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tv   Cross Talk  RT  December 8, 2021 3:30pm-4:01pm EST

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dive into voucher. indeed. any of this our stories can be found on our website. all is fresh content on free to use that is r t dot com. by for non the dynamism of the ecosystem of planet earth predictably is dying because there's too much pollution. whether it's landfill pollution, pollution in the rivers, pollution in the oceans, pollution in the air, chemical pollution, permanent chemical, pollution, all the bio systems are dying. so humans effectively estimating mass suicide or species is becoming extinct. mm ah
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hello and welcome to cross stock. were all things we considered? i'm peter lavelle. what is the national mood? i suppose it depends on what kind of media you consume to say the nation is divided in highly partisan is an understatement. this is certainly what the national media wants us to think. what are we really so divided on what really matters cross talking the public mood. i'm joined by my guess, martha bernetta in palm beach. she is president a boat america 1st in atlanta. we have d dawkins, hagler. she is a political strategist and a former georgia state representative. and in boston, we cross a rory riley topping she is an attorney, a conservative commentator and a contributor at the hill. all right, ladies, crosshatch rules and a fact that means you can jump anytime you want. and i always appreciate martha, you, this is your 1st appearance on socks. i would like to go to you 1st. i'm calling
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this program angry nation. what is the mood? because, you know, i'm a media attic, so i watch everything from cnn and miss nbc fox. everything you know, and i get the impression people are angry, but angry over what i'm not really sure. go ahead, martha nbc, listen, most americans, regardless of what side of the aisle you are, republican, democrat, independent undecided. most americans dealt with their pocket books. and at the end of the day we care about kitchen table issues. and right now, the cost of gas at the pumps is through the roof, and every american is feeling it. it's affecting the cost of goods and the grocery stores. of course, the supply chain has still not recovered. there are still empty shelves in different parts of the country shortage on building products. and of course the cost of these items is through the roof. and from that perspective, it's really not a partisan issue. in terms of the,
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the unhappiness that americans are feeling right now. i in terms of the cost of goods and gas that is largely attributed to who's in the white house right now. but that is really the town of the nation. well, it's interesting. let me go to dean atlanta mean, martha just gave a prognosis a described what's going on. she didn't mention politics at all, which was, it's kind of interesting to me. ok. so, so d, i mean we are, is the country, are people really angry? and if they are, as martha said, is it just about the economic situation? go ahead in atlanta. thank you and that's totally agree with mark. those are the issues that we're concerned about. this is why you have all female panel today because women understand the basis of what's needed. we push out all of the parts of how to at the end of the day, we want to make sure that we have access to quality health care and invitation for
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our children and be able to afford things at the grocery store. that's what mass us and be able to fuel for our car to get our children, our family where they go from day to day in august bickering. it's really not group of the country. so maybe what we should do is see a ship in and pull down all those people at the top for me and replace the women because we have work to do in america. and we don't have time for the prompts it rory. and if i go to boston here, no, but i mean, that's not the impression you get from watching the national media. i mean, i think we're all in agreement and i'm not going to ask you to repeat what we've already heard here. but then it's just really about culture wars is that would really everyone's bickering about, go ahead, rory. well, your point about national media. i mean, the national media is driven by ratings. and how do you get ratings? you get ratings by having people disagree and bicker and show that their anger about things. anger gets ratings. and this is something that all the major networks know. you put a bunch of panelists on that say yeah, you know, we're all in agreement. that's not going to drive the ratings that these networks
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want. so i think as far as the point about media driving this conversation, we do need to take a bigger look at that. mean things certainly look different back in the day before we had a 247 new cycle. you had 3 major networks and you had 30 minutes of news 3 times a day basically. and so what you saw was more neutral based in this is what happened and we're letting you know, as opposed to just having people sharing their opinions in disguise as facts, getting angry, that sort of thing. so, so absolutely, for people who are consuming lots of national media, that is influencing the culture wars and what we're seeing as both the marginal already said, i think that people are more interested in economic issues that affect their everyday lives. i mean, i do think we have to acknowledge that politics is interwoven with that because the politicians who are in charge implement policies that drive economic factors. so you have to acknowledge that politics is at play. but i think when you look at both
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of our major political parties, they don't have as much variance in some of their economic policy as they may be due on some of the social issues. and so when people are angry, they're looking for an outlet. they turn on their tv, and we get into this mission cycle that we've been seeing for the last several years now. yeah, well, that's very interesting, martha. let me go back to you. i mean, i think, but it, rory said, is very, very interesting because, you know, we all feel the same pain. ok with the economics and all of that. but these, these cultural social issues is a cover. so you don't have to talk about who's really responsible for all of it here. i mean, i that, that's what drives me up the wall all the time. because if you turn on and if nbc or fox, you know, it's going to be the culture war issue of the moment. okay. but it doesn't change the, the, the well being, the socio economic well being of all of us. ok, wherever we stand on the political spectrum go ahead. martha? well, certainly, and you know, the political landscape has changed radically because we have alternative forms of
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media news. right. there are influencers that have millions of followers on social media that can change and election based on their opinions that they push out on, on social media platforms like twitter, instagram, facebook, and these, these conversations are happening all across our country. and as more and more americans distrust mainstream media, they're looking to these other alternative resources for their use. and it's dramatically impacting the course in history, in america and, and around the world to that. and i think that i agree with worry in terms of, you know, how the new cycle is in play. but again, at the end of the day, there are basic issues that everybody wants for themselves and their families, excellent healthcare, a safe place to live in, raise our families, got excellent education. you know,
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the ability to have enough money to pay the bills and put food on the table, and there is frustration across our nation. the polling numbers for the city president, our historically rock bottom. and there's tremendous uncertainty. we have the horrific situation that happened with united states leaving and seeing those, those images on tv i think are forever ingrained in everybody, regardless of what your political party is. and it just brought tears to my eyes, seeing so many people clinging for the whole being rescued from afghanistan. so, you know, there's that we still have a crisis at our border. there's great uncertainty in terms of the economy. i mean show, and all of this is directly affected directly impacted by who's in the white house . and so i agree with worry to that and, and that is that, you know, there's
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a reason why to be president biden has be historically low ratings at this time. you know, d, martha talks about how the growing mistrusted them and the mass media, but the mass media tells us to distress each other. i find that really worries them be. go ahead. well, one of the things i like to say is we do that the conversation is quite daunting and exhausting at times. but let's be very clear. i'm going to be the 1st to say that the democratic messaging is very poor. i mean, we really do have a very good plan and i believe in the back there. i mean, i've looked at the plan is this a way. and i think that he can really help many american citizens. but because reports so far as people have been taking the time to really look at the plan, which many of those things are curious to some of the think the truck describe. for example, i'm, when you look at pharmaceutical companies, are you saying that we need better prescription drugs or just trying to fix our infrastructure? we don't even talk about this on the flip side with terms of numbers below. he was
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really trying to get a back set back the nation in place. people were, i guess it just because he was a republican president. we cannot operate like this. and the reason the economy is so bad by now is because we are in the middle of a global pandemic. then no one seems to want to be there. this is not an american fe. everyone in the world is dealing with the same pandemic. and for some reason, america has seemed to colorado. one part of blame is that out of which is absolutely utterly ridiculous. what well do you sound? what i think you, one of the only normal democrats i've come across in a very long time. i get like, i'm serious about that, rory, let me go to you in boston, are we in a change phase? you know, everyone to me every election. you say this is a change election, it's not a change election, or we need a change time right now. go ahead, rory. well, i certainly would hope so, but to be honest, i don't know that we're quite there yet. and he liked, he was just talking about it. pandemic has been an unforeseen factor. a lot of
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people didn't know how to deal with it, even though we're almost 2 years into it. people still don't really know how to deal with it. and so i think in terms of change, one of the biggest factors in the last election was people were just pro trapper anti trop. and i think that's what we heard the binding ministration. is there election strategy was filled for me? i'm not. and so, you know, to these point, even though there are all these policy initiatives that they're working on that you know, on their face are good things that they spend so much time being saying, look at us, we're not trump, they didn't really focus on their messaging and so that kind of got lost in translation. so i think, you know, now with that from talking about plaque, he wants running 2024. you know, the democrats are worried. paris hasn't pulled well. they don't want her to run in 2024, but some people do. we've got this this back and forth. and what gets me pretty much every election cycle is people on both sides. hate the other guys so much, but they can rally around
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a single person who's going to unify their party the country that they could them for years every time to get together and finding a good candidate. and then we had these primaries that are free for all where he's got 20 people on the same side fighting with each other. it does so much damaged by the time that we finally get a candidate more in the election. i would love to see some changes in that process and i think that would help drive change. i mean, i don't think it's a, it's a bad thing to have, you know, different candidates and the primary process. but i mean the fighting on each side . i think are really preventing some of this, this changed it we need. so, you know, as far as that goes, i think that we need to kind of look further downstream before we can get to a place where we're ready to embrace change. i for one would love to see it. i just don't think that we're there yet based on what i well, considering the candidates that are put up, it's really quite amazing. that's the best they can do. i'm going to jump in here. we're going to go to a hard break about about hard break. we'll continue our discussion on the public
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lute saying, with archy, ah, when i will show the wrong one, i just don't know. i mean, you world, yes, to shape out disdain because the adjective and engagement equals the trail. when so many find themselves worlds apart, we choose to look for common ground. ah, it's update on you being are you oh no, no, no, but they did in a valuable. mm hm. mapping my
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middle now i only hit up my laptop that has a knuckle. my la bob again thought, no, well i'm gonna get a bit a well, i mean a relationship with sonya natal. i'm not in that and i make no, you know, born is and is a tease and you various as a merge we don't have with the we don't to look back. see the whole world needs to take action and be ready. people are judgment. 2 common crisis with we can do better, we should be doing better. every one is contributing each in their own way. but we
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also know that this crisis will not go on forever. the challenge is great to response has been massive. so many good people are helping us. it makes us feel very proud that we're in it together with the welcome banks across stock, where all things are considered. i'm peter beltran, and you were discussing the public mood. ah, ah, ah, okay, in the 1st part of the program, we talked about what the problem is. now we're going to do the hard part, how to solve it. martha, the gentleman's name is already been mentioned in this program, but that person is donald trump here. now it's, you know, d even pointed out in the 1st part of the program, the democrats have a very difficult time. i mean,
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the perception of the democrats for the public is that they are, they spend most of their time fighting each other. ok, which i think it's a pretty good characterization, but there's a whole lot of fighting. i'll get you to you don't worry, i'll get to you. but there's also the republican party is having a hard time here. it's to trump or not to trump. is that good for the party bad for the party, and how does it bode for the mid terms? go ahead, martha. well, listen, donald trump right now, it's pulling very high all across our nation. certainly higher than our city. president, wyatt and you know, when, when president trump was in office, we had energy independence, unprecedented unemployment. was that an all time low we were secure and our borders are starting to be more secure in our borders? we had, we caught me was we, americans were hopeful, in terms of continuing to have hardy retirement plans, you know, not worrying about things why national security president trump brought
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a booming economy job and, and really hope across our country. and i think now i don't think i know now that you know, we compare that present and see to where we are now with president blinded. you know, there, there's, we have a problem. and some say absence makes the heart grow fonder. but you can't dispute with the pulling says right now, and that is that americans are not happy with the state of the economy. you know, they're not happy with what they're paying, what they're paying at the gas pump, and the cost of general good just reproach christmas. now, you know, prices have skyrocketed. many goods just aren't available because the supply chain still hasn't been repaired. and the president trump wrote a booming economy and americans at the end of the day, as i said before, vote with their pocket books. so president trump is now travelling across the country. he is doing many appearances and the walk for donald trump.
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ok, what day? i mean, when we saw in the virginia gubernatorial election, that playing the trump car didn't work for the democrats. i mean, what is the thinking there? because again, i'm a media guy, so i focusing on the media and, and it's already been pointed out on this pro is said, you know that a, they look for controversy and we know trump's middle name as controversy. so, i mean, is that good for the democrats, as it is, it is something they're going to continue to play because, you know, he's out of office, he's gone, he's off of twitter, but the more i look at liberal media, they just, that's the bogeyman. they keep scaring everyone with went and i would rather like all 3 of you talk about the basic things that affect the vast majority of the country. instead of talking about the possible fate of the 45th president of the united states, go ahead d. and there's a very absent nation, or we cannot continue to use trump as the subject of our conversation,
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to be honest with you, the bill that better plan is really a good place for us to start and finish. now let's just be clear, her mom to talk about home numbers when, when trump was in his pregnancy around this time, his numbers were just as low a continue to be local rock majority of his residency. so we can't look necessarily at pulling numbers all the time. to be the end are to be are what we have to look at subtly is what is happening economically. so that part, i do agree with her and everyone else can worry. well, let's be clear. trumped in that he inherited a very good economy from president obama. why now, president dime had to in here an economy that was right on the turn, a coming out of the global pandemic. so that meant many things had to change. we had supply chain issues, people were not working to wear at home. people were afraid. it's a you cannot use the sang litmus test for president vine that you would have used for our president trump. that being said, we have to figure out a way that we have
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a lot of conversations. like you said, i was the only thank them crash. i am convinced that most of them are insane, but that's neither here nor there because for them to say that i understand that president mine is dealing with a global pandemic. i think he's been a phenomenal job. we just on the democratic fact have to do much better with that messaging because i'm messaging at this and people are going to continue to be unhappy because they don't know the great big brother bags do, which, especially those things that in the bureau of a better plan ok, we're already that's interesting. i mean, i've come across this argument before it's a messaging problem. um, you know, my rule of thumb is doing when the sitting president is there, all the problems are in this case, his problems. you can say it was because of this administration before, and i now we were in there here, and now you take responsibility for it here. but my question to you, rory, considering that it be the democrats are disarrayed, particularly in the polls. do the republicans have a positive message? i mean, it's very easy to pick on joe biden, to the point of being just merciless,
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which i find out so counterproductive. okay. i'm a policy want, i'm not really interested in tweets or if a guy is coughing or something of that. i did some people obsess over this so much here. so the, do the republicans have a positive message, or is it just easy to punch away at the democrats and by doing go ahead in boston? well, i'm with you because i'm a policy walk as well. and you know, i would like to see this from both sides of, you know, more well enunciated, substantive policy platforms. i think the yes, you're correct that the republicans are just doing a lot of looking for. gotcha moments. i think the democrats are doing the same thing and we just get into this tit for tat on both sides. i think both sides are guilty of it. we just want to have this moment, we say a high look. the other guy did this and we didn't do that, so were better. well, i don't necessarily think that that makes you more qualified to be in power just because you were able to have more gotcha moments. and there was bob dole's.
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passion is up and was just published in the washington post yesterday. i don't know, he had a chance to read it, but i thought that that was it raised a very good point. and there was some debate that followed about the role of character. and yes, we want somebody who, you know, has the ability to, to message and have substantive policy positions to, to back that up. but i think one of the things that's been missing from this conversation is, is that role of, of character because somebody who has character is going to take responsibility and say, yeah, i inherited a bad situation. but you know what? it's now on me, it's my responsibility to do something about it or haven't, here's why or here's what i'm working on. 8 here's where i hope to get to, and i think that character element of leadership is really missing on both sides. it's not just about it should ultimately be about doing the right thing. what's best for nation instead of just, you know. gotcha. gotcha, gotcha. and i feel like that's what we're seeing, a lot of so i would love to see the importance of character be discussed and you
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know, more of a role in politics than it has right now. really, that's such a excellent point. it's something i've thought about many, many times when we go to martha and palm palm beach here. i mean, and unfortunately because of the media, they was producer of celebrity when we don't get politicians anymore, we get celebrities ok and life style. and you know, you have no idea what these people really stand for, okay? except for, you know, what kind of ice cream made like a where they go shopping or something. i find that just a completely inane and worthless here because the character issue, the leadership issue that rory was mentioning is so very important. and i think we've kind of forgotten. i mean, i wasn't a big bob dole fan, but he had integrity. i don't think anybody doubts that. go ahead, martha. oh, you're absolutely correct and i have to agree that you know, the landscape has changed radically. i mean, frankly, i don't care what play rationing the president consumes. i want to know what is being done to create more jobs,
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more opportunity to put america 1st to make sure that, that american household feel hopeful for the future to feel like, you know, we have a secure nation to feel that, that there's an opportunity here in america and americans are being twit 1st and show to that, and i agree wholeheartedly that at the end of the day, you know, we need to be focusing on policy. i for one, was very involved in the junior race. and the only message that mccall of brought to the table was, you know, you know, trump back, that was all the messaging every day american people were bombarded with commercial after commercial. with donald trump. there was no focus on issues, policy creating more jobs, putting virginia on the map as be open for business. show to that and you're absolutely correct. i'm looking forward to the candidates coming on board that want to run and focus on the american people and make it more about putting americans
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1st. you know, you know, you've been on this program before. and like i said, you're, you're a democrat. i can talk to, i mean, the, the fact of the matter is that a lot of democrats rank and file and a lot of republicans, even trumpeters. they all have a lot of similar concerns, but they're leaders in each party and the media always make they always focus on what's different or exaggerated. and that drives me up the wall. and that only works for the elite, you know, at the end of the day, status quo works pretty well for them. and they entertain the rest of us. ok with, you know, you've got to hate this person in this person hates this part. and it, you know, that's when this is all about, i get very frustrated with the lead to both parties because people are hurting out there and we spend so much of our time attacking each other. go ahead d. yes we do, and i just want to say it is so good in refreshing to actually be in a conversation when i'm fighting back of board with the opposite fact i'm it's really made my day quite pleasant this morning. but at the end of the day,
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we do have a lot of cultural differences, are social, is it different? if you can just be honest, i'm a democrat, for the most part we really do think that people have the choice of whatever they want to do in life. whether it is you know, whether they want to have the choice, right? to choose what we've done freedoms or whether it is whether they want to use recreational marijuana, whether they think that people should love it, man who they want to. we really do believe in those basic things. but once you get past that, the bottom issue is how we got to pay our bill. then i think we need to have more conversational have we want to do that? and i'm a matter of fact, i tell my children's park on cars because there are like kinds of him or you car it by mistake. you get out because i don't feel like i was many for this year was this is ridiculous and, and it's going to take away from me when you go my next trip. ashley won't, but still that's the thing i'm telling them because it's ridiculous and i really
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want us to come together and have a conversation on how do we change that, dan? and what do we need to do with fuel independence and i'm products. when a few democrats who actually believe that we should do some offshore drilling. i mean, i mean, i care about it, but it's saying that it would be a breeze in america, you know, move for yourself. i don't know what we're going to do. we got to do some. well ladies, thank you for being on this program. i think we're going to have more female panels because nobody is yelling and screaming at anybody talking about would really it's important to all of us and families and working people. so i congratulate all 3 of you from coming on with the courage of having different points of view at the same time. that's it. many, thanks them i guess in palm beach, atlanta, and in boston. and thanks to our viewers for watching us here, darky. see you next time, remember, ah, ah.
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yagi yost of here is new. i just thought you on, you know, all recording that when his yeah, but i, she and i didn't better we video don't. michelle kraus, of pretty much with sure the call when you a quite a bit of your skin don't eat a just stick both with from one to one to boise like you to form a that the, you know much doubtful you will lose, like with figured out those they might not. spanish video is net compared to long term with
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a transparency for the powerful receive for the bell. this kid is about privacy or people, care about is power. tuna sanchez, become a symbol of the battle. the privacy information is power. that's what's going on in the world issue, struggle with governments and corporations to want to keep information secret and others who think democratic rights should be pushed forward. and people have a right to know what you are doing. watch how assange helped shift the conversation around transparency and see what that battle has done to him. i feel like children's life might be coming to an end. we are in a conflict situation with the largest, most powerful employer in such
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a situation. it's remarkably civilized. the this is headline stories, a child lost by his parents during august, chaotic, us withdraw enough gamma may be inside parties, big to the family that took the boy in and enjoy this search for his parents. suddenly i saw this baby on the ground crying in pain to home. the baby was just wearing a shirt. it was difficult to leave him about me. you. k video emerges of key members of the forest johnson and joking about a party in joining street last christmas. but seeing as it supposedly took place during a locked on period, fewer finding, it fully shown, a virus restriction start to ramp up again around the world in the face of the new on the chrome variance we hear from the world health.

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