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tv   Cross Talk  RT  October 18, 2021 3:30am-4:01am EDT

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in major, both in america and in britain begin the process of conditioning, the american and british people to see in order to see in the taliban as a ally against isis. because the americans and the british mainstream major outlets are starting to tell their people that the taliban, another taliban from the 19 nineties and the to fail since they have reforms they have even pledged to observe and respect human rights. so what i believe pates is that the americans and the british are very much in afghanistan. they do not need an army of occupation to control afghanistan. they have simply, i write that an informal agreement with talent and they control key institutions in afghanistan, such as the civil service. and i believe that sooner rather than later, washington and london willis will formalize informal relations with the taliban. by
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reopening the embassies in i just need to jump in in there because you could also make the argument in the, in what we just heard can be true. but it can also be true that the taliban are, are playing the field. of course you have they, they've met with the russians or the russians met with them before, even though the taliban is designated by russia as a terrorist organization on china. his chimed in as well. so it looks like in the green game in this, it's the 21st century version of the here. because i would agree with marcus of the us wants to can maintain at least some form of influence there because it's the, the taliban is reaching out to others. and we have to remind everyone part of the trump deal was that our groups like al qaeda and isis will had to be had to be under control. and meaning they wouldn't be using afghanistan and it say
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a base for or, and endeavors here which. so there's a lot of mix commentary, again, it's because of the emotional shock for so many people that were so best in the war and they're getting a pedal that narrative. so i think things are in flux here. but when patrick reacted with marcus and to say it was very interesting. yeah. you could say a comment on what continue it, marcus, this point. i think you can go off to segue. but it, when the early ninety's, when the taliban took power, it was, it was, you know, a lot of people in the west don't realize that a lot of people in afghanistan at that time saw them is the lesser of 2 evils. because all these warlords in northern alliance types that the u. s. had backed later post 911. they were responsible and known throughout afghanistan for committing grave atrocities. and so when they were, when the taliban came to power, even by the women of, of afghanistan were seen as
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a lesser of 2 evils. so it wasn't as black and white because the afghan war is portrayed as a women's rights issue. in the west. i mean, that was the sort of overriding narrative right through everything justified that the intervention and that's how it played out anyway in terms of the liberal press and so forth with the reality is much more complicated. and the point marcus was making about the u. s. strategic interests. so the question is, what are those strategic interests? and yes, you have the tapi, the turk many stand afghan pakistan india pipeline. that's definitely a western interest. why is that a western interest? because that's in direct competition with the c pack of chinese pakistan energy corridor, which is part of the belton road initiative. so these are competing supply lines. india is, is a big set piece in western geopolitical hedge money terms. and so who can
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win india and also cut off china to derive china. i mean the u. s. it's known the u . s. are backing belushi militants, and they're attacking some of these very areas, including your, the water port of water in pakistan. you have the militants in my and more, you have d stabilization there. that's another route. china needs these overland routes to bypass any potential disruption in the south. china sea are august and the sort of the things that we're looking at that could take place in the future in terms of disrupting shipping lanes and so forth. so china has a very diverse strategy, and one of the main step pieces also is shing john, western china. and there was a z, a isis, the emergence of isis k is. if you look back at the history of this so called terrorist group, ok that did just re branded entices k was the course and group in 2013 or no,
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sorry, 20142015. this was a term coined by the u. s. intelligence. when james clapper was in charge, this is an obama administration, in my opinion, and, and probably many others who looked at this closely. it's a kind of a construct the course and group, and it is a pedigree through it. i'm in, don't worry. i'll cut in the reading peninsula to underwear bomber. it runs right through this bit of classic and intelligence, clandestine and terrorist construction that the u. s. or they've just basically revived it and all the sudden suicide bomb attacks. and after the pull out in afghanistan. so what is the nicest fraction doing in afghanistan, but playing a disruptive role, you just had all the wiggers as escaping from prison, magically after the u. s. withdrew, you have all these other isis militants who were somehow simultaneously escape from
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prison. i'm sure they will. they had assistance in that, so that's the major g, haughty jailbreak that you saw right before the emergence of isis in july of 2014. so i see of this repeating pattern that's forming right now. and so the, like you said, the us doesn't need to be enough guest and military, like marcus said, and they, there's other things that they can do to direct the affairs in the region. it sounds like mark, as it sounds like to me is that, you know, in western historical co conference. we go from this state to this day here at any given what we've already said here on our program, is it? this is just the continuation of the civil war just in a different direction with different people with different names because it sounds like what this is, what's going on right here. go ahead and yes, i also believe that history teaches us by the americans and the british only withdraw from a country or strategic value to them if they have been militarily defeated in that
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country. and the americans and the british will not militarily defeated in afghanistan. it is true, the americans and the british, whenever able to militarily, inflict at the fates on the taliban. but at the same time, the taliban, whenever able to defeat the americans and the british markets also is it need. another failure is that the u. s. was never able to legitimize their proxy government in the eyes of the population that was very keeping. and at the fundamentally, that is the reason why they decided to be ok, because there was nothing you could do to legitimize that government was just corrupt to the core. keep going in days, i mean we have a look at the casualties which the american and british military's incurred spanish song, but loss is almost negligible. so that is why it comes back to my assertion which i have been putting out for some months now that the americans and
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the british had no reason to leave an immense strategic value to buy washington and london as it was to the british empire in the 19th in the 19th century. so that is why i believe we see through the taliban americans in the british, russian national security fruit, central asia, because of central asia. is russia also to speak to the taliban? the americans in the british. we'll continue to try the stabilize shine, which is of course, a restless muslim province in china. and also a free to tell the americans in the british will be able to limit iran's influence in the region. a lot more to talk about when it comes up as an in the future. going to go to what you're breaking up with that short break. we'll continue our discussion on some real estate. ah
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ah ah, there is other voices to play but also within the daniels purely a little fish with needed. yeah. it was a just food say the game and then you would you that is images moves up was good for supposedly good. have my did on i would say with music his image is sprint. so we come up with your phone was out of the to get the vote for idea with all of your group plan it some way up with the to the shelf of worship, with
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a financial survival guide. daisy, let's learn about be allowed. let's say i'm a true, i get any grades from greece on base of the site. 9 wall street broad, thank you for helping with joy. that's right. fell out that way. when i see black america, i see part of my so i was growing, you know, like america spoke to me when, why destroyed, you did not have to say black life matter is
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a movement. we are importing from america. no, nothing is who we are. i lived in a world where wide lives mattered, and i was not why. like mission. and i wasn't known from black america. i learned how to speak back to whiteness. aboriginal people of iraq law every day. we're out wanted them now with the police. were out with she states, i'm scared that more children are going to grow up in the country that think says no racism, but they're more likely to end up in the criminal justice system. then there are other fellow friends in daycare a. i was just seemed wrong when i just don't hold any well. yes, to say proud disdain. because of the attitude and engagement equals the trail
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went so many find themselves worlds apart. we choose to look for common ground in it's been decade since the fall of spain's fascist regime, but old wound still haven't hailed your interest in going into them because on the phone with michael feed him. okay. give me support, said cutting me in the pursuit. this is me neighborhood. i just, i think with thousands of newborn babies, what toned from their mothers, and given away and forced adoption? they don't really bottom on, are you just yet, fiesta, my old robot. if you live, i meant it to this day mother still search for grown children, while adults look in hope for their birth parents.
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ah, well, the light across that were all things are considered. i'm peter labelle. this is the home edition. to remind you we're discussing some real issues. ah ok gentlemen, let's change gears here. patrick. the western world world in general is experiencing a quote unquote energy crisis here. in many ways, for me, i certainly consumers are feeling it a shortage high prices. there's no denying. but the cost of a, well, that's a different issue altogether and i sum it up with this 2 ideas, ranking competence and ideology. i'll explain later. go head jumping. yeah. so, you know, it's funny how the press has reported this, this energy shock price shock. and it's,
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it's seen is like some active nature. it's just some organic event that just happened. and we all have to deal with this surgeon, record search and wholesale energy prices. and the reality is that this isn't an organic act of god. this is a direct result of government policies, specific policy decisions made by the governments of europe made by great britain made by the united states and other g 7 countries included. ok. so there are there the willingness to go along with this green new deal, or ideologically mainly ideologically driven directors. and we saw the results of it last winter in germany when the wind turbines froze. when there was no solar power, when they couldn't meet their base load demand, what did they do? they fired up the same thing in texas. yes, they fired up the coal plants. so now what do you see? you see a cold. ready coming back now they have to do this again. what's happened to the
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price of coal? it surged. what does that mean? they need to by carbon credits or carbon offsets. so the carbon markets are booming because of a restriction and supply to the energy market. so what's the result of this x fossil fuels becoming expensive? this price is being passed on to consumers. ok, but a lot, but what's really cause this. this started during the enron revolution. the total deregulation and free floating of wholesale price is derivative, markets were introduced for energy spec. the speculation industry was basically opened up. and although enron collapsed and people were arrested and charges were brought, the system still remains. so it's, you can manipulate the energy market, then you add to this, the price of, of gas. because if russia was allowed to supply via the north stream to buy other pipeline projects, it would help to stabilize the spot price. and so they're blue. now they're blaming
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russia using couldn't have weapon. ising energy is just it, some believable. so russia just wants to be a good partner to europe, provide constant cheap and stable, natural gas, and marcus. the amazing thing. i mean, i've been following the russian energy mark or donte years. i mean a long, long time. and one thing that they've always dressed in gas from is always that because that's the monopoly export for russia is that they want long term contracts . they want to stay away from this speculation and that's when it all is exactly what patrick was saying. my dear, this is a for some people, a one person's crisis is a small group of a wealthy people's opportunity here. and again, the incompetence of it. ok when, when we have the, the height, the lock down in the west, the consumption went down and then, you know, they can fill up the storage units and then when they lock down, starting to come to an end, there was a surgeon in demand. and while they are doing that same time,
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they should have been refilling the storage units, but they weren't. ok, i mean just incompetent. i mean i'm, i don't even work in that industry and i know that go ahead mark. firstly in the u . k. energy prices rise year on year, not because of breasts, it, not because of a supposed energy crisis, but because energy, electricity and gas in britain is privatized. secondly, britain has relied to extensively on liquefied natural gas. and further, the british government should have put politics aside and should have emulated the agreement which germany reached with russia by which germany will receive constant, an uninterrupted flow of natural gas, which is crucial to the german industry and crucial to german domestic households. pizza, i want to share story review patrick and our viewers. recently i embarked on
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a journey from london to pembroke shire. that is a long distance and i stopped in numerous places along the way. at no time did i see food shortage at no time did i see an energy shortage, but i took it upon my so to speak with employees. i petrol stations from london to pembroke, shire, and in supermarkets from london to pembroke. every single employee totally. that is no food shortage, is no energy shortage, cause say, what has caused some problems regarding items of foods in supermarkets and almost an overnight demands on petrol and diesel was panic volume. we have seen pizza in grayson is british mainstream major a few weeks ago. put out some cooperated story to say that princeton was short of petro and diesel
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and the british people, again, without fin, can independent labor about forensic thinking. critically having this absolute faith in what mainstream major tells them they went out, they didn't just fill out that because they filled up jeremy times. they filled up plastic bin liners with petrol and diesel. and that caused a very short term shortage. but there is no energy crisis, per se, in the united kingdom. so that leads me on to discussing why is mainstream major alleging that why are british ministers legina? i believe, part of the reason peter is to distract the british public from some very serious changes which are being imposed in british society. fraser be what is known as coven 19. and i believe it is also
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a novel way of justifying the increase in electricity and gas by saying it has anything to do with privatization. it has everything to do with russia. so i believe that there is more so this story of an energy crisis in britain. i patrick also when, when is when is i think it's dangerous for the average consumer. is it in a way this narrative can be turned in to see how see how incompetent carbon fuel is we really have to. we have to make that final bowls. ok over, you know, to the green economy here, which of course for the people that are subscribed to that all, that might be all nice and fine. maybe they have solar panels already. but i mean, there's more time and effort putting in being put into 202420342044. what about this this, this, this winter?
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ok, these are incompetent people, the, they think about unicorns all the time, and the rest of us pay the price for it. go ahead yet. so when the, when there is a spike in wholesale prices, it hurts the retail providers of energy. so it's, this is knocked out all of the smaller providers, the ones the government entice to get into the market for years. and so you're left with the big players. and if the big players can then go and complain to the government, ask for what a bailout. so i wouldn't be surprised if we see that. and so this is a consolidation of markets. this is what we've seen since the beginning of the coven 19 crisis, globally is really a re consolidation of finance. so power and the concentration of financial power into a fewer and fewer hands. and so if you look at the great reset directive of the book, ca, schwab's own book, once they want to reduce air travel, they want to make fossil fuels are no longer economically viable. they want to
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reduce consumption of beef and pork. now we have the pork price crisis in the u. k as well. they don't have went over to our workers and butchers to kill all the pigs, so they need to slaughter the pigs. a cashless society that's also important feature central bank, digital currencies, block chain currencies. this is now being talked about by re she's so the chancellor checker and the bank of england more often now is so that this is seen as a fait accompli eliminating suburban life. and moving people into more concentrated city dwellings and so forth. so, and stakeholder capitalism putting the values of stakeholders ahead of, of profit. so fundamentally transforming or the, what the free market economy or the crony capitalist economy, whichever way you want to describe it. so all of these take all these boxes one by one. and so it's interesting how this overlaps this d, d and
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d fossil fuel is ation d industrialization, energy intensive for you and sustainable development calls for 2030. this does overlap somewhat, which you know politics because this also sees to keep russia out of the european market. it is funny that they're the u. s. and the britain are egging on you to keep sanctions on russia. they've been doing this for years and, and russia just became the number to oil and petroleum in puerto, into the united states. just in september, they just certain pass mexico only buying canada now. so, i mean, where, where is the outrage from the, from the democrats, from a bite administrator. i mean, where's the outreach? just the, the complete stupidity of their planning and having the certainly the law of getting it comes into play here. i mean, there are some, there are many things that people want it on the left want to tinker with and you know, when it comes to energy and i don't want them tinkering within here. and i mean
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partners, demarcus me and me know crisis is being left wasted here. is it ok everything because i think we have the supply chain for the quote unquote energy crisis and they're all coming all home. oh, go ahead. i think it's a great transformation is occurring in the west, principally in america, canada, australia, and then it's no coincidence. and i know none of it is good, as i say, it's no coincidence that they are, but those are the anglo saxon countries of well, we know that when something happens in america, very, very quickly transforms to the rest of the world. and i believe that this transformation is very, very, and in fact, i would go as far as the site, it's a very hideous transformation. the problem is that in america and in britain,
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the democratic republican, conservative and labor policies, all 2 sides of the same coin. they are coffee. they act in, in their own interest, not in the interest of the ordinary man and woman. and they are also important in back by then knowledge that the average person in america and in britain is more interested in what is happening on that television set. and what is happening in, in that local communities in societies as a large and when you have distracted extent, when you have broken down that capacity to think for them. so you can, you know, run out of an employment or viewers for watching is here. are you next? i'm remember? ah,
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when i see a spoke to me, why destroyed it? didn't know how to say like, lash matter is a movement we are importing from america. no, nothing of who we are. i lived in a world where white lives mattered. and i was not wise like miss noon. and i wasn't known from black america. i learned how to speak back to whiteness. aboriginal people of iraq law every day. we're out wanted them now with the police were out with. she speaks, i'm scared that more children are going to grow up in the country that think says no racism, but they're more likely to end up in the criminal justice system. then there are
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other fellow friends in daycare 3 rows of us to play, but also within the daniel stream earlier, the little fish with the rest of the basilica. thought about that because more used to lead the simple just needed. yeah. it was, i just would say the game and then you would get that is images, but it goes up with good, supposedly good. have my did some, i would say again to spend music. his image is filica mom, but it's much like yourself was out of see to get the vote. if i give you with all of your rooms, planet, dumb way up. all of the fellow with the shelter bush up with
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it's been decade since the fall of spain's fascist regime, but old wound still haven't hailed your interest in going into done them. nick us on the phone with nickel freedom. okay. give me a bowl said cutting me on the bus at the station. we know that i understand. i think with thousands of newborn babies were torn from their mothers and given away and forced adoption late bought about. are you still fiesta? bitter? my old robots. i feel elementary to this day mothers still search for grown children, while adults look in hope for their birth parents. oh, is your media a reflection of reality?
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in the world transformed? what will make you feel safer? isolation, whole community. are you going the right way or are you being led to some with direct? what is true? what is great? in the world corrupted, you need to descend a join us in the depths or remain in the shallows. mass kaiser, financial survival guide, liquid assets are those that you can convert into cash quite easily. but keep in mind, no as if you need to inflation better watch guys report with
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this always top headlines here, one artsy and ready for action. russia fills one sec, nova no stream to gas pipeline with natural gas and awaits the final green light from regulators to stop supplying europe tortured and jailed for 17 years without trial. we explore the case of pakistani national, who still in guantanamo despite being cleared for release years ago after it emerged, he had been mistaken for a terrorist. for russia, welcome back. the 1st have a space filled and crew off to the 12 day shoot on both the international space station. and we're talking about extreme pressure flaming turbulence, the new pioneers over orbital cinema speak with us here at
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