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tv   Documentary  RT  July 21, 2023 3:30am-4:00am EDT

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is nuclear power plants talk you those don't they don't always have that to you or she back was i still didn't kill them. does a lot of people to think that i'm most and oh god, oh goodness you know that what do you have a do you not do tell me what, what am i talking to my account so uh so are you able to come up to them this be the same thing and i tried correct? yes, we need to develop you. yep. so we just done the, the one that i sent you the not the one you left to me. you want the more hold on hold. i'll get back to the screen. i don't know if they're going to jot those investors settlement on the client. i would show hold on one second. it's on the corner of it and not be doing it or you know, we definitely get enough. okay. and then oh you oh, we can definitely do it less than that. i don't know cuz the seal the middle of the night, i call my boss or a g i n. i said my recommendation is that we. busy us utilities, that g e cannot support the continued operation of these plans. and my boss said to
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me, well it can't be that bad deal. and keep in mind that if we have to shut down all of these more one plans, it will probably mean the end of j as nuclear business forever. the, [000:00:00;00] the the, the home for, you know, after the kind of made it to dollars to, to
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a proposal to have on the oh $7.00 logo on the to so i am coming based. next on this. the rear is site as a new but the new one, especially typical one here to use the world when they're down those funds. damage to the reactive it's been played with the worse played a full 2 months. some of them flying over in may so that they use one of the right one reactor two's building is the only one still in one piece, but it's the source of the most dangerous radioactive. the explosion with happened inside the building damage the base of the reactor, costing of one of the various rooms and underground conduit every day,
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hundreds of tons of radioactive water spilled into the ocean. the cannot be met close on the 20. i don't allow ideas of soldiers that you might be getting more sure to get into more bucket and i don't know, they don't know, maybe phenomena. mother made it down to the state level. yeah. that whole night. so that was almost cool meeting that comes from those sorts of those 2 ideas are still up to the we now know for sure that the, for a made a whole the metallic base of the city and became our 2 companies. so the only thing is the rates on here and the report from the government's investigation committee because of the radiation. no one, not even the robots can approach close enough to understand how much concrete
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separates the koreans, the ground. the, [000:00:00;00] the
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hungary has been a member of the european union and nato since 1999 during the 1st post. so good wave of nato's eastwood expansion. number of the sailors cuz of this the me longest thing is delaying my property that i see like that uh by the country itself. e. so me that me if so we did, i guess will. zach, but i did do my, i just bought the pretty show the name. yeah. it's the lawyers now will beach, but i see, but i see us play upside by choice, some of which east, on the way in the early ninety's hungry was a country with the west view of russia due to historical disagreements left over from the soviet union. so what is the, why do you, what are you some of them? i don't know what to do and what i see if you will, if you love somebody in the compared to what you should go more than otherwise. but
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i sees great and i did as a political though as much for the the the, the sisters that collect the hundreds of thousands of tons radioactive liquids are no longer sufficient. the leaks everywhere infiltrate the ground. some arguments that it would be best to throw everything over for him because of fishing area has already been compromised in pacific ocean is so big the but nobody really knows what to be a long term effects, the radioactive substances, infiltrate the food chain and the color rise on the top,
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where we stand with our dictates our fears, the the sensor to the, to the but i'm not suggesting that is the on the program. i basically sending it to when i sent that out and puts it on and on for 2 people that are these most opinion coding basic mean for much
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sooner. that information later supplied by workers confessed by the executives and then confirmed through concrete examples. in the $641.00 pages of the color color report talks about a name cause catastrophe. everything but such a guy the to send us the, the top out in the middle of all this was
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still a member of the didn't know us to be sent home. i put in no middle class. so what is she to accompany? until you see what i want to products, and that is the same on the left side of the street to settled and who is in 1st state and secret to grant. the current tower report shows that the direct cause of the accident for all, for seeable prior to march 11th, 2011. tapco was too quick to cite this anatomy as the cause of a nuclear accident in denied that the earthquake caused any damage. the direct intervention by the current day, including the prime minister tons visit to the physician, but each plant disrupted the chain of command and brought disorder to an already dire situation at the site. the accident was the result of collusion between the
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government, the regulators, tapco, and the lack of governance by said parties the with their behavior,
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they betrayed the right of japan to be safe nuclear risks the, the, the, the, i wonder how it is possible that as of today, there hasn't been any indictments for trial, let alone a conviction. all the criminal investigations that have been started have already been closed. we shall no longer prosecute. everybody is guilty. no one is guilty. as in war, if there is no guilt, there is no responsibility. and there is no sin if there is no repentance
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misburg closer to each other. this is the, the way it's nice. always keep it up. okay. so anything on the me, why are the real risk is to leave these roads to the where they are now on the roof of my building right before the is it in to our routine maintenance. so which consists of the replacement of the spent, the fuel was taking place at the reactor for perform with estimates and as the as good for the, the room above the reactor. so that was our level is even ways that the pool contains the new to the get, you know, that come up when the cooling system is stopped working on, you know, in the room above and the reactor full number. there was only want to build
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a louder and decide the pool deal or the fewer walls in kind of this new into the which made with was in the pool. boy, if the fuel had been left on top of that, there would be yet another meltdown. no coloring, but this time obviously didn't happen there. close sequences would have the culture would have been told.
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the reason why this moved down the the x ray has, has remained missed for a long time. it was only after several months. we got to understand the tanks to look off of conditions including due to the pressure increase in the rest of the key to the bar. that separates the reactor from the fuel to storage pool broke down, causing the water to pull out into the address. fewer storage has again, not for a pool of water would have to end up like causing the man with a very short time on. the portal is safe by chance.
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the or the
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the method of nuclear economic sakes has been swept away. this disaster has forced to face up to refresh. many other countries have already dealt with the wish, right? in the face of some to ship. we are japanese, the increasing global energy demand is things that the pass to renewable. energy is important, but it is not enough in itself. the lot of the dream is nuclear fusion of an infinite energy. clean energy for all is
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still there waiting for us. at the other side of history, focusing most heroes were not enough. a bigger disaster has been forwarded because a gate sounds broke the we have been spared because miraculously, something in the country of technology did not work.
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the the the
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american voters are rarely interested in for policy during election cycles. but a said the issue between maybe the exception this time around, particularly among the g o p voters, much of the republican base us our w frame policy. they see it is by the the stuff for the
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store. so i'm a ship for the office, especially for the show called the convolution to get our daughter should do this vehicle. is it economical for to model have us for this problem next time and see if it's doesn't figured that's what i understand. so we'll say august, even though it was a new month's bill on each of the company and the mortgage goes up, developing bio chemical weapons inside, you know, wasn't cheap, but that was about to send it to the customer. but he's because of his center state, [000:00:00;00]
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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 christie ein, you're watching the cost of everything we are 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 a multitude of factors to consider before making such a big life decision. things like the ease of buying and owing pop party and the value of property investments, the cost of renting health care systems, the cost of living in groceries, language barriers,
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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 estimates that 9000000 americans live abroad and suggest that 5000000 of these have retired abroad or 12 percent of the nation's 45000000 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 or receives is usually finance. an income that is comfortable or tight in the us can often give a lifestyle. consider luxurious overseas, and countries like the caribbean 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
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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 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
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for the 1st time in us history by 2034 according to the 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 or less bringing 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 a combination of figuring out what your budget is and what, what you spend to, is there going to be and then what you're getting, what you're going to have in terms of a cash flow coming in is it didn't come from investments, is attention income is it social security income? those, those are the 3 say that's the 1st and foremost. the secondary one which is prop
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park your primary to a lot of people needing to save enough money for retirement. they just got a 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. think you're talking about living and traveling. you want to talk about what kind of countries if it's likely to austria or switch. so, and you might need $3000000.00. if it's good to these, you know, let's assume it's, um, a mexico or like, you know, the central american country, like you know, course, the rica you might need a little bit less than that depending on what your, your, what the cost of living or so it depends on the lot of factors and how kind of want
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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, they're, they're bills or let's say 60 or 70 percent of what they, you know, what their income is. and then we can say, ok, what's the number we need to save to, to get enough money to generate that money. so they don't 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, but sometimes it is 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
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coast, have a, a good group of people are thinking about retiring it 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, if you'd like to move 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 by real estate or really the big questions and 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've taken to 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 anymore. oh yeah. well i'm, i'm assuming the person who wants to retire internationally. it's gotten like a call did got spirit. i'd like our to learn more about the culture. right. so they
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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 boot 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 could start with basic conversational things like, you know, how do you say, uh, let's go to, i wanted to find the weather with the train station is, you know, and at a time that's the village stuff to you on a federal body. and you know, you need to know like you want to learn some of those key phrases to kind of get
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through your day if you will. what are some of the benefits and drawbacks of downsizing 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 go to go back to that country. so they might be getting a social security or a page for government pension from that country um 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. 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 of it's really because you're going to
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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. you know, low point makes a lot more sense. i get, i can't emphasize that enough retirement homes like assisted living facilities in 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 or are you talking about retirement home like i'm in and out. 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, that's expensive. so that can start anywhere from $6000.00 a month. probably till $12000.00 more depending on the level of care that the leads need. so that's also what we're seeing a lot of his parents,

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