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tv   Cross Talk  RT  December 29, 2021 5:30am-6:00am EST

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to say that we need to move forward and continue with the negotiation that we began in doha, that they cannot be any more saber rattling. it's no good for the afghan people. it's no good. i've got to say no, what the britain or america you really got to find a way forward. ah ah
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ah ah ah hello and welcome to cross stock where all things are considered. i am peter level at the end of every year across soc answer some of your many questions. not surprisingly, many of your questions, concerns politics, the current international situation, and whether we should trust legacy media will do our best to answer as many questions as we can. ah
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ra, sucking q and a i am joined by my guest gland deason in oslo. he is professor at the university south eastern norway as well as author of the book, great power politics in the 4th industrial revolution and in plymouth. we have patrick hennington. he's the editor and founder of 21st century wire dot com. all right, gentlemen, crosshatch, rules and effect. that means you can, joan, any time you want, i got a lot of questions. let's see, we can get to as many as possible here. the 1st question is, let me go to glen 1st. what are the chances of an arm conflict involving russia and nato in the new year? thoughts? well, i think it's unlikely, but it's becoming increasingly likely and i did. they are a good, couldn't use his other recognizing actually difficulties that we have in europe and them in conflict as effectively what is the european secure, secure the architecture for the russians. they're demanding an estimate based on all our underpin security agreements which suggest invisible security. so, you know, made to, for example,
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once on the expenditure at the expense of russia. well, the nate was arguing european tradition to, based on the principal, but they cost freedom to expand. so, so this is the main main main main conflict of this, or having discussions about this, which is something didn't, didn't want to do in the past. but that being said, ma'am, and then also said that russia has pointed out that it will intervene in ukraine. if you claim that taxed on bus, or if there is a nato is expanding or even, you know, u. s. troops starting to move in to ukraine. however, that being said, if russia intervenes, the americans have many cleared enough to respond and intervene them on the other side. so it seems that the war can be avoided. that being said, there's always this risk of a miscalculation so affecting the problem if someone wants to have a peace agreement. but they did this,
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that doesn't seem to be any room for compromise. and in the absence of disagreement, the parents who might become normally alternative, imp, patrick, think the interesting time. right. i mean that the fact that they're talking, ok, the russians have said that big nato's been talking like this for 20 years. ok. the russians want it in writing. i mean, this is something new. it is a bit of a departure from their usual procedures here. i think that's why it's important that talk is talk, but we want it in writing. we want it to be public and transparent. go ahead, patrick. i think it rushes in a very on diplomatic position because it's made its intentioned well known. it's setting the pace, especially by its recent movie in december, i with issuing it sort of demands against nato. but the thing that worries me is you have a very weak president in the white house and mind you this, if there is anything up in terms of aggression from the nato side or anything they would like to provoke. it's always on the table, just a question of when it's most politically opportune to do so. and if this
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administration is desperate in washington, they might push the button on something. i'm not sure what that something would be in order to resurrect it's flailing a poll numbers. this has happened many times throughout history, so it's not anything that we should be surprised about. so, but i don't think there's a lot that nato can do, other than provocations and skirmishes as we've seen in recent years, with the current straits and so forth. but what, what really worries me is there a potential for a, a misunderstanding or a false flag, or a nother m h 17 type of van. and in which case, the west would automatically blame a russia and then that would most certainly trigger a new round of sanctions. and the point of that is, is the bigger picture here is about what the global agenda is or what the agenda for europe is. and it's to not allow the, makes records to be realised, and that,
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and crates that sanctions oliver, that europe in the, in the west will continue to hold over russia. so, and this is part of a bigger agenda, which is to balkanized, di, global eyes and di carbon eyes europe. so i think that's the bigger picture in the background, in what we're seeing on the, on the military skirmish front or the provocation front is really just an excuse for the, with the west and the dominant interests in the west. to exact this, a new, a globalized urban, anti anti globalized, or globalist agenda, whichever way you wanna frame it. so, but it is a very dangerous a potentially dangerous situation, hopefully could avoid of full scale conflict. well, a certainly be keeping an eye on it as we have always have. let's go to our next question here, glen, i don't know if this is exactly up your alley, but it's an interesting question. what is worse? corporatism in oligarchy, or neal liberal woke ism, it's
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a breton tastic question. i think we could do a series of programs on it. go ahead. a good question. i'm not sure if they're mutually exclusive. i mean, okay, a lot of this new liberal work is some kind of go some, it's hand in hand with corporatism again. i think that's one of the key problems in with, with the neo liberal economics and oligarchy that follow this. and now that the political system hasn't been able to function as it shoots, so again, the political left to redistribute wealth, political ryan conference, protect or redistribute and protected a distinctive communicators. cochran produce its own culture, all this alyssa, regular, and his issues, which he will usually have been pursuing. now. i think that the, in the absence of any of the political parties, either ref, left to right. being able to address the main economic problems and the main
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problems are economic. i think it's more appealing to go into a culture war. so yeah. why, why, why do i talk about the economic inequality becoming of the sustainable where they come talk about transgender toilets and, you know, men competing us women in sports, all this nonsense. i think j. m. yeah, not necessarily michel, mutually exclusive. but if i would pick, i guess, the neo liberal walking from the house it's, it has a greater chance simply because it is. yeah. deconstruct some of the most basic if a nation of society. so. yeah. ok, patrick the same question to you. i mean, if the i tend to agree with glenn here, i mean the both are bad been like to choosing one of the other. go ahead, you give it a shot. well, i would have answered it pretty much the same as glen did regarding that they're not mutually exclusive. but the thing to point out, which i think is really interesting, as is the west has used, woke ism or used
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a culture wars to break down. other countries and to soften them up internally and to undermine a traditional of values and the sort of traditional or conservative or cohesive elements of a society. certainly the, the western media and the activist, global activist community in the vase network and so forth. i have done this to russia with regards to l using l g b t issues. they've done this to syria as well. so if you look at the target nations, iran as well. so if you look at the target nations that are on the west regime change list, they've used this, but this is a bit of a genie that is been let out of the bottle and threatened to really destroy us. some of these countries or politically destabilize them from inside. certainly we're seeing this in the united states, and it threatens really to a vis rate of the current form of the democratic party as well. they cannot handle
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the, it's gotten out of control. so maybe maybe we're seeing the, the end of the arc of, of this and it might be turning in another direction. certainly it's next, a central crisis for the democratic party. yeah. way to allow this radical wing to take over. yeah. when these people are in a circular firing squad, just let him finish it off themselves. okay. it's rapidly go to the next question here. i can, this is probably, this was the most popular question sent to me i'm, i'm a little disappointed, but i'm going to give it to you guys anyway. i do think trump will run in 2024. and if you do, do you think it's a good idea, glenn? oh, and he has suggested that he, my drum, i also hillary clinton has indicated she might run as well. so we might get a repeat of 2018th or how ever i'm not quite sure if you will run. it's still a while into the future, and i guess it would depend on the mood of the country. so like he's argued in 2016,
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he wouldn't run, you can think he could swim. and i think it depends on the support she has from the political party and from the voter snob. and i don't, i don't think necessarily that is should road simply because i think with united states needs the most now is a 2 year bridge, this huge valorization within the united states, which is saying you're getting out of control where the perceived the political position effectively to be an enemy and this is something you have to trust. so you need perhaps a less polarizing figure and you know, whether you're like or hate donald trump or i guess we'll can objectively say, he says quite polarizing. and i think that's a bit of an interest to take for the united states. i think the 2nd main challenge with united states is he needs to adapt to the new world order that is, in effect the lead been running the past 30 years of that ideal of
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a liberal hedge money where the u. s. would rule the world under its own principles and i think this has come to an end and it has to be some, oh, way of transitioning away from this. now i think donald trump is not necessarily rejected you as a global head tamani, if you simply believe that, you know, for funding subsidizing allies went to costly and here other running with this on his own. however, he did reject the liberal hedge him on the part. so i think from that perspective a he's, she's main value, i guess 2 years has been that is a transitional figure. so i think that's a lot of new voice, a sub come up in the united states since he became president. where there is contesting the whole idea of live had your money, both and political rights and political lest or bugs. and for him, the person to choose to run himself, i think will be midway with my successor,
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made a one of the problems. although do not stay simply because the seems have to come to believe he clamber terrorist attack on the capital veto. he's on the agent to russia. i think it's very difficult for him to yet to lead to such a divided country. yeah, in any case, if it was a rematch with a h r c, it would be a whole lot of theater, but it wouldn't solve anything or a gentleman. i'm going to jump in here. we're going to go to a hard break. and after that hard break, we'll continue our discussion on this year's q and a stay with r t ah, i was diagnosed with cancer in 2000 lives when the doctors told me the cancer was incurable. i knew i had to make a change. so i decided to travel to one of the most toxic places in america.
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it states has to be ready to be able to afford enzyme in front of the luxury that for sure, despite having the most expensive health care system in the world. we have poor life expectancy, we have higher infant mortality. we have more deaths from treatable causes. so americans are suffering every day from it. it's as if these people don't count. i saw how many confuse customers and dump a sick. so also i can satisfy their wall street investors no parents should have to see what i saw. so if you're denying payment for someone's care, your makes life and death decisions and determine to kiss to live and who dies. to
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me that's best getting away with murder. welcome back to cross stock where all things are considered on peter level. to remind you we're discussing this ears. q and a. ah . okay, go ahead. add back to patrick. here. patrick, you want to answer? should trump come back in 2024? your thoughts? go ahead. i think on some level it's, it's inevitable if you take the temperature of half the country right now in the u . s. certainly. all the signals are there of you watching a media and so forth. but you know, you have to consider a couple of extenuating circumstances. the 1st being is age. i don't think it's a, a major problem and compared to joe biden, it would be a 2nd term. so he's going into a 2nd term a rather than his 1st term as opposed to bind,
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but the trump agenda is already kind of a baked in to the republican party. so in that sense it wouldn't be i'd, i don't think there would be any surprises with a trump presidency in the 2nd term. i'm so i think it on that side, it's good. but then if you want to bring in new blood, it would most likely come via a vice president appointee on the ticket. so that right now looks like it would be . rhonda santas now would be an easy handover for the republican party after trump would finish a 2nd term. and mike pompei was going to run for president in the republican primary. ted cruz. i'm sure marco rubio and ran. paul tom cotton will also be in there as well, but there's such a polar, i swing right now. it swung so far into one direction in just the 1st year, the biden administration. and you'll see the mid terms bear bear outs, a result probably in favor of the republicans in the house and senate. so it is
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going to be a shift in politics. the question is, is that shift going to want to continue with donald trump or to bring in somebody younger and more dynamic? perhaps it has maybe a longer tail future and politics. we shall see, but it looks like to me, it looks like he is going to run, so will. but who knows what will happen between on i'm sure, on this program will revisit that issue a number of times. let's keep with political personalities. here are many viewers asked the question, who's more of a failure, joe biden, or boris johnson? question to you, glen? oh, well, it's difficult to compare the 2 liter. so i guess there are the ruling. there are different. well, they treat it when they do have a lot in common, their failures, but that's, that's enough. going to think out. i mean, i'll finish. well, i mean time to say joe biden, simply because he has some more challenging task ahead. i mean, the like commission before the us really have to adopt from this unit polar arrow
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to, to the multiple order which is already here, which is having immense difficulties in terms of doing. and furthermore, the u. s. appears have been a much greater and challenges in terms of financial and economic crisis. the country is moving him to. so the us needs a lot of the hassle of painful reforms. it needs to carry through to restore fiscal responsibility. however you as a less room for maneuver because it also has this global empire it's carrying on his shoulder. so a sort of sla sir ability to maneuver who to, to restore a lot of this. so it takes a lot of this week. so i think a failing subdomain has been a more yet they had better mental while the feelings and well, the feelings of a burst johnson house las vegas. and furthermore, one could also point out what we just discussed,
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that you society so profoundly divided again by them. you can also see that he, i would, are he failed on this aspect. i mean, the router are assuming unity. from the beginning it became obvious that unity would require the other side. so the republicans to repentance align themselves behind is devices, policies. so again, this is the problem with the political position is deemed to be an emmy, a sucker lane or roof are compromised. and so i think that these are all key problems. and also he didn't actually do any of his born subject as either he was gonna really go back to the nuclear deal with iran gas bomb bachelor's gonna correlations with china as much follow the trunk also there as well. and then also i yeah, russia isn't. i've been able to improve men of the relish with that relationship either. so i think, yeah, yeah, across the board he so this is his found it or patrick?
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same thing. i say now let's go brand in our budget, which ones were us? go ahead. this is a really difficult question to answer, but it's actually quite a profound question because there is, there is a kind of an answer in there. these are both. these were both gimmick leaders. they both effectively ran on a gimmick. joe biden ran on. i'm anybody but donald trump and managed to garner ah, quite a few of votes just on that basis. and arguably that would have been his a margin, albeit slim considering the other extenuating, our electoral challenges and so forth. but boys johnson ran on the gimmick of brick set, and a lot of people wouldn't realize that just months before the referendum in 2016 boris johnson, who was a committed euro file, he had been his whole career and all the sudden p b came mister breck said it was a bit of a marketing sensation, politically. so at that, that's how he got his mandate. and right now the people, the remain are, is,
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are very disenchanted with or it's johnston. it really has to do with the kind of draconian policies around cov ed and around vax vaccine mandates and so forth. he's really just basically hemorrhaged a lot of this support he had and the miracle of getting the northern working class to vote for a tory a leader. and he had trounced in with this massive mandate. that's all but gone now . so in a way that they're both similar in that they both ran on a gimmick and in some ways a well, especially biden, he, it was already a failure before he was even sworn until office because of the circumstances in which he was elected on many different levels and boys, johnson, again that it's basically he spent his political capital now. so, but over i would say, um, i would say on some level boards, johnson is, is a bigger of failure because of this sort of paper mandate that's now been shredded
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. yeah. yeah. i don't think either one of them have much of a future her is go to our next question here, viewers, and go to glen here is mac round capable of leading the e you with the departure of frau merkel go ahead. i would say no. i can definitely see why he believes he can take over leadership because, you know, germany is running into some economic difficulties now and its own political problems with the partial mckeyan. mcmillan also has certain ideas in terms of, you know, creating in the you are me, which would make france obvious leader with him to you by having him or militarized to you or however, the problem is always that my kind of wants to be a leader, but nobody really wants to follow it. so i think that his policy is not more focused on the french leadership within the us postal clear missions, how the you as a whole can regain its relevance in the world. so for
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a couple of nothing, any great ideas or at least a great and is, is that able to push forward in terms of establishing greater technological sovereignty and competitiveness within the you are also the foreign policy. i mean, he's been making suggestions. perhaps the you should start to patch things up with russia about it is never able to move anywhere. and again, i think this is the maimed difficulty. i mean, probably not able to give any clear benefits for, for the you only the last case. now with this northern, it was nordstrom to, for example, it is allowing, well, do you assess all europeans to, to obstruct this pipeline, simply convincing the direction that they should shift the gas to asia. so as a consequence, nearing districts will not be competitive against asians have a future. so you don't, you don't have any, i don't see him being able to make the relevant. and by doing what's needed to be
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done. so i don't, i don't see that and, and again this a lack of alternatives at this point. yeah, that's a, they a you did. does that all the time? no alternative. and i think that's my design on. fortunately, patrick, your thoughts here because mac round this actually, and i've never been a big fan of the, the french president he has matured in office. he is, he's a lot more articulate and, and willing to take some chances here and place these up for reelection in the spring here. so, i mean, maybe it's not the right question. is france able to do it instead of micro and i don't know what are your thoughts a just looking at the internal domestic political situation in france up. that's going, it looks like a tall order for a lot of reasons. the french at movement in france is also very strong, arguably a strong or stronger than any other european country. so there is a lot of disenchantment with brussels. not only that, i would say his popularity. now you have not just disapproval you probably have or
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by any one's estimation upwards of 40 percent of the french public that strongly dislike a manual micron because of the recent policies. and again, it goes back to basic freedom, liberty, fraternity galaxy. there's a lot of french citizens that do not believe that micron holds those essential, repub, french republican values. that's how disconnected he is with a large part and important part segments of the french population. so if you don't have the support at home, one says how can you lead the european union? where's angela merkel didn't have that level of disdain in germany for her during her tenure at the time. so i think that's a difficult one for manual macro, and he was elected as a technocrat. he is a goldman sachs type candidate. he's a mart, maria young mario druggie, or mario monte type. that's what the people who back to him they envisioned and he
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would play that role. so we'll see, i but i don't see him in terms of populism having the sort of appeal any more than he barely got elected on the 1st round. i think he's gonna run into problems. he might squeak by in the next election, but he doesn't have the mandate. i think that's required to say that he's really going to be a strong leader for your. well it's, it's finish up on macro at a gland. i mean, it's really interesting is that he's having to have to grapple with his re election is to appeal to the populace. i mean, it's really quite amazing that, damn, this is, that's going to make that, that's the tiebreaker in all of this here. the left is completely collapse and now it's who is going to be able to appeal to the populace. right. and yeah, micron wasn't designed to do that kind of thing. that your thoughts right before we end the program, go ahead one. well, i agree, i think the french have lost some on their advertised for the you. so for him to position themselves as the champion of you know,
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at the same time winning over the french population, it would require a lot of a paradox to call stanza, but a lot of dishonesty. and i think the french up to not a small so i guess i don't think i don't see it happening. i think you would even have a are, i'm struggling to remain the leader of france, which putting the leader. but you, i mean, making it much more difficult. yeah, well, i mean, we have a whole lot more to talk about in the new year gentlemen. i wish you both a happy new year. that's all the time we have many, thanks my guess and i'll slow in plymouth. thanks. our viewers were watching us here at r t c. you next time. remember, crossed out rules. ah, a came on the test bed for medical and
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then later recreational marijuana and it started with something so innocent. i was wanting to socialize. everybody does it so i cannot and then it just keeps going and going and going. i'm just going to do it one. yeah. and minutes. oh, i'm just going to try this one and then never do it again because they want my phone with them on and on. right on inside. ok. and you surround yourself with people who are encouraging you to do it and not to stop. mm. it felt like my life was over, jumped office about the balcony and died. mm. you just won't be new here. special kaiser report with the one and only gerald salenti, originator of the trend forecast man,
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no stuff with headlines. it's our america's big budget priorities. put the pentagon before the pandemic as president biden signs off on a massive $700000000000.00 defense plan. while washington's global vaccination campaign came running out of funds, also this our german politicians call to ban the popular messaging app telegram over hosting hate speech and cobit conspiracy. theorists. moscow though, says that double standards after the german media rounded on russia for trying to do the same a few years ago. and a mary leader plans destroy alias policy reporting convicts to new zealand saying it's causing a search in gang related crimes. and.

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