tv News RT December 28, 2021 4:00pm-4:30pm EST
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ah, a 4 year old, a 4 year old is court in pepper spray has believe, spray, call finance vaccine march in germany. countries across europe are facing on rep ahead of new year. okay. richard restrictions, some parents in the u. k. a q hospitals of discriminating against children with down syndrome in a bed have free up beds. during the pandemic we had from a mother who was all to find a do not was off the table death. i thought when she did, i, well job is that's my son's life that you're asking with down syndrome, but that's got nothing to do with the latest polling shows the most us democrats now don't one joe biden,
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to running 2024. we look back at his boss and i'll put a brown. this is all the international live from a most good thanks, which choosing update ways good to happy with getting started. europe is facing a new wave of angry street. protests, governments are tightening the screws on the on vaccinated. one protest in germany, a 4 year old child was caught in pepper spray as police moved and the, according to the police, the child was complete. the symptom free again off the un. i was officers launched a formal complaint against the mother for in danger and her child, meanwhile, and from anger, gave friction, shows no sign of the peyton on the
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since monday, a number of german states have imposed strict covered restrictions. and these include, amongst others limiting pepe gatherings to 10 people. and that is people who have either been vaccinated or who have recovered. and at the same time, shutting down balls and nightclubs. it comes as a number of demonstrations take place across the country. hundreds of people were wasted in protest here in the capital city, berlin, and also trying foot. now in the last, a 4 year old child received paper spray accidentally from the police after her mother had bought her to the demonstration in a prime. the mother of the child had to appear before the judge and it comes as police complain that he and 2 faxes are becoming more and more violent in france.
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they. the country has recorded a record high of a 100000 new co cases a day. at the same time, the country has registered more than a 122000 people who have died from the virus. now this is largely due to the new omi con variant that was detected in south africa and which tends to be quite mild . but at the same time, the country is seeing a search in delta cases that has led to a number of people being hospitalized. the government is looking to transform its coven health passed into a vaccine path. we've heard from the countries prime minister, saying that a negative taste is no longer going to be enough for people to enter bars, restaurants, and other cultural venues. lot dawn. so she said you in france that in europe, the situation is extremely tense. the new wave is sweeping over the continent. we reached a symbolic 100000 daily new infections. we adjusting
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a law that will transform the health path into a vaccination. if parliament votes in favor, it will be applied from the 15th of january. we've been across now to the netherlands. they have the government has suggested of all that innovative way for people who are afraid of taking the vaccine to deal with so called vaccine anxiety . the health ministry has introduced virtual reality glosses that will help people relax during the injection. while i pull a mentioned to say in the u. k. dany cove, it infections all around the $100000.00 mark, with the countries health care system, stretch style phase. the corners are being caught. now putting lives at risk parents and campaigners are raising the alarm. they worry vulnerable children are being discriminated against during covert to free up that space. it comes amid a spike and do not receive take orders for children with down syndrome. and autism, one mother who was asked to sign such an order for her son chad,
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her story when she said it, i, well docked in tears because in home that's lost on life that you're asking what you should stable know and i haven't been asked. that's my other 2 children and yes, he has down syndrome, but that's got nothing to do if, whether shipping the taste or not. he was in the room and she was asking him a lot of questions and he, he con, he's crusty, isn't that he understands. and i think luckily for him and i asked me because he was on the 16 anyway, but they are the parents. i know there's also around children. so in one respects i was glad he was on the 6th day because the others where i was 16 and where else themselves. well,
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do you not with us to what is offered to people who are gravely ill? one find doctors won't perform cpr to help restart the patient's heart. like i mentioned earlier in the u. k. d and ours are increasingly being offered to teenagers with autism. that's condition that affects around 700000 people in the country as well as to teenagers with down syndrome, the national health services. it's not discriminating. stressing that it regards blanket policies as inappropriate. but karen, will it again, thanks to defer where every child in every hour got the right, especially to life. and i just don't understand why there's a difference in society for anyone, discrimination of even the question b n. why are people with adults children el delay while we why on i will trade differently with the lack of you must say
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given the health care system they deserve. on the social system, i did that, i get the and i just, it was painted under train cab again, that's to do with higher than the and i just isn't as the government needs to pull their finger out. and so, you know, as alan isn't it isn't our kids to say, oh, your children are not valuable. was everyone else's children? so they're not going to be put on the less the list i was off isn't it will leave you out of the i don't to say because there's not a lot of room muscle for well in no dk that seem to be more, whoa, is full hospitals with admissions on the rise, again, a new study wants that next year, medical staff absences due to been out the triple. the findings suggest hospitals could experience severe staff shortages with 17 percent of was expected to cool and sick. just last week as admissions rose absences followed suit reaching 12 percent
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. meanwhile, unions have called on the government to increase staff, pay all face industrial action. the n h s. as the panoramic has created unprecedented prussia and it's doing all it can to support doctors and nurses. all he spoke to medical staff on the ground to say that something i really has to give david is with us almost 2 years now. our doctor, the nurses, clinicians on the ground, absolutely exhausted. they're not just exhausted that scared the tired. you must remember the doctor, the nurses, the patients do so we are sick. we get physically think we get mentally think. and quite frankly, we bad the moral burden of what's been happening over the past couple of years. so yeah. at the moment it's exhausting and was worse still. of course, it's not over when the short and we somehow need to find some capacity outside of what we've already got. so rather than asking the same to give mall, we need to somehow find capacity outside of the chess. and that might mean that
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asking people who aren't medically qualified to come in and step in and do sort of stuff. and in the longer term, of course we really need to do is solve our recruitment issues. we do need more know, and we do need more doctors. we've vast amounts in particular the general practice, for example, just get a status quo. and there are some, a human may burden just in general bureaucracy that can get some workforce who have retired or who have steps down that work to actually come back. some of those barriers and insurmountable a quite quick and easy, but it just requires government to make some decisions. well, it's really quite worry and i'm not sure how the nature is going to survive with these numbers. is really quite frightening stuff. and also patience because, you know, they still know of good, proper guidance come in from the talk really terrible environment and you know, trying to get through them and being taken for granted at the same time. if needing
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to. now, many nurses are talking about go along, protest and strike caption on some of the unions or really support of that. but it just seems it's very difficult obviously because we need to think about patient safety, but soon we may not have any nurses in to lead to care for these patients. the risk post by the news train is still being started, but new research in the case suggests it's 70 percent less likely to lead to hospitalization, exhibiting symptoms similar to the common cold. although the world health organization says its more contagious and vaccine resistant than previous strains, we discuss details with best folks passing. it's very contagious, it infects more quickly and it infects more people and, and the growth rate is much faster than previous variance. so it's certainly
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a fetal and faster variance. what we don't know yet is the severity of the illness it produces. we've had some early information, but in the countries where they're studying and closely. they haven't seen the hospital philips of quickly, but we don't know whether that's on the crime or the fact that there's been very good vaccination in those countries, or a lot of penetration by previous variance in the populations where those studies have been done. the critical thing, and this is why the restrictions are taken is to leave some reserve in your health system for other things. this is a period of time when people get ill with all kinds of other things, but she winter, accidents, heart attacks, all sorts of things that need intensive care and are on the cons. problematic for 2 reasons, because it's spreading so quickly. the people who need to provide that care a getting sick, as well as the people who are coming into hospital. so even if you are people are in hospital. if you've got fewer people to look after them, you've also got
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a problem. so the critical thing is to trying to jam pin down this for the real effect you'll get is getting the people who have not been fascinated 1st. so even though many countries in chief, very high levels of vaccination, they still haven't reached everyone. and those sadly other people who are coming into hospital and many of them are still losing their lives, we prefer not see mandates. it's much better if you understand why you'd want to vaccine and go and get it. but the people who are very hard line will still find ways to avoid it. right at the beginning of this pandemic, all countries of the world got together and said, yep, we need to vaccinate the whole world at the same time. now, sadly, when the vaccines became available, so interest or whatever took hold. all the contracts were bought out by the most merciless rich countries leaving the countries with less power,
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less resources at the end of the queue that we'd set up a system called co. that's to ensure that it could be delivered to everybody. ah, i didn't think side, and joe biden has suffered another brutal blow in the polls. more democrats would now, while the sea, someone else running 2024, the not a chimes of the battering. his ratings have taken during his fost yet in office. next help can have open looks a wide 2021 wasn't really biden's best. was like a fairy tale. joe biden was set to ride into the white house on a white horse to save the country from the nightmare. those lights that are shooting out from the lincoln memorial. i love you. it's like almost extensions of jo biden's arms embracing america. president alleged joe biden and vice president harris, cold the grief and regret out of the privacy of our hearts if just for a moment so that we all could share it. but in just a year, the country seems to have shifted from tears of joy and sighs of relief to let's go
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brandon. mm. mm mm. mm. mm. mm. mm. mm. mm. mm. oh, all, charlotte, 70 percent of americans doubt that biden is a leader. you can trust only donald trump had a worse approval rating at this point in his presidency. and it's not just the american voters, the mainstream media that wants praised him, are now calling him worse than a lame duck and recommending he not run for reelection in 2024. quite a huge turn. how could this have happened to a democratic president? so love by mainstream media and the party establishment cova,
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das at this point of added up to about the population of st. louis and atlanta combined double what it was when trump left office. joe biden does not have much to say about this topic with why haven't you outside of it or did you hear it on the origin with joe biden is urging americans to get vaccinated. one can't help but wonder if americans have hesitation about heating their commander in chief's words, wild assertions, the administration was making about how this was going to go away and inject bleach and all those kinds of things. it was diminishing confidence across the board. you know, you can't, but you can't say everyone. this is actually requirements work only makes sense to require a vaccine to stop the spread of covert 90 forcing people to get vaccinated with mandates is not exactly
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a big hit. either federal and private companies are fighting them in court. furthermore, you got the senate repudiating the vaccine mandates and judges ruling against them . inflation is that a 39 year high, half of the americans say that biden is making things worse. and 2 thirds of americans say that inflation is causing them financial hardships like ever since he became president. things have been slowly going downhill, especially in this city. thing is about 40 percent higher than or was a couple of years ago. so no, i would not say that there during, for a job to be honest is actually one more up lake. everything when it's bad is really bad. the afghan pull out got pretty massy. 13 soldiers died. people were hanging from planes, and u. s. personnel was left behind on republicans wanted joe biden to be impeached. now that didn't exactly play out, but people aren't exactly ready to move on from this afghanistan disaster
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with it's not only to you as public, it's unhappy with the afghan pull out within army ranks. there is rising discontent . active duty marine corps. lieutenant colonel stuart sheller. a combat veteran with multiple deployments in iraq and afghanistan even went public. he demanded accountability from senior military and civilian leaders for their failures. people are upset because they're senior leaders, let them down, and none of them are raising their hands and accepting accountability are saying we messed this up. i'm not saying we've got to be in the in afghanistan forever, but i am saying, did any of you throw your rank on the table and say, hey, it's a bad idea to evacuate bob graham airfield, strategic or various before we evaluate everyone. this got him charged in the military court, find and punished, but many consider him a hero. what about the commander in chief himself? now biden is telling people he opposed the war in afghanistan from the beginning.
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however, the record begs to differ. he was beating the drums of war for afghanistan and iraq, 20 years ago, back when it was popular. but i guess this is not the only thing he has forgotten. and i want to thank her that sell down on thank you very much bout but i'll kinda side of course, present harris is a proud howard. oh, no wonder so many of his press conferences and grabs the white house, sometimes even cuts his live feed wholesale. that americans are questioning his mental capacity. democrats is starting to get worried with mid term elections less than a year away. and biden unpopular even in states where he won the election by a large margin. there's so many reasons people should be disappointed and upset with biting. it's hard to settle on one. certainly, afghanistan was a huge blow to america's sense of itself, and the outrage in middle america is not to be underestimated even today. at the
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way joe biden got us out of afghanistan. joe biden, drug america down an ugly past. of course the economy is the unkept promises, his insistence that he would shut down the virus and not be economy. and since then of course you had more debts on his watch. then trump had on a longer time scale. i believe our allies no longer trust us. i believe our enemies are lining up to take advantage of us. you see how it all goes together and it all is generally against american interest. it's extremely unfortunate and he's not showing any sign of changing his weights. we've got pants most toys coming out this short break, so stick with join me every thursday on the alex salmon show and i'll be speaking to guess of the
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world politics sport business. i'm show business. i'll see you then. mm. ah ah, mm. at the end of every year, crosstalk answer some of your many questions. not surprisingly, many of your questions, concerns politics, the current international situation, and whether we should trust legacy median. we'll do our best to answer as many
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questions as again ah, welcome back. president putin has fired the deputy director of russia's prison service. no official reason has been given, but it does come after a national scandal over torture in the countries jails equals non off reports. it is the latest we shuffle within the russian federal penitentiary system. so far, no official reason has been given as to why this deputy had, has been fired by this comes against the backdrop of a massive torture scandal within this federal penitentiary system. essentially, activists league to crows, literally dozens of gigabytes of videos. very, very disturbing ones. and which inmates in russian prisons were tortured, how they were beaten up, and even sexually abused by the staff of prisons and by inmates who were said to be
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in cahoots with the prison authorities. now the, those if those videos have, we can show them to you or force well for obvious reasons. rarely, but the scandal got the highest attention among the russian government. among the russian authorities, the russian president vladimir putin. he personally addressed the issue during his latest end of the year major event, then absolute in this case is necessary festival to rely on the dates of the investigation. 17 criminal cases had been initiated and obeying under investigation you have named only one or 2 people. but there are as far as i know, more than a 1000 dismissed and their criminal cases opened against them. yes, there is a problem we need to work with. it's and rely on a conscientious, fully fledged investigation of those crimes. and these are clearly crimes that have been committed. we need to bring it to an end so that everyone understands that punishment for these offences is inevitable. while officially this decision to well fire, the deputy head of the federal penitentiary system has not been explicitly linked to the torture scandal right before the about a month ago when the 1st videos emerged on line emerged in public domain. vladimir
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putin fired and other high profile official, in fact, as high as it gets the very head of the russian federal penitentiary system. again, that decision was as well, not linked explicitly to the torture scandal, but this string of events, this string of re shuffles. well, it does look like yet another high profile official has taken the all over the allegations and over the scandal and finding the sour, lighter and stronger the men sleep and rushes. aviation industry is an entirely home grown a fat onto you to ship. the volume gets up close and personal. the countries latest jet, which is also being counted as another example of how sanctions i've actually helped such sectors. dr. a long awaited event for russian civil aviation. the media arrange a mass 21300 airplane made. it's made in flight with a wink sally made of russian composites the chance to come from the air field of
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the air. coots, evasion plant, where the m. s. 21 series is produced. initially for the m. s 21 wing, it's manufacturer used materials from american and japanese companies. but in the fall of 2018, it came on the u. s. sanctions. and as a result, the company was unable to purchase imported raw materials for the wing nationally, sweden images through some of them on u. m. s. 21. medium ranger crofts has nothing to do with the defense complex. they just stopped supplying us with the composite materials for the wing. this is unfair competition. they knew we would create our own materials, but that would take time and eventually we would roll out this new plane much later . so the russians had to spend almost 60000000 years dollars on the development of an alternative to american composites. all the work was done in the shortest possible time. there are some corporation took over the development of domestic composite materials and is currently producing them. the m. s. 21300 is
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a new generation russian aircraft with capacity for 211 passengers. certification is now closed to completion and deliver as a plan to begin in 2022. it is powered by pratt and whitney at $1400.00 engines, and at the same time, the m. s. 21310 aircraft. with a new ration p. d. 14 engine isn't going fly test. so in the future, buyers will be able to choose between the 2 types of engine comfortable to similar . there are many innovations in the aircraft design. it has the widest carbon in his class. the m. s. 21 is focus on the most massive segments of the passenger transportation markets. it will be able to compete with the airbus $320.00 family and the boeing 737 family. according to the head of ross tag, they should have composite seen the m. s. $21.00 structure is about a 40 percent, which is a re quote for a medium hole aircraft. improved ira dynamics have made it possible to increase the width of the m. s 21 fuselage, which brings new adventures in terms of passenger comfort. passengers have enough
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room to comfortably stretch their legs. plans the widest aisle in his class will allow them to easily pause this said as charlie, so pretty soon regular passengers will be able to appreciate this new creation of russia's aviation industry. unit ship of oliver auntie. that is us this albert, remember any of our social media accounts and of course auto dot com. but just a click away. i'm dated around the clock to take a peek and have a great day. ah, [000:00:00;00] with one of the worst ever mess. shootings in america was in las vegas in 2017. the tragedy exploded a little of the real las vegas,
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where many se elected officials are controlled by casino owners. the vegas shooting revealed wet deal vm, p d really is. and now it's part of the stand machine. most of the american public barely remembers that it happens. that just shows you the power of money and las vegas. the powerful showed that true colors when the pandemic hit the most contagious contagion that we've seen in decades. and then you have a mayor who doesn't care. so here is caroline goodman, offering the lives of the vegas residence. to be the control group to the shiny facades conceal a deep indifference to the people who lives could have been saved if they were to take an action. absolutely keep the registering and keep the slot machines. dinging vegas is a money machine, is a huge cash register that is ran by people who don't care about people's lives. being lost
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shush ah, i was diagnosed with cancer in 2005 the doctors didn't really know what kind of cancer it was or how to treat it. they explained i was part of a growing population of people with hybrid cancers from environmental factors. my tumors were growing aggressively of a dangerous. they'd eventually grow over my organs and kill. i became a full time patient. my life only happened in between surgeries, radiation, and experimental drugs. when the doctors told me the cancer was incurable, i knew i had to make a change, and i decided to give up the comfort of security and instead, travel around the world, investigating environmental pollution in crime and see if i could find other
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reasons that were leading to these rise and cancer rates and i got to work on some amazing direct action campaigns that really took me into remote areas . there is pollution everywhere. but aside from the plastics there were also multinational corporations polluting into local river ways, getting everyone around them sick for profit, and with access to clean water disappearing. every day people were fighting back and at the same time i saw that back home, people were being poisoned by the industries around them. childhood cancer rates for up to 6 times the national average. if we can prevent any kids from going through what i've been through, then it's our duty to investigate, find out what's happening and stuff. so i decided to travel to one of the most toxic places in america, florida. mm. mm.
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ah. they always go to florida, is beaches and disney world. in reality, one afford is biggest industries and best kept secrets is phosphate money. but for every one ton of usable phosphate, there's 5 kinds of radioactive rod left behind. florida is still radioactive, that the fountain of youth is closed due to radioactivity. people that work in the mind and live in the mind, we're getting accelerated cancer and in 2011 cancer became the leading cause of death in florida. we noticed a study today by the world health organization that said that long term exposure to
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