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tv   News. Views. Hughes  RT  November 26, 2021 8:30am-9:00am EST

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and the timbers are much shorter. we will discuss how airlines are handling the crowds and doesn't really passengers as some wonder if the industry is really prepared to handle the holiday rush. also, another statue has been removed from a city hall this time, thomas jefferson joining a list of over 100 confederate statues from there were torn down just last year. but more holes remain for statues from every period american history leading back all the way to her founding to be removed. will there be any left standing and is it fair to judge history with mom and a standard? i'm going to use and we're going to give you the $360.00 view of these issues on this special panel edition of news views right here on our to america. ah, maybe it is your desire to get out of the house, or maybe you're ambitious to see loved ones who you have missed over the past 2
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years. but if you are looking to travel this holiday season, you're not alone. triple a expect more than 10 percent normal will be hitting the rows. however, the biggest search actually happens an airline travel, which is estimated to be more than 80 percent more than just the previous year. and more traverse in flight means the potential for more stressful situations between travelers and airline staff. what are some of the problem has been created? preventable by the airlines are benefiting some while putting others and fairly at odd. let me introduce our panel, former antiques, be official, jamie finch hillary for which of us are all mark l o n and martin publisher of a pro american report dot com. thanks for joining me on this conversation. i have no doubt of his going to be a lively one considering the last 10 minutes before row. i'm sure they're gonna bring that fire here. jamie, i want to start with you on this. you have a background in the airline industry. let's start with the airlines. you know, we have seen continued a uses that have been happening of those are the staff and now you have this influx
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. those passengers are the airlines and back up, ready to go at full force enabled to handle this rush. i'm hoping that they are, i mean they think they've been trying to ramp up with the staff and with, with planes is or work they just take some time. and also they're having delays on the planes that they were expecting to have from the oldest that they were replacing, which was the $737.00 max. and those are back backlog into in being delayed in delivery. so they're really trying to do their best, but i think they're going to have to just mark down and deal with it. you know, people are so many people traveling like jefferson or well and they're allowed to brush flaring, but also goes the idea of price increases because it's not cheap. now granted, in the past there's been sales, but hillary this time, how is this year any different? the prices seem to be the same and if it's not what caused that influx? gas prices on the road are a lot higher. yeah, absolutely. and pleasure to be back to you and just to add to what jamie was saying, i mean they're giving tie quando and crockett classes to some of the students. so i think that might help them though. but koby, the ceo of tonight,
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the deadline to saying actually that it will be about 55 percent more expensive to travel. a couple of factors. you're right, absolutely about the cost of fuel by nicole, because now we're lease some of the strategic petroleum reserve. a little bit too late and a little too late, and it's not really going to help those prices. but a few things. also, the staff that they let go, and the staff that they put on follow during the pandemic. because although they had government funding to help them through that period, they actually didn't realize how quickly travel would rebound now it's vaccinations, travel is up to such a great extent. there was a huge demand and that having quite a few problems, getting the staff to come back. so what are they doing there? inducing them with extra pay extra overtime pay. also a lot of the maintenance staff actually for the airlines, the maintenance staff is put on a. busy lot of extended followed and they've actually had to induce them back. so you've got the higher cost on the staff side as well as the cost of the fuel very well to compound just thats logistics but well, but also we have a we have
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a couple of problems. one is a lot of people have used this pandemic to get control. get excited about it. i mean, i never had, i thought we call them air hostesses. don't call air host a. yeah. yeah. that's, that's not a lot. yeah. but you know, all the sudden the math it's got to be on you. the story is a mass drops down over your nose and you get so because over and says, get that up right in. and your neighbors upset the tension on flights after you haven't been on flights for a while. i mean, you know, you actually have been flying through the pandemic. people don't handle it. well, people don't handle a mask on, well, i'm vaccinated. i'm booster. here i am. i got to where the mask, my neighbor is going to complain. she's got 8 masks on. she's wearing a here all the stuff. oh, i wanted more peanuts. i was like, you know, it's right that you're allergic, so we're going to have pretzels and i can't get my 3rd jack daniels. it's gonna be a i. but that's one thing. one thing is the power of
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the, of the workers and they have a problem, right? it's a tough thing, but i do think it's people are grumpy, right. holidays are hard and i think people are going to be grumpy or that yet. it was one thing member the paying them to get the seat empty between you that was like, this is the best. yeah. now the stacked on top the and the gun eat masks on on. you know, i think it's going to be really interesting to see who has just come out of that little hole. so anything cooper. yeah. they're not used to actually even socialization or interaction router that way. i think we need to put it in that country through like a nice a nice them for a nice class mate remind everybody i have that can make me will mean i depending on what it is. okay. so when you look at this travel costs you investigations and have gone into initiated for unruly passengers, there has been a problem between what the, how the passengers are acting and how the staff is acting. some say, like you said, some say it's below your nose and you make any of
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a local agent. they've also on short facilities, it definitely has gone up. that means a lot of these reasons don't make sense. you know, when you're waiting in line, you're on top of each other to check in your radio and go through it. and then i know they go into an nfl football game and they're all going to be next week and good. everybody right next. you know, they're, you're taking it off and of course the person next me comes in with a big goal and a sandwich in the whole time. they're just munching around on it. like, yeah, how is this making sense? does that have any part and do you think in the frustration that passengers a whole is a combination of all of it? i mean the people have just been like they said, you said they didn't show up at home. they had where you mash the old now you don't have to where, you know, put your last back on in there. you're pissed off about that and it's become very politicized. and, and it's just not fun to travel anyway. you know, play a practical matter. did they, did the planes a just with filtering i've heard that know the place of always say playing to actually one of the safest faces and yeah, the, the hipaa filters. it circulates the entire cabin with every 2 or 3 minutes. all
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the air, if you're right, that's what i'm saying. so yeah, my point is i don't have a place to relax. i mean, i was, i church a few days ago in the and the pre said, we're not going to do mask and dc the day or 2 ago and i should send, he said, you know, you can, if you want. well, if it, the hipaa fill the show, got it needs to relax. well, you know, it should be light, the squeaking you want to get on the bus and then there's the air coming sort of possible to sleep. i don't know if i want to right in your area on that line, but it might work with the air in the pilots in their chamber at least a, you know, i do have to talk about the airline staff here because they are able to build this list right now of unruly powers that are not able to fly anywhere with us. but guess what every industry has. we're people right now. they're not able to build a list. okay? so what is the difference here? is that a fairly so you? because you're not putting a plane in the air 35000 feet at risk, and that this is deadly serious when you are disturbing the safety of
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a plane. i think that has done a test for job of going after these things are not doing what they need to do as far as going after it's in prosecuting these people are not having their mass down or off or having confrontations in the com or continuing on their mansions, yes. every, as you go after they've no, i mean, the only thing about behavior, i think it's exacerbated now that's the issue. it's been multiplied and exacerbated, and he went through and united actually point out the pointed out, he said listen, we would love to share. 1 our list with the other airlines, that unfortunately the government won't let us do that. government regulations, what gover regulations and the union did not make sense. why can i fly on united or get banned from there? i'm going to go book my flight on delta. why is there a unified list of no fly limits in his role as well? the units are another part of the units inside of it. when you're talking about logistics and trying to get the people being able to fly wherever the logistical issues i've worlds the weather, i guess i've not been able to like what part or is that these outside organizations
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playing? well, i'm not, look, i'm, i'm and i checked this out easy. let's see. listen in general, i think you should be able to, as you say, if someone does something wrong to the extent of crime, don't charge them after that. you've got to be able to have a bad day. i'm the weight of the industry plus, frankly, i don't think we're transitioning t s a could be more useless, right? could be more users. everyone, i don't want to say you could get you into a better mood to get on a plane every time they get all their what is it depending on the way to the guy personally for you before you get on the plane? surely at that time in your tell you it is a lot of to because i have clear as well you go to clear and the 1st thing you get is a big smile. they're doing the same thing, but they're absolutely delightful. it all comes down to the training, the ts people could be just as delightful if they were trying to. i see those clear people, you know, the big money people go pay line lawyers and they're, you know, just wait. but that's the thing you had to pay for ts said,
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now you see all these alpha once again, is this dividing america? yes, it's already expensive to travel, but we don't have a player at tech, but you're talking about if i get band, guess what? if i'm rich, i wanted to go private to my own plan. yeah, it's good side and then that's fine. no pressure open and the industry has taken off as dry people actually chattering planes, then they getting into groups and they're doing. so went against that divide, that goes to it. so the idea about this no fly list is forever. there's not a hay in 5 years, 10 years. we might not, that should be, should be by degree of what you did if you did something really, really bad advice. but if not, but again, the common sense in these lines that are making them and that, that frustrate on that goes with it. well, i think that, you know, if you did something that was, you know, moderate and so, or, you know, maybe for a free period but not for the rest of your life. but also i think that other private industries, retail, everything, if they weren't bad, some people because of poor behavior. other they should be able to do that because they have done just a responsibility to making sure their business is going well. their responsibility to their customers and we actually are for sure that they are okay and safe. so i
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think that's a well, let me bring up the next. whether the next question is, can you, what are they doing with vaccinated? can you get on a plane vaccinated right now? i mean, i and i get on a different flights. obviously, i thought i thought there was one for that you either had to show a test and a negative test with the international for international. yeah. but right now, anybody are we going to get to the point where vaccinate cards are going to be shown? yes, i'm looking at. yeah, sure me. and then that scared, especially for when you come to that filter on a list, if you want to list, cuz you're on the backside. does that count as bad behavior for you could be? yeah, see a government control, does anybody, lea, a divergent? i will not be checking vaccination cards. well to sit on the stage what they made me other kind of cards and then natural immunity is even stronger over state and outside of it. i have my medical doctor check you guys out the next time after the break, would you like to own one of the 1st draft of the u. s. constitution? don't jump it that way. i know your answer. you actually want to purchase it in case i'm a,
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it faces the same 8 as many statues of america passed. we're going to discuss with join me every thursday on the alex solomon. sure. but i'll be speaking to guess from the world of politics, sport, business. i'm sure business, i'll see you then. oh, when i was shopping wrong when i just don't know. i mean you well, yes to shape out. disdain becomes the after kid and engagement equals the trail.
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when so many find themselves will the pardon? we choose to look so common ground o d u is in the process of finalizing what is being called this strategic compass for security and defense. this is a shorthand for what may become an e u army. this is not a new idea, and there is no guarantee that will ever come about is europe capable of defending itself in this competitive world? i saw this is from an unknown account. it had a selfie with my pulse board as its profile page. i saw pictures of my documents, it will say i also sent a credit contract if i had just 3 days in a comply with their demands. if i didn't send money and they sent of an online hate campaigns ago, i was supposed to be very dangerous man. ah,
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you s constitution gives insight into the minds of america founding fathers. and well, anyone can simply google the information these days. there's actually something special about being able to see the historic document and person. it's right, so many tourists walked to washington dc, the museum of national archive, just to get a glimpse of the real thing. but another 1st edition copy was a just sold at auction. and as articles one it natasha sweet, explains it so fast and cost more than you might expect. a 1st edition copy of the u. s. constitution sells for a whopping $43200000.00 in only 8 minutes. and many were surprised this unknown bitter beat out a crypto crowd funder, who also made a group effort to obtain that 1787 documents. there's nothing more american than the phrase we the people for many who consider themselves patriots to see the u. s
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. constitution as gospel for how this young country was started and many believe we need to heed the founding fathers directions. now more than ever, regardless of where are you stand politically, all can agree there simply nothing like the real thing at the new york auction thursday, a mystery better bought the 1st edition copy in minutes. his person out bid aid crypto crown funder, who managed to raise 40000000 for the historic document, but in the end, they were 3000000 sure of what the prize documents went for. well, the group constitution, dow did not win the bid. they saw their efforts as a victory saying in a tweet they showed the world what crypto and web 3 can essentially do on boarding thousands of people in the process, including museum curators and art directors who are now excited to keep learning constitution tao. emphasize while they were the 1st to work with a set of bees, they know that they would not be the last. and the u. s. constitution replaced the articles of confederation. it's been amended some 27 times. now this 1st edition
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copy of the u. s. constitution is so rare, it's only one of 11 known copies remaining in the world, 9 or in museums, 6 or in u. s. institutions, one in london, and only 2 are privately held copies, which are both in the united states. reporting for news use hughes and hash a suite r t. okay, we're back with our panel and ed. i bet you have just texture while saying you know exactly what you want for christmas and thank you so much for giving it. yeah, my wife loves taking up guests and for 2 kids to the national archives. so she'll get the one the gift shop, they have a copy there that would be, that would be good. that's when it gets very cool story. i mean, i think like in light of the c r t debate and all these things, we're gonna talk about more education about the constitution looking at it. it's origins, how it came about, even the story of the articles of confederation and how it was replaced. it's wonderful, it's powerful my old boss, late polish laugh. we used to say it was a divine event that we, that these pretty regular very towns at all. but there were regular people they
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came in, came together and put it together and worked out. it's an extraordinary miracle, literally not just that piece of paper, but even though that is an actual symbol which brings us to the is happening right now. thomas jefferson statues banished from the new york city hall after 187 years sachi will be relocated to the new york historical society. like people just put that on their maps to and what is it when in new york? yeah. and the chair of the black latin asian caucus, denique miller, who represents queens actually said he wanted the statues gone, because it doesn't represent contemporary values. while the minority leader, obviously a republican minority in new york job early actually from staten island, called the move in attempt to sideline history. so who is right? bring back and our panel once again, 4 inches be official. jamie finch, henry ford, which of aesrael mark elsie and ed martin, publisher of pro america report dot com. i'm gonna throw this to you and he just said, yeah, you know, with what the ride will look. i think we need to get rid of j. f. k. he was abusive
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that he was a philander right. they need to go off of every school we known as economy for land or that is a take a look at this. is there anyone that's not a good one? here we can find something else about the man. yeah, it has a day, so he's out to okay. me double. you probably didn't. oh, well, go with okay. they all had their phones cuz we're all human. none of this is mortgage. this to my, me, we're talking before and this is much more important than people realize if we go this route where we're gutting our history, the whole shit, the whole american experiment is based on being a christian nation. now there were jews and others and everybody here, but it was a christian nation. christianity is a historical religion. it comes from that. and that, that whole identity we have the rule of law law relies on it. commerce relies on it is very, very serious. and frankly, the people that do this,
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they actually do hate america, we shouldn't. oh, they're confused. they hate america. the people that do this hate america, and they want to destroy it. they're not saying, oh, let's build something better. they're just wearing something that's great. well, that has been scribble. sorry about the difference between the civil war figures. ok, find those in the south? they fought against the north. a last mark. this is still you're still going to pay for this, but more importantly, it's the rest of history. that is it right to judge the people of today, by or of yesterday, right today. so there's no software at all. i mean, it's ridiculous. i mean, you're going to do that. basically, you're going to review all the history every time that we did that the chinese change, you're going to go back to the romans and everything else. you're going to have to rewrite the whole thing because that doesn't fit with our, our values state because there's slaves and they, they execute people all the time. all these kinds of things that we don't do now. and so i think there's, you just can't, you've got to stop it. it's got way out of control. and also what shows me is a lot of these people, they're tearing down things where they were tearing down the average pikes to study
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ulysses s grant statute. i mean, things that they were tearing down last summer. they do not understand the history of this. well, that said is just tearing down any stone possible and give us some background. obviously a being or we say british this time being from being from england, you know, is there a history cuz we're still the teenagers on the world's fear as us as america? how about what does this taken on in the u. k. and other countries? same thing also, and i actually will go back to this point when he said about people to hate america, i would also say i agree, but it's also people that are basically ignorant of history. because if you look at the entire supply chain, it's very different picture. this is the issue, is that most people like look at, look at the moment they actually on educated in terms of history. obviously, slavery is an absolute abomination. but it was throughout history to jamie's point . the romans, every single one of the table, most of our audience was all the descendants of slaves. because the romans built those rows built the coliseum. everything was built by indigenous people. i want reparation of reparation. this is getting to my next point,
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you've anticipated my next point in terms reparations. the supply chain started way in africa, who rounded off every single. so then american say, and i had them in shackles in cages on the beaches reading. the african kings would go in eliminating villages and eliminate cultures. they had them shackled in the cages on the beach and they were making a fortune and money from this. it wasn't so much a racial issue. this is a financial issue. this was trade or was about just like it was the romans. it's been like this throughout history. so slavery is unable nation. remember you asked about the english issue? the english, right. william wilbur. 4th, 18. 07. was the 1st to actually start the abolitionist movement. it wasn't to $865.00 that slavery was abolished in america. obviously the u. k was in advance of that, but even in the u. k. now, in bristol, a very industrial town statues are being pulled down. and we've all heard of the roads, scholarships, right, roads, special roads, his stature was pulled down. and then his guy, i've been, i'm thomas guy out of probably the guy hospital in london. are you ready?
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75 percent of the public voted, but it's not true. should remain nevertheless, the, the challenge that round runs the hospital still pulled it down so, so this is not just an american ignorant issue. this is everywhere that people don't know the history. i think the solution should be key this not true bought. do declare what an abomination slavery was, how abhorrent it was, but talk about the entire supply chain. i think a lot of black people would feel a lot better if they realize it wasn't just not the white people. it was their block. and festival kings that sold them and they're, they're the lucky ones. they survived because they all the ones died when they're black african kings either slaughtered them, packed off their right hands, or put on the safe trips. well, and are we talking about a double sparing? guess slavery obviously is a big reason why is their bomb nationwide for them, but like, you point out, there were other bad things that happen besides slavery in american history, world history. and yet those stay up. yeah, i mean look again and one of the things i would say we're point in this,
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this moment we're in, you can't get real news. you can't get honest news. i think you can't get real history. you get fake history. you go back and look at this and you say, so it was written history and you say, what is this? because for a certain number of people right now, you'd say for the last 40 years we've killed 50000000 babies, right? if you're pro life, right, you say this is an abomination. why are we at some point history going to look back and say nancy pelosi was so pro abortion she shouldn't have a statue. is that the? so my point is, who gets to set the standard and the race to the bottom? but here's the real danger. the real danger is, most americans, people watching all of us. we got a normal setting who are in a bar, we get a booth. so we could talk, i able to hear us because the pressure of the culture right now is that you're going to be accused of being racist to just have a conversation. i haven't heard about it because i'm not like you guy do it. i mean, you know, you said, you know, i was happy that got there was a time in america where there was signs and every, all the shop saying, no, i no, no, and where can i get my report? i don't know, but it's been,
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it's been all sorts of people. this is my who out history that has seen different people on the truck to do so. you know what i mean? it's a very good. that's the question of it. moving forward from this, my biggest ferrett that old adage that those who forget about history tend to repeat it. yeah, there's so many vision to it. it's not going to be savory as it was in the traditional fence in the past. but what is going to be the newspaper when, when do we actually in chain ourselves to something that we can't get out? well, i think that that's what we're doing, we're, we're, we're wrapping ourselves up the change. but with this, this woke culture and so forth. where you're not even allowed, this was going to the point is good. you're not even allowed to ask a question. yeah. if you ask a question your basis and they immediately shut you down and, and we're not studying the history and to end if we study the history of it, then people would understand it a lot better. you know, that has to do with the civic. they took civic jobs. yeah. cool. that's a very good. yeah. johnny, at the very beginning of conversation, someone said people want to be edified. if you wake up in the morning and you're 15 and you're told america's racist, it gets tiring, right?
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the whole thing gets tired, we're building a culture that feels bad about itself. instead of saying, here's how we overcome things. here's a system that can do better. reagan say, don't many problems, baby. so yeah, is not unifying each other way. right? is, is, is pitting us against the right and it's making is actually putting everybody in silos much more of hispanics, of african american whites. all of us are being siloed to, to a certain degree and just like, not having interaction with each other. and if you don't have interaction with people, you get to make up or whatever. i'll tell you something about that very point going back just like the irish catholic thing like going up and i had never happened. i mean i never met anybody catholic. i mean, from what we were taught in for me, it's in the constitution that one moment can on our account, we can never be on for. so and i forced, of course, i luckily approached. i forked was a complex over to you try me on my fire on both on i remember. remember, remember, so the only thing that will come to america just like anybody else,
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he always managed to complete that just, i'm divorced of here. but i mean, my point is actually to jamie's point is that once you then you interact when you embracing, when you live in a culture where every religion doesn't matter, embrace doesn't matter because you just embrace everybody and you still hold it. and it's not just, i think it's a, it's not just the race, it's also homophobic. it's also sexy. so if anybody is talking about it, all that does is divide the picture this. my last point is, the more this is done, the more i think regular americans look up and don't want the democratic party. and they want from to be honest because they feel like, well, i mean, he loved everybody equally. if you didn't, you don't you attack them and then you don't, can i say is that from policies without all the on tooth and golf the how much it's hard to govern. mostly how he does. yeah. good. that's out of it. well, once you get on what they give us conversation could continue and we will continue
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it. and thanks for joining me on it. in the meantime, we're going to have the conversations due to public to follow me on twitter, s got it and he's use a hash tag team and v 8 for this show in more detail on the portable dot tv app for your app. android devices. thanks for watching and thanks for chatting ah with ah sure don't seem an official mystery. okay, sure. someone with
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some gender walsh of discussion to fill that out and walk you through it people and yet you supposed to do this? i was asked to follow up on that when you decide bixler me at the whipping and they should, she can usually sit almost by you. so what i'm going to look up in cities. it took us once initially, right? yes, the key moment sich, shes leeway asher. shell supposed to switch cells for these double membranes stretches which i like sex, which capture pushes aside, applies them and then deliver them to water, the incinerator of the cell, the licenses for degradation. so that's what we'll talk with me.
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the postal service delivers a $155000000000.00 pieces of mail every year. approximately 40 percent of the world's mail right now. the us postal service is in the flight of its life, facilitated introduction, bad financial shape. now facing default. the postal service is a cash cow and there was a way to pull money out of the postal service to put into a federal budget. there was a mandate that you bring in a $100000.00, new revenue every month. the nature of privatization in the us postal service is very much hidden from public view. it's privatization from the inside out. uh huh. bye bye. oh, i know about big business in money about the public and given the service that they deserve. it's not about quality train workers. it's about the mind.
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one rescuer was found alive. he's one of our medics who was saving people right there. a small miracle after a her reflect tragedy, one rescue or is found alive in a siberian coal mine after being presumed dead. i criminal negligence probe has been opened into thursday's explosion, which claimed over 50 lives. we have got live reaction coming up shortly. a new strain of cobit is identified in south africa, mid fears it could prove far more infectious than previous variance. we've spoken to the head of the russian investment fund, which is overseeing the rollout of the sputnik vaccine. the new variable force has to be started and we need to.

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