tv Cross Talk RT July 20, 2022 1:30pm-2:01pm EDT
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an union made decisions about peoples had, they had money spent my and a t. and there is always the sanction to them. but they have decided to, well, only part the hundreds of millions of people in you. more and more on other voices can be heard, which are in favor ups top paying get a sanction cody c and urging piece instead of so it can be that sooner or later under the pressure people, more countries can be in the can talk you later by 100 more world news coming your way in just about half an hour. ah,
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probably the most important and impactful piece of political advice ever given was it's the economy, stupid. indeed, the economic and financial condition of any public transcends ideology. and it is ideology, neal liberalism, to be specific, that is driving the world into recession. b, a . it was in the 1950s that our secretary of state john foster, dulles, proclaimed. our policy is global. ah, we started as a continental empire by clearing out native peoples and other
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foreign forces. then we became overseas empire by taking islands in various parts of the world. and then after the 2nd world war we became a global empire. now we are playing on the whole bill your time. ah, the united states has always had a variety of tools to use in its attacks on other countries. economic sanctions are, are often just the beginning. another thing you like to do is place some military
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pressure on the countries that you're talking about. and there has to be an effort to demonize that country and the leader of that country, particularly in our own press. and in the press of that leaders own country, americans love to think there were intervening in other countries to overthrow evil people. and if that's true, you have to make the person look evil. in 1951, ottomans came to power in guatemala. after being elected by the people in washington, the u. s. president received all but with all the usual courtesies of a state visit. years ago, i wrote a book about how the united states over through the government of guatemala, in 1954. ah, the case a lot on law is
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a great example of american covert action during the period of the 1950s when covert action was at a pink country last it's legitimate government and hundreds of people lost their lives. mm. oh, a with see if you decide to do with it on them on the, on the, on them even today. let me pull one over here for you. so i
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know at this time a giant american company, the united food company owned a huge amount of land in guatemala. ah, in much of that way. and they were not like, it was just being held vacant. while many guatemalans are starving because they didn't have land to grow food, i am with the ample gabby i got out of the battle in an antibiotic. but of both, don't keep that. i you? that was a better cool. i may go on with no on. no one month and then it's a, it's
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a way for lemme and get those the recalls those. well that all of them when the i know, but again, if that is i only i get out yet. yeah. i'm as you know, but if you look at the end of sales off of a i n m i l n left. now i let it, let it be. i love looking up in the, in so our president, our benz on the guatemalan government decreed a land reform program. this land reform program would have forced the united fruit company to sell its unused land, so it could be divided up and given to poor families. the united for the company was very unhappy with this. they went to the united states government. the u. s. government then concluded that the socialist orientation of guatemala was dangerous to the united states were okay, sanjay it though bye or go. i don't
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wear a pair of nicholas battle and they will see outbound buddha film and throw your head . he thought, my boy, i think i'm in kindergarten, we're good we're we're, we're a peer foot over here. i wonder if this will affect think, i mean, so if you look them up, doesn't i get over my line later civil war broke out. something like 200000 people were killed in that conflict over more than 30 years with the info me. but i didn't know at all going that they can see so black and a guy. oh, but a thought was the lateral. it's am i like one be near?
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won't be near samarnie yet then. yeah, i got to see him in a condo that come with me for a while. go via mm. i see you. are you scared of the with the amend my thought cm today. they may have been in this video and look at them. what get that in that course of it and then have them out here. now. the 2nd one is in those in one big with the other. okay. like to see i will get all those folders
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the most of them there, but i mean these 3 stages. so the 1st one is in the government, the we don't like shows bad faith by bothering an american company. then we convince ourselves that that company is our geopolitical enemy. and then we sell the intervention for as humanitarian intervention. we only do it to help them. we don't do anything for ourselves. in fact, we sacrifice ourselves for the good of others with
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american involvement in the overthrow of the government of libya, the government, a whole more kodachi was another example that calls on a number of impulses in the american intervention of spirit. ah, man. as mac cmc was nea thought, one, no, not that could be a no hand and looked. and if it had been with them, i'd only had that uni a thing. what the fuck up as a c,
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thought of him as a bad leader or one we couldn't control. now he looked like it might be about to carry out human rights atrocity. so we decided it was time to participate and, and operation to fall were throw gadhafi in that operation. of course he was kill. so we succeeded in the short term goal. get rid of gadhafi and depose that government. but then what happened? we didn't have a plan for what was going to come next. we thought that maybe by magic, some new piece, sol regime already, burge, everybody were cooperative things. together. with
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ah ah ah the sub a 100 to your boss about to let him come slash can submit that to him up for 700 sellers. korea couldn't and for coffee, my love them. and for for hut, or can they any or could it be min harper? not my lad, kind of whom was it? i do. we're newton myself. i kind of got a letter, phyllis about my mom was in our committee and then one, shall they have been you just them and the what them and presenting on that. i'd love to know if you have any special fee or bars. costco maya,
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war or the conflict does not usually break out with the bigger the smaller country, pushing up and pushing up and finally attacking. that's not what happens. it's usually the bigger country that gets worried and then the tax. and you can see this pattern through history, they call it sometimes the considered these crap. and it's dangerous for the future because we've, united states is the power that's been used to being on the top and is now being challenged. not no out of no net leisure mat. let me. yeah. what kind of a lot of b? yeah. we had the jim math, but nobody and me shit. at the school at the last getty, heidi's, ilo, ilo, ilo, medina. publish. but that allows him to, at the, wasn't the majors. yes. i know a lot of believe me to a to fee for send it to him fee. whoa, whoa,
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we believe that we are an exceptional nation. this is a phrase you hear a lot united states. we call it american exceptionalism. it means that we have a responsibility for the whole world. and we need to make rules for the rest of the world. because without us there will be chaos. a my name is dr. key on the site and i am a white political scientists for 1893 and my country was invaded by the united states and we've been under an illegal control on occupation. ever since, i've dedicated my life to not only finding out why the united states invaded my country, but also how to bring the occupation to with
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hawaii was a long term american project. it began with religious missionaries. they left from boston in the 1820 to go to hawaii and lived there to spend the rest of their lives. civilizing the poor savages and barbarians as we saw who lived in hawaii with this is yolanda palace here in the back row. this was the executive monarchs building hawaii by 18. 93 was already a constitutional monarchy. so it had 3 separate branches of government. it is here, legislative and judicial, which is across the street mm.
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with leader of the white hawaiian actually came to washington to win permission from the president of the united states to overthrow the government of the kingdom of hawaii. he received that permission. he went home, he organized a coup in which the hawaiian kingdom was overthrown. american marines were quickly landed to secure the new white government. and a few years later, hawaii became part of the united states. so this is the place that us marines landed. this road here is where they marched from honolulu harbor and they occupied this location right here when they invaded my country,
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the honking building. so we're at right now. this is where cap smith, this is headquarters for the pacific command. and it overlooks per harbor and pro harbor is a naval base for the united states. so it falls under the command structure of the pacific command. ah, with what you was taken by the united states were invaded in order for the united states to control per harbor because of hawaii's location, it's central central in the central pacific. so there's a central location that ships ester owen, ports after disarming, refurbish, leave home ports, re arm,
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and go back fighting a metaphor who it was in b, y island by money, by greed. and so he was done in relation to represent all the things that was happening and will you be mean 1819 and 930. so what we see rising out of the last out of the ocean are the giant monsters that are asked to read when documentation of annexation of documentation that basically saying we're right is what we are. we're the inevitable truth. and their absence was also again that the high saying that from the newspapers that we're seeing, never huh. we've developed an unusual a view of the world because of our location. we have huge oceans in
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a couple of weak neighbors in mexico and canada. therefore, we've never had to have a foreign policy of clear co operation with others. we've been able because of our power to impose our will on others we hear of hello come on a charter school high school level there. we're going to be visiting both share with you folks doing local. i'm gonna turn it over to you in your class. and so, anything 40 feel like we already know who i was is standing, national, was a nation state and for 50 years you celebrated 1893, when we know that, oh, the united states of america illegally overthrew. now,
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how did the united states maintain that power, despite having more legal authority from a military, like i said, military threat of force, violence, brass weapons, who, how else are they maintain power in her viking or population? we just talked about how many go spending 2 hours of their traffic was. all americans are winning guy, but serious in we are the evidence. oh, but the nationalization where the evidence of the war correct. we're not the war
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crimes ourselves. what. what you already is an independent country. all that was overthrown, any to 93, was our government by the united states, not our country. so our country is still an independent state, but we're not in control of our independence. we're occupied. mm mm. this book over throw is an attempt to show the times that america over through foreign governments over a long period in the united states, at least in a relative sense, is declining in power in the world. and we can still remain, and i believe will still remain a potent dominant force in the world. but we need to accept that the conditions of past decades don't exist anymore. and we're not used to this. we're not ready for
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a with brussel says the coming winter will be spent without russian gas and calls on the blocks members to rely on other sources of energy. also this hours with our american and british counterparts really want to turn this war into re real what it's advantageous for the u. s. and the u. k. were sitting far away and an exclusive interview with our team rushes foreign minister survey lab rob shares his take on what the us and u. k. r planning for ukraine and the european union, plus with our correspondent is in the thick of the action amid the latest.
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