tv Direct Impact RT July 10, 2024 7:30am-8:01am EDT
7:30 am
around here about how the information's been shared with the 1st one. yeah, since you're getting the hot chaos in the white house briefing room as the president spokes person is called out for essentially lying about the president's commission. we're going to have it for you. we're going to play it for you. i'm rick sanchez. let's do this on the right. i know we're gonna start with something a little different. i wanna show you something and i'm gonna show you some images here. and i hate the fact that i have to constantly say this before i show images like this, but it's important. these are images that my fellow americans here will probably never see. because here in this country, my colleagues in the media have simply decided that the, for some reason they can't show you something like this. i will never show video that in any way, humanizes russia or the russian people or the russian president. but here's the video, it's no big deal. it's just, it's president put and giving
7:31 am
a tour of his home to india. is president moody? here it is. look at the video again. i mean, here's mowdy, leaving his limo coming up and shaking hands with the president of russia. now india and rush out to here, indian officials describe and have like the 75 year relationship, that is not going to be stopped simply because some people in washington don't like the fact that their friends, that's what i need. officials say, by the way, in the family right, the us state department spokesperson said last night that he's concerned about india's president meeting with russia's leader. i should know that one of the most important reasons why mony is meeting with putting is the hash out ways to try and settle that ukraine conflict. and interestingly enough, this is important. interestingly enough, that is something that western leaders with the exception of a few like maybe hungry is victor or bon, have not been willing to know if that they haven't even included russian any of the piece starts. and would there have been potential deals they sabotaged out?
7:32 am
think about that. so now they're mad because these guys are talking about a potential piece deal. anyway, by the way, there is an ample community of people from india by the way, who are now citizens living in russia. and yesterday i thought you'd find this interesting. here's miss remote, are you paying some of them a visit? the yeah, this is, this is pretty cool, was about 14000 of them are so just in and around moscow. extremely enthusiastic about modi's visit. and again, modi's government has a stablish some extremely close speaker, nomic toddlers with russia. i mean, if you think about this they, they import 2100000 barrels a day of russian oil. and here's what makes us even more important as we watch this video. since the warren ukraine, india imports from the u. s. had been downgraded by more than 70 percent. well, imports from russia are a 25 percent. right. and that's the,
7:33 am
it ended up improving the can nomic situations of both countries. and again, that's probably something that does not make some folks in washington happy. then there's another video i found, but i wanted to show you because there's something that's almost amusing about this guy mowdy, right? the moody mistake, if you want to call it, just watch this. okay. and i bought the, i don't know about to, but i thought that was kind of cool manila as i'm looking about. i'm thinking, who is this guy, elvis? i mean, he's got everybody cheering them and stuff, but listen, all kidding aside, this is an important global story. what a shame the us media is basically ignoring it. yeah, those women rick were giddy like school girls. it was kind of cute,
7:34 am
kind of funny to see over were moti got rock star treatment would work. you know i, i'm super surprised. i mean, weight, blood of your opponent doesn't live in a layer on the side of a mountain or something like dr. evening. he has a ranch with horses like what? hold on, and then, you know, dmitri pest called but i think he rightly said, so yesterday, dmitri pest golf said the washington is simply jealous of modi's visit to, to rush on the friendly relations. although we should know modi's previous presidential visit here to the us during bivens term. i think it was about a year or so ago. the president mowdy believe it or not actually hosted and lead a yoga session on the national mall. there you go there, you know, so, you know, he got some rockstar treatment here as well. but the story of the, the russian indian friendship, i think, is ignored largely because it shows
7:35 am
a narrative, the unflattering to the us. we hope that russia is not isolated in the world as the narrative has been for the last 2 years. and i think this is very clearly evidence of that. me and i, and i'm just uh, looking at the video and comparing my ranch to mr buttons, by the way i have, i have horses, i have golf carts, you know, and, but i don't think i'm in as good a shape as he is. so we'll just see for that. but by the way, i, i, there's another head shaking story today, but i have to share with you. and this moves us out of the, you know, russia, india spear, or maybe it doesn't em, here it is. it seems to be making little ayers out of the present in staff. this happened over night. it broke yesterday after you and i were done with yesterday, show the new york times to the credit by the way, broke the story yesterday that according to whitehouse logs that check people in and out when they come in and out of the white house. a neurologist who is an
7:36 am
expert in parkinson's has been, has visited the white house once a month, every month for the past 8 months now. right. but watch what happens when corinne, john pierre spokesperson for the white house, is asked about this report. so every year to around this, the presence physical examination, he sees a neurologist that's 3 times. right. so i am telling you that he has seen or they're all just 3 times while he has been in this presidency. that's what i'm saying. i'm telling you that he has seen them 3 times. for security reasons. we cannot share names. we cannot share names. you can, we have to put, we have other she would have met with someone came here share. we cannot share names a specialist broadly from a dermatologist to
7:37 am
a neurologist. we cannot share anything. is there a security reasons we have to? we have to print it. i hear you guys are. 7 the 2nd, there's no reason to get back and go back and forth me in the rest of the way, just around here about how the information's been shared. the press for the waiting list and then everybody's asked about it, what do you and then every time i come back and i answer the question that you guys are correct me to come back and clean. i never answer the question incorrectly. yeah, it can't share his name unless of course it's somebody who has good stuff to say about the president. then we'd give you his name, his address, his phone number, and his credit cards. we could add a, you know, middle, i'm watching this and as a reporter, i mean, i did with those guys are doing there for many years working as you know, it's cnn and nbc and fox. and i'm telling you my b. s. detectors like going it is so obvious that she's lying as well. yes. i mean, rick,
7:38 am
part and parcel and her job is to run cover for the white house. and unfortunately, increasingly over the years that has become the role of the white house press secretary instead of actually conveying the full and 4th right information to the press. now, n o t's, he's usually very mild mannered. he's a very nice man. i bumped into him a couple of times. i've never seen him get that test be so for it to come from cbs . is it okay if that says a lot, but you know the, the response coming from korean. john pierre. i think she was quite shocked that it came from him because normally she gets a pestered with questions and peppered by peter. do see from fox, but for it to come from ed. yeah. and to have it get that testy, that explains a lot about what's actually going on behind the scenes is basic, math is basic math. i mean, how does she get 3 out of 8 if there are no show a neurologist, specialist and parkinson's went to the white house,
7:39 am
met with the president's doctor at least on one occasion. and was there at times. and then she sits there and says, no, according to my records, they only saw him 3 times. why do you get 3 out of 8? this is may have, i'm sorry, but it's really not my forte either. yeah, the either i'm, i mean, either. all right, so here's the situation. now. the president appears to be saying a parkinson's expert as we just learned, even though they're denying it. well, the vice president carmella harris appears to be and lollo land. this is a spoof that was brought to my attention, but it by none other than manila. uh, it was prepared by the way, by comedy central. here it is. i want to share it with you. is talking about the significance of the past significance of the passage. so when we think about it, there is great significance of the past time. seems like maybe it's
7:40 am
a small issue. it's a big issue. you need to get to go and need to be able to get where you need to go to do the work and get home. it is time for us to do what we have been doing in that time is every day, every day it is time for us to agree that she's come so far. since our 1st session, i leave the vice president on not so much sentences as ideas, voyages. do you think you just fell out of a coconut tree? you think that in the context of all in which you live and what came before you think in the context of a hall where to live and what came before you ladies and gentlemen, the vice president of the united states, what the hell is she talking about well, rick, 1st let me get you up to speed. i am
7:41 am
a los angeles negative where all the yoga hippy dippy, crunchy mumbo jumbo, originated. and i have been immersed in that world where there are different spiritual leaders. they call themselves or, you know, thought leaders in that community that really do speak like that. so that's why that, that joe was so funny to me when i saw it. and i had to wonder, holy cow, does com layers really have like some yogi person that's kind of walking her through on how to approach foreign policy and diplomacy? because how, how else would we explain that unless the neurologist specialist that's going to the white house is helping her to? well listen, if she was introduced, yogi hippy, dippy, whatever you call it that maybe they do somewhere in california. that's fine. as long as we also had a matching sound bite of her explaining public policy at some point in some
7:42 am
coaching fashion. but since i've never seen that, i think because it doesn't exist, this is all we got. and it's frightening to me and it shouldn't be to most americans. i mean, wow, it's a new age. correct? yeah. you a crunchy stuff. you got to take a trip to california and then you'll understand. yeah, i'm too old and to east coast like this with credit bags. manila, thanks for sharing that. by the way, i thought it was pretty a pretty amazing. why do we come back? another new age guy then come all is going to be chuck because he's writing a new book. by the way, it's called the case for palestine. why it matters and why you should care. dan is going to be joining us there. you see a smiling face. we'll be talking to them when we come back, you stay right there. the water is part of or is it that the latter?
7:43 am
is it a poly would post that isn't the deepest view of us and that in the word part, is it something deeper more complex might be present there? let's stop without collisions. let's go part of the . all right, welcome back. i'm rick sanchez. i'm his glorious day, let me read you something ready goes like this. defenders of israel would like us to believe that the creation of israel was a peaceful process on a barely populated land. however, this is far from the truth. rather, the creation of israel was accompanied by a knock by a catastrophe for the people of palestine. once again, that's
7:44 am
a description of the book that's called the case for palestine. why it matters and why you should care. and the man wrote that is a dance of all. it was good enough to join us now to talk about this, i hope you're not insulted when i called you a new age guy, dan. i don't know whether you all are. i was at one point i went through a new age period. okay. so let's talk less. but let's, let's talk about your book of the fascination around the world with what's happening in the gaza. is amazing. i even read some numbers today that the situation and causes much more dire. then we have been reporting. i mean, the number that's being used here in the united states by the media is generally maybe 30000 people have been killed, maybe 35, maybe as much as 40. i'm hearing it could be nearing a $100000.00. that's crazy isn't. yeah, well actually the lancet, the very well respected lancet. i believe that a great britain is estimating that
7:45 am
a 186000 people and guys have been killed. good god, which is about 8 percent of the population of gaza. and that number's going to climb rick very quickly. i mean, the families setting in, you're seeing photos of a children, massey aid, and i have friends and guys, you know, who have no access to food, no access to water. so those numbers are terrible. they're going to climb, they're going to get worse, and it's something we need. we need to focus on because the us is credit providing critical support to this. what is the case for palestine? and then as you, as you see, i mean i was it, i was playing golf this weekend with some buddies. and i heard them saying things that were not very kind about palestine situation or the palestinian situation. and they seem to be saying, well, they're kind of getting what they deserve because they struck 1st they attacked right on october 7th. so what, what, what, what, what is the case for them?
7:46 am
yeah. well 1st of all, yeah, that claim, which is a common claim. it basically ignores what happened for year decades before october 7th, including as you mentioned, the knock of 1948 in which 750000 palestinians were displaced thousands others killed in the creation of israel, which was created on a land occupied by the palestinian people for centuries, and again, that's a fact that is re lease and their supporters want to deny, but it's a fact. and uh is you only went on to get a to forcibly take more land to occupy both guys in the west bank and then around 20082009. israel left a kaiser. but what it did is it surrounded it with fences. it determine how much food and water got in and electricity got into a gaza. in fact,
7:47 am
in terms of the food, the israelis calculated how much, how many calories were necessary per person to keep the people gaza live in guaranteed that they got just under that to the point where a 2018 the u. n. so that does, it would be on livable by 2020. that was 40 years ago. and so that has to be taken into account when you look at what happened on october 7th, already israel. it may god's in and livable place. so yeah, yeah. if you're saying that, let me, let me, let me tell you about a comparison that i've read a lot about that people often make people say that what happened on october 7th was akin to what the slaves and the results that occurred like the famous revolt and 80,
7:48 am
for example, that we know very well in our hemisphere. some of the slave results that took place in the united states when people who felt like they were oppressed and slaved finally fall back. and they're saying that's all that really was. i'm not defending it. and i'm certainly not defending the killing innocent people like what happened on that day. but can that case payments? of course it can. and i do make it in the book and actually i quote, a jewish intellectual and they do also compares it to the warsaw ghetto. uprising against the nazis because in fact, again before october, 7th visual had really effectively made gaza into a concentration camp. and so yes, i think it can be compared to all those things. and by the way, we also have to acknowledge what heretics is finding these rarely papers. finally acknowledging an english and that is that it looks like it's possible israel till
7:49 am
more. as riley's on october 7th, then all last it because they ordered the hannibal director, which was to kill, is rarely use if it looked like they might be taken as hostage. so that's a hold other thing to think about. but even putting that aside. yes, this is like a slight revolve. this is like uh frankly the attacks the john brown made in trying to end slavery. so. ringback if that's the case that i think here's another point that i've heard made, and i'm wondering what, how you're going to react to this. i've often heard asked recently by some intellectuals, what really happened was there was a certain amount of guilt, especially after world war 2, given what europeans had done to the jews, which was phenomenally abominable, was horrible. i mean, and there's no question about it. but rather than then say we did this, we should make a space for you because you deserve it. they said we did this,
7:50 am
but the palestinians and the arabs are going to make a place for you, not us even though. and i think there's an irony here from my reading, the palestinians, and the jews in that area for centuries, got along magnificently. the palestinians never mistreated the jews, but your opinions did. but the europeans chose to make the palestinians pay for, for, for their crime essentially. right for their sins. what did i get wrong? yes and no, you got it perfectly. right. first of all though, it needs to be pointed out that the plans to create israel were made in 1917 with the balfour declaration. correct? correct. and the already announced the israel would be created as a homeland for the jews. and that's important because that predicts the all the costs but many decades. at that point we're, we're one ones and even over right. much less the beginning award or 2. but you're right alternately the un issued resolution calling for the
7:51 am
creation of visual 1948 after the holocaust. clearly and reaction to it and again, totally understandable, given the terrible things that were done to the jews which all of us have to to recognise court. and i certainly recognize um, but you don't have to solve a crime like that by committing a crime against other people. very similar crime. and as you mentioned, it ignores the fact that it was germany that committed that crime. sherman is never paid for that crime. instead, the palestinian people were made to, to, to pay for the crime and continued to me. and not only do they are they saddled with having to pay for in a strange way. they're even saddled with the guilt to it. somehow. there was almost weird thought process which processing in which the power of spinning is or blame for the cost, which they had nothing to do with. you know,
7:52 am
it is this strange mental gymnastics. yeah. yeah there's, there's this term guys like you and i use all the time when we have these conversations is that we live in this 48 hour new cycle and for the palestinians, for example. and for many is really who it's not their fault. they've been imagining those railing child who was born 161718 years ago. all he knows up, all he knows is he's grown up in a place where he is constantly being told the palestinians want to kill you. the palestinians want to destroy you, a bunch of arab countries say you shouldn't, you don't deserve to live. so they, they grow up thinking those people are my enemy and i can't ever accept them. so everything is contextual, right? and even the people we think may be wrong in this case. are they really that wrong is, gets so confusing them? well, i think they are wrong. and i think 1st of all, it has to be pointed out that the palestinians, most palestinians are accepting of jews,
7:53 am
have always been accepting of jews. do not want to kill jewish people. they do want their land back. and by the way, the u. n is passed numerous resolution saying palestinians have a ride to return to their land to their homes. but yes, what i think has happened in his railey society is they've convinced themselves that the palestinians represented next is central threat to yeah. and that therefore, that they have a right to wipe them out when in fact, when you look at the facts, right, in every conflict between these rabies and palestinians, about a 100 times more palestinians will be killed in his regular is. and that's true right now, right? that's happening right now. and so of the x essential threat is really to the palestinians. but yes, these ray, these have convinced themselves in large sectors of the world. they are the ones under x is the central brett. when in fact, that's not really the case. we have a minute left, sam says, mental and physical problems. do you think the way mister biden has prosecuted this
7:54 am
situation and gaza will also lead to his demise as the president or as a candidate for the presidency. and i think there's a good chance it will and i think his administration knows that he the last pull i saw was that only 18 percent of democrats supported. yeah, this war and got to, i mean the very small amount and he is losing his base, especially amongst young people. certainly what he's going to have is a deficit of enthusiasm for him at the polls and he will need that to be trump. so i think this good lead to is too much no question. yeah. the explanation of what is essentially the case for palestine. something that is totally ignored in the western media. and here you have them come all like say i'm writing a book and i'm going to explain to people exactly what it is. thanks for doing that down. and thanks for sharing your insight into this story for us that is seen
7:55 am
differently from a global perspective than it is from a western perspective completely differently, i should say. thanks again. thank you. we really appreciate you. that's our show. remember, always to be looking outside your own box. true, so they don't live in boxes. that's why we try to do this newscast. the way we do, i'm rick sanchez. thank so much for being with us. um, when were you looking for your depth next time? the 1898 of the united states when the war again, spain and gained control of the philippines. the people of the philippines held
7:56 am
that the americans would help over throw spanish rule and the grand independence to the country. but the united states was by no means willing to give freedom to the philippines and sides as just another colony. the 1999, the filipinos began armed resistance to the new occupied american troops were barely able to occupy the territory of the philippine republic. but that patriot started a desperate derail of war. washington was forced to sit in new reinforcements and triple the number of its troops on the islands. the u. s. army suffered heavy losses. the americans took 8 out of the population, general jacob smith, in revenge for the gorilla attack on the garrison in the city of valentino porter to kill everyone over 10 years old. the monstrous gulf of terror, according to the most conservative estimates lead to the death of about 200000
7:57 am
philippine notes. the americans manage to suppress that guerrillas, only 14 years after the beginning of the war. but the united states was not able to stop the national liberation struggle of the filipino peoples in 1946. after the decades of the dramatic ordeal, the philippines was finally able to achieve independence. the
7:58 am
look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people, a robot. so bases orders given it by human beings except we're so shorter is a conflict with the 1st law show you live in just a patient. we should be very careful about visual intelligence, and the point obviously, is to create a trust rather than fit the various jobs. i mean, with the artificial intelligence, we have so many with him in the a robot less protects his phone, existence was on the everything had changed with her daughter. she was completely when they came back and they told jamie, your daughter is having a diabetic ketoacidosis. i was miserable,
7:59 am
i just felt sick and nauseous. the hardest cancer diabetic per on her, obviously that affects every part of the organ assist. the barricade diabetes association is that the american diabetes association has been bought off by the millions of dollars that they pharmaceutical corp. see, and then every year i wasn't given a specific di it just told to inject and test. so i wish i could go back and change the governing bodies, put these recommendations out, forces physicians to live within those guidelines for fear of reprisals. people have not been told the full truth on how to manage the diabetes and what, what the consequences are funding low carbohydrate diet. there was a multiple $1000000000.00. they found the corporations that were go bankrupt.
8:00 am
it's nathan, one of us are we stomach takes off in washington with a quote historic donation to ukraine. well, the blog continues to promote china. 75. this defense for g is a little late, but it does puts the world in regents at high security risk. but firmly reject native skills location and blame shifting. so i always say that piece is essential for the bright future of our next generations. which is why we emphasize that dialogue is necessary. and remote equals for a peaceful resolution to the ukraine calling us today 20th to day trip to moscow despite.
7 Views
Uploaded by TV Archive on
