tv The Modus Operandi RT May 18, 2023 4:30pm-5:01pm EDT
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such people, people just like lie live all the time. and then when they get cortner lives, they dig their hills and, and continue to lie there. you know, it just leads people like me to believe as a journalist, i believe in truth, i've been finding the facts and it's just leasing specialist that these people can maintain their positions of power and authority and they. busy never apologized now they will never back down and they will never get a return. their rewards posed, surprise, they won't because they have no integrity. uh, no sense of obviously no sense of decency and economic for him bringing together russian and his law, making investors as kicked off and cuts on it's a russian city with a large most and population. very beautiful town as well over now to our correspondent shape. here i think has them for him and the 4 names to generate and perpetuate links between russia and the east make world, given the shape, the changing shape of the global geo political world. it's very important that
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these particular 4 and forums allow people to come together to share their intellectual ideas, their business ideas. and there are very, very many decision makers here. the form itself, of course, 1st held in 2009, and it's grown significantly with 15000 people attending the conference from over 85 different states. so it's a fantastic opportunity for decision makers on innovators to come together and work in the context of russia. reaching out and warming relations with it is allow, make friends and associates across the globe. like guineas on baset of russia is among the biggest step before him. he believes ties between the countries will only strengthen and continue to grow, are nice in a given yea, and as far as to say, they give these relations with russia a cowardly. at the highest level, one of the largest russian companies known as were celebrates in guinea,
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extracting alimentary, amend bulk site. and addition, there are other small companies working on a territory like node gold. all right, but gimme cooperation with russia in the field of culture as well as in the defend the sex at approximately 400 military trainees are currently studying in russia. that's the students of other specialities who study and brush and receive scholarships. the numbers reach is about 500 people. in other words, cooperation with russia in these areas is very close and we would like to continue to improve them. meanwhile, there are at least 6 african nations right now that i working together to develop a piece initiative for the conflict in ukraine. you can learn more about that on our website. thoughts the, the hello, i'm the noah chan. you are tuned into modus operandi. us president joe biden is
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facing a crisis along the southern border with mexico as 2022 tops the record for the highest level of illegal border crossings in us history. many saying he's more concerned with foreign borders then his own. this week we'll examine the international hip hop or state of america as border bias. all right, let's get into the m o. the 2022 was a record breaking year along the us border with mexico, with migrants flooding into the us, 5 of thousands daily domestic outrage as texas governor and greg abbott, a re, with abided administrations handling of the influx began busing migrants out of his state several times even dropping them off directly at the door step of vice
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president comma la harris, who was tasked with being the so called borders are. meanwhile, internationally, the us government is being called out for it's hypocrisy of picking and choosing when to respect the sovereignty of other countries and their borders when it comes to bringing war to foreign lands. now to discuss the domestic issues being faced by the, by an administration, specifically the issue of title 40 to the trump era, so called remain in mexico policy. is us immigration attorney, susan? hi, susan, thanks for joining us. for susan, can you explain for our international audience what exactly title 42 is and why it's a topic of contention here in the us. so title $42.00 is actually a public health measure that prevents migrants or actually anybody from entering the united states in order to prevent cologne, a virus infection and spread and it was set forth by
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the department of health. and recently, the department of health has stated that title $42.00 is no longer applicable in, in the atlas current atmosphere of testing and treatment. and so a, a, d. c court actually declared title 42 to keep my grades out of the united states and being expelled from our southern border, illegal in november. but the supreme court of the united states has stopped that seized order of the d. c. district court. so the supreme court has intervened and will later hear a case as to why title 42 should end or not. and so title 42 has been used to expel 2000000 migrants since its inception. and so where international law and our own law says that p, okay, present at
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a port of entry, which includes obviously the southern border and make a claim of asylum and then be admitted to the united states while they're asylum case is pending. so title $42.00 actually moves the right for them to claim asylum at the border. and so there's no way for those people to get admitted to the united states. and like i said, it's, they've thus far expelled 2000000 migrants under title 42. now some of those maybe repeat crossers and it's estimated about 30 percent are, but nonetheless, numbers about 2000000 and without passing judgment on whether title 42 is good or bad policy, can you tell us the impact it's had on the flow of migration into the us, so title 42 definitely has worked to use circuit the asylum claim process up the southern border because as i said,
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they have expelled 2000000 migrants from the border without hearing their asylum plane since title $42.00 started in the united states. however, its impact on overall numbers is actually negligible. those numbers have actually increased. so for example, in 2020 we had uh lets see $50000.00 about $50000.00 encounters at the southern border per month in 2021 in 2022. that number has increased 220250000 per month at the southern border. so as you can see, the impact of title 42 has not been to slow down migration attempts at the southern border. actually, those numbers have increased. the i'm documented, population in the united states has remained largely the same between about 10.5 to a 1000000 people on authorized in the united states since 2005 before that in the
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year 2000. it was 8 and a half 1000000 on authorized documents in the united states. so what people don't understand, and what we often hear in the media is that these are illegal immigrants coming into the united states. that's not the case because we have international law and also our own life, which allows people to make asylum claims at the border once the into the united states pending their assign case. they are authorized and documented aliens. so the unauthorized or, and documented alien number has not increased in quite a while. but the number of authorized or documented individuals you know, for waiting on an asylum trial to occur, like in 5 years, 6 years or 8 years after they 1st cross the border. that number is greatly increasing. so like i said, the number of such encounters in 2020 was about $50000.00 per month. and now that
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number is about $250000.00 per month. so that's about $4.00 to $5.00 times higher than it was in 2020. and so the, the impact is really felt with the number of immigration cases that are backlog. so the backlog in cases is let's see we, we have a currently, a 2000000 immigration case backlog for 600 immigration judges. and just to give you an example, about 700000 asylum cases have been decided by immigration judges. since the year 2000 in fiscal year 2023, which has just begun the asylum case backlog for just this partial year alone is already 800000. and then to give you another example in 2012, the asylum case backlog was 100000. and again, like i said,
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the assign the case backlog. now with immigration port is 2000000 for about 600 judges. and that number is exponentially increase, increasing as each month goes on. susan high immigration attorney and immigration law expert. thank you so much for joining and explaining i'm coming up next accusations that b u. s. and nato invented new borders to create kosovo. and why the u. s has no moral authority on sovereignty, we'll discuss it when we return. sit tight. m o will be right back. the take a fresh look around his life. kaleidoscopic isn't just a shifted reality distortion by power to vision with no real opinions.
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the welcome back to the m o i manila chant. the us often criticized as other countries for warring with its neighbors, telling others to respect the neighbors sovereign borders. but looking back in america's modern history, the secret war allows the us led nato carving up serv, serbia to create cost of all, or most recently, the us bombing and conflict in syria. a complete with american boots on the ground is the us really then in a position to slam others who have valid border concerns. daniel mic. adams is the executive director of the ron paul institute and spent a years working in the senate and the state department. he's joining us now to examine the policy of hypocrisy. daniel, thanks for being with us. so we know in the waning days of 2022, a federal judge rule to keep the title 42 that remain in mexico policy that it should stay in place. this trump era doctor and effectively use the cobit pandemic
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as the basis for enactment to help stem the flow of illegal migration here into the u. s. at the southern border. the binding administration for their part have done very little one way or the other on title 42 or immigration policy more broadly. but what biden has done only recently adding a clause to $242.00, stating that anyone from us cuba, haiti, or new cut off was crossing illegally on the land border would be an automatic return fighter. and also began or reckoning margaret camp facilities across southern texas. where you are, how do you read this administration stance on legal migration? it's been a difficult couple of years for them because they really haven't done very much on it. of course, everything that trump did is automatically bad. so, you know, obviously the type of 42 was not something they were interested until january in fact. and that's when that's when the button and mistress and started to move on title $42.00 and started to try to strengthen it and add additional countries
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that's eligible to be deported upon illegal arrival to the us. the question of why they haven't done anything. well, obviously they have some constituencies or the left wing of the party certainly is very much in favor of open immigration. are they view it as good for voters? and that may work very well. be true that that's the case. so they have a lot of different special interest that they have to deal with. but they also have the use of the american people. now there was a, a, uh, it says pull, i think back in august of this past year that found that a large majority, well over 50 percent of americans view what's happening on the border as quote and invasion until you're seeing a real shift in people's views i think it was in the low to mid fourties of democrat voters who agreed with it was an n p r. it's us, paul, who agreed with the idea that this was an invasion. so you have a balancing of political, competing political views. and i think that might have had something to do with
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a shift that happened in january with the by the administration on the polling. but you have, well, i think we had something like 2400000 people in 2022, arrested for legally crossing the border. that's a significant number of people, particularly when you add in those that were not arrested or not caught, which is probably many times more of that. so you do see of a massive influx and i would just, i would just say one thing. the miller, of the one sort of wrinkling this whole thing now is that it takes on, in my view, a national security component. having people coming over and you don't know who they are, where they're coming from, or what business they have here. because you haven't literally billions and billions of dollars in weapons. the united states and it's nato allies have sent to ukraine with 0 accounting. and we've already heard from finland. we've already heard for some african countries that these weapons are starting to show up in these countries. so you're going to face and increasing danger in the open you west border of someone crossing over with god knows what a rocket launcher
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a take it though. who knows what, but a most, here's the, it is a real issue. so there really will be a need for national security reasons to get a handle on the border. and biden has been accused of being more concerned with foreign boarders than america's own. what of that accusation that the us government in general, no matter who's in the oval office, but they always seem more concerned with protecting democracy over there and right now over there. in this case, as ukraine is biting more concerned with ukraine's borders, then our own, you know, since the us is dumping north of a $100000000000.00 into ukraine as well. i would say, yes, i mean it is a border issue. and then when we have referred to it that way, that you know, we're concerned with the borders of other countries, more than our own. but of course, as we know it's, it's bigger than a border issue. it's a proxy war with russia that the body and ministration is undertaking. and i would just, you know, look back, if you look at the bush administration, it was
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a war and tear. and that was basically the premise was if we invade iraq, democracy will break out, like a plague of goodness. across the middle east. everyone will be happy and definitely on the streets. and then the obama came and said, we're going to re make the middle east, and they invested the spring as a way to re make the middle east. and of course, like all neal con plans to re make the world, they both ended an abject failure. and along comes biden with a lot of, uh, obama retracts and he says, hold my beer. i'm going to have the regime change in a rush, you know, forget about this middle east stuff. so i think that's exactly what we're seeing now. there hasn't been a lot of emphasis placed on the us borders for a number of reasons, but certainly the borders of ukraine, or what was ukraine speaking of crimea, and the eastern provinces that are now legally part of russia, according to russian constitution, are those are border issue, but again, i would say it's law as part of a larger us and nato regime change operation targeting russia than anything else.
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a permanent washington. i like to call them that be elected bureaucrats. they seem to cherry pick when to respect or observe borders or the sovereignty of nations. take the years of illegal us bombing in syria. as one example, no more between syria and the u. s. has been declared. congress did not approve any war with syria. how does permanent washington then arrive at window respect, borders, and when not to as well. there is a powerful lobby in washington called the military industrial complex, and it gets terrified when there's a prospect, a piece breaking out. of course, when we saw the end of the cold war, there was a prospect of a peace dividend, and they began to ramp up the war on terror. and other things and of course, were right after we got out of afghanistan and there was the possibility of us stopping a flushing all of that money down the toilet. we spent for 20 years. well that's when we started getting up ukraine. so the deep state,
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the permanent state in washington dc, the life blood, the literal blood that runs through their veins, is wor, money, and it makes everything flowing, washington from the media to the think tanks to everything. so that is exactly what makes, what makes it, what makes it flow. but, you know, what with regard to the middle east, you know, the us has powerful allies and powerful forces there that have sucked the us into wars that really have nothing to do with our own security amar alliance with the saudis, which is now going south, are alliance with these rarely, that seems to be going slightly self, of course, in our lives with turkey, all 3 of those signed on to regime change in syria and were promised all sorts of goodies and things that they wanted because of it. and of course, again, as i say, as with all of these plans, it didn't work out, it works out terrible. it turns into a disaster. and even the turks have fun. the realize this at the end of last year and the beginning of this year, as your viewers no doubt,
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no. there have been some high level meetings between a turkish and syrian leaders when they even see a meeting between us on an arrow on coming this year. the turks have apparently agreed to pull all of their forces out of syria and both assad and are the one focusing on what they view as the curtis threat, the kurds being america's own, the allies in syria. so it leaves the very interesting dynamics there that's happening, but these are the special interest of poor us in and then when things go south, they just move on to another to another conflict. there's also the curious case of kosovo. the u. s. lead nato effectively decided to create a brand new country. they drew up brand new borders around the clinton and early g . w. bush era. isn't really that easy to just create new countries and new borders? i mean, what's that process supposed to actually look like?
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and what was that saying from the bush official where he said, we create realities? you know, that's, that's the mentality of the neo cons. but you know, the yugoslavia project was it was an ongoing project and certainly thought come to fruition under president clinton, who was a pretty evil president and a pretty evil guy and surrounded themselves with these evil people. but the idea was to break up. you still have you, that's what they want to do. that's why they ramped up nationalism. they got they had to sick, a corrupt, again, serb against bosnian, muslim. and they did a pretty good job of doing that. and i think one of the reasons was 1st, they wanted to break off croatia, which was most eager to join a new europe. and i think that was the 1st thing. and once that happened, i think the idea was to destabilize and over throw and permanently defending any of the former yugoslav, territories, that would historically be pro russian. i think the, the cold war never ended for these people. the goal has always been to overthrow
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moscow. and i think this had something to do with it, even if we had our own puppet in power at the time in the kremlin so. so that's why you see now i served a serbia which had under which i suffered a crew in the year 2000 and the end of any kind of nationalism or pro russia sentiment. and what you have in serbia now is very, very weak and controlled leadership. and it has been for the past, you know, 25 or 30 years. the same is truth montenegro, which had been historically a close to serbia and to russia. that is also gone. you know, completely in the camp of the us and nato, i think we're seeing a shift and this is something that really is not appropriate for our show. but what we're seeing is shifting these alliances. but i think a sense of that's what the case was. your idea was the break up yugoslavia and the idea of picking up all the pieces and bringing them into our constellation of stars to yeah, excellent point about how the cold war never really ended. now, how would you compare kosovo to crimea?
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now in the latter, they actually held a referendum boat to secede from ukraine and rejoined the russian federation. but the us and the west did not accept that vote. can you compare and contrast for us? well, as you well, no manila, the only votes account are the ones that go washington's way and i would add brussels to because if you remember, every major you agreement where the country is about the wrong way, they've had to redo them. but i think pulling was victim of that a couple of times in denmark, what have you. so, you know, it's only counts if you vote our way and you, your viewers will probably remember. and i'm going to paraphrase the essence of what she said that hillary clinton said when she was secretary state. sure, we need to vote in the palestinian territories, but we need to find out how they're going to vote. first, need to find out who they're going to elect 1st, and that's the case in, in uh, in cost of them crimea, are there really isn't much of a comparison? because as you said, there was a referendum and you know, there's a claim that this was a force referendum that people are forced with,
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with guns to their head, to vote for russia. none of the statistics know nothing that we know about crimea would, would, would bear that out. and of course, if there was violent use, we would have seen that there's no question about it. these are people that have been russian or pro russian for the longest time. and we know how long crimea was part of russia, so it's kind of an apples and oranges in a way other than the fact that there was a vote in comfortable there wasn't a boat, there was a decision made by the us. and if you allies, but of course, the majority of countries in the world don't recognize costs as low as an independent state. now, last many would say the u. s. is in the business of destroying countries to the nation build in its own image. is that a fair criticism or fair judgment? and there's a, there's a dangerous totalitarian impulse in uh, in liberal, liberal global is thinking right now. and you can trace it back a quite a bit. a book that really influenced my thinking on this is rashad the good. so
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he's a polish intellectual who wrote a book called the demon in democracy, totalitarian temptations and free societies. and this, the idea that there is only one final way we are at the end of history, are you have to do it this global is liberal way. this neil, a liberal world order is the only world order. we set the rules, the international of the rules of international. we're our hours to set and nothing else is acceptable. and that's a recipe for disaster. it's a recipe for war. and it's the recipe for the eventual war that happened between of course, ukraine in russia. it's the, it's the essence of our fight with iran because you're on choose, is to have a different kind of society than we have. so there's this to tell terry impulse, among the us and in his followers in the west and nato, that there is only one international rules based order. we make the rules,
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we make the order, and if you don't follow it regardless of your history, regardless of the evolution of your society, regardless of your religion or lack of religion, if you deviate, you wouldn't either submit or you will be invaded. and there are many intellectuals that have recognize this alexander, duke and russia, for example, has been very interesting in, in flushing this out. but it's a dangerous impulse. i think it's certainly it's doomed. like all to tell terry and impulses is doomed to failure. but between point a and point z, unfortunately, there's going to be a lot of bloodshed and misery. all right, i actually live one more, one more as a followup, based on what you've just described for us, for as much as the us likes to fashion itself as a beacon of democracy. it's starting to sound more are like the us as an empire. so is the us of democracy. is it a republic or is it an empire? well, we're an empire. democracy in itself is not very good. it's, you know, it's to lose 2 worlds and the sheep funding of are voting on who's for dinner. as
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the saying goes, so in itself, it's not, but we don't even we, we preach the taught we, we preach the gospel democracy and of course everyone, the us a neil cons. the u. s. washington of foreign policy establishment endorses overseas is the opposite of democracy. we were all great to mot, democratic ally and ukraine, shut down all media, that's not state media close down or political parties did not agree with him, shut down the church even. and this is our great democratic ally. our wonderful allies in the middle east include outside uh uh, and in israel with a very sketchy human rights record. let's be honest about that. and so we do tend to endorse and support the worst of the worst, as long as they do our bidding in washington. and what really is needed is a change in radical change in foreign policy. that's why it's the wrong policy. it was supporting non intervention this one policy, because we simply aren't smart enough to pick or choose what, how other people should live. we don't have the knowledge and it will be in more
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detail the people how to live. in any case, daniel make, adams, i gotta leave it right there. thank you so much for that insight for that is going to do it for this weeks episode of modus operandi the show that dig deep into foreign policy. i'm your host middle a chance. thanks for tuning in. we'll see you again next week to figure out the m. o, the how brains are fascinating. they control everything from our ability to function to experiencing emotion. in fact, your ability to under stand what i'm saying to you right now comes down to the amazing functionality of your brain. and yes, there are still so much that we don't understand about how our minds work. so what happens when things go wrong up here?
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well, the find out the answers we came here to use, you know, come up and speak with me john. here's one of the world's foremost in our surgeons . utilizing state of the art technology and progressive techniques, the boss can do, i just need to get them with key at the washington state. the process is to begin the computer system on send that to professional men city and to keep the list of all but huge. but they use the
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little bit of goods that out of the support at the election for the russian is given us. we now stand out as an island of stability and peace was appraised from uganda and was a high level of delegation is here in the russian capital steps as a 6th nation group from africa works on a possible peace plan for the conflicts in ukraine. ruptured las alto western countries of the latest un security council meeting being accomplices and prolonging the conflict by increasingly and do pray. also a head for the really forces on the.
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