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

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where 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 or are you talking about retiring 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, let's say for instance, the children, the parents, you know, the trouble moved away and they now live in a different state. the parents want to move closer to them. um, so the pets children could check it on them every day. you know,
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in political local facility versus having in the home our preference and most of my clients preferences is to be in their homes is as long as possible. so you can make adjustments like making some you might creates ramp. so you might create a, a elevator in the house 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 that for my mom and dad all the time. thank you so much for your time and insight today, matthew. and when we come back, the notion of retiring and places like italy and france is appealing to the benefits those country offers. the retirees are threatened, we'll have more on that after the break piece is a x of today because there's a lot of that censorship on many topics in schools that start to just the migration
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topic, to my impression, it went on this atomic change from back it went almost send them a call. you'll see it's, i mean, there was no, there was no way of debate. it was either or the s. and now it's about russia and it's about, yes, we have to fight the russia and russia has to be taken off the map. the take a fresh look around. there's a life kaleidoscopic, isn't just a shifted reality distortion by tell us to do vision 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 to this? but can you see through their illusion going underground can
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hungry has been a member of the european union of the nato since 1999 during the 1st post. so good wave of nato's eastwood expansion. none of the sailors cuz of this. the main log offensives, delaying my property that i see like that by now as a country, it's a, as the so me that me, it of, so we get like i saw is after i did do my, i just bought the pre show is that am yeah, so more than the beach, but i see, but i see us layouts of our choice, some of which we strongly in the early ninety's hungry was a country with a west view of russia to day star co disagreements left over from the soviet union . and the why do you, what did you, some of them, not yours? i'm going to go to what i see if you've heard of you must somebody in the compare the police report more than those. what i see is great. and i did as a, it's
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a police degree though as much but the, some of the cheapest places to live in europe during retirement, our friends, italy and cyprus. these countries enjoy great health benefits, lower costs of living, and a relatively stable political landscape. that is, until their great benefits are now threatened. france suffered fears protests when president background raised the retirement age. from 62 to 64. the french are very protective of the countries, the universal health care system and generous social security system. and the idea is that you pay very high tax during your working years, but then you get to retire at a relatively young age to enjoy these benefits. this compare to most of europe
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where the retirement age is still 65. unfortunately, many governments in the developed world are in similar situations as population growth is down, people are living longer, medicine is better and benefits cost more. so government attempt to balance budgets by cutting benefits, particularly in countries with generous plans like france, the president macro and argue that the reforms are essential to prevent the french pension system from collapsing. and in the us, the full retirement age was 65 for most a social security's history. but the 1983 overall gradually raised the age of 67, which it reached in 2022 for those born in 1960 or later. which effectively cutting benefits by 13 percent as compared to benefits if the retirement age has remained 65. each one year increase in the full retirement age is equivalent to roughly 7
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percent cut in monthly benefits for all affected retirees. so if the full retirement age were raised to 70 current, social security benefits would be reduced by nearly 20 percent. essentially raising the retirement age amounts to an across the board cuts and benefits. regardless of whether a worker falls for social security benefits for upon or after reaching the full retirement age, that means that the younger generations will receive benefits for a smaller number of years and their lifetime benefits will be much lower. meanwhile, china has the world's youngest retirement age, according to the o. e cd with women retiring at 50 and men retiring at 60. but while retiring young is the dream, the reality is that money will not be able to in order to maintain a certain lifestyle. in china, government funding hasn't kept up with a number of people entry retirement, so they have to remain in the workforce for longer. now let's take
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a closer look at what does it cost to retire an african countries like cameras, and for that well, assign mach waiting to can radio journalist and community mental health experts and joins us from cameron to discuss their perspective on african retirement dynamics. and so how does the concept of retirement vary across different cultures and regions? are there any notable cultural differences and how retirement is perceived and experienced in the committee room? the time it was that like something which is a burglary, it's up to some things to shift school because people feel like they have to. i've seen practical somebody's been retire mean, or they have to be the ability to know she's very much, i mean, but i don't know why doing so much to my roaming around the time in the best bet
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today is what gets an enlightened the bible jennings about how to have the time in the land and also how to pay every player based on so it's not like they used to use before. as long as i said, i took the time and i'm the, you know, well, the idea of more hopefully that you're fine, i think maybe because or send it back to diamonds king. so they thought that when the eastern time and a guy that seems for them and the end of our lives, i'm, you know, been actually faster we 2 years at a time in reference to the some of that is, is scenario. and can you share insight into the retirement systems and social support structure as an african countries and how they differ from other parts of the world? and so a come around just couple years ago in the past. actually we had them in time in ages from the room is the surface define?
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that's what category is, b a, b, c, d, 's or category a mean back to a senior level staff category. do you mean, you know, any level staff as go see for executives and category g for somebody needs to category and do the tire? at the age of 55 and category c, energy under agent pc. but on the 2nd of december suite, between the spanish has decreed, that's how more nice retirement is increased than come in. so 3 that's created. we now have them in eighty's 4 categories. these andes wants to 60 is a category c and d, t, c 5 is or if someone writes for every call and kind of hard for me to savvy, okay. discuss any cultural norms or traditions related to retirement in african countries and how they shape retirement experiences for individuals. i mean to not be that you work for
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a certain number of years. been the way to accept these and i'm waiting you, your class, you to also been on the call. you find yourself in. so you'd be had people is he doesn't have medical to add those. you know it's each insect. so i know guys of the champions and had those in on i had they didn't even then they know they have averaged back to me, today's stuff you're seeing. that's a lot of a time now we have people to be waiting on them to retirement. you know, you know, i said to your, to work for 20 years. you're sure. it's in a box. i feel free to take your brands here to tammy is going to have your patients . but um, like i mentioned in the past when i like to go, 1st of all people do not. the drug is to read about what's the diamond entails and
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patients. so they will not be what i have to find out what the brain damage seems available for them, or what's a patient skiing. and how, when that really understanding noticing but to yet what their time and it is a really huge supply in the next i have to have, i have no m saves, i have nothing who in the settings are on their pension and famines being. but today, there is information out there on the internet every way, so people can actually go to office. i mean, i talk to this guy about every time in man or having the intentions team attached to the entity. how does a emphasis on intergenerational support and family dynamics impact retirement planning and lifestyle choices in african cultures in terms of the family dynamics
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route and i just want some time between 3 and 3 is low. so what we're going to finally because you know, people understand that expecting to be on time, and we need to get around to be around the right at least the lead cypress, which are also forward. so you don't need to be in class with him. you know, just to be available for them on the show him before someone to retire and the person will be less it. no, they happy that jenna, i only got people in the house, you know, be as tough as died. there's literally nothing that goes through tammy, is because they like the new bogging on the house or they just use the around. so in the past, the board was not date, but more and more, we have seen that families are fixing to get back to you at least this long term and to provide the family off to them kinase. and just being there for the space
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for them to stay, i think you should have the basic needs and then it's and get her. uh, i'm it. so families of what see for a long time in my context, in china, in fact, in my culture. and normally you'll realize that we have to go without love to bear all that peep. we'll have to join and stick tendencies. so if you need to retire and you don't have to get somebody issued in your why your band or this, well, you know, directly related to you, you have a cost. when you have a, an offer, you have really distorted listed sheet that comes as these in your house, or you can go by and type in their fees. so more and more we are having these scenarios where people, what we can say, i mean, that's a to receive and probably saw, watched when they need, if they needed. can you provide some examples of countries in africa that are popular along retirees and how retirement life differs in these particular regions,
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year old, so that this will retire from civil service? my country because international jobs, maybe from the u. a client in the, the international organization. so yeah, that's perfect. so people that with that level of experience and um, with the website and able to because his job because i have his draw tv and i did it by 60, i think it was too strong enough to work because we've seen that it's not, it was even supposed to work, so the prospects for them to get to see the national surveys all aspects due to some of that kind of i live on the right area. and you can imagine that has now been shown schemes. so yeah, it's possible is do it. will it wraps new door? many people that i know we need my phone fixed. well, next phone coming every it doesn't stand up international jobs. a new toyota and honda national station scheme. so it just depends on where you want to go from
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way when you're national level and the house. and um, once you access to is the international curry and i informed you about, you know, the international patient's team and how you can benefit from that. thank you. so much well assign for all your time today. retirement is an availability for everyone eventually, but some of the retire in better shape than others. the winners are going to be the ones who are playing properly for their retirement and saved up a decent next day in order to provide them with the same lifestyle that they've become accustomed to. on average, retirement is about 20 years. so there has to be enough saved a way to last and enjoy the latter years. unfortunately, most people wait until it's almost too late. the millions of americans are still financially unprepared for retirement as nearly 50 percent of women and 40 percent
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of men between the ages of $55.66 have no retirement savings. as a culture has adopted a new for now philosophy which can become a burden onto the younger generation. i'm christy. i. thanks for watching. and we'll see you right back here next time on the cost of everything. the after the end of world war 2, the national liberation movement, it'd be an intensified dramatically having driven away the japanese occupiers. the vietnamese patriots by no means wanted the return of the former french colonizers
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bod brands did not want to lose the rich colony, and decided to beat the opposition by board. in december 1946, a full scale war broke out. the main bay 3 arctic organization led by o g men inflicted heavy losses on the french. the invaders were in rage. according to western historians, of the 250000 lives of these will be the means were on their contents. the colonialist widely used the practice of mass rape of b. it means women as revenge on the gorilla. in 1947, the french destroyed the village of nights, rock murdering 170 women, and 157 children. however, terror did not help. in 1954, the vietnamese defeated the french army and the decisive battle of gen, being food, almost 12000 french soldiers and officers, including the commander general of the categories. and his command staff were captured. that ca, visualization of a huge garrison had
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a demoralizing effect in europe. the french laughed vietnam, but they were replaced by even more violent and much stronger invaders. the american hard times were awaiting vietnam. again, the look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings accept. we're so shorter is it conflict with the 1st law? show your mind, anticipation. we should be very careful about visual intelligence at the point, obviously, is to create a trust rather than to the area. i mean with artificial intelligence, we have somebody with him and the robot most protects his phone existence was on the
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sort of course it yourself. so now are you happy with that, ma'am? can you hold up love the line here, the, the, the,
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the, just the
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hello and welcome across stop where all things are considered. i'm beautiful about american voters are rarely interested in foreign policy during election cycles. but i've said the issue between maybe the exception this time round, particularly among g o p voters, much of the republican base, a sour them ukraine policy. they see it as biden's war. the to discuss these issues and more, i'm joined by my guest door to send you what are we in budapest, he's a pod cast or the goggle which can be found on youtube and locals. and in lisbon week rustic, like morris is host of the redacted news podcast and a former fox news baker part, gentleman cross stock needs and the fact that needed to get into a meantime one. and i always appreciated right, george in budapest, it was very interesting how over the last few weeks out of the ukraine policies
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played out in the us presidential election. but having said that, a foreign minister lobrado said on the last new cycle, which i think is quite interesting said, we know what we're fighting for. what is the bike administration fighting for? the very good question. as far as one can tell, is fighting for the right to keep the wall going in definitely is doing good business for us on the manufacturers. and it's killing russians as lindsey graham, same as we said, the best money i ever spent, you know, the reference of dying. so i and that's all with the only strategic objectives of it. is it possible to do some in the case of a bite? and i mean, when it comes to the republicans office, they, they're all the, the neo cons, and there is donald trump and trump himself. however, as always,
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has been ambiguous. i mean, he's not quite sure. does he want to be the tough guy who's going to, you know, stand the boat and bring this waterman and photos they want to be the piece? make a will finally. uh then, you know, be, deliver what everyone obviously wants. so he's playing it both ways and this happened during his presidency. you know, when you tried to sit on 2 stools, tried to use a full in between the a, you know, cleaning. it's very interesting looking at the main stream media coverage of the conflict in your brain and it's, it's about 99.9 percent in one direction. but at the same time you have a lot of people. and if you look in the alternative media and the pod cast and whatnot is almost the reverse, there's in an enormous amount of skepticism in this skepticism is only getting more intense as people actually learn more about the context of the conflict. your thoughts? i, i agree with you. i think that there's been an awakening when we were covering at
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the beginning of the war and drawing attention to this is not just started in february. this goes back many, many years. there's a lot of context here. let's talk about victoria newland. let's talk about all of the pieces under the obama administration that were put in place to get us to this point. the expansion of nato and people would say no, no, and you can't talk about that. we were banned and blocked and censored and taken off youtube and now i've been there. so what is that we, we, you know, you know how it goes, right? so you've, you've been expand now. i think there's this awakening, this unfolding. and even just among, i know anecdotes right, really don't fly, but even like among friends who are sort of, well, maybe had, you know, ukrainian flags flying or, or, or pulled up in their, their, their twitter bios. you've seen a removal of that. you've seen flags removed just even going around portugal, other parts of europe where you had all of the flags and subway stops and, and billboards. and everything had been removed. and i think there's a growing awareness, and i think it's starting to trickle into the main stream, and i'm encouraged by that. it's a i like when people become educated. yeah, yeah,
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but it's sometimes it's really hard to get it out there. it doesn't charge. i mean, we, you, we could all be very skeptical here and take a step back. okay. so the bike and administration is for the war. overwhelmingly, the trump is against biting. so support trump, you see what i mean, how it kind of plays that, that plays into that because it's clayton is mentioned, you know, the more you're educated about this, the more questions that are, that are brought up. but then there's also a political wedge issue. i'm against this because he's for me. i think there is part of that as well. george? yes. uh without question. and uh, and i think that's the problem. there's originally but with chrome and, and his acolytes is that they're constantly attacking by them. but it's not clear always what are they attacking by them full because some of them are attacking buying but not doing, you know, do i have the ukraine and, and drum says what it wouldn't have happened if i were president,
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because i was so top and you know both and with the dad to do anything with me and, and so, so the difficulty however, is i'm, i, i agree with the weights and is that there is the public perception of ukraine is very different from the perception of the foreign policy making. you leave the policy making a lead is absolutely gone home and supporting the ukraine. but because i think you've greenville, when they just want to go on bleeding. russia. 7 however, the public, as you know, as, as not being as soon as the last thing about that will the polls show that as knowing susie, as on board this, you know, no way do you see any demonstrations against russia? um, it's just costing a lot of money and i think that point is saving into people's consciousness to say we're spending all this money on the landscape. how come, you know, we go ahead and, you know, there's no money, but this is no money by health care. and then what date with dental care, whatever. but there's a prostate infinite amount of money. but uh,
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as soon as gets the question, that is, how do we get to some kind of democratic accountability. so let's get a public view. oh, we'll do back, we'll get to that with the war powers act, images, pay the past this time of the 2nd half of the program. i claim that i like it. george gave us a wonderful segue into the self destruction of mike pens by tucker carlson, which is very interesting is because, you know, as i said in my introduction, you know, much of the republican base is souring on this here, but not the leads. and this is one of the things that george and i have talked about a lot over ever since the conflicts started this iteration of meaning in february of last year. is that now we're seeing the real start difference between the establishment and everybody else. well, it was interesting to watch tuckers is this the ration of a lot of these candidates over the past few days and you really, you're absolutely right about it. there's this dichotomy between the people in the
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audience and the sort of automaton sewer up on stage. mike pen, spring we're, we're the perfect perfect robot, right? the neoconservative robot, and i think one interesting narrative emerged when you watched all of those interviews. it was this idea of we can walk and chew gum at the same time. and so they're having this very narrow debate right now. biden is too slow to get, gets into ukraine. we would do it more quickly. and that's literally the batter. yeah, that's the spectrum. you know, and, and so there is no daylight at all between democrats and republicans. but you have this audience sitting there saying, wait a minute, why are we sending billions of dollars into this vacuum cleaner? that's ukraine. why are we doing this? when our bridges are collapsing in the united states, when we have a fit know, crisis pouring across our borders, when people can't afford their rent and they're working harder for less money is the us dollar continues to be valued. so i, it's amazing to watch this disconnect,
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but georgia definitely right. there is an absolute thirst for continuing the military industrial complex in the united states and just follow the money. and all of those mansions that pop up around washington dc. they're all fueled by the military industrial complex and defense contractor. so the money is just pouring into washington d. c. and then of course, you'll have this u. f o here in next week. and the military industrial complex will make even more money. once that disclosure project comes out, they'll make trillions instead of billions. you know, judge, it was interesting the who that nikki haley, me, she might not have been obliterated, but she certainly learned her lesson from mike pens. okay. meeting she does doesn't really say anything subsystem she never has before. why should we expect it now? but the what the, the, the, the tucker interviews showed in least if you, if you're interested in the topic of the,
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there are red lines there people have certain limits and they don't like being like, i like to, okay, it's for democracy. okay, so then why are their elections going on in ukraine? okay. well, it's about transparency. why can't you have an audit of all the money that's going? they're excited people, you know, people don't like to be treated as it is if they're children. yeah. then the question, and it's was very striking that the in the 2016 when the trump um, what is this array to, is full of his or republican opponents. he did it by a very clear unambiguous messages and we will like to about the rock.

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