tv Documentary RT June 18, 2023 9:30pm-10:00pm EDT
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to benefit the military industrial companies. so it's like nothing to do with you. great. everything is good to do with what washington, london, brussels, whatever that they want to achieve. but it's not going to suddenly help be the actual citizen. so if you click, that's the unfortunate part of this country and advise that you form like us president ronald reagan has spoken to all to you in an exclusive interview. it's been nearly 4 decades since the renowned american liter cold for the soviet union to tear down the bilingual correspondence with mine. but you shot as an so recently you have decided to pass your archives to the russian presidential library . yes. what was your aiming? that very simple. number one, it's a library, it's a great library. i was in petersburg. more time i. i know petersburg very well. i have a very small apartment in st. petersburg. i have worked there for
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almost in fact i've worked there much more than i've ever worked in moscow that is really my home, away from out. and that's where i am. and you are very well renewed for a play and a huge role in the efforts of ending the cold war. right. and how, what do you think? how can we bring the same efforts into the current conflict that is going on right now? my dear, that is what i am working on. i am trying very hard because i do believe, as you know, i know russia very well, and i believe that we need russian russian needs and that we should go find a way to get back to discussing something else besides a more would. that is one reason i'm giving my archive because i would like to think if i am that, well,
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it's better to talk about talk and then talk about war. so tell us a little bit more on your opinion. it, when it comes to relations between russia and the united states, and after 30 years of ending the cold war, now we have this conflict starting and what do you think, what needs to be done in terms of dialogues? and do you think that dialogue right now is even possible between the 2? well, we have to try, you know, it's a lot easier and a lot cheaper to do that the news weapons do to be all right, talk is always better then weapons. so my desire really is to help this talk begin again. the voters in the west african nation of molly have taken to the poles to decide whether to adopt a new constitution. it'll be just the head of next year as presidential election of
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the country has undergone to cruise in the past 3 years. and support has all the new constitution say it might paved the way for a transition to civilian rule, a political and rest as play. molly and made an ongoing jihad is in search and see you in the rural north. and critics say the french military forces stations of the country have done little to quell the violence. i mean, in effect, molly ivan expelled the french ambassador just last. yeah. i mean, while the power space thing tank is published a report recognizing rising and see french sentiment across africa, the reports off the say the rhetoric is politically motivated and they say russia is behind the effort to undermine the french position. that for each speech is against french policy, have proliferated, in recent years, in french speaking africa, this has of function in the politics of so it's in french speaking african countries, mainly to designate, to escape good. indeed, the french pulse is used by african political leads to explain disappointing
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political economic go security policy. in some countries helped by russian entities really co systems have even developed on social networks, producing anti french campaigns. the president of the african freedom institute, dr. franklin, the obviously was mentioned in that report and then joined us earlier, took a moment to criticize the assessment as well as well. french foreign policy towards africa. in general, a result of the eye for it is not scientifically told because there is no cd or stuff we can not use all african problems. we show up any kind of responsibility from the african side and accuse a uni, liked about these and science and only friends. in fact, flags has never called nice. it's multi uh, sic, who are responsibility in african dfcs by slips played quantization. meal coolness
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. nice visual and low media, tardy, occupation, money tell the domain nation. but as has never made these, i don't know mental to see what is to be picked in and what is what must be ended. and that is why in fact they pretend that that they have been deep. uh, we chose a life this kid good of african people do they know it just because there is no just do some documentation and that price has never paid for full or did these us does. it has been acting up in the report of the i s b. i is just a complaint of a meal put on you on file. what, losing it's all you just defy advantage on because as weekends uh, what coming mo, an every way i sort of want to put a name to 6. i sent you a piece of donation dot to the phone. after that. yeah, it does not intend to to meet you or to dominate. i mean,
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i think god intends to be free. so, but i do decided by insight. and that is influx of a problem for many 40 to kind of a leasing process because they have new laptops of the possibility of his famous power without the muscular dystrophy, without exploiting. i think it is time for us to think and you will flash probably without applicant exploitation. we got, we got a free kind of support issue, and that is the intellect trusts video of the 1st 40 to calculate that the out on the able to imagine a fresh power will we don't operate, can do munitions without doing anything else for many years now i have the, i think many books i have been giving, so conferences, meetings in every way in here in france, you open up, we've got to explain that. we have to change that to release them because i'll click on people with no more except to be doing that. they have to be exploited to
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be absolutely slaves on the, on, on their own a. so on their own go, this is normal, was a, be a book because they knew of africa is now a week from the g 28 to the g. 21. india is prime minister, moody has moved to include the african union in the group of 20 and a transition to that of a more multi polar world p. a moody has written to his counterparts and the g 20 proposing for the african union to be given full membership of the grouping. edit september somebody. it's a new debbie or more developments now over to walk a's orange on china. so i'm going to send the range and we'll do use taking a significant step and enhance the ask for goes voice on the global stage. he's willing to his g 20 gone to about that african union to be given full membership at the upcoming g. 20 summit. which will be will switch by and you'll jenny, except 10 of them. now ask for continue in the middle who you did,
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you can always or 50 concierge that in there for you, that their voice also should be hard on the g 20 platform. remember india earlier this your head also hosted the voice of the global self summit in january, but ended research to over 120 con fees to your bomb baby shoes. so that india can cool lease it and bring it on the g 20 that fall off. the solid, which is largely the developing was the under develop load also the one which is largely under the presented on file for the global platforms. for instance, the g 20 uh india wants to be the voice ended up being the developing country of sofa know also last week. and y'all had posted an indian african box to ship summit where the florida for administer to india. as j. sean got highlighted of the goal of for africa in re shaping the global bond
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for india. and it's important that african partners appreciate this. for india, the rise of africa is key to global pre bondage india engagement with africa as we move on the last few years at this move by prime into sort of the country not being the more the to include the african union and the g. 20 block is one you to select to bring the c 20 policy. remember, india has reached out to more than $120.00 countries that the global south to confuse that vast strong beating. we saw several issues, issues in the a wants to highlight on and the g twenties that form issues that are leading to the developing in the developed world. for example, the world prices, the fuel prices, and now she crisis. india wants to bring all what do you this on the platform lead to unzip that? moving in the a will be hosting the war lead to us in new delhi or so this. the pause is by the
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time minister of the country, a radio step forward in equilibrium and includes the below blue pro elliott, my colleague more that time i me, i had a pair of guests on the program and they said that including africa, india, g, 20, it's not just favorites, also in line with today's new global reality of multi polarity. you have to go to union guns, seem to go deeper empty. if you're going to benefit, keep wouldn't be expedited because then what would happen when you walked out of the was going to be on the affordable good be so i agree to become the law. i just for be on know, i just put it literally just next to the united nations. and do you have to do that? you should receive them be a, you go to the shared all the rules, the word more, the more what do you need to order?
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these are changing city that quickly like not beaten by strategic sense on the sense and that's kind of what you mean. the other piece from africa like guns, they have to show the 1st week of august 15th to kinda inform everything from africa. and you'll be able to produce the sure beautiful weather infiniti put in with a gene to weather expire. so an expansion of the g to and these base a member consensus, how likely is this? is this proposal to succeed? and what would the ramos a rubber for cases be if they were any? and he says, one of the major, the hasn't changed, is kind of dependent mckee seemed to be held to india. so these little sweet, they, for india, we also have good tie in that in the last year. and the change in the i was hoping to push logistically for us because side is difficult for what kind of is like in
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the kind of the title company's name advice yet, because they've always, you'd actually get it in. but if you look at the, with the, the, a always use it with this kind of a horse and like that miss, you should be in the house. so it's going to be a bit difficult for them, except possibly guys it equal a. but i the least that is as we say that the world is changing. we have a lot of categories as i applied for and made it even better and made it worse for the inclusion actually got. so i feel like it's going to succeed because there's a lot of good with formulas of possible kind of is, is going to succeed in the width as much as they may not make it. i don't think they have a choice yet. they have to paypal beijing has locked out of washington saying that by increasing its military presence around china, the us is instigating a possible conflict. do you find expected military conflict where to arise between
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china and the us? it would not be caused by china taking provocative moves of sending military vessels and jets to a la or anywhere off the coast of california. rather, it would be triggered by us, worships or plains close to china's territory in dealing with the country. the size of china mutual respect is the ground rule. well this comes out to be a us secretary of state anthony blinking is in beijing patrol just trying to cool down the heat of tensions between the both countries is the highest level of visit by a us official in china is since 2018 badging has reportedly been refusing phone calls by washington for months and political analyst, alix or fortify, says military maneuvers by washington in the china region and make redundant lincoln's diplomatic gesture invasion. it's in a blink of an eye that so much attention. china is going to be put on it. i did not see any red carpet being rolled out for anthony in his,
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i guess cumulation tour as i call it. i mean, where is joe biden, in this, i mean, shouldn't he be visiting a china to try to work this out? we put a, a, a, you know, diplomatic person in charge here and the blinking, and he's scared of an air balloon a few months ago. so i don't see much is going to come from this at all. it would be like having a war ships off uh, you know, the west coast of california. uh, that would never happen. uh from, you know, chinese military or its navy would not to put its destroyers just off the shores of, you know, los angeles. it would be an absolute ludicrous move. but yet, here we see the americans being very provocative. true trying to see how close and how productive they can get to china. and i don't know, we could see a mistake potentially happen in the future. a senior official in key of admits that hundreds of ukrainian child refugees have been taken away from the
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guardians in western countries. she says, a government must do more to fix this issue in european countries, the rockies as of taking a child away from the people with whom he or she is living because of differences in legislation. currently 240 such cases have been recorded. there is insufficient work on the part of ukraine on the sure. we need to inform people the representative of the ukraine in children's on both of us and said that there have been cases where parents couldn't leave the children with grandparents. she said in some western countries, the lowest and dictated grandparents and the other relatives cannot have guardianship if the parents are alive. that's as the crate inside is a huge rush or a kid, nothing children that have been evacuated from conflict zones to russian territory . and the i c c in the, hey, it gives you the interest warren for president putin. and on the rush is a children's on. but persons on related charges as well. let's take this conversation further, mountain dose of human rights lawyer. so if you don't address and the full,
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the parliamentary and a member of the last party joining us here or not, you international, a very good evening to you tonight. so the what, what do you think i'm in a bit of a bit of a difference here. between ukraine's reaction to refugee children being separated from their families in the you versus it's reaction to russia, evacuating children from conflict areas. how do you analyze that contrast? relocate this whole process of cost as other people, chris units. but if we see the problem in it, so we see the ukranian refugees and the european union. while we look at this, as mostly they are quite small. the rich and the multiple people might be, they kind of come the south say same thing, grandparents and then the children taken away. that means that again, those who are not that rich, they suffer. most of all the different uh,
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point of view to say across the train and how so that's the best of all say have to care for the citizens. and if they are refugee some of the feedback problem so easily read those things happen. they have to care and check to see that the legislation has to be brought to a compromise so that the children will to get taken away by itself across the abuse of blaming russell it back to aging children and giving them l supply, giving them all supply the needs and then talking all that they had been taken that the way they chosen by falls. of course this is uh well for back on the so you can call it, well probably gonna box it. but i mean, this is something that the, the international criminal court in the hague issued an arrest warrant for the russian president, accusing him of kidnapping children from ukraine when, when it's the fact so that all these kids have been basically brought to homes in
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russia, relatives and russia, or even helpful shelters to give them some sort of roof over their heads. and i look there being uh, what are these 240 cases of ukrainian children being separated from family members in the european union? one might think perhaps the use of just kind of amended slow is to keep the kids directly with family members in the year. a yes, across the country show, see the real situation. and then they show up to the live that way. the problem and then look to test to get away. and then on the other hand, if we look at this, i see, see, it's working as kind of new or geostrategic to the instrument, the nasal 1st. so mostly the african presidents. off we can fully to shows in front of that fall and now we have this kind of a stupid wall around the narrative of kidnapping children with rob ross and 6
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your places. uh, this is uh you know, in and we'll choose this the 1st dice and the cost should be follow that stupid wall from the gun of a little more closely what's going on. so there is so much, let's say, uh, i don't use that route. so the government, it's really like it's, it's also a disaster. we don't have to have that warrant against letting me do. we don't have to have the blame of getting up in children because they are brought in secure places. and if not, there has to be called cases in the bar 1st, but it's, we'll come back on that we can see that and the u. p. m. laws and the u. p. and treatments or refugees of the frame. uh, they are treat, transferred, and much better than refugees from syria or from a frequent countries in any way,
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but still those, well, we're at, so don't know that, right, so we'll just manage all the rich people. okay, 1st year. so it's not supposed to treat people like that to take away the children from grad, something like that of the splitting is absolutely unacceptable as well. and european states. no, that's an acceptable martin. adults of human rights flores, social interest, as well. joining us, i live on a how to international a great pleasure to have you on. thank you very much. thank you. thank you as well . oh, the best to a p. f. as left out over a major french tv channel covering the russian side of the conflict, saying the story could barely be considered. john was the ones report and russian troops to destroy more serious inc, occupied areas. so if you creating its new laws of journalism, they taught the so called mind a fresh us military. these designers of those,
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it has killed more of r, t f. one visited the occupied territories, violating ukraine, sloss, or the report by 2 f, one compet russian defensive lines, and preparations against the crating and counter offensive. they didn't declare any direct support for the russian side and excel recently another channel, another french channel fonts, 24 was criticized by ukraine for reporting about the daily life interruption. training comes to the soldiers prepared for battle. that time, however, the coverage was deleted over and political. i've listened to collab, markovich says key, i've tried to control media narrative, and it was simply shocked by the west, apparently neutral coverage. let's just remember that this uh, there's the document from french channel and see if one was not a pro russian document. it was a totally neutral objective view from the french drawers on location st. what he saw and he wasn't interviewing pro. you pro kept pundits telling us what were
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supposed to think about the russian army. he was just interviewing russian military court told him the telling the drawers what they were actually doing. so this was a very good objective piece of journalism. and i think this is shocking for jeff today because they're just used to dates and fabricating the news, and this is the fabric that they want to fabricate, to use in most of the news we get into west today on mainstream media. jeff, since the beginning has been dashing out at everybody, those were not giving enough tags to those are not giving enough ammunition. and now those, we're not making this of a very good journalism. and this is a, i mean, who's, who's the boss here? right now, the program for now here on how to international. thanks for joining us here. we're talking about, i guess midnight most go time with more of your weekly highlights. that will be in about $27.00. the. it's crazy. the thing that in some parts of the world, obesity is becoming that the demick on other parts of the world. there's not no
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food that children are malnourished or dying from starvation. i'm christy i and you're watching the cost of everything. what today we're going to be looking at the cost of food waste, how much perfectly good food is trash and disposed of globally. every year, anywhere between 30 to 40 percent of all food produced globally for human consumption is lost or wasted. some of that waste comes from a spoiler strain, transport, and other times it's from not being sold at the supermarket or be forgotten at the back of a person's refrigerator. while there's food loss at nearly every stage of food production and distribution, it is shocking how much perfectly good food is simply wasted. the food loss index estimates and globally around 14 percent of all food produced is loss from post harvested up to but excluding the retail stage. meanwhile,
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17 percent of global food production is wasted at the household retail and food service level. meanwhile, millions of people are suffering from food and security every day. so while the world weighs about $1400000000.00 tons of food every year, the us is the biggest corporate. the us, this car is more food than any other country in the world. nearly $40000000.00 tons every year. that equates to about $219.00 pounds of waste per person is now in the us. 37 percent of food ways happens at the household level, which means that american consumers are over buying food. spoilage is a real issue and one of the biggest reasons why people throw out food more than 80 percent of americans discard perfectly good consumable food. because they misunderstand expiration labels. compared to the rest of the world, the u. s. is less costly and plentiful, making impulsive food purchases. america also has
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a take out culture where it doesn't used food in its entirety. and composting isn't a natural part of our food prep routine. if people started buying, handling, consuming and budgeting for meals differently, it could make a big difference. food waste also contributes to wasted water and energy. it took to produce and generating greenhouse gases like methane, and c, o. 2 and chloral floor a carbons from agriculture. and if not consumed food waste and trickles down stream to become the largest category of material placed in municipal landfills. these rotten vegetables or expired food also released methane and nitrogen, which are problem that a greenhouse gases. while a very small portion of this food waste is donated or recycled, the majority goes straight to the landfills where it's incinerated and flows down the drain or left to rot. so has food ways become a global economic issue?
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or is it a social problem to explain more well bringing neural goldstein editor and publisher of bio cycle. so nora, what our country is doing with all of this food waste, can they, we really distributed for up cycled or does it all just go to spoilage. different countries have, have different opportunities and it's also somewhat cultural. we find that in, in many cities, people go to the market or stop by the, you know, just the neighborhood shop every day on their way home to get what they need for the meal. so there's, there's not a lot of excess versus people that will go to the store and shop for a week and buy a bunch of stuff and they end up eating out 3 or 4 of those nights a week. so i think culturally that, that goes, that's a factor in that. uh, the other thing that we're seeing is food that is produced,
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but maybe not sold in time. there's a growing support for food for donating that food network for making sure the food especially perishable food stays safe and you know, so let's say the and then for example, they'll get funding for refrigerated trucks or refrigerators, in places to, to keep it as a bowl sourcing that they have a certain amount of upside clean, you know, taking, taking food and, and making it and using it as a rod greeting for something else. and then traditionally, and this is going on for, for many, many, many years, is a recycling food that is no longer eligible for animal feed. so it still says, staying within the food system. all that says we still throw away a lot of food that should have been eaten or could have to be why it's so little
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food recycled or up cycled. does it cost more to risk cycles and just to toss in many places? the answer sadly is yes. it's, it's even starting at the farm where there's crafts that, you know, they pick the, the highest quality that they'll get the most money for. and then the 2nd grade. yeah, the lower grade produce ends up staying, you know, in the field. because they can't, they're not going to get enough money for it to harvest it. so there's ways spread out the farm level. and then, as you know, when they, when it comes to figuring out what to do with the food that needs to be thrown away it's, it's really crazy for all the infrastructure that's been created for donation. it's still a very small percentage of food that still available, gets donated,
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and then you basically end up with, well, you know what, just thrown away. it's easier. it's very developed countries. that's our culture. we've been very much just toss it away. it has no value. and so when folks like myself, we're in the field of organics recycling and food waste. recycling. it does at least have a better n use if it goes to composting to make soil amendment to the old healthy soil's or to be what we call in aerobically digested produce. a bio gas that can be used to produce electricity or, or fuels. uh so there's, it's, and then yes, in many places it is a what cheaper just to throw it away then to go through the process of product collecting and processing it. how can countries reduce food waste and what countries have been the most successful at that?
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it's interesting, i was thinking about this question and i would say that the biggest challenge to getting as a country to reduce food waste, it starts with education and really realizing how much food is being thrown away. and then developing strategies to and programs to both reduce the amount of, of food that's wasted, introduce smart or buying habits and cooking habits and, and then also a re purposing, you know, in other words, let's just say what we see in the catering business, the food service is not putting out all the food you've made, but keeping some of it back because if it's not, sir, then it has to be that it can be donated even if it's prepared. so it's really in kitchen practices at.
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