tv News RT July 20, 2023 4:00am-4:30am EDT
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the one in the republican field, and because of bobby tucker, and by the way to tucker is the bill buckley of his time. you may not be in office, but he is extremely critical. so we're seeing right now things that are changes. and one more thing, as we're talking about this jordan and comb, we're talking about hunter biden's checking account. who cares? this is how, how out of their mind they are, how out of the it was already cares about that time. so i'm not ready. 2024 is the waters, tyler brought up a really good point. i think it did the to the salvage, the, the, the political culture is going to be resolved within the republican party and considering, you know, there are a lot of my expenses. and nikki haley is out there in jennifer. i mean, is it possible that you wouldn't be republicans and actually in lock step to get behind donald trump? is it possible now with considering what tucker carlson had to say, go ahead a. hi joe, and i'll tell you one thing i live in wisconsin in right now, there is a, there's a chasm. there's a shift of and people are realizing it, but
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a lot of the people, you know, wisconsin is a great, it's a salt of the earth place. but the conservative here are completely in a conservative, at least the porch front that have supported the ideas of styles by dr on paul, by others, by an anti war anti establishment. that those conservatives here are hated by the republican party. and i know that's happening throughout the area and, and i, i can tell you, i mean there's, there is one, at least at least one state representative as of the past 7 days. as of last week, who has literally stated, i don't care what the patriots say about me. this is a republican state representative. and, and so these people i, i hope that they could get in lock step. we'd hope that there could be unity, but you're already involved and acknowledgement that you care about your base that you care about. these thoughts of the earth, a good, the conservative, the people who are saying another war, another for terry isn't of terry. and as i'm another this big farm, a dictatorship,
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enough of all of this. and those are okay questions i, i know of not looking a blind i, attorney to blind eye to elections where there are questions about what's going on . our elections is there for you. we look into this and, and these are people who have been demonized, who've been months well and do it. yeah. but jennifer, you can, you can, you can question the 2016 election of course. but you can question the 2020 election business. the pockets and the we live with. alright, and we're going to go to work. we're going to go to a hard break. and after that hard break, we'll continue our discussion on tucker carlson. and the future of the conservative movement say, without taking the look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. the robot must obey the orders given by human beings,
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except we're so shorter is that conflict with the 1st law show alignment of the patient. we should be very careful about visual intelligence. the point obviously is to great trust, rather than ship the job with the artificial intelligence, we have so many with the man, the robot must protect this phone existence with alexis. the take a fresh look around. there's a 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?
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can you see through their illusion going underground can march the 112011. the largest squeak ever recorded in japan is where interested. a 14 me to. to nami, devastates the focus cima. each in nuclear power plants, the, the nuclear ranches are flooded, sparking, and no risk disaster i. d e v o n e t r e in june is living in japan and decided to go to the area that needs to be a meltdown. config. ashima immediately drove me to
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talk to somebody about the full year investigation stats. watch on how to use the welcome back across stock. were all things are considered. i'm peter le billed to remind you we're discussing tucker carlson in the future of the conservative movement. the okay, it's go back to denver and tyler, you know, one of the things that i've talked about years on this program is how the professional managerial class has been able to capture the political, the political establishment, both parties here. how do we break out of that? because tucker gave us, you know, i think a, a path, you know,
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common sense and challenging power. it shouldn't be unique, but it is at this moment in time. go ahead, tyler? well, i mean you, it's, it's a, that's this be essential to just going in with what you're seeing is it's happening now. and i think the age of multi media and give the internet age of all the different outside outlets and resources and sources are educating people and making them realize that they don't know what used to be a very managed controlled environment. but the problem is how do you translate that into electoral politics? and unfortunately, as i know from my battles in the delaware republican party, years back, beginning with uh, frankly, finding out that these people do not care what the, what the base thinks, what most republican voters think that they're going to do, what they, what they feel as it is right for whoever their masters, happy be within the, whether financial or political establishment. and this is where we have to, we have to really the where the rubber meets the road and people need to realize
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that they are empowered. and i think unfortunately, you know, this is why you've seen election fraud become a real thing because they've realized that people have awakened and are no longer going to go in lock step or follow just whatever they're served up by the establishment. and in either party, i would hope to see the democrat party burton see the lock broken because that means this is the truly an evil institution compared to i'd say, you know, the, the i used to kind of, um, scott that up. but they say the stupid bodies are bubbling part in the does that democrats are evil. but i think in, in the age of constant information where people can see the truth where a they tucker carlson, even though he's been taken off the air is more influential perhaps than ever that, that there are avenues to, to uh, translate this into electrical victories because they're new people are going to stand for these candidates who will not be. i will not answer the questions that are, are the essential questions for the voters. they will not stand for stage managed
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politics. you know where it's just, i mean it's, it's, it's essentially a fraud. i mean, the entire thing is that the time can village really, you know, everything's okay. everything's great. well, it's not. that means it's the exact opposite of what people want and what they expect. and it's going to be a long process, i think because to these people, these parasites will not give up power easily. and it will not that, that a strangle hold they have on the american politics may require the gaps, unfortunately. well not unfortunately, it's on people's cases, but it would require generational change, or people like hillary clinton and others finally finally drop dead frankly. and i think you know, that she deserves it more than anybody just throughout and all these, you know, with all these boomer era politicians who have destroyed american politics, turned it into a farce. and a totally 3rd, as you know, it was certainly had his share of corruption, but it was do, sir, is now just thorough corruption. they'll have to die and pass on. i think i think i would cite the link in principle, abraham lincoln. you can yeah. and he wants that you can full some of the people
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all the time, all the people, some of the time. but you can not full all the people all the time. that's the problem as well. no. talking about fooling people line or, you know, let's look at these, these met issues here, cove at the national security stage here, and they and both parties and they saw how much meant they gravitate around these med narratives here. meaning you can't question them. ok. that is, the problem is that when it comes to national security and health, i mean we all should have a right to question it. but know you're shut down for it. line on a couple of things to bring in addition to that, um you know, originally there was something which i never thought i would see it originally. there was something which i never thought i would see. and i think it's relevant. there was a film that came out the sound of freedom and it was about a child trafficking and human driver getting in short child protection. and it wasn't jim, could these all and not mel gibson, but it was thought to be an e mail, gibson, and it was about 10 ballard. and these folks who basically were trump supporters and good christians, trying to fight get this child trafficking. i don't know about you,
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but i think most people would be against this when you saw the concert incidents when you saw the concerted, choreographed, and orchestrated movement in, in, in, in reaction to this by this professional left who, whoever these media folks are. it's amazing. they saw that people who concern themselves about that were part of some kind of a blood conspiracy sector, whatever. that's number one. number 2, let me tell you the problem that the republicans are making right now. the democrats stole the election and 2020 legally. they know exactly what to do. 20 legally. they know exactly what to do. nobody but nobody in the republican party is saying we're ready to go. we have boots in the ground, we have a lawyer and we have law firms. we have observers. they are going to have this snatch again from them, so in as much as tucker and bobby kennedy are doing from mendez things. peters, there are old fashion, plain old hardware rules about elections and how to steal out of preventing from
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being steal a stolen that whatever the situation of the republican party is, is forever degeneration of the republican party is, is not doing, but i remain hopeful. and again, remember talking crossing is the build buckley. he may not be in office, but he is a spirit of a meal republic, and i use that word. and bobby kennedy is a godsend. remember if he goes 3rd party, because let's face it, this is a guy who basically had his family destroyed by the same organizations that are trying to destroy this country. now what a great payback that would be think it's, it's a, as i would, i would just know real quick. it's funny because the tucker carlson son his name buckley in. oh, nice. okay. the circle was closed. okay. jennifer, one of my biggest problem, my biggest problem with the g o. p. i'm not, i'm a republican. i can't be in a party with lindsey graham. sorry, i just can't. okay. and there's a lot of other women mitten romney the rest of them. i, i really can't be in the same club as people like that. jennifer,
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it really bothers me. is that so many republican establishment, terry? and say they go along with the liberal narrative on almost every single issue and the in a particularly and like mitch mcconnell, he seems to be comfortable in the minority. you know, i mean, i guess he has time to count as money or something like that. right? i just don't see the vigor to want to establish an agenda for too many years. we're republicans have been fall over as mountain leaders. okay. and of course they did everything to obstruct trump. go ahead, jennifer. a plane you brought up a good point. no, i don't want to be in a party with, you know, lindsey graham or mitt romney or some of these others. but there's a reason people use the term rhino and when you break that down, republican, a name only, they're just democrats. we don't want to be in by an established establishment. democrats. all they care about is the unified with each other. there's the old adage and anyone that's lived in washington dc knows this, you know, they, they sit and fight in front of the cam. 2 and then they go and have a drink afterwards, and they, they kind of laugh about it. it's all
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a show. and i think more and more people are seen that you're in a party. and then that, you know, party that just the, that hates and that is pro war pro establishment. you know, a really fascinating thing is beginning to happen and that's at the, the, the grass roots level with the people. if you don't mention your political party, if you don't mention what political party vote with a general people that may be support, what bobby kennedy is saying, um, or something else that you've got the new conservative, the tucker conservatives, if you will, with the robert kennedy democrat, with the kennedy democrats, if you get those people in a room despite how divided we've been, you know, reprogram to, to, to think that we are those 2 people in the rooms, hucker, republicans, candidates. the democrats will agree on almost everything. yep. they will agree that the government needs to be held in check. they will agree that were supposed to be a few questions. bill reed, at the vaccine loc, as
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a romeo want to ask questions about this perpetual war military industrial complex . i'm the want to do that. and so that's what i think the establishment is the most afraid of the fact that people are finally asking questions they're pressing back. but there is push that, you know, it was george orwell that said in a time of universal to see truth as a revolutionary act. and that's how they treat people as revolution, not as revolutionaries is, as rebels as instruction as others who are trying to just ask questions to get to the true, to say, i'm not buying what you're selling me. yeah. and it's hard because you can talk about more years where it's hard for lawyers to, there's pushed back against against good constitutional lawyers in this country. well, you know, tyler, i been on the jimmy door and show twice. i mean in, because of it's a, it was a pod cast, it lasted a long time. i, everybody knows i'm a conservative and a pretty rigid one on the, on most issues here. but i can talk to jimmy door for the longest time,
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and we kept looking for a way to disagree with each other, but we really didn't. okay, and we've max blumenthal also. i mean, it's a good, what is all engineer to divide us whether there is a division. go ahead, tyler? well, you know, it's, it's so interesting. you mentioned that because of jimmy jimmy has been you know, he's the, he'll tell you just the easiest, the comedian who realized what was going on and had to speak out as an american. and for years he, uh, essentially there was this notion that you had to sort of disavow tucker carlson as you agree with him in the sense that, that well, you know, tucker i, you know, in the same thing with alex jones. frankly, just everybody had to always give these sort of preliminaries if they were not, you know, have it supporters that, oh well, you know, alex jones may be crazy but, and they, they started doing that so much that i noticed the jimmy no longer says well tucker carlson as well, you know, off the ranch or whatever i've known. i've noticed the transition i noticed was right, is it exactly the way you did? i remember, yeah. it's finally finally coming to reconciling with the fact that these,
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these labels and these, uh, these i audiological or political sort of compartmentalization of people were for false. i mean, we agree on more than we disagree about. and then we certainly agree on the fundamentals of what this country should be, and this absolutely frightening the hell out of the establishment that is, as a totally ruled on the basis of these artificial, this artificial divide, i mean, in any sort of rebels or, or people who would challenge that to me? i worked for newt gingrich when he was minority whip and the an inch is speakership . he only lasted maybe 2 or 3 years, a speaker, roughly from the time of the revolution. so they asked him, put, put in dennis hastert of all people, you know, it was might as well been bob michael, who was the the previous uh, the loyal opposition. minority leader who as you said, you know, did, they did nothing. so you know the system as an abided people like this. but what we have now is an entire sort of parallel infrastructure. this rising up,
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it's far more vital farmer. truthful and touches people or reaches people far better this uh, this media fascist media propaganda combine that we've had in corporate uh you know, corporate media for years and that's gonna make the huge difference. yeah. be kennedy's all over, all this. i mean, these are easy. well, if you need to. but bobby kennedy and tucker, carlson gave me door. i would even say they have a lot they, they've given us permission not to hate our neighbor and that is refreshing. okay. you weren't, we don't have to hate. okay, that is an inspiring message coming from the gentleman, folks we've run out of time. i want to thank my guess in new york, denver and in milwaukee. and of course, i want to thank our viewers for watching us here at archie. so you next time, remember prospect rules the the,
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the other way not. right? so see what's printing, what was the other one was correct there so so the just so basically of course we need your last name was needed, read it was can, will be used to live you much and we have some more for someone who was this, we weren't sure, i knew people to the, the
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the, the, the pieces they asked as of today because there's a lot of that censorship on many topics in schools that start to just the migration topic to my impression it went on this atomic change. so i'm back at spend on this, send them a call. you see it's, i mean, there was no, there was no way of debate. it was, i don't know. that's never spent. now it's about russia and it's about, yes,
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we have to fight russia and russia has to be taken off the map. the as the cost of living has ballooned worldwide people's retirement plans have altered drastically. every day, more than 10000 americans turn 65. and as the baby boomers retire, there will be a significant demographic shift, often referred to as the grace unami. i'm christiane, you're watching the cost of everything more today. we're going to be looking at the cost of retirement. living in a foreign country offers a chance to see more of the world as well as lower the cost of living. but there are multitude of factors to consider before making such
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a big life decision. things like the ease of buying and owing property and the value of poppy investments, the cost of renting health care system, the cost of living in groceries, language barriers, climate and the stability of the country's political situation. the social security administration has stated that the number of americans drawing their benefits from overseas grew from 413002760000. in the last 3 years, the state department's estimate that 9000000 americans live abroad and suggest that 5000000 of these have retired abroad or 12 percent of the nations for the 5000000 retirees. baby boomers are increasingly understanding the advantages of living abroad, given the rising energy and living costs at home, while returns on investments and asset values fall. the 1st driver of retirement overseas is usually finance. an income that is comfortable or tight in the us can
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often give a lifestyle. consider luxurious overseas, and countries like the caribbean is or southeast asia, as a cost of living is significantly less. the average cost of retirement in the us is $700000.00, which is considered a fortune in places like pakistan or thailand. for example, a one bedroom apartment and a city in portugal is 57 percent cheaper than in an american city, costing a little over $500.00 a month. in thailand, it is 80 percent less. this extends to the overall cost of living. we're closing prices are cheaper by 30 percent and food by up to 80 percent cheaper. to me while on the other half of spectrum, singapore is the most expensive country in the world to retire costing an average of one point. $1000000.00 over a 15 year period. inflation has been particularly high now costing over
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a $171000.00 more than it did 2 years ago. meanwhile, pakistan is the cheapest place to retire at a little over a $100000.00. older adults are projected to out number children under the age of 18 for the 1st time in us history by 2034 according to census bureau projections. and this mismatch will have implications across the coming years, as there will be an increasing need for caregivers. and health services for those over $65.00, there will also be less and young people in the labor force to generate enough tax revenue to provide social benefits to the older population. and for more, let's bring in matthew sinclair, financial advisor at new england advisor groups a. so matthew, what are the key factors to consider one planning for retirement? well, generically, uh, uh, is really just 1st of all is you want to 1st take a look at what your cash flow is. and that's
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a combination of figuring out what your budget is and what, what you specialize. you're going to be and then what you're good, what you're going to have in terms of a cash flow coming in. is it income from investments? is it pension income? is it social security income? those, those are the 3 say that's the 1st and foremost, the secondary one, which is product par. your primary to a lot of people needing to save enough money for retirement. they just got to can accumulate enough money so they can retire. you know, and we usually use a, you know, when you're talking about your investments, if it's a younger person, they don't have, they typically don't have a pension plan, right? they might have social security. so you want to have minimally, i think if you live on the east coast of the west coast, you know, $11.00 and a half to $2000000.00. if you're talking about living and traveling, you want to talk about what kind of car is if it's like the to austria or a switch. so you might need $3000000.00. if it's going to be, you know,
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let's assume it's, um, i don't know mexico or like, you know, the central american country like you know, costa rica. you might need a little bit less than that, depending on what your, your, what the cost of living are. so it depends on the factors and how kind of want to estimate the amount of money needed for a comfortable retirement when inflation and the cost of living just keeps on going up and up and an accelerated rate. well here's the good thing is that we do a lot of modeling on retirement projections. so we could say ok, this person makes x amount of dollars. now they're assuming they're gonna, uh, their, their bills are, let's say, 60 or 70 percent of what they, you know, what their income is. and then we can say, okay, what's the number we need to save to, to get it enough money to generate that money. so they don't want to work for us and we just put we model different rates of inflation is a 3 percent, 5 percent, 7 percent. the average we model is about 3. uh,
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but sometimes of these hyper inflationary periods, you might say the 1st 7 years might be 5 percent and then it drops to 3. what are some of the advantages of retiring internationally? well, but again, depends on where you're going to go internationally. if it's so we are the east coast, have a, a good group of people are thinking about a retired to europe, one popular places, portugal right now, because it doesn't cost a lot to live there. but there's other factors, right? that there might be a, you might live on 50 percent of what you need in the states to retire there, but you need to figure out, ok, can i even own a home there, or how am i going to live like my real estate, or really the big questions in, when you're moving to those kind of countries in the secondary one would be, is what's my hot water, my medical services going to be available. so those are factors that we take into a lot of consideration or talking to pre retirees about this. and what about the challenges of retiring internationally, especially as an older person who cannot pick up languages and adapt as quickly
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anymore? oh, yeah. well, well i'm, i'm assuming the person who wants to retire internationally is gone like a call. they've got a spirit of like our to learn more about the culture. right. so they want to do a lot of pre education about what the cultural norms are, especially if they go visit there once or twice before you really got to stay there for a period of time. so i normally recommend, if you're going to go anywhere that you're not, not currently living now you spend 3 months there and just do an air b and b and kind of put yourself in a day to day of living there. you know, pick you out. what's the, you know, where am i going to do my laundry? where am i going to do a dry cleaning? where am i gonna, where, what activities, where i want to be part of and with language, which is great, you know, the internet and, and, and just using the apps on your phone. you've got like trans, like doc. com, which you can start with basic conversational things like, you know, how do you say, uh, let's go to, i wanted to find where the,
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with the train station is, you know, in there to tell you that's the village stuff to you on a set of ideas you know, you need to know like you want to learn some of those key phrases to kind of get through your day if you will. what are some of the benefits and drawbacks of downsize saying or relocating after retirement? but i'm not really familiar with that as much. a lot of my clients were retiring to . those countries have been, had worked, had lived and worked in that country before they were from that country. and now they're going to go back to that country. so they might be getting a social security or a page for government pension from that country other cartridge encourage american dollars to go to their country. so they're going to get some people favorable tax rules. that's a key issue for a lot of. i call the ex pap retirees. story is i'm looking at. busy what all the tax rules and what are the agreements between the united states in that country.
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you want to do your research before you go. you might have been doing your own taxes for years. i might recommend you find a firm that has a relationship and knows those tax rules between the country you're going to that's it's just it's good tax policy. it's great. it's just good for you to be ahead of the problems. not all of a sudden be surprised if you will, a little a little play the makes a lot more sense. i get i can't emphasize that enough retirement homes like assisted living facilities and the america is a very big business. so how big is the retirement home market internationally? i don't, i mean, i don't know that for say, don't have a specifics that what do you mean, retirement home, are you talking about a assisted living facility? are you talking about retirement home like i'm going to now i had i lived in new york. i have a house in florida. i'm now selling the house in new york to live in florida. that's the case. there's a lot of that. oh,
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that's expensive. so that i can start anywhere from $6000.00 a month, up until $12000.00 more depending on the level of care that the leaves need. so that's also what we're seeing a lot of his parents, let's say for instance, the children, the parents, you know, the children moved away and they now live in a different state. the parents want to move closer to them. um, so the parents children could check in on them everyday, you know, and flip a local facility versus having in the home our preference and most of my college preferences has to be in their homes is as long as possible. so you could make adjustments like making some, you might create the ramp so you might create a, a elevator in the house. we get to up the stairs, so you'll make some adjustments through the house so they can stay the longest. and hopefully the children live locally so they can check and.
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