tv Documentary RT October 21, 2022 7:00pm-7:31pm EDT
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[000:00:00;00] a with for the show, the ukrainian people what the soviet parties and stood full and who was actually fighting the invaders. cedar cough fuck was ordered to conduct res, throughout ukraine, all the way to the copay, the mountains. during one such incursion, they destroyed a large supply of oil along with the oil fields that provided them up with fuel. cup book squads earned universal respect and for his courage, the legendary parties on commander was awarded to gold stars.
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while the red army was fighting the air marketing 1943, a new force arose in ukraine. the u. p. a ukrainian insurgent army esco was to strike and seize power when the red army and the vm offer was the weakest. it was quite a disciplined, military organization which had a clear structure, well trained commanders of which was planning to increase its manpower up to a 1000000. however, moscow had not taken into account that the u. p. a had a soon enemy, the po, it was against them. that the u. p. a on the terror in valeria, which later became known as the volcano massacre. don't put a ruler, mobile partner from this contribute to detroit for each piece from here, good ostable started. don't oldish crimes are facetious gibberish nurse to will print that. a friend that bush or surely shooting up to go, but catching fresh tomorrow in brooklyn. stokes dis,
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disney owns to trigger it for to start this is veronica willis because elliot or some sort of fits or award. i don't remember where lena said he has no do small waterloo on one hand, d u p. a was a well organized structure with a territorial division and strict hierarchy on the other fragmentation and a high level of autonomy and cited commanders of large units. pres, claims to lead the organization. but few were experiences ramayo cabbage. it wasn't long before he firmly established himself. as the commander in chief, soviet intelligence was keen to eliminate him. but he was sneaking and dodgy, and like an animal, he sent the danger. he changed the location of his h q frequently, and he's short. he has heavy personal security according to german estimates during its heyday, the u. p. a numbers up to 500000 people. our figures that are more modest of also
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postulated. in the year the u. p. a reached the peak of its powers. the red army launched a massive offensive in ukraine. she gave it, his dreams disintegrated rapidly among the fools upon his shoulders. he had raised the da was suffering. the suit on the national up to the elbows in blood should be able to, his plans didn't include taking responsibility for numerous crimes and atrocities. but he didn't want to accept defeat either. the u. p. a squads went underground and became illegal. gangs nationalists who hadn't been finished off after the war formed the core of these groups. their secret, high doubts were scattered throughout the west of the soviet union. before i was there, but even those that jealous left an excellent ship. i've got
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a guy idea hurl dealer. um push him up. if not, so do i have the choice with cheryl bush ready when you're more unique about anybody is like you got a schedule. great. year or so unless you're under what color, just very general question. a group where it will be in the car. just hello joe. it's good plus the that us was sure for sure. if i'm, should you the former, you a members found a new mazda, the central intelligence agency, of the usa, cia, although it was on a different continent. it was far more generous than the germans. that b, $2.00 are both. so as not deal kind of do not say quality care, what got voted, got us in your mouth in the, in america, i'd say me and my territory what the what gun throwing this i was from so usually of so i guess can say was, what did you say, do you see any deal nice boys over to what that pursued?
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so on that end and was pulling it in both for huge fan, the early 1950 s u. s. president harry truman signed a secret plan to attack the usaa. the americans went going to declare war because the world would have undoubtedly condemned them for it. however, a so called piece making operation, which ukraine would rise up with the u. k. i taking up arms with a different story. i just gave it trying to convince the americans that it was still possible to separate ukraine from the u. s. s. o. at the cia behest he did his best to rock the boat as hard as possible. a nationalist ran a mug throughout the ukrainian and night attacks were a real nightmare for the civilian population or you will be what is a percentage is just gonna say is go as the last for this were resorted to beside
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the general ritual that those toby barrels re to probably yeah. cause yeah is don't reach me then you brought a sub gorgeous show for the last. do you prefer to have an effect, but it, russia nobody's. rubio, bishop mutual. you in particular to job personally and what should i say like the reports you gave and sent across the ocean, were heard with great satisfaction and rows. for instance, they had to cancel, change his saboteurs. they were still trying to create some sort of an organized group there. in the baltic region, the network acted efficiently, but like numbers. however, in ukraine, everything was set up and such a window of opportunity had to be used. the americans were so infused by shook image that they became careless. it seemed to provocation was about to occur in the ussr southwest, in which case they'd have to come to the age of uva, an organization rising from its ashes. however,
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the scale of their activities covered them, moscow began to take action with the chief aim of finding roman showcase and depriving the u. p. a of its leader through the planter followed any clue that could lead into shockey rich family members, friends, places he'd been to all came under scrutiny. but oh, you and leader laid low like a cunning and experienced wolf. he was, nevertheless, a lead. eventually came ne, a british le ish near by, lena will school probably in your part of what school was to go to the scholar school when you were, but not always of student mitchell, if you both got ideas with version in your brother or not all but didn't so she was in for months or for huge. and i got or, or cause i begin the hoarded so near. the idea was check. please go from washington,
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sees fusion i asked goes on with the actual search. on the day they decided to arrest daria, who sucked it up. lots of personally, breathed his operatives. it was imperative to take her alive. the general's instructions were carried out to the letter to the applause. it was right. when they searched her flat, they found a gun and a cyanide pill soon into the color of her bathrobe. i knew by janish william price if they had thought to, i knew merely with as little sketch. yet the emitted p. c b. e. a good idea, show busy for their order in. yeah. and you've been your mother. yeah. issue during interrogation. the messenger denied everything she claimed she had the c. she gave it for a long time and she had nothing to tell the investigators to the plan to have employed a trick. he put an n k d operator in her cell under the guise of an arrested. oh, you an activist who is will much to build
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a boy. yeah. and that was cute you knew who's supposed to leave a bunch of course. and it years role as much is to what just let me know if you have new media and that's gonzales billing issue. and that's new admission. you a, you and i don't know when she learned her cell night was about to be released was she had asked her to relay a message on the outside of the trucking, a complicated chain of uva messengers. the operatives got a lead concerning the village of bella goetia outside trouble to the plot of assembled a serious force to arrest the o. u. n leda. they didn't know the exact house. so hundreds of machine gunners blocked the whole village. several intelligence officers went door to door knocking . they knocked everywhere, but to no avail, could the wolf escaped. a woman opened the door of the fall. this house, the operatives recognized instantly they didn't let on. it was catalina d duke,
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also known as message and that shit and then you know, i should have whiskey with you at the dawn eve or listening to what new marlisa told me. you said you both in okay. i certainly could do a new entry to school, probably good at my military. i was that is we still are also does not belong people to go to what, cuz the only sure sure your brochure machine. you could just go to also for huge one you we just open you, will we still, if we schedule a bianca's also be the driver polish. she'll kurt the shots and rushed into the house. the sold, the bandit confided burst from his machine gun because i was in the ship the while were billed for huge news. okay, so it's from here which one of the shells were when i sheronica, i'm a small quote, you can, i'm good with millimeters. fortune was 40. okay, can you spell that austin was the thank you mobile on watch those like winchell
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switch. no good. i was recently. i'm on the switch here and she was here with frontier for the mobile, off of a. we're not sure. but even just like a nice today had to which slow slow today for no garage my secret. no, my school name minister goes does up us being in europe, alcorn, you go back home or or see me on shows? no, i don't store what a good that says you're sure. of course the plan had not been to eliminate you gave it to the plot of had counted on taking the u. p. a commander alive. he was certain to save his life. she gave, it would have portrayed many people the general had also been keen to remind. she gave it personally of his friend andre. my love, she gave it should been involved in his murder 17 years before. but he wasn't to be at any rate, the o u and the 2nd in command and chief of the u. p. a,
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it being eliminated. it remained to be seen who would replace him shawl stuart view is stump gun it does. it does to the to mean resume, scroll talk. we're sponsor to shift the clarity off of a pump. nancy underneath monday. so what else clear if anybody yet your screen i thought i was doing this course, it's a shock with 0 snows up integrating the buyers and it says that the pos as the 45000000. sure. graham for sure. yeah, i was sure the cream did unless you to that history shows that the plots of was right all alone. even the headed, the height of ukrainian nationalism doesn't die. it just goes into hibernation and
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ah ah mm. as winter approaches, some cold realities are setting in the west sanctioned war against russia has failed. it is the west that is feeling the economic pain and ukraine's energy infrastructure is slowly being degraded. common sense would dictate a major rethink for these people in power. that is inconceivable. ah, so my name is jeremy justice and i'm a farmer in iowa right in the middle of my home town as noon we raised corn and soybeans here. so some issues that are different this year,
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the in years past is that with all the things going on the world, the day are input costs, have almost doubled nitrogen, it's oh, dream double and triple reading on the form of nitrogen have. so it's been interesting. next years on that's going to be typical. we're running a whole inventory supply chain issues while we're all because a cold low over reaction to the cold with i cause a lot of supply chain problems and that's what we're, they're telling us more. see, i don't, i think it's great. whatever. if everything would, everything would stabilize. it will help it's, it's a pro,
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i wanna say it very risky. very risky right now. for example, you could have to far was living one right across the road from each other. and each operate just a little bit different, one, i'm lucky enough to show his price bar enough. ahead and a good price. and the other one doesn't one can go broke near the window. it's, it's this risk it's gonna be, it's gotta be really hard for everybody to keep going from omega solemn, won't. ah, or you're here changes. you, sweetie. she's well, yeah, absolutely. it came from sweden and down in sweden. i believe her last name was
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peterson, and then when they come here, then they changed it to patterson, just because i think it was too many peterson's and you know, the 1st patterson moved here like an 800 $65.00 and then poppy didn't stake his claim. until you know, in the end of 1871. and then i think he jumped on his horse and rode a boon to stake his claim. anyway, so those kind of can interested. so goes back a long way. so yeah, to say t hundreds, i guess, laid 18 hunters we homesteaded some ground. well where i live. that was so mm. 18. 898218. 87, something like that. up there now. my dad farms and all goals and just been around forever to hard to get away from it
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but a dirty tractor for a backdrop case. so in the state of iowa, they give awards to farms that have been in the family for a 100 years or 150 years. so this was the order we got in 1976 by grandfather roy got for have in the farm for a 100 years in the family and will be coming up here in just a couple years. now, on our 150 years of this being a family farm, everything, everything is so expensive right now. the main reason is because of the cost of fuel that drives a cost from everything up ah, the difference in price of what the farmer gets for the grain. it seems like it's a high price. but when you take that in consideration, what all the inputs, the equipment and all that stuff, ask there are grain prices are, are not high enough to keep up with. what
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a wall or inputs are costing us a gas price. as far as reason for it. ah, our current, a lame duck president is blaming russia for that. and he doesn't realize that if you could exploring oil resources in the u. s. and canada, and he shut down pipelines is you make doing business, so prohibitively expensive or so time consuming to file for the right permits. and philly, new forms out all the time. ah, your gas company is, are going get plane for the problem. but they are not the problem, they would like to maximize output. so biden really can't blame booting for causing the problem because he himself caused the problem. in his campaign speeches,
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he was trying to pander to his woke crowd and he said, there is no room for fossil fuel in this administration, if i get elected soul, ah, my plan on that, which if i was king, i would do. i would have every one that voted for don trump. bice, get to buy field for $2.00 a gallon less. and everyone that voted for biden paid $2.00 more for fuel. so that would be my solution. what we need to do, you guys need what united states needs to do is start drilling our while again we, we, we've got, we can drill for oil. and for some reason our government thinks that we shouldn't be using our own oil, which is crazy. you guys are environmental, us and all that trying to stop at so what do we do?
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i don't take electric cars is going to solve the problem. how do you make electricity? windmills when, when you have to blow for the windmills to work, what are you doing? the wind doesn't blow but to say that we're going to work off solar or battery technology that we have now. i don't think we got the capacity to do the work. we're doing with what is available. you still have to have a source of electricity to charge your battery or your capacitor or whatever system you're using. if you burn diesel fuel and turn the generator to make the energy, the fertilizers, a lot of the, the commercial, conventional fertilizers are what really has one very high this year. so this is urea. so this is 46 percent nitrogen. that is more than double that it was last
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year. the process to make this is using does use natural gas. so that's, that's the main reason that is hire people that have farmed land for a long time. they generally have a surplus of fertilizers in the soil. it's, i don't know like money in the bank, i guess you'd call it. and you can minimize inputs for a few years, but it will come back to haunt you eventually. if you don't try to keep up, when you put fertilizer on the land, it generally takes 4 to 5 years before you start to realize any benefits, rather because it is a mineral and it takes the microbes in the soil to break it down. so a plant can use it, so yeah, it's available, nitrogen is the only thing that's got to be replaced every year and finding a source for nitrogen has been the hurdle nitrogen. it's sort of like the gas engine of the plan that gives you your height that gives you your size and it makes your plant healthy. so you put a good ear on the same chloride that's more than double also. and we believe
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that's more due to energy or justs because they can raise it because it shouldn't cost the company's twice as much to produce that same ton of fertilizer as it did, you know, in the past. so i think what it was is typically, john deere, had monsanto or always competing to see who can extract $100.00 an acre from each farmer that's raising corn. so it looked to me like the fertilizer industry want it to get in the front line to see if they could extract $200.00 an acre from the fertilizer expense. and that's what they did this year. and we know every society that has degraded it. soil doesn't treat it right, ends up failing because they lost their food supply, hungry people,
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right. and overthrow government. so as far as in the end user, so the general public buying, you know, a lot of this food, basically because the food is, comes lots of corn and soybeans even if it's fed through animals you know, the, to be for poultry fish. i've noticed in the grocery store that a lot of these prices are up 25 to 30 percent already. and with high fertilizer and energy prices, you know, they will stay high with the fertilizer being twice as high as where it is normally that probably alone as you know, 10 or 15 percent to the cost of that product going in the grocery store. so for, so this is affecting everyone obviously, i mean everyone needs to eat and cost in the groceries or are going to be increased
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. ah, ah, so, so yeah, for next year, dramatically changes. we don't see him. if we don't see our commodity prices stay high, because our him put prices have already gone up. fertilizer and chemicals have dramatically risen fuel is dramatically risen. and right now it's, it's a waiting list. if you need to replace machinery, basically, it's really hard to get your hands on any kind of new or used machinery. probably one of the bigger issues right now is get our hands on tires a certain size of the tires. we've had a hard time list. i mean, when it's time to replace the tire, you can't just sit back and wait to sign, replace the tire. you gotta put a new one on in the area of machine parts. if far were has a 500 dollars 1000 dollar combine with a $150000.00 head on it. when it is missing
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a $5.00 part that was made in china and they don't have that part. the country does a sound like a good idea to have it so that machine has to set and his crop doesn't get combined before the heavy snows hit. so we've, in this country, our political leaders have been spineless and they allowed a lot of the manufacturing to be offshored. and often times and countries that aren't always friendly to us. bar for machinery has very bad ha, used equipment is getting really expensive because new. you can't my new what we're doing here is making reverse osmosis water. we use reverse osmosis water for some of our fertilizer products that we make as well as from our com policies. this, this tote is, has,
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is full of worms that we're using to make. we're kathleen's and basically get this compost and mix ready to be used for compost t extract. this replaces for the spring planting application. what farmer would be paying $30.00 an acre for this is going to cost them about $12.00 so that's where the cost savings comes. in that's why we're doing it. yep. so what we're doing here is using the g o t 250 machine to take dry composts or a dry compost blend that has different ingredients and like warm castings and for what can you make asses and different food sources for the biology where put it in this tea bag or whatever, and then bubbling water through it,
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latch it. basically what it does is you're reenacting the saw with this bacteria and fungi, and that bacteria, fungi are loosely enough or making some of that available nutrients available to the plant. makes everything work better, it puts more air in the soil, puts more water and soil it just makes the plant thrive. another thing we're going to do this year, we're going to use full air on the corn that is a nitrogen fixing bacteria. and for like 15 or $20.00 an acre, we think we can get $45.00 if 50 pounds of nitrogen, which is about half the price of, of nitrogen right now. me not. i think that's the things were going to have to start noon in the future. and i do believe there will be a lot of people starting new that in the future. if these prices stay up, a farmers will find
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a way to survive and always have there some difficulty in it. but we'll see more manufacturing come back and we'll get through it. ah, 1950 the u. s. i saw was returning to peaceful life, but the newspapers didn't report ongoing massacres and the ukrainian ssr, according to intelligence ukrainian nationalists and the ukrainian insurgent army, led by roman. she'll give each perpetrated these atrocities for huge reserves. but hold that, that was for what i shouldn't be self thought knew it would be wise to review. i pushed please of course we'll do immune novels to the plot of was the head of the n k v d sabotaged department of the time he was tasked with stopping the atrocities in ukraine for
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a good reason. general suit of florida was very familiar with the situation he had experienced fighting the nationalists before the war. get the movie neo natal named lovelyn chicken garcia. do it's inevitable. so didn't know, creamy, but it was full access control. give me the task was tremendously difficult, but suit blanton was determined to complete it. we had personal accounts to settle with the ukrainian nationalists with ah,
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