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tv   Documentary  RT  November 24, 2022 12:30am-1:01am EST

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diesel assuring, armenia will remain a member of the mosque allied block because the school has things. armenia will undoubtedly stay despite all the complexity, despite the fact that is the latest said not everything was agreed upon. the event once again confirmed the relevance and viability of the c s t o. the leadership of all the member organizations hat were here and attendance the presidents, the defense ministers of each country, and the foreign minister of each country as well. we also heard a lot of potential documents that were signed today. actually the for a moving forward with the organizations specifically equipping c s t o peacekeepers with the i'm with state of the art equipment into it specifically for protection against radioactive, biological, and chemical weapons. as, as well as supplying them with medical supplies. and dmitri pest. gov also spoke a bit about the ukraine conflict. he said that the, that the russian military spare is special military operations. objectives will be
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accomplished. and this is going to actually lead to the strengthening of the military organization itself. an army as capitol of your. a event, nearly 100 people came out in protest against russia before the summer began. the demonstrations came ahead of an appearance by vladimir putin at the alliance's meeting. protesters demanded their country, quit the russian lead, coalition accusing it of not coming to armenia as a during clashes with all their visor on in the timber while a handful of others called for an end to the conflict in ukraine. a pro russian rally was also house with the porter, seen waving russian flags and banners, they called for closer ties with russia, with others asking for to assist in the return of armenian prisoners of war. and also by john and that's all for now. be sure to check out our t dot com for all the latest breaking news and updates. we'll see you right back
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here at the top of the hour. ah, ah, most people on a laser id our job and go home and relax. i have about 3 or 4 more hours to go, so i just keep my clothes, change my clothes, the 1st job, go to the 2nd and this keeps me from want to go home. what's the book about this time? i will finish it to repeat the mailbox it was it was mitch ah, yeah, i'm, i have listen to some of that one with yes.
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ah, you need see, didn't have to maybe work is hard to get by. you kinda maybe spend more time with your loved ones. why? you still have them margaret, this is my grandpa sister. she ah, came off a horse. i in a curve. i found her on a bank. and now here's my grand great grandmother and great grandfather. here it's peaceful, i really like it up here and then since my family's buried here, how this feel like, i need to come up here and take care of the same material. i dislike volunteer. and i do thanks for my community in try to make
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a difference. no one ever dies and says, and i wish i had a better job. they say i wish had more time to spend with my family. i wish i could have explored some of my interests of music or ard, or church, or being a baseball coach. and so i just think we're at a moment where we're going to have machines and artificial intelligence produce a lot of things much more cheaply than we've ever seen before. we're going to have the potential for abundance. and when we have abundance, what we should do is give people the chance to live out their dreams, whatever they are. and that's the gift of this moment. if we don't turn it into the hackers, we already spend millions of dollars every year in this country to try to address poverty and economic insecurity. what do we get for that money? we get 50 percent of americans living paycheck to paycheck. 50 percent of americans
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who have little or no savings in the bank to tie them over if they encounter a serious illness. 50 percent americans don't have that kind of savings to get them over that kind of an advance come on in the house. here it is. what it is, but i'm happy here much the rocks very much of over. i seriously thought i was to help this person ever. i all sudden just feel like someone hit me and my spine with an axe and my blood pressure was 380 over 260. and then they finally came in, decided that i had an a order dissection. there's 3 lines to your a order which fees all your body with blood. and mine was ripping apart both by the force of the blood. which means i have my blood pressure down very,
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very low. because it gets too high, you have a rupture in your dad where you're at me when you're sick and you're trying to deal with the potentially fatal health issue . there's just so much stress, you know, on the financial end of it because you're getting these phone calls every day and, and every attorney, i will call it like a 101200 bucks, just to file bankruptcy. now i'm thinking, you know, am i so broke? i can't afford to offer bankruptcy, you know, my cardiovascular specialist there, vanderbilt, he wrote on my medical records, he said look, this guy does not need to wait for his disability. he needs it now. and i still had to wait 15 months, you know, if it hadn't been for family and some friends,
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i don't know what i would have done. i really don't because i mean, i had no money and you know, i had, i had eat you can look at someone like you can look at me right now perhaps and, and maybe think hello, perfectly healthy. but you don't know what's going on inside someone's body in it, what we spend another 4 trillion dollars on. we spend another trillion dollars on tax cuts. are wealthy people, do you see the effects of wealthy people spending those tax cuts that we give them in salina, or do you think that instead of economic activity always coming from the top and trickling down, that economic activity might actually be kind of thing that bubbles up from the ground right with, if everybody has a decent amount of economic security and has,
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might spend, then economic activity will spiral upwards in a community, likes align left in the army originally. and when i got out, i just didn't come back home. i just started work, started going for 27. the reason that i'm here back cancel anna is because i have custody of my 2 granddaughters. they are 11 and 10. so full time in saying, i live here and go home, start getting ready for them to get home from school. and of course we have to have supper if their homework gets their bass and it's bad time and ready to start all over. they've been through a lot to be as small as they are and same things and heard things and that her child shouldn't. you know, drugs is really bad thing here in the school. small town and it has destroyed
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many families. it sure has sure. mandel friday. oh. 6 a also wanna warn that works hard that you just don't. well, all of us live in a basement with a bag. i gave up the best job i ever had my life. when i came back to that girl girl in the head. it was either that or let them going to states custody. and so i gave it all up, came back out and i need is there what you have to do? you know, so in where you go,
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i don't like about where i spend my money and i would much rather do it here. and i have to drive 30 or 45 minutes to for the nearest place. they will because this is the fashion nowadays. we really would like to say the town come alive again, like i said, we just need more people that are willing to last in the community. if we give everybody money, you know, everybody has something to spend and they can spend it in, in each other's businesses. and that creates an upward spiral of economic activity that can revitalize the small town like selina. if i can make the analogy to a board game, if you think about the game monopoly time ago around the board, the costco. yeah, another $200.00. you didn't have that $2.03 time you, pasco, and monopoly, again,
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would be over in about 3 terms. see that $200.00 you get for passing go when monopoly that's universal. basic income. they are no matter what. it's on conditional, you know, it's come, you're getting it, whether you're when and or you lows in and if you're losing it can give you a chance. should give you hope it may be just, maybe you could still pull this off in our representatives in legislatures and congress, they know the investments payoff, right? they know that, for example, $1000000.00 investment in the fish hatchery, they'll hollow, pays off in multiples of that amount. every year in the tourism that it brings into this community. a lot of people actually travel here just to fish and buy them, come and do slot or just to visual, say i have to buy groceries here at the bar. vision lies about gas. you know, like those terms like to economy, you know, quite
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a bit with right, this is why our representatives fight for money in washington to bring back to our communities because they know that these investments can have multiplier effects that bring in much more than the cost of those programs go straight up the river cuz the doc is a little bit either further. buffalo offer has got a girl. oh oh, good infrastructure. like roads and bridges and rail brings in business. oh, basic income is like infrastructure spending for families. right. less families to, to, to pay for the infrastructure that they need, whether it's child care or whether it's housing, whether it's food closing, or a car that works or medical expenses. these are all infrastructure investments as
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well in the productive power of our people and our families in our communities. volley mo, came up with money and got yeah. it was hard on. again, imagine what she had to go through a hated to put her in that predicament, and i would never have to put her in predicting her again if i can help it. but like i said, as long as it's hard to get work, it's harder paid. you know, if you got the money you gain, it scares me death. i'm a ne, a. or if i know of, i don't buy it after so long they're going to come get in, take me away from a family in. are you working right now? i'm fine off and on working rogues and it's hard on me course. notice you guys notice lions and stuff. it's hard on me cuz i retain fluid and stuff, but i get it now and i, when i have to give my kids, you know,
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we try to go to a doctors office. they wouldn't accept him because he don't have insurance. and then i goes all the way back to the money thing. no money. so because you don't got no money, we don't care about channels. we don't care what's going on with you. we're not going to tell you good by maybe days all turn him down. and he didn't show it to you guys, but when he slid down the hill over there to to catch land in that heard him a got him. how would a $1000.00 a man help you own? i mean it would got on mine. okay. the imagine what it would do for my family made my wife would live better. we were our years much is mounted are valid.
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and that way i'm on the table guy. you know, if you don't me careful who a dish. oh wow. i
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oh oh i ah ah community and we have 2 choices when we design programs for the poor and for people who are struggling, we can say you need to prove to me 1st,
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you're worthy of my health and then i'll help you. ready or we can treat people the way we treat our families. our children are neighbors and say, we're going to help you 1st because we have faith in you. we believe that you're going to do something good with that help. and that's what it basically come to us . i just up a couple of different things from the presupposition is that there is a, a belief of inherent good that within people there's a common belief and understand that most people are basically good, i believe in. ah, we say that you ought to pull yourself up by your own bootstraps. that's a really classic southern say though, some people don't have boot straps to pull up. some people don't have hands to pull them. some people don't have feet to put them on
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to be a person of faith, no matter what was specifically alive involved in years or, or what tribe of christianity or other belief system that we prior to that there isn't, there ought to be a common written, loving our name for who they are for where they are not for who and where we think they ought to be. that kind of love was good enough for jesus. i think it ought to be good enough for us to hey, ah, what's interesting to me talking to people about basic income, especially people that would benefit from it. is there often resistant to the idea? and often the resistance takes the form of, you know, some other people will be lazy, some other people will use it for drugs. some other people will misuse it in some way. some other people choose not to work. don't you think somebody to paypal it. gabriel, money they wouldn't turn into well dope, a couch, potatoes,
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work on what we are name. but when i asked people what, what would you do? right? no one has ever to me like, oh, i'll sit on the couch and buy some drugs and some alcohol and be lazy. but i'm looking at this way. if i'm growing a garden and my family go out there that when asked garden, we work hard on that. so you're saying i should just open the door and let the neighbor down the road and it will work so hard. come in here and get part of my garden house at wrap for us. this kind of resistance is almost a question of human nature. you know, how do people think about other people beyond their own family and friends? do they trust them or do they not trust them? and i think that's that's what we kind of have to talk about. and that's where actually pilots are very useful because we have a little bit of an earlier i've actually quite a lot of empirical evidence saying, well, actually most people act like you and your friends in your family. basic and compounds have been done all over the world,
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and generally they do not find that people misuse the cash or stop working when they receive it. in 2019, the mayor of stockton, california launched an 18 month program where they gave $500.00 a month, no strings attached to a $125.00 residence and made less than the cities annual median income. one of those recipients spent the money on surprise, groceries pay and bills, you know, the same things you and your family would probably spend the money on to ah ah, so we are within the last $30.00 days of the pilot project in his 1st year with the 20 women and we worked with, we have seen them do everything from payoff predatory debt. go back to school, get better and coin opportunities and feel like we are more engaged parents to re establish relationships. really does have an opportunity to show up and we have
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their full lives. and that's the beauty and the power pairs. ah, i use the for so many things. stay and on top of paying the bills in the household, things i was having to like take the baby to glaze so you know, they, you know, you can't really just really have the babies. oh so oh baker allowing him to be somewhere where he can now. so not, not just being watched but also learned. ah me. i was able to go ahead and now enrolled him in daycare in the and just focus on school. i sorry my sake a semester, he a medical bill and they all coating as i finished that semester, i made the bings lease. there was very exciting. i got my ged, i graduated in june. i was very excited about that because ill, really, one of the things that he can hinder me from, you know,
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job basically well good job receiving a $1000.00 a month, even though it is a blessing. it's not enough to sustain yourself or your family. so individuals took this for what it was an opportunity to get a leg up an opportunity to put in place a plan for themselves and their families. so no one quit working individuals when and gab better career opportunities in the they didn't look at the school and it was paid off, dead individuals, labor charbonneau lives now. and you were polls of valentine. they it was a mere inside. you can take them with the keys in 6 months for the baby girls where they had a gar. mary had a when i was a murder visa and i get up there on this line. oh my god, i have to do something to tear the golden road. on row in i looked up a he, boy, he bo, he crying hard and everyone, you know, was, it was exciting. you know,
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50000. yeah. she started it. she started the that the room. all crying. yes. mom, actually i was on a magnet with cancer hearts out. they also want our relationship close to between the, you know, my mom got the mom and you know she needed a lot or she is mer to stay. and when she hit with the bill, she'll with the key. so now her being down, you know, just to return the favor just to be like, mom, we're for you. just like use your for me all, even though it is a guaranteed income pilot in their other guaranteed income pilot, currently being conducted. ours is the only one working with extremely low income families. so families who have various subsidies that they are dependent upon. and even though individuals had a decrease in benefits, they still say that they are glad that they receive the cash because the cash allowed the opportunity to do whatever they need it. it wasn't a voucher or
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a subsidy dedicated to one particular b. or most importantly, where do i go? family milan, katie, boley movie. we were able to celebrate a lie, right? they, we, you know, before holidays and just count by actually being able to get together as a family. and i have so many things lined up. i'm actually going to be looking for a job in these administration. i met some great people. great, great thing. wait, let me know when cost a breach to come talk to them. so i'm very excited about a, you know, just say people did, you know, and looking out for you just to see did you're trying to do something, you know, to change a life, a new situation than in your awaiting kamani. and we're happy to share with
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what you think is gonna happen when the programs you know, i believe that we spend a lot of time thinking about what happens when something ins. and to me that's a clear sign of that trusting individual. so if i am going to say that i trust you enough to give you money and know that you are going to do which you and your family need, i have to say that i trust you enough. they are put a plan in place for when is money and so, so i believe that individuals are going to continue to do whatever they need to do to take care of themselves. and, ah, ah, in the end, people want to be productive. they want to have a better tomorrow than they have today. and if you give people a stable, durable source of income that they can count on, then most people will invest that money in ways that are best for them. as we live
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in a moment of change, it's going to happen. driverless cars are going to arrive and artificial intelligence is going to improve progress though in terms of people and whether they're better or worse off. that is optional. this is a moment to leave. this is a moment for debate because the future of our families and our children is really expect cash to me. it's freedom, it, it, it's bringing. it gives you options that without that you do not have a casual ass them the freedom to actually make the decisions to determine what it is that they need for themselves. you know, right now i'm academic, let's say for some reason academia doesn't work out. and i need to take a couple of years to get some training or to switch careers. or let's say i have a parent that really needs my help. i can instantly fall back on that universal basic income in that pitch. so it's something i really want for, you know, the disadvantage people in this country,
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but it's something i also really want for myself. and i think that's how you create really powerful political movements. i take this opportunity and see that we do not have a limited time. and so my ask for you all to night is free to take this new vision of the economy, this trickle up economy, this human centered economy, this vision and make it yours. i don't know to have picked up on it or not, but right now things are less than ideal for a huge number of people in this country, a blur bay and let go from jobs that are never going to come back rack medical bills are never going to be able to pay, you know, by the way, a global freakin, contagion level, pandemic. hard to feel very good about they treadmill. don't you think you'd feel a little better if you had slightly more assurance that you and your family we are going to be okay. we really believe in the land of the free lunch act like it was slip at john, economic boot off of people's next, let's give everyone a piece of the get all american pass so that no one has to start from nothing
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that's freedom at u. b. i think about a with
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with ah ah
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ah, ah ah ah, we don't recall a similar reaction in the west in 2015 when residents of crimea were left without water and electricity due to ukraine's actions. moscow heads out at western hypocrisy. happy un security council in response to an emergency meeting over russian stripes. i knew crane's critical infrastructure. also this our our parliament, a sketch rated with unconditional hatred towards russia. these parliament will support any measure that goes against most policies, even if it will not bring any benefit. the sponsors of these resolution wants to push us to war therapy and parliament.

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