tv Going Underground RT November 17, 2021 4:30am-5:01am EST
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which is, it is disappointing, that we're still above $1.00. you know, to save the islands to save the culture, to save the language. we need to be below $1.00. and i say that because we live the reality, we see the tides every day and they're rising their over run our docs. they're into our homes. they're into our taurus ones where people grow their food. so we see the threat from the high temperatures destroying our coal reefs at the same time killing our jelly, fish, which are a private attraction for below and, and we also see the fish now they produce by 2100 on the current track. when lose 40 percent of our for fish population. so these are just part of what we are experienced already. and if we're on the current track, the reason i said you might,
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as obamacare is the continuous torture that we're going to be experiencing from now till then. which also threaten our borders and are, are, are easy because then there will be a debate on, well, no initial boundary needs to move under 50 miles because now those i was don't exist anymore. you know, that's, that's the real reality that we face and, and we want the people of the world to understand that it's real, it's a challenge, and we need to all work together to solve these problems. so i know that from comp, you know, we heard commitments. oh, for funding and we heard some of the things that they're doing, but i still say it's not enough, but at least there is some progress. when you go back, what was the reaction from a residence in palau to the fact that the loss and damage element of the so called gold 26 packed was and mentioned you said 4 trillion was needed as
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a trillion trip less than traded in foreign exchange today, what was the reaction there that lawson damage just wasn't in that pack? is it's cooled, signed i hear by boris johnson and others. yes. so you know, the world bank, that's that number we got from the world bank. and the world bank has declared that that that's the amount that is needed. and you know, what, we wanna give our people as hope. and when the world, you know together doesn't give home. and it's about, you know, this country over that country. i don't think that's, that's fair and we need to be fair. we need to be responsible to every citizen of the world. and that's really why comp, in the united nations are there is to protect every citizen in the world. not just the large and big countries, but also the small countries of the world. what did the, the,
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by the ministration at tell you because it, you know, i mean, arguably your lucky in some places because when typhoon sir, a guy destroyed so much of your island. unusually because you don't, no normally have to have wounds. the americans gave money to you, a lot of money, proportionally, per capita. wow. they gave us some, it was actually, i was not just united states through their usa id program. it was also australia, new zealand, our friends from the federated states, micronesia in japan. and taiwan. so was, was a mix of countries. they came out to help and they said, you know, through red cross, blue care kids and all those kinds of things to help people get back on their feet . but the reality is to build new homes, are built homes that are strong enough to withstand the storms. that's where the real challenge lies in. and unfortunately it's the people that are the most vulnerable. the weakest are the ones that sell for the most,
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you know from this because they, it's hard for them to rebuild and it's hard for them to build structures they can really withstand the stronger wins that we now are faced with. of course, missing from call was the emissions fossil fuel emissions that come from the military as you know, the bent, again repeatedly larger, polluted than a 140 countries combined. why have you asked for military for military bases in palau? i already know, you know, a 3rd, maybe the country is u. s. military. why have you asked for more? military base is given the fossil fuel emissions. because of the pentagon, hello and force, we believe that the presence is deterrence, we believe in peace and security and freedom and democracy. and one of the challenges that we have is, are you, you and people not respecting our, our borders. so having the military presence in follow helps on our protection of
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our and security of our borders. i think the other advantage that we have with the military is economic benefit, of course, having military transiting in and out. i also provide some boost to the economy. we don't have a military base here, per se, but they come here to conduct exercises when the ships visit. of course, people come to shores of that provides economic activity, which is important for our small economy. so it's about diversifying our economy, but you're right there military just like big corporations and, and in countries like we have to all do our part in reducing our emissions. so i definitely agree with you that we need to encourage the military to take do its part in finding ways that their clients can be, go to 0 carbon and their ships and, and their, all their operations moved in that direction because you're from
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a military family or your father a u. s. army medical born in maryland, who is the enemy? you said protecting the board is from which country. i mean, if you're going to say china a half your g d p comes from tourism obviously, and that's a lot of chinese dr. well, with that illegal fishing boat from china, from vietnam, from the philippines and that those are the ones that are frequent and even indonesia. so, but surely, nuclear submarines, nuclear submarines and i'm going to protect you from fishing vessels. i mean, this is serious military over there. you have. they were training their 200 people . first type of 40 is more us strike forces. they're the 7th fleet. well then, right, well i think there, there is no question. and then, you know, if you see the activity on the western side of the philippines and activity in the south china sea are, you know,
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i think the protection of borders and say, you know, these are the rule of the law and rule of the center laws of the see that we should follow. we also have concerns because we've seen activities of vessels surveying and naming ridges in our area. there are from chinese and that is, that is a concern to us in our security and our, our easy and our claims to our extended continental shelf and so forth. so, you know, you're correct we, we expect all countries, the world respect boundaries and, and respect the rights of nations and protection of their, their, their, their borders and having a partner that respects, that is important. i mean, you have it in time history, mr. president in your country of environmentalism being the 1st country in the world to have a nuclear free constitution. is that torn up now? is joe biden, sending nuclear submarines to your boards right now?
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well, yeah, you have a good point there. you know, hello. it was hard for hello to accept the compact. we voted ford 7 times and we were because one of the major provisions was we did not want to nuclear into below, you know, we, we suffered in world war 2. and we did, we were concerned about the military presence and asked that would become a situation that we would have to repeat again. and i know those were definitely concerns for the people, but ultimately they can, you know, we basically were forced, we had no choice into accepting the deal that was put on the table. and i think that's ok. you know, for economic reasons, this is where a plow is today. and i think it's important is when we're partners, we've got to develop a country not only for secure security wise, but economically to make it stable, diversify its economy. you look for ways that i can develop and be strong. and i
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think that's one of the areas that the partnership with united states has been lacking and needs needs to improve because you're correct. we have the vessels, we have the planes coming in. but the economic side is where we really need improve responsibility when it comes to global issues, whether it's climate change and the impacts that those will be it, as you say, it is better off the many islands in that region. you know, we spoke to the president of olivia who passed through london from cope. you was talking about the importance of the sea of 26. and he actually told us about an assassination attempt by forces related to washington. your, his, your country's history has a history of a reputed assassinations linked to the united states. if you were to, if you were to ally with china simultaneously with die one, somehow, would you be afraid of your life?
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you know, we're a super peaceful country. we want to be friends with everyone. well, we also believe that no one should tell us that we cannot be somebody's friends. and i think that's where the, where people ask us, why aren't you in line with china and we are, our response is always been. it's really up to the chinese to accept this is their friend. it's taiwan, that they want us to relinquish our relationship with them. you know, that's what we believe that all people on a should should be part of the world and they should be accept it. and we should work toward peace and freedom and, and security is an important part of making sure that there is peace in the world. and that's why we have these partnerships and these alliances. and we want to continue to promote that. we haven't know, killed the 1st president of below, or maybe the 2nd as well. oh, well, there was an investigation and there were there were people prosecuted and went to jail for the assassination. so we,
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we know who committed the crime was, was that it was internal. i mean, it was polite owens that did it and they were prosecutor now who was behind on who won the buck stops with them. on the 2nd president, we understand that it was a, was, there was no further investigation. i think it was rule at the time that it was unfortunately taken his own life. but there's also rumors that possibly that really wasn't the case. but the investigations ended with that at the time, and i don't go any further investigation. of course there's rumors that maybe there was more involved, but we don't. we don't have any evidence in any further investigation because unfortunately the investigators at the time was the f. b, i right, so that's, that's what we have as our basis for the conclusions that allow came up with. well, we hope to interview you in palau next year. we'll mess emotions, kara,
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your international, or i look, thank you so much, mr. president. thank you. after the break and we ask the award winning biochemist to buy any of them are in a vaccines how a discovery has saved millions of lives as the 4th wave of corona virus hit to europe. all of them all coming up and bought 2 of going undergrad when there are problems like the energy crisis, europe, illegal immigration on poland border or even when the wrong political party or politician wins. there is a culprit, always waiting in the wings and that's russia. scapegoating, russia is the excuse used by failing western leagues and people is building the cars right on police report in december 2020 a group of anti finishes allowed a film crew access for 3 months. so if people are organization, if an idea that is
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a must be a ppo, is that you can't allow the gate. wow, they may kill that. but he says, but they can say what they believe in. we believe in helping our community and we believe that fascism is one of the major threats to the united states as gotten reuben, this is a chance to see who and t for really are in order for me to extract my 1st amendment right and say that my life matters have to be on to the teacher that that's all american. we can't trust the police. we can't trust the government. we can't trust anyone except ourselves to protect ourselves in with
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ah, welcome back your of his back at the epicenter of the groan of our span damage, according to the world health organization, with cases in germany said to be rising alarmingly as its health minister calls it the pandemic of the unvaccinated will join me never minds. his professor, captain carrico, the internationally renowned and award winning senior vice president biotech who held pioneer research behind the m. r n. a technology used in the cove in 1000 vaccines that have saved millions of lives. can i just say, kate, that thanks so much for what you've done to help save millions of people and maybe the going under guaranteeing that makes this program. just take us back to the rejections and why you think corporations,
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corporation funded universities thought it was too far fetched that you could take clips of dna and vaccinate them. and humans would drop a inflammation from, from these bits of messenger r n a vaccine. yes, thank you me here much. so i wasn't even wanting to get even of any vaccine. i was wanting to give her a message that i need for therapy to treat the stroke on different kinds of diseases. and one with my colleague, you want to be realized, and i am making this tube and then we tested out he was in from our 3 series and we tried to develop not even when jenny nanine from pretty on any of us. we didn't know that he could be such a could be made a projection is you know, the application i submitted for my grand, you know, actually in the, it's not the university is paying somebody in the united states in my boss what you
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have to apply for funding a grant and a grant to spain your salary. so i tried it for 2 years. every month i submitted the rent i didn't get any. and later i submitted more much because i was not on beach that i was emerging from my position, but i stayed on and i keep doing. and i was working at there in 21 years and always on autopay and did not matter that somebody else paid my set or somebody could get grand or i wrote a grant and somebody i submitted and i was supported. so it was it, we thought the problem, you also find the organizational elements in organizing all these ideas, all of experimentation. i mean, is it true that used hungarian pickle jars at one point? actually i my husband, the door. so some, some tools and equipment that he have me and you know, to fixing because people,
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usually when they had something broken, they left out in the hallway for trash and i picked up, you know, the comb and my husband. and i could use it. i mean, he had to go back to hungary, at one point you became quite ill. i mean, why do you think the ground? so people giving up the grants thought it was far fetched, where they convinced that the rejection would continue? because so many of experiments didn't work. she leaves actually more paper, isn't about me, why and the system to try to understand that it might be somewhere, some ideas are fresh. that's why you don't get the funding and then get some answers. maybe those who are making decision, those who, what are they at the grant? and then they are more likely to find something closer to what they are the week and not something which is got away from those things. because they have like 12 grand to make a decision and they can on maybe want and then easier to say, you know, no to 1st thing is to read then to say yes to something similar, what
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a i for me. and that's what maybe one that is a dna and bio mass tours and those are more stable, more ro, date was 8, and i was, you know, less are less for name was me, and a short period of time. of course, right now we already knew that at the church a, the, the r n a is just a clip of that huge dna chain discovered, of course, here, but you said you were thinking of it as our applications for people with stroke or cancer. and so on, someone from outside, this whole academic scholarly research might say, how is it that the advances that you did in m, r n, a. advances in the delivery systems of the vaccination. all these things came into place, just month before the coven vaccine started. i'm not about to say, it was
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a big conspiracy, but does it even surprise you that all these different elements of scholarly work over decades? and then there were very quick advances in the month before the coven virus was 1st detected in china or in it. so they were just assume that it could happen so quickly because actually 2018 already for the same formulation. emma emma, an english, i know it was already just an, actually a puerto one type of insurance in here in germany. so those were, it was just a different, a lead animal studies monkey studies showing that this is a very effective vaccine to have this i read article and he was published in a lot of the least could prove that. and i just, for, it was for the providers, for why was many, many events, he always looks away. so it was just those people who were not on all fear and i'm
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not following this. we're thinking that it just happened. everything right there. and i'm back in 2018. we already were, we pfizer, a vaccine when it was toward influenza? do you understand the nature of breakthrough infections, or is it to do with the mother in a or is it to do with the delivery mechanism? the, the lip, it, as you might have to say, what that is, do we understand yet why break through infections happening? incredibly red hot inflammation. the side effects is nothing to do with the m r n. a technology is to do with the delivery to the do it to the buyers and then it, when you in here it start to probably put it in your nasal cavity and we're not here . and if you don't have enough for anybody in your blood, you don't have antibody in that area. so there's a virus can pretty funny. most of the virus is homemade when we are infected in
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friends, it's not just getting into our law. it's chris gets in there every day in the nasal cavity and that be by there and then goes in health or not. but if you don't have any blood and body, because you want to be would have vaccinated 6 or earlier 6 lot earlier. what happened is anybody, let me go such, but you have memory says so that when you, with the infected, that you get a little b c, because you don't have any, anybody now in your nasal cavity and you in here. but then you might want to start with kicking, and then you will get anybody would get to the satellite. immunity is just say group cut off a little bit. it is will be a city. so this is the breakthrough happened because it is, it is rescued authorities. gosh, the body just is a middle factory, isn't it?
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i don't know whether you heard about this thing called new or a 10 approach him protein, which they're saying is the they've identified, which is a bit like it is to me. can things just we plug it in to your technology. i know the peanut allergies. i know that obviously, malaria, it's going to be much more complicated. kills 400000 people. you have a malaria is obviously going to be more complicated because of the life cycle of piracy. but can you not just do the peanut allergy one tomorrow? so, so we are talking go back to nation, everyone. oh immune system to respond to some again the any meet and, and you know, kids are allergies, auto immune disease. we want our human system is not to we p act. so these are different things and, and you can approach her for a good. it was one that is ation dudley's vaccination to adaptation. meaning that you with peanut to and the other dish because those are protein based actually 8 years ago was already we heard presentation from our messenger. i'm eating that
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people try to use an a to a p to lee inject to the patient. and now that you don't want to have that component to it, it would have a component clarity, tony canary. and that is also we're in to see a weak presented already. we diluted glass panels is a very serious outing. disease presenting the and teaching repeatedly with a buddy, but now he's not activating liking the kids to massey, but say good evening, we do a man that believe want to activate anything which says just connect to larry clay and then in animosities already we could see that it is asia and the treatment of human disease was accomplished. yeah, i mean, it seems and such an early stage i was in the cancer one being so, so important. i mean, i have to ask you obviously about the fact that all those corporations have funded those educational establishment rejecting you in the 900 ninety's. it turns out now
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that the pfizer, bye own tech, i think, combined $86000000000.00 in revenues. thanks to this. what do you think about the intellectual property debate amnesty international saying that out of $5760000.00 doses of vaccine, only point 3 percent gone to low income countries. do you favor as joe biden did at the beginning, i think the relaxation of intellectual property rights through your work. i can be out there for free hand. i always wanted to have everybody, you know, i was 2 or people. nothing is, was never in my mind to get to ratio and nobody should be a scientist in mind to get a channel. the scientist is dedicating that i want all of those people who are in a day to get the same quality, so that the late i would make and you get them to heaters recipe and they start to do and a 150 printer quality control and everything it goes, what happens,
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i understand that you cannot just keep the rest at me and do what you want. they had to be a trained and they had to, if you want to set up to promotion, it has to be sustainable. not that they do, and then when the week is over, the largest vaccine factories are in the developing world, which as the least amount of exit like we are in britain with vaccination produce in india. yes. but those a writers which is something there for decades and decades, so they get, they were trained to call that procedure. and when you have to have the formulation of the particle, that is everything done differently. you need the people to be educated. i'm sure it sounds something happened like that, that not only the information we reach people so quickly,
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you know the tests. for example, the essay i remember on h, i v that do, we didn't, we couldn't even identify the device is there because there was no essay to that. that thing happened now quickly. everybody could see that, ok, it wasn't even somebody infected and, and, but to me it came very quickly but to not everywhere. but i have to value the best of my knowledge, a 144 countries to was a vaccine. and the price was the cop and, and providing. but most people who could educate those in a lot of facilities that how to do this, those that 247 they are working to make seen. and they don't have the time to do that. but, you know, i think that his intention is, is the best, and i don't see that that it's pushing down the money. i don't see his way or
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drink on. thank you. jazz over the show will be back on saturday. the end of the day, since you came by minister bars, johnson's closest said, dawning cummings, left downing street to the height of the groan of our span demik. after being accused of violating lockdown rules, he helped implemented till then he got to iowa social media. let us know if you think big farmers costing lives by intellectual property rights ah, with or new york, it's really what america is about ah, when our mayor took our place, he was elected because of his campaign on our city, being a tale of 2 cities. the haves and i have not,
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and those who have not are usually the ones who wind up being buried on hard. i. the city is always wanted to forget about how loud city is wanted to forget about the people who are buried there. it's wanted to forget about the fact that there is a potter's field that there was a place where difficult stories are hidden. the fact that we're using inmates to maintain this active burial site, where 1000000 souls are buried. where so much of new york city history is buried is documents of the inequality that has existed in the city for centuries. ah no, when i was showing wrong, when i just don't know any world is yet to see out the same because the applicant and engagement equals the trail.
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when so many find themselves worlds apart, we choose to look for common ground allowing ourselves to be more efficient, quicker with our transactions. but with that comes a trade off. every device is a potential entry point for security into any machine can be hacked. it's an extension of traditional time. the defenders have always been one step behind the attackers permit when there's one called in laws. it's not a matter of, if it happens it's a matter of went with
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headline serenity international. the e. you said it will use all tools at his disposal to stop the micro in flux into poland. that's as polish border guards, fi, a, t, a gas, and a water cannon at refugees. much to the anger of bella roost. a shop divide emerges of opponents tactics with france slamming plans to build a massive border wall on the program. we look at the tough line being taken against people crossing via bella rows, while migrant boats of freely crossing the mediterranean. also in the program, germany considered imposing drastic covey rules on the unvaccinated joining a growing list of countries to do so. if the government struggles to coordinate is pandemic responding to submit a power transition.
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