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tv   News  RT  July 8, 2023 6:00am-6:31am EDT

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the take a fresh look around his life kaleidoscopic isn't just a shifted reality distortion by how of tired vision with no real live indians. fixtures, design to simplify will confuse who really wants a better wills and then it just does. it shows you fractured images, presented as fast can you see through their illusion going underground? can the the the
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the okay, welcome back, comment. sanchez and, and i want to ask you a question which goes right, right to really the heart of democracy. right. and it's this who do you think? what do you think chooses the people who represent us? well, if you go by the argument that you can't win an election in the united states without the right amount of money, that it stands to reason that those who win are the ones who can raise the most money. you know, if that money comes from all of us,
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that would be good measure of what we really like. but guess what? it doesn't. it doesn't even come close. in fact, look at this pie chart from open secrets dot org. they measure who gives money to candidates. 48 percent of the donations come from very wealthy people. 23 percent come from super packs. those are company sectors and special interest that wants something from the politicians. they're huge, and they got a lot of though. only 13 percent comes from regular voters, only 13 percent. and by the way, even that number, it said to be exaggerated, because oftentimes these wealthy people, these funders, they disguise their donations by giving the money of their family members their kids. and then they turn it in. and it looks like it's coming from regular people. but it aint coming from regular people. so who's choosing our politicians who's making sure the same people remain and that the system remains the same as talk about that. we're back with edward woodson,
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talking about no country for old presidents, which is kind of the state of things right now in the united states and, and we're trying to see if we can help figure out why america is in the state and, and there's a couple of things that really come into play one of them i'm, i'm just thinking out loud right now because i just looked at some numbers. most of the people who vote in the united states or the biggest number are in their sixties and seventies. they're voting for somebody who reminds them of them know. sure, sure, sure. and yeah, as much as we want to act like, you know, you do to the boat, people get off the boat, all this up. you know, people don't vote. i mean, don't go to rallies, they'll talk about it, they'll do videos, but when it comes down to voting, they actually don't vote. and those are the numbers. those are statistics. so maybe in a sense, we're giving the voters what they want, right? as well or, or is it edward that uh this the system was sold, voters,
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it's skews towards old voters. uh, i mean for example young guy in his twenty's, maybe his thirty's or a young woman in her twenties, maybe or thirty's. she's got a job. she's working, putting in 50 hours a week and they want her to go and wait in line for 2 hours, maybe 3 who the hell knows depends on where she lives. so that she can wait in line to vote in the presidential election. and i mean, yeah, you're right for her, it doesn't matter that much, but they're not making it easy. whereas the old retired guy, right, i've got nothing else to do. bob and i are going to go play golf. and when we're done, we're going to go over there and then we're going to go get a drink, make sense for the older person. not for the other person. yes, i think there's actually more opportunity now to both. never really. you got so much so early voting. have some keyboarding there's, you know, i think back to, you know, 2030 years ago. it was, you know,
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you voted basically election day. right. so now there's actually manage. there really is more opportunity to vote today than there ever has been. and i think it comes down to motivation. i think the it's not as important. like, i think that people used to think that it was a civic duty that it was part of being an american part of the fabric of america. that people would be like psyched to vote. and i don't think that that is really necessarily present. why. okay. okay, okay, you're on to something you're on to something. what all americans use to feel like this is my duty. i'm a patriot. i love my country. this is something i got to do. and today, most people look at these candidates, look at this system and they go yeah, we've increasingly gotten more cynical in it. and maybe it's because we're, we're, we're pretty so much information. we have so much information, right? uh huh. and it's almost over load. and then we don't really know anything, right?
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so you for that, you've got people that are google in doing all of this stuff, but yet we can't recall anything. and so i don't know, maybe it's because of the, the, because of the vapid miss of ours, our, our cold. uh, yeah. what about this, what about and what you're referring to is cynicism and i get it right. i mean, there is a hell of a lot of cynicism in this, as you're right now, probably as much in our country right now as there's ever been right. and i got a figure that a lot of these people are looking up. for example, the big donors and how much money they put into these guys both left and right. by the way, they give them the republicans. sure. and you are standing out there and you're going ok. they want me to vote. but what the hell difference is my boat going to make compared to this guy who's given this guy a $100000.00 or $500000.00, jointly to make sure that they represent their point of view and not mine. and wouldn't just think that those big donors want the buttons in office want the old
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people in office when they walk the people who've been there for years and years and years because they've been working for years and years and years. and they know what to expect from the sure and the same age. think about. so the people that are in power are the same page as the people that are running. think about it. you've got the ceos, they're not going anywhere you. yeah, so you've got this block of a concentrated power right amongst. paid the same as your global leads. corporations corporate have cdls and they're actually skewing older as well. so you've got this whole block of power, just human nature. do you want to the, what is it, is it their age or is it their desire to monitor really manipulate the system as well? i think it's the latter, sir. what age? you know, you've been around a while, so again, you don't want to give it up. you don't want to give him a power. nobody wants to give him
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a power once you have. yeah. right. so i think that's what's also going on and not these, but again, i go back to the, the, the example, the boomers boomers are, you know, do you know they're not going away any time soon? edward woodson, tv and radio is good enough to join us to have this really important conversation and it was a good one. thanks words. thanks. thanks for having me. you're a great american. before we go, i want to remind you of our mission. it's simple really. we want to decide all the world somehow. you know, we've got to stop living in these little silos. we're on one group believes one thing, and they never talk to the other guys. these boxes choose to live in boxes. truth is everywhere. i'm rick sanchez. i'll be looking for you again right here, where i hope that we can give you direct impact the the,
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[000:00:00;00] the which i thought that was the little thing interested us. the sluggard has done so right now, lecturing they've on getting this. the 1st is always on the at the is that i, that's a get a minute come out i need, which is easy to saw on the screen. so of course i'm sure material which is a 1000000 level i'm willing to identify to lock up. the idea is based on weight.
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so sort of well in the middle of something in the we get present it to not the limited results between you and they to bundle. would you a decent solution for short term transform which would, which insidiously, simply process the same thing? you know, for the middle step in this done out the math concepts to deal with i q as when from the, from the as hours from the end of the way to do it in b. c differing. you could keep the way in apologies. just give us an edge it's on the shift store, was the same little ball coming in. the crucial,
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just as i was leaving is with the bonus and nobody's computing these 2. so they need the one with a few things that you need to fix, that will be the going to going to listen to me that kind of the i'm just putting on those issue the new system in the middle of the ok. let's just have to get into it. is that those circumstances, this material, the toaster, even though so clearly. so the peters, my tell me, i'm still open and it doesn't happen often the, the is awesome. let me have you, let me see if those pictures are correct. yes, please. thank you. all depends on this plan. you have, so the most is the most out of special this is openings and it took a little something to skip the look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a
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robot must obey the orders given by human beings accept. we're such orders at conflict with the 1st law show alignment of the patient. we should be very careful about our personal intelligence at the point, obviously is to place a trust rather than to the various things with artificial intelligence. we have somebody with the man, the robot must protect this phone. existence was alexis, the with the end of world war one. the move in for an indian independence from the
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british empire flared up with renewed vigor. the british responded to the growth of the national liberation movement with arrest and brutal violence. repression caused active resistance. in march 1919 at the call of mahatma gandhi, a peaceful strike began in the country. but the british responded with a new round of violence and far bade the indians to gather more than 4 people. on the day of the sea bass, at the best about a huge crowd of civilians gathered in the center of the city of i'm gonna start in northern india seeing base as outright defiance. general reginald dyer gave the order to open fire on the on arms. the both the barbaric execution claimed the lives of at least 379 indians, including 40 children, the youngest of who was 6 weeks old. the indian national congress considered the
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official figures to be underestimated and announced the death of more than $1000.00 civilians. the well known greatest newspaper, the morning post called dyer, the man who saved india, gave him a sword and 26000 pounds sterling as a token of gratitude for the massacre. the amorous dar massacre went down in history as one of the most brutal crimes of the british invaders, and only escalated the affair. struggle of the indians for liberation from the colonial yoke. the new russian military repels keeps comfortable. offensive attacks on the front line topped on both sides, the ukrainian president tours nato. a member states with a fresh appeal for arms and munitions. also ad on the program this,
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our claims on our partners here leveled up the us treasury secretary following her criticism of china as far as to foreign firms. john, at the ellen's visits of aging combs and made inflamed tensions between the 2 countries and is really court to absolve a police officer over the killing of an alarm. tell us that in mind with autism injuries and zone city we hear from his breathing the tops of the united nations and this war, emergency aid to help refugees from board tour into the a some find themselves stranded into more so the for their passports being held up the u. s. embassy were destroyed with washington po, that stuff on the mid day and most of this saturday. i appreciate you giving us some of your precious weekend time for the global news roundup. i'm unit russian troops of repelled ukrainian attacks on the front line near the city of archibald school,
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soon as bus moved in the done yet reach. and that's according to russia's ministry of defense, which released footage of russian tanks and moving into combat positions. pushing back against kids forces, while elsewhere in the buffalo zones in the neighboring luc ganske region. the printing assault troops are reported to help being routed from their foothold. ortiz, senior correspondent, but that goes the reports now. and the recent developments on the front. a ukrainian soldier parts of the special forces squad films,

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