tv News RT June 5, 2023 3:00am-3:30am EDT
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and, you know, there's people here who are so nice and everybody's kind to me here and, and, and this is a great, you know, it's, it's a good thing to have. at least you have this, you know. yeah, we're, we're very vulnerable and susceptible to the whims of the government. they can come in here and shut this down for the girls for any reason they want to dream up, you know, and create, go to, is this a good chance that people there, you know, they take their garbage in the bag it up, but i take it out of here, it's a clean champ. it's an orderly champ. it's just a good chair. and the good people. and so, you know, there should be champs like this around america. people can't afford housing. this gives them freedom, it gives them community. it gives them all kinds of aspects that they need as an individual, you know, and were complicated things and we need we need a complicated type of system to live in my practice going god, i have a written for morning at least to pine trees here, straight ones,
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these are in need of to this area. rockefeller had all of the street pine trees imported in planets in this, in this area here. so we're in ocean county park, also called rockefeller's park. this used to be j. d, rockefeller's the stage. you know, he was normally stationed in in new york and then when he decided to retire, he lives here. i think for about 20 years, lakewood was an extremely prosperous town. it was the playground of the rich and famous as they would say. a lot of billionaires lived in lakewood around the turn of the century, 1900, you know, either very rich and famous, the original man that ever lived in the history of the world lived here. and yeah, now it's, it's one of the poor as towns in the area. in fact, i think it's considered the poor as town in ocean county right now, where you were on, on route to the main, cham but uh, there's uh,
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a couple of man and a woman who's living in one of these abandoned buildings right here. been in houses, there's about 4 whom in a row right here. and they're, they're spending the nights in one of these houses. so they called me every so often for some water, and then propane, they've got a small propane heater, that they put in a room to stay warm. and they have a little propane stove that they use to cook on. you know, i get a lot of calls from people that are in adverse situations that are living in their car that are uh, either living in somebody's house or their couch or in their basement, living in some adverse condition. they need some help. so the property owners, if they find out that people are living in these houses, i'm sure they'll be checked out. but so they've gotta be very quiet. they gotta leave early in the morning, come back late at night. and they've got, you know, they can't have any lights on it where it would shine through a window or anything like that. they've got to stay located, but everybody has
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a right to have a place to lay their head. that's a basic human. right. and so, you know, the problem is that the government in this area at least this is withholding that basic human right from the people. and it's is morally wrong is ethically wrong. it's, it's constitutionally wrong, as you know, is just wrong or across the board. but it goes up, it happens all the time. and so, you know, it's, it's, it's a, it's a crime against humanity is what it is, is to with an oxygen down there, you don't need the generator need the generator. you know, 247 around the clock is kind of a life and death situation for 2 of the women down there right now with the price of gas the way it is. it's already $600.00 a month to keep up with the costs of the gasoline takes for these generate this generator to keep going. price of gas goes up is going to be more and more expensive to keep these women alive down. and we can talk to the machines. yeah.
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for a seal pd. so this is the machine here for in test the machine. so okay, then you, you've tried other places with your social services and nothing. right? no, because i have a dog. my dog that wants to make sure of that. right. it's, it's important. yeah, no, that's right. yeah. the animal can be part of the family for sure. don't ask for larry we are switching on. yeah, they shut down surface room and ram our yeah. was low and some, some movies november cars. they used to live. right. and shutting down the home. and it's not because i didn't 8, right. because they sold it right here. 00 less affordable place to live in the area. that's right. yeah, no, i had a trailer on my own. all
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is the last resort as a whole. try to make it as comfortable as possible, but just no, no other options for me. i'll be 64. all right, and angela, i just ordered, heirloom, and it's organic. don tmo, everything's going to be non tmo. i got 50 seeds, a vague plan. so because people i gave plan here, i don't want to be under a rather be over. we have an abundance we can give to others. i can cook 3 or a child in a plant like a plant farm i can make, or i can make degree k plan where you put it in the flower and you put little chunks of garlic on top of it. this is page and we get some spare to cope it up. there we go. ok, rich spanish, so spinach and let's see what else do we need?
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the c uh, tendencies for sure. really well we're gonna that right. 6 we're going to do it. we got a big area right here, right? right here is a big area. it just so l is tremendous for this area in jersey is not knowing what good story i know, but whatever reason why? because i think this, this is one plan and so i had a lot of bio matter rolling in the chain here. and it created a very, you know, the cold, much soil twice certain areas and which is fantastic sort of knowing things. and so we just happened to be bless another god said, we're blessed with good soil right down here. we've got a plot of land and see if we go about 20200 yards over here. oh wow. yeah, 200. well, not a football field. football field with the uh too far. so i think 200 maybe a 150 yards. 200 yards. so yeah, we'll put this down with
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a lot more and then we'll get the router chiller, finding the winner silver mitchell this soil up here. and are you going to your, the seeds on order? i got them on order. i got to now i'm going to be ordering more, you know, because i'm looking at, i want to make sure it's heirloom, non g m o, you know, i don't want to become a genetic hybrid biting form of a stream will tap into the stream for washing water for showers, which are good with the excess that run continues to run, right? it runs right there, past the tower, and you run, let's go into the wood, just a little pond there now, but we'll create a way to dig around. go with tickets. are 10 feet deep and we'll create a box, right? and then was the generator in the poll, we'll talk with the, or did our, our guard way. everybody has problems. i mean, both my children are living with people that they're scared are gonna throw them out in the street any day. you know, same, so here they can't help me because every time they try to help me,
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it gets them uncomfortable. yeah. so yeah, we're here and in the liquid industrial park, this is, i think, the 2nd largest industrial parks in the state. it's, it's a very big industrial park. these are more manufacturing type jobs or service type jobs. and you know, typically don't pay real well. and so, um, you know, a lot of times people that are working here, they need to jobs or they need their, their spouse needs to be work getting a good job also to afford ends me. the problem is the costs of housing keeps on going on. it's cost of living, keeps on going up, inflation keeps on going up, gas keeps on going up. so all the costs of living keeps on rising. but the salaries typically are keeping up. so it's a big problem for a lot of families. you know, i'm seeing it firsthand with families. i got another family coming down into the
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homeless camp this week. we'll have a 5 complete families living in the 10 city. yeah, i've done some research on the family history, thomas bring them to me. for in 1635, my personal family, the brigham family had a key role in starting the revolution. guiding the revolution and a participating a $117.00. brigham was born in the revolution, all related to that. so, you know, this idea of equality is near and dear to my heart, and i can't see why these government agencies are doing, you know, what they're supposed to do, and guarding the rights of the people. and treating everybody equally. you know, that's part of the reason why i do this in lakewood because i see groups of people that are being discriminated against and just respected, you know, and it's just not the american way the
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the take a fresh look around his life. kaleidoscopic isn't just a shifted reality distortion by power to division with no real opinions. fixtures designed to simplify will confuse who really wants a better wills. and is it just as a chosen few fractured images presented as 1st? can you see through their illusions, going underground? can
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the throne welcome to wells apart, over the last couple of months, media coverage of the conflicting ukraine has been dominated by the hopes and the fears of keys counter offensive, which is bound to deliver. if not, we sold them humiliating enough to blow to russia and force it to retreat. while these possibilities heres will be dismissed and moscow doesn't, it all sort of for, and i'll put you all from for both sides to cut the losses and trade a good war for a bad piece. well, to discuss that, i'm now and join by with silly caution. director of the center for comprehensive
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european and international studies of the higher school of economics. and most cool is the question. it's a great on a great pleasure to talk to thank you very much for your time. thank you for having me. now you rode before that, what's going on in your crate right now is not just a conflict between russia and the west on the territory of ukraine or over the church, true of ukraine. but it's a conflict in which ukraine itself has been turned into a weapon by washington, the entire nation weaponized for geo political purposes. isn't it also true for russia didn't have to objectify its neighbor in order to defend its own security. and basically, what russia has been doing, and to a relatively recent time rush, i was trying to influence the ukraine in politics and that way, which would prevent these developments. russia tried to, to uh,
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use historically rushing mostly tried to use economics tools in the relatively primitive way to create the economic incentives for the ukranian. so leads to work with russia. and the goal was never the undermining the ukrainian state hold. uh russia have uh never even dreamed about uh, taking cray me and before to 1014, then there proves for that, for example, uh, throughout the thousands rush it has been building a huge naval base. new york near never ceased spending billions of dollars on that and the naval base was supposed to house the black sea fleets uh after its the of 3. it will be withdraw him from cray me in to $1017.00.
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i run, it leads these bass or senior shed of exactly the $1014.00 mission discussion. i'm sure the opponents of these thesis would tell you that an operation of the scale of premier is impossible to pull on the when you kind of just wake up and decide that you're going to do it. it means it requires certain preparation. uh, there was of course, contingency planning. uh the possibility of disabilities ation awfully. ukraine was always taking into account your train has experienced 1st uh cool in to 1004. and uh, that was the 1st like as while and turn in ukraine in history, which was followed by periods of uh, economic and political instability. again, uh, one should remember that the best p,
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it's in the history of the post soviet ukraine was the beaten between us 199292003 economic d. b girls in to $1003.00 was above 11 percent. ukraine was growing. this year uh was the same speed as china uh, in uh, 2004, immediately after the orangery of allusion, economic development has abruptly stopped. as result, ukraine has never been able to reach per capita g d p, a level of 1992. you wrote something that, um, touched me deeply. uh you said that the biggest, the most costly mistake of the russian leadership and the russian and the elliptical community was the failures to understand the shift in social attitudes
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in ukraine, attitudes, 1st and foremost towards russia. why do you think moscow followed this old ration out of, you know, let's develop a mutually beneficial economic ties for so long. why was it blind to these links a trip? yeah, uh basically uh, russian leadership, prussian state failed to set up another good system of morning storing and res.
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