there is a major exodus of health care workers from the pet damage overload, the state of virginia is closing admissions at 5 other $88.00, run mental health facilities. hospitals across the country are struggling to keep health care workers, everything from burnout to a fear of being harmed. an unprecedented amount of nurses have quit. this is just part of the reason the virginia department of behavioral health and development services has announced the closing of more than half of their state run facilities for the mentally ill. according to a letter from the commissioner, just to give you an idea of how many people are giving their notice, there have been 108 new resignation in the past. 2 weeks alone for 5500 job statewide. there are more than 1500 vacancies and the staffing crisis has reportedly resulted in at least 63 injuries among both patients and staff since
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july. first official say they are reporting more than 4 incidents per day. but the need to feel the vinyl positions is only part of the issue. back in 2014, the state passed a law called bed of last resort. it came after state senator creed, deeds lost his son, his site. amid a mental health crisis, the law requires that patients be admitted within an 8 hour period. if a bed cannot be found at another facility, including private hospitals with behavioral units. so now the burden has been falling on state run, hospitals take in those patients. now blah has resulted in a massive shortage of beds in the states when its referred to as t b o or temporary attention order has skyrocketed in 2013 state hospitals in virginia. received an average of $3.00 patients per day. but right now they are seen 18 patients a day, which is a 392 percent increase. so the combination of more patients with less health care workers has lost the state with no other choice. but it's not only
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a problem the state of virginia is facing, it's nationwide, according to in our eyes. and so 1950 the number of beds and psychiatric hospital has declined over 91 percent. they don't for the time being the state, there's halting admission to their state road mental hospital. a visual say there is no need to worry about current patients as they will not be kicked out. as people needing help, a solution for their care remains to be seen. and there is no timeline for how long disclosure will last reporting for news. use hughes and tosh, a sweet r t. and that's all that we have time for today show, like always download a portable dot tv app for this show and more. and we can always continue the conversation by follow me on twitter as you. thanks for watching and we'll catch you later. i when i see black america, i see myself when i was growing up,
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like america spoke to me when why astray did did not to say like, marsh measure is a movement we are importing from america. no, nothing is we. i lived in a world where life lives mattered. i was not why i like missing. and i wasn't new from black america. i learned how to speak back to one of the regional people, a lot of re di them. now the police were out with statistics. i'm scared that my children are going to grow up in the country. that thing says no racism, but they're more likely to end up in the criminal justice system than their other fellow friends in daycare. mm.
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the news the, the headlines and party claims of faith test results, no checks and no masks the euro. 2020 final. the world health organization says london's football show damage. devastating for efforts to control the pandemic. meanwhile, the bathroom continues is kind of, it's highly can tell you just tell to vary, takes room worldwide, and now i can't more than 90 percent of russia's new cases. we returned to a corona of ours clinic to see how health care workers a co thing. and the u. s. u s. lead is openly back what they call key is protests against decades of economic suffering. havana points that the major ro, washington has play through decades of sanctions and now allegedly social media manipulation. ah.
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