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tv   Going Underground  RT  July 28, 2021 9:30am-10:00am EDT

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that's been the main concern of the prime minister reportedly. what is your latest study telling us about acute covered? so i'm a professor of medicine and child health, the university of liverpool and i get invited to attend stage meetings. the gum and senior advisors are chris with the and patrick balance, and they choose the expert than their advice or not. my role. i bring to that data from research studies i'm personally responsible for. so i have to take personal responsibility for the data on present. the, the reality is the cobra does not just the disease of the frail and the elderly. and we are seeing children a bit hostile and adult submitted hospital. the reality is the death mostly does occur in people over the age of 50 and far more people label. they just 75 that goes up exponentially buzzword very steeply of age gets all. but if you look at people damaged by covered, even people as young as 19,
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are suffering damage and hospital, which we can measure. and some of the children to rarely get inflammatory syndromes and require quite a lot of hospital care. so to say that this is just a disease, the frail elderly is definitely wrong. well, i'm sure the anti faxes will come out in 4th treating against this show. but this was a study of $70000.00 adults and all be it. this is rare. the proportions that i've got to figure 27 percent between 1929 year olds, 37 and 3039 year old. and the organs effected a kidney long and hot, and you think this is a long term issue for these people suffering from this acute conditions caused by covered. so this is a study conducted in u. k. hospitals in 302 hospitals. so it's generalizable, it's conduction, england, scotland, and wales. so you can say to do any special problem in any one of our countries or
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any failing into any one particular hospital. so this whole call quality generalizable data. the study has been peer reviewed. so unlike the fraudulent piper matching report which has been retracted because of plagiarism and data quality issues, this is a study that's been to the gamut of peer review. what we found when we looked at 70000 adults age between 19 and i think the oldest of some 100, something was quite a surprise. we found it. even the younger adults were suffering tissue injuries to the lung, liver, kidney, heart, and occasionally the brain as well. the commonest injury was a thing called kidney acute kidney injury. and you would expect most people with the kidney injury to actually get better. but some will have a step wise reduction kidney function which may lead in decades to come to need for renewal, replacement therapy or problems handling drugs or metabolize for the kidney. so
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what we're starting to get to know is really koran learned astounding of how komar covered damages. people of all ages, particularly adults. so these are cute injuries occurring in hospital. we do know this concept of long cove. it but the injuries we're seeing in hospital are unlikely to get better overnight or even a matter of weeks. so i think some aspects of the damage caused by corporate and hostile are leading into the parts of the syndrome called long covert and to some way to explain long calls it, not all the way that some way. and these are the vaccinated or the unvaccinated suffering like this. what are the proportions? the study reporting was conducted to for vaccination, so it's, they were all unvaccinated. we've seen a huge benefit from vast nation and hospitals. the age groups being admitted to hospital majority or no under 50, under unvaccinated,
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and the mature or have had the vaccine but is not low enough to work yet. so totally different population is now coming into hospital is mostly under 50. and the paradox here is these are salvageable people. these are people that we can save their lives with the highest interventions. that means that they take our hospital resources as we say their lives. now we keep them well. so there's still quite a high burden on our health care system generated by these people that are not vaccinated. now, i should just say about, i have a mexican in case no one knows about it. and antiviral being talked about. and as you said, peer review has shown it to be fraudulent. apparently, i should also just say that apparently the government is reported the thinking of vaccinating 12 or 15 year old. you're not so sure about the effectiveness of injecting children and i m r n a vaccines.
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i've been sitting on the fence on the vaccination of children issue for some time. while i waited to hear more about the safety data in the younger age groups. and the conclusion i'm coming to and this is very much personal conclusion. we do know that covered causes some harm to children, but if vanishingly rare, and if you want to balance the risks, the pure health risks against the, again, very rare side effects of the vaccine is a really, really finally balanced argument. however, if you take into consider the wider impact of covered on disrupting children's education and their social and emotional development and take into consideration that children do amplify that disease to some extent. mainly because they're the only group that aren't vaccinated. that i think the overall argument
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sways in favor of fascinating are teenagers. but that's an arguments that's involving a big picture argument. taking kind of effect on society and education. not just health suspiciously correlate to these report that the british government just about to announce obviously being an expert, particularly in the midst and maybe maybe an issue i should just quickly ask another thing about vaccination, very reports from israel that shortening the delay between 1st and 2nd, vaccines seems to have impacted on the efficacy of the vaccination program over there, whereas we've kept it the same sort of length here. are you aware aware of that? and then therefore the dangers of shortening that length. yes, and we've got to study ongoing in the u. k. i think it's called a predict study and they've looked at different generations of distance between 1st
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dose and 2nd dose. but i think they're shown showing this a 6 to a week delay between 1st and 2nd. dose is probably optimal and is worthwhile keeping that delay right? about 6 to 8 weeks when prevalence is relatively middle of the road, not particularly high. and, and that's because you're, you do get a slightly better pick up with that delay a. and it does allow you to vaccinate more people. so this is the balance between pushing for early full immunity and spreading the 2 doses to get more people actually it has been given amount of time and a longer lasting effect. so a little bit, the delay seems to be a good thing even for the fines or even for the pfizer and other r n, a based vaccines. and just just quickly, before i get onto immune escape, is there any truth to the delta variant? help to kill off the variance. the beats are varied. he for 84 k that seem to
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bypass the answers and occur. and pfizer and we're done the vaccines. so we have the delta vary to thanks for that. it's really hard to know, especially these viruses compete for ecological spaces or they compete to find people to in fact. and if one virus just slightly more infectious, is likely better at making people infectious for longer or produces more virus from the nose and throat than that gives it a huge advantage in the population. we are aware that delta is escaping all of the current vaccines because all the current vaccines are based on a strain that was circulating in early 2020 the good news is that all the vaccines are editable. now, because they use this editable r n a technology. so the way of seeing this pan out,
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as i think come winter or spring, we'll have boosters for over 50 year olds and people that are chronically extremely vulnerable. and the boosters will be targeted, say the delta and the bitter strains. you might get a it'll be a vaccine soup of probably the 2 most recent relevant streams. ok, i mean i've been drinking say that when you say me an escape with delta, you mean you don't mean that people become seriously ill after vaccination movie because they have much milder responses. much milder illness and this is, this is really good, but some still will come into hospital particular those sort of very frail, which just in the wind just have to change direction for some people to go into hospital so they might be double vaccinated and they'll still come into hospital, but they wouldn't do died and that's, that's really good. the fact scenes are things are super faxing. we would, we'd have been very happy to settle for the vaccines. had the even been 5060 percent effective to start off the vaccine that was 85 to 95 percent effective as
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wonderful. and that's given to some wiggle room that allows these new variance to still be targeted using this faxing. yeah, i know big pharma champion and i had it after the 2nd vaccine and it was very mild . just finally. what about the fact that the viral evolution exploded oxygen sierra's category of thing. we have 92 percent of the bodies in this country. we now have the possibility of immune escape in terms of mutation at highest level in britain here. obviously, scientists around the world criticizing the british government in a way, sage by inference, is now the time that we are most going to be able to expect a new british variant because of the high levels of explanation here in britain, they don't quite work that way. if you've got, if you've got very high levels of vaccination in most of your population,
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you stop virus and evolving in these areas because it's got less opportunity. the worst case scenario when you get partial vaccination in your community or mild fascination. and that's why we do need to push forward and get as much the populations vaccinated. i'm not sure that i quite agree with his argument and many others that don't agree with his argument. the, the concern for me is here is that the pediatric population. we probably only got about 25 percent of the population of children exposed to the virus presence. so we haven't a sufficient coverage there to prevent a risk of vital escape and evolution in that population. so again, that's another good reason for pushing forward with vaccination in the children at the moment. price column sample. thank you. thank you very much. after the break in the week of the 100 and 25th anniversary of the opening of the 1st ever for profit movie theater, i just go pole in the united states. is it time for hollywood,
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germany to come to an end? we speak. tiffany black coach, his new film night, the kings expose african ancient oral tradition from inside an ivory coast prison. all of them all coming up and bought 2 of going underground. ah ah, the new gold rush is underway and gunner thousands of ill equipped workers are flocking to the goldfields, hoping to strike it. rich children are torn between gold and education. my family was very poor. i thought i was doing my best to get back to school, which still will have the strongest appeal to count down the next day. she has torn and historic day monetary history. that would be august 15th, 1971, the dated,
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then president. richard nixon closed the gold window, basically defaulting on americans, obligations to great britain at the time. and since then we've had pure monetary chaos. the ah ah, i use
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the welcome back to this week mark free 125th anniversary of the opening of the 1st cinema by disco paul in the u. s. since then, the u. s. has come to dominate the global cinema industry through hollywood, which is based accusations of being a tool for the united states is foreign policy establishment from black lifting of alleged communists to working closely with the us military. so is it time for a realignment to let us centric film industry and new film tips for an oscar night of the king feels a story not often seen in the world of hollywood, exploring class politics and revolution in a tory is ivory coast. prison is direct. tiffany black co joins me now for my be john and called to var fairly welcome to going underground. what an amazing film night of the kings is. i have to say right from the outset of the prior to national view is will say people here, they know, did the, a drug where they know chocolate from ivory coast. and they might know about the qu,
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backed by the french government in 2011, which features in the new film. tell me about this oral tradition that you've resurrected for us in this amazing, phil was 1st tradition the i i, i'm trying to, to show the additional additional or why the team of all our story in a course and in west africa we have a real, it's we are, would be a man or woman and i'll story and i'll boys are still and i wanted to, to pay it to do in this in to always done so. so dramatically knowledge i saw yesterday, i knew what it is for me, but you know, ah ah,
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when you me and your main character is like sure harris side. and so it is kind of international even though it's set in this bleak prison called the mocker. it's somehow international and yet so enclosed your challenge was to, to go to go inside to be in the mesh in, in the mesh in mac, please on or maybe off work us or jasmine. we don't know if i, we goes inside your phone and in the same time, so other story to ask the question about. so if any was you know, best on, i know scott, i was, i was to share some, it's best to spend, go off for a long time. so i do this piece and gave it to my
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ease or blood's 2 story already tonight. and then if you want to survive is to finish the story. i know you've talked about how george and a, maybe to some known on the gene genie from by david. very john janae's name, the master thief storyteller, affronts inspire this as well. when you want to speak about please on, and specially about design all 6 shunting on, it's obliged to think about john's or me and jimmy chapter piece colleges made and in these meds play mistress during 111 evening and in the rankings might result very play kings and queens doing one night
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on ah, you need to, ah yeah, there's a bit of our lady of the flowers to the people say, reportedly people say that they watch this program in guantanamo, even in this prison in ivory coast, which you show as being so appalling, i mean, it is appalling. the, the shadow of guantanamo washington guantanamo georgia camp even hangs here in this, in one of the scenes. yes this i got one more he's got in, he's in my job and i wanted to say something about titian edge or her position of friday. so software my car again 5 games and
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they play like one to move. so it's a soft off, may not be my offer on the inside the prison. and who is zelma king, the man whose life your main character tells the story of. it was there we have our i'm, i was again, believe off to young by the age to 18. yes. and then and then was, this is linda call my cars and they took away and then from the city of god was seen because they watched the same. it's very famous in the joe and back to very what sniffed soon was know this time. and they wanted to, to, to make that sent via the spring and summer was that was a young boy in a corporate in some mystical to fight. and
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after you begin a young boy with political or video and it became a bell and after after it gets it to become a so job story of this gun with young people. and finally he was leased by the appropriate issue. yeah, the connections, they're obviously the fulfill as of brazil in city of god. we now know that lula who's been on this joe as well as to say, with the lies we're told about him. you have laurel back bow, who made international headlines when he was, i don't know what you, how you think of it because you show the news footage suddenly, amidst the scenes of the film, whether it was the french that kidnapped him, i understand he's returned in the past few weeks to be john, after being a quite different lead actual criminal court. not just to show the french matching
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in reality, yes, i would say that's my work in rico started in 2002. when i came in, the united goes to make it there to montgomery about my childhood france, a friend called him like, who died in the back out what i wanted to make a dr. montgomery about him and it was kind of genuine and 3 days later. so i started, so my scene already got off. why not? because he can watch i have to offer you kind of cries united because so i photo and photos. this was in my stress picture on the sensing. and now i want to g as just a moment event because it's very bus on and why not? when i was there popped off for a video and i said,
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i knew i would make these entry in this day one by one very. when one day i went by this way and i had gotten some archives, some image off 3 of my sons. but how do you maintain a distance as a director and writer, given that your own mother was imprisoned in, in jail and you were 8 years old and she was in jail for being a political revolutionary. yeah, i've come from a political family that get some strong image when i, when i drive a collective taxi one day by week to go to see my mother back out. and now my guys are open please on. and as a, as a visitor, you know, discuss, we present on your grade, was it was on, i got you on your space on the interaction like this,
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and for me at the edge now my guy was like a kid don't. which quinn's in that case, and i want to, i did that much. i mean, they set up to fail are all the characters set up to fail. people who said that some western nations have deliberately created a structural adjustment system in ivory coast to fail. you know, i because the switch so countries are quality. well it is, i country because we, we were on guys control of fedex office where you don't really need the support. the dance was, was a lead. soft freak out was france. so receive some, sometimes i because he's a window of france and enough for god. so we can, we can see that window. but today,
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at the very last option to united read both ways locked off into i've and read, read, read wants, some prices. want to be in different, economically, politically, but it's not going to be in the band when, when's the main army of class is on recourse and everything is work for you guys to be in different way or your economy is based on a it's josh, y'all is their own color. so it's a site, it's not their political $51.00, the job to stick 5. it's a human fact. it's a so show fight. but i believe i believe in this, in this site, and i think we can, we can, we can speak without vice and some say it's a fight repeated in other countries, but we don't get many sub saharan african films in the 1st place just totally out
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of i mean, hopefully there will be more, but the currently actors that are in this film are actually from, i don't know, is it called the lawless quarter of be john? you just have gotten them to act. yeah, we made, we made for a gas station. not be john, professor and i was not there. so for the restaurant and in 2 days, and i was not very happy was discussed and decided to go in different sub job during 2. yes. research. so maybe 2000 young people and finally respected thought to be part of what the young people dense got much out of 5 yards. and we made up shop doing to mouse by this way. we define all this growing was all we found this further?
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my god. oh yeah. no, no. thought the dam is an old god. yeah. john does the job i did not buy the gosh bob. no this is jen law. yeah. no more going on as well. yeah. you know, it's, it's strange, but the prison put capitol population in ivory coast is less than in france,
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the old, colonial monster. and maybe as you say, some say to have colonial mastery. you know, in a way, it was incredibly important. presumably in the film to, to create an echo of society outside prison as it is in prison. yeah. they're usually what, what's the name on it? it's got to send me off to the society. so it went away and switched out of your book value violence. you will see freeze on is a violence or is also in also psyche. so i wanted to use this on for me, it was only just a complete society society with this quote with this, with this belief. and i wanted to ask jeff all they did was power over for a succession and trying to, to other to other it was, you know,
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we're outside about our united because we do with politics. philip, like, thank you. thank you. and that's it for the show will be back on saturday until then keep in touch with us on the la social media and let us know if you'd like to be more films that don't us and he didn't trust the so neural networks have been following us everywhere we look online because our relationships are what matters most of us and that's how we find meaning and how we make sense in our place in the world. what silicon valley see. i don't mention in this leak presentations. however, i think ghost workers who train the software humans are involved in every step of the process when you're using anything online. but we're sold,
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as is miracle of automation behind your screen. it's workforce that seems algorithm is for next to nothing. on a very good day to do $5.00. now a really bad day. i could do 10 years worth is removable by design. it's about labor costs, but it's also about creating layers of western responsibility between those who solicit the kind of work and need it. and those who do it when i would show the wrong one. i'll just don't the room. yes. to see out the scene because the attitude and engagement equals the trail. when so many find themselves will depart. we choose to look for common ground in
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the the me ah, germany is rotten despite a deadly explosion that an industrial part of chemical company is left to die more than 30 wounded vironment. this also sounded the alarm over a huge cloud of potentially toxic black smoke created by the black and the whistle blow. daniel hayley sent it to almost 4 years in prison for leaking classified details about washington's drone assassination program. we get reaction from others chosen to make public lethal state secret when we kill civilians and then put in the official reports that they weren't children. for example, they were.

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