tv Going Underground RT January 24, 2022 2:30pm-3:01pm EST
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this and they talked about it and they abandoned them. rules about certain medical requirements needed full truck drivers and, and, and, and so because if you suddenly have these new rules and very tough restrictions, then you are reducing supplying many industries. now, because energy is one of the most fundamental industries to keep an economy going and if you are creating energy supply shortages by, by these policies. and then you are creating a big problem. it's very just a clear picture as to what i'm sort of jumping together to say difficult to get a clear picture when you, when you, when you've got some top lloyd's and use outlet saying one thing. you've got a whole bunch of other saying another thing here, but the out of a day, all of this stuff rolls downhill and it's hitting everyone like you or me in the pocket as well. richard one, a professor of banking and finance at demand for university in the u. k. wish we had more time i really do,
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but we've done. thanks so much for joining us. thank you for joining us as well. here for the monday evening program live from moscow 1030 p. m. i rural research i or not international. we're back soon with with it was not a showdown, but rather an exercise in placing markers the russia us talks in geneva settled basically nothing. however, the vitamin ministration can no longer say it does not understand russia's position on pan european security. the mom is in washington for ah, a
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ah after attention to what you're going underground from a country dominated by doubts over the premise ship averse johnson as he tries to save himself with something called operation red meat for the 2 and a half 1000000 food bank uses value be suffered on the conservative leadership, red meat and food itself is something that must be substituted and sacrifice under so gold rising cost of living crisis. joining me now from eugene, oregon is professor michael factory. the un special rupture on the right to food to discuss the nutritional value of neoliberalism. thank you so much. progressive, actually for going on special roger, i suppose i better just start with something very general. given that where i'm talking to you from not far from food banks or something not seen here
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for decades. why is food scarcer in 2022? when there is more food supply than ever before. you know, and thank you for having me and you're quite right to start with the question of food banks, especially in the u. k. so 1st it highlights that the issue of hunger and malnutrition is not just a matter of poor countries. rich countries alike are having a serious issue today, and it is on the rise. and the increased use of food banks indicates it's, it's not an issue. as you pointed. an issue of there isn't enough food. there's been more than enough food globally speaking on a per capita basis for the last 60 years. the issue always when there's a rise of hunger, malnutrition, and especially famine, is always indicative of a political failure of the failure of institutions not doing what they're supposed to be doing, and politicians not being responsive to people's needs. who concern today, what's happening with ko it's cov, it is made existing problems,
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worse. hunger was on the rise even before the pandemic. and there were a lot of endemic problems before the pandemic. and what the pandemic is done is it's complicated supply chain issues. but the term supply chain destruction is to abstract what it means is workers in aggregate in farms, workers in the supply chain, workers and restaurants are getting sick, they're not being protected properly. so what it's showing is how we treat the people who are essential to keeping us well fed has always been problematic. i'll follow the chain back in a moment, but i mean, in your country, what 40000000 at least rely on the snap food stamp program. shortly the by the administration would say, you know, the political failure. no, this is a political success. the food stamps are feeding people. so in the united states, as your point has also been on the, on the rise, just like in the u. k. and so there's been some adjustments to programs here and there, but just like the use of food banks or whether it's you. so in the united states,
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the snap program, more popularly known as food stamps. these are all the equivalent of saying it's like the cooking of an emergency room. so it's dealing with things in the immediate sense, but the structural issues of how we fundamentally organize our relationship with land, with the ecosystem, with each other has not been adjusted. and in the united states, there's a long standing issue of racism that stems from the u. s. department of agriculture, which the biden ministration has not been able to been overcome. it's been blocked by the courts in many regards. so i so sorry. why racism? yes, so in the united states, very specifically, black farmers have been dispossessed from their land from the era from the minute they were free from slavery until today. so a common phrase is that the u. s. d a was the last plantation in the united states . so there's a long pattern up until today of specifically black farmers being dispossessed from the line, not being it access to credit the same way. white farmers are given access to
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credit and financing. and so over the years there's been a decrease in black farmers over the years. and then if you look at other groups, indigenous people and immigrant communities, minorities, by any definition, it's hard to get into farming. but it's hard for anyone to get into farming in the united states, so there's racism. but then this is the corporate domination of the farming sector in the u. s. but also globally, obviously bank. so then i, they conclude credit worthiness on, on the idea raises you painting some sort of apartheid picture that well banks will hear you. no one will say i am a racist right normally, that it's structural meaning. it's the pattern of how, how these loans are made and who gets those longs. and then if you added up in the aggregate, you see these very clear patterns of who's winning and who's losing. and it is by farmers. and so it does mimic patterns of apartheid. it mimics patterns of,
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of discrimination in the past. so it's deeply problematic. the bite administration didn't try to do something recently and provide specific relief or black farmers, but that was blocked at the, to the courts. and so, and so black farmers have heard time and time again, administration of administration, regardless of political party of being helped, and no one is really solve the problem here for the leader 1000 commons. here, jacob reese, moore said that food banks kind of are to be celebrated. they are quotes rather up lifting what a good, compassionate country we are, every food bank and you see is actually something to be celebrated and politicians in recent months, love to be instagram. beside them showing how great food banks are, whereas your saying appears to be saying they're kind of indictment well, food banks, this is the language of compassion. i think it catches the limitation of food banks, food banks, most food banks still are working on a charity model, which is,
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but for the, the power of those with money of donations. do those food banks work? food is an entitlement without it. we can't live and for food banks is to say these are a good thing is like to say, well, our health care system is, is doing great look at everyone can have access to an emergency room, as opposed to say, why are people hungry in the 1st place, why are people using a food bank in the 1st place, they shouldn't have to get to that point and food banks themselves in the united kingdom say we shouldn't be, shouldn't be relying on us. we're just doing our best at the, at the final point. but at the very beginning, families shouldn't have to seek charity for food is an entitlement. they should be able to feed their families by matter of course. and the right to food is enshrined in the un. well, like any right. it's an issue that people debate. i think the right to food is one
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of the least controversial rights out there. i have, you know, even countries that may not technically are formally enacted the right to put in their laws. very few will say will argue that there is not a right to food. so the right to food is recognized in international law. it is recognized in human rights. it is recognized in many un institutions at the core of what they do, whether it's the food in agricultural organization or any of the other, you and institutions. and then different national systems incorporate the right to food in a lot of different ways. what's exciting about the united kingdom is many people at the city level at the municipal level. local governments are taking up the right to food as something anyone can enact. so you don't have to wait for a parliament to not to write to food. it is your entitlements, and any public institution can say we're going to and not the right to food. and we're going to treat food as something as a basic necessity that people are entitled to. and therefore,
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we have to marshall public resources to make sure everyone has access to good nutritious food that's appropriate for the particular contact. cases of malnutrition have been rising. and you know, some studies show that since the bail out of the city of london under 50000, may have been killed by austerity. whereas which food must be a part of, but we covered him and the other day britain in the united states, a boarding weaponry to bomb yemen. not sure that works with this right to food because obviously, blockades of ports, united states sanctions on countries. how does that fit in with any kind of internationally recognized idea of a right to food? well, this highlights exactly. it is highlights that the problem is always political with hunger and malnutrition. so you know, i get to how the right works in the 2nd. but 1st, so point to the issue, i'm in there was a report by a group of so called eminent experts from the united nations in september 2020. and
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they said the issue is absurd. it's a travesty of the situation of, of famine in yemen and who is heard most by these blockades. often it's, it is children in the situation and it's a choice. so hunger, when you see instances of hunger, malnutrition, and famine, it's always the result of political choices that are made. so by framing the issue as a right it, what it's saying is governments, you are falling short of your obligations and you can change this. you can point to just natural conditions or sage. it's the pandemic. it puts, it creates a relationship of obligation and accountability. it means people can hold their politicians accountable for these instances of hunger and malnutrition. and it can't be wrapped up in rhetoric of just a scientific solution or technical solution, or just a charity that it has to be. it's an issues at the core of how governance works,
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how government works for the wants. we see the u. s. administration's british administration's, you know, using food as a weapon. i don't know whether you think they are. i mean it's 25 years since madeline albright, the 1st woman secretary of state. famously, she said, as regards a half a 1000000 reputed children to die and sanctions against iraq was a price with me. is food being used as a weapon today? food is being used as a weapon in yemen. and in many other areas where there's an increase in conflict and where there are blockades, where there are unilateral actions blocking the importation of necessary products in several countries around the world. you know, and the united states and britain, the biggest donors of h t m. and as well indeed. so isn't that ironic will block the block? you're not sure. this is, you know, this is sort of what the message, this thing is. create a blockade unblock your natural commerce and way of getting access to food. we're
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going to make it difficult to grow your own food, and then we're going to subsidize our own farmers and use that to donate food and inevitably who wins. it's not, it's not people in yemen, it's the powers that are donating. so in this model of donation people are the winds of donors as opposed to being self sustaining, as opposed to being able to live the regular lives importing from where they need to import and just have regular commerce. so even a system where donations are coming in the, the, the people receiving the donations always still remain at the mercy of those, giving them food and a relationship of donations and receiving donations is not a healthy or a relationship with dignity. this is at the core of the issue. well, the un claims 377000 people killed since the war began the war field by britain in the united states in terms of weapons sales. obviously, you seem to be suggesting these parallels from the food bank on your street right
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up to geopolitical aid. i suppose we better get to commercial systems of food. are you allowed to call out individual corporations and companies? because when journalists try and do that, and this seems to some like a monopoly situation, when it comes to global aggregate corporations, they get sued for defamation. i can be very specific. i've covered these in my reports to the united nations. i've pointed to the so called big for companies. so our global food system is dominated by a small number of companies, and they are part of the problem. so the other reason, so i pointed to the failure of politicians and of governments. but the other problem in our food system is asking the person who controls the main elements of a good system, access to land, access to seeds, working conditions, and the problem. the biggest problem in our food systems today is the increase of
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corporate power. the fact that corporations go after people with lawyers, with the pressure farmers, indicates that they are sensitive to these, to these calls, accountability. they're very sensitive to these calls of accountability. but when a small group of and let's not be abstract, it's not just corporations. it's a small group of people whose power is enabled to corporations. when a small group of people and a small number of corporations dominate access to the essentials of the food system, inevitably, people are going to go hungry. inevitably, the system will fall will strain under its own pressure. no, this is would say, obviously they would say actually for who dominate their interest is selling the most food and seeds and all the rest of it. fertilizer indeed, right, exactly. the fact and the fact that the corporation job is to profit it's job is to make money. it's job is not to make sure everyone has access to nutritious,
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inappropriate food, and it for thousands of years. and even even got more recently, even more recently in countries that are not dominated by corporate systems. we don't need corporations to feed each other properly. we don't need corporations to produce enough food to feed everyone in the world. corporations are driven by a profit model that process model then determines how land is purchased. it determines what is grown, the conditions of the working conditions. and we know that antitrust a regulation sam lived. they sometimes worked. certainly there been certainly investigation, professor michael fac rail. stop you that more from the you in special rapids are on the right to food up to this break. join me every thursday on the alex salmon. sure. and i'll be speaking to guess of the world politics sport business. i'm sure business. i'll see you then. mm.
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ah. welcome back. i'm still here with professor michael frank. really humans special robert on the right to food. the structure, this is supply and demand was famous. a few decades ago, the european union destroyed grain mountains and wine lakes and butter mountains. and they had to do that to keep the prices stable. so you're against them destroying food to keep prices stable, which is a central tenet of the way food capitalism. as it works, i, you know, everyone has to figure out how to stabilize prices into this is the eternal problem and known. and this is it, this is, i mean it's, that's when you're trying to focus on fishers and pass or lists and people that make our food and workers can make a good living. a dignified living and the prices are,
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are affordable for people. is a different question of we want to stable market. we want to fair market versus people trying to create a market that's profit oriented. now, on the destruction has the european common agricultural policy work. we could spend a whole show on that. i think we and i think we are in union here in britain, i should write and i understand if you came in a moment of try to figure out its own sort of agricultural policy, but you know, the destruction of food for the purpose of stability. i had a chance to the specifics of that because it just shows i think no one has no system has really worked. in recent, i'm going to show you how you and special a you don't backlit instruction of food. i mean, in general. sure. that's what i just wanted to make sure i'm thinking back. exactly . i mean, there is, of course, another model. i mean china responsible for disproportionate improvement in world health and nutrition. $800000000.00 out of poverty, of course, since since gentleman square, and that's a world bank figure. if
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a 820000000 currently undernourished around the world, i mean should, should the world not just follow the chinese communist model, which got 800000000 out of over the i mean, this is, you know, the fact that we're bringing poverty nouns of issues exactly right, so there is unfortunately there's a link between poverty and hunger and, but that's, that doesn't have to be the case. why is it that we've constructed a global economy and national economies? when people's income determines their ability to get access to food, your income, your source of money, your source of livelihood should not determine your access to good food? we can, there are, there are instances where the poor, the middle class and the rich alike eat well in a way that is affordable. that is healthy, that is culturally appropriate. the fact that our food systems are so closely tied to market trends to economic factors from issues of poverty highlights the problem
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. now what each individual country can do becomes very specific agrarian reform redistribution of land. that's one way of thinking about it. oh, but there's always a cost and i always worry about, well, we can look at statistics and say, you know, x many thousands or x. many millions of people have been taken out of poverty. but at what price did people have to pay? were human people's human rights violated to pull them out of poverty and it's hunger still an issue. so you can still have, for example, in rich countries where they are rich or you reduce poverty, but hunger still is on the rise. so there isn't always a direct correlation between decrease of poverty and addressing the issue of malnutrition and hunger. yeah, that's go to nutrition. i mean, i actually just have a sandwich here. i got it from a soup market. any evidence you found that there's less nutrition in food vegetables now than say before,
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it is more process to the more we process food less do attrition and there isn't the more of food produces have to add sort of put nutrition back into the food. so the more you start from just if you start from a raw vegetable chalk full of nutrients and vitamins and the like. and the more you're processing it, the more you're depleting it's nutritional value. and what we're seeing is the rise, the increase of consumption, of processed food and, and, and, and so what companies do though, they have to add things to process more, as opposed to people's access to fruits and vegetables. i mean, as part of a class war, obviously the leads are more embracing and they're ever more embracing the more expensive organic foods and so on. you're talking about the rest of us, you're doing about the 99 percent. indeed exactly is it, isn't it, isn't it ridiculous now that the rich,
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now we are making what we all sort of for centuries, people is fresh food that hasn't isn't covered and pesticides that's culturally appropriate. and it gets turned into a product. and i think that's the point is when people say all but organic food is just for the elite, and that's, that's, that's not, that's a choice. why is it that i'll give you a very specific example in the united states, most of the subsidies go to things like corn and soybeans. fruits and vegetables are barely subsidized in the united states. that's indicative of many industrialized countries that they're not subsidized in the correct foods. the foods that we know, our nutritionist isn't much, is that because of law being by these big companies, i don't know a special router whether you can compete with the, the millions of dollars lobbying dollars of the big food companies. i can't compete, but the people can compete. this is the point, this is to bring it back to the right to food. this is what the power of the right to food is. it starts with the powers in the hands of people and people organizing
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themselves around their sense of title. so the reason these subsidies sort of end up subsidizing the wrong in the wrong way, is it 1st the subsidies started out of a previous hunger crisis, which was the thirty's in the united states. and around the world. many industrialized countries experienced hunger before the great depression in the late twenty's. and so to, to, to keep away revolution. they started subsidizing farmers in unprecedented ways, starting in the twenties and thirties. but then what started happening is the people they were subsidized in more power. and it was hard to change in the hard to adapt to new ideas. so then these companies now have power in the fifty's and sixty's. now they log me in a particular way, but it doesn't have to be. so i've seen in multiple places when people organize when they come together, especially around the idea of the right to food, especially around the idea of food as an entitlement. it creates new social reality, new political power that, that politicians cannot ignore,
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that companies cannot ignore. so the more people are organizing the more unions or organizing the more farmers or organizing or see real changes happen that are undoing existing power structures. well, our lawyers will definitely be glad you didn't mention the names of the actual companies. arguably, obviously they all, they all that i wrong doing, but when you talk about that mass action, why do you think the international media did not focus is a, i suppose one of the biggest stories of last year. what did you make of the india from protest? i think the india farm protest and inspired many people around the world. and so what it showed in and what was it was in the family would have to explain what it was. well don't. yeah, i guess i'm in my own bubble where everyone around me was reading and talking about it. i mean this for you. so 1st you're exactly right. i think the farmer protest in india is one of the most important actions we've seen in the last year and will
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continue to be an issue. what happens is that the indian government decided to change its laws and reduce its support of farmers and make it harder for farmers to have access to a stable pricing system to a market that focuses on price stability and farmers support. and the shift was to make it easier for corporations to engage directly with farmers. the argument that the indian government was, is they wanted to provide farmers more opportunities to sell to anybody. but everyone knew was this would enable corporations to enter the indian market more easily. than protesters, the farmers who are against this idea and who mobilize by this thousands and millions. their argument was we don't want this system which will be dominated by corporations. we're not here for maximizing profit. what we want is
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a stable market, so we can maintain our livelihood and live with dignity and maintain a stable good system for all indians. and so they took to the streets and, and forced in effect, basically raise the issue on a global scale. what was unique about this protest, unlike other poets, this is not just the number of farmers that mobilize and work together is the expressions of solidarity within india is worker unions also came together with farmers in an unprecedented coalition. a new form of solidarity between farmers and workers who don't always get along. and there was a common agreement that what they needed was stable market. and then a solidarity and calls for support happen all over the world, not just from former groups, but from all types of social movements advocacy groups. so looking to the indian
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farmers as leading to the example of what it takes to push against the corporatization of our food system. we had agnes calabasas the green deal for africa. the alliance for green revolution in africa on the, on the show, a lot of these different quangos, different groups saying we should work with the court. no, they don't talk to hundreds of 1000000 so much. they say that we should ally with the corporations that are lobbying up all additions and work with them to insure food and nutrition security. this is a deeply problematic claim, you know, with all due respect to dr calabasas, who is also the un special envoy on the food system summit. so the secretary general asked her last year, it's sort of need this food system summit and very quickly i learned is a large number of people. and unfortunately, a growing number of people in the united nations are comfortable working with corporations and my,
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my concern that i raise publicly time and time again. and i've raised it before the human rights council and for the general assembly is that corporations are part of the problem. so how is it that we would allow the people and the organizations that have created the problems are far food system. also be part of the solution. and my, what i've argued and many of are you, i'm sort of, i'm representing the call that comes out from many communities is to say, you start with holding the people who caused the problem accountable. there needs to be accountability. first, 2nd, the solutions do not come from the people that caused the problems. the solutions come from the people that make our food in the 1st place, from the farmers, from the workers, from the past or from the fishes, from the, from people's communities themselves. and so to work with a corporation is to say to acquiesce to existing structures and to say, well at best, what we can do is reform what is needed is
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a fundamental transformation of power structures within our food system. so working with working with corporations, i mean to use the old the term, i mean, but it's appropriate in the discussion of food. it's letting the fox into the house special have a to thank you. thank you very much. it's been a pleasure that's over the show back on wednesday republic day in india, when the country celebrates sovereignty from british imperialism, the reputedly sole, 45 trillion dollars, and killed 35000000 until then keep in touch with social media and let us know whether you think the power of agribusiness will ever allow the right to food to become law. ah, with
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ah top headlines right now he or not you international, the u. s. put 8500 troops on a higher pentagon, so they ready to put a point with an eastern europe if russia attacks ukraine despite moscow continuing to say, it still has no such a bad. a british government minister quit while slamming their prime ministers, quote lamentable track record and tackling claims of massive fraud and that governments copied loans. he added with heating powder julian assange wins the right to appeal to the u. k. supreme court to prevent his extradition to america on espionage charges. the ruling has been welcomed by his family and support.
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