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tv   Direct Impact  RT  August 2, 2024 11:30am-12:01pm EDT

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a smile organization day one day. also people who are just in lawyers from brazil, from engine tina, for many countries and all the international servers. i faxed it back, we had free elections and said, and i was without any kind of problem. as we read the bible develops, and i guess they are trying to create a situation of dual or something like that. they, they're trying to, to, they will not affect the results on the far right hand that they also will not assess the results. and they will try to do something like they also did the last they start to maybe uh strive in the country. so people
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feel a few more than those when i go out from venezuela. and it's a very complicated moment and you mind states are trying to, to make to, to create that situation. that's my blues. and my dream is to get out of this house, but they do not. i guess you will not hear. we will try to, to say a read to we're gonna have to leave it that thank you for your time. that was a rita acorta chino, who is the 60 general the present incentive for the solidarity of peoples and the struggle for peace. okay, thank you. thank you very much. i it's, well, thanks very much for joining us all changes. i show a lot more and using these view in just on the 30 minutes. so do hope that you can join us again the
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everybody. i'm rick sanchez. this is direct impact, and this is part of what we're going to be talking about today. a large scale exchange of prisoners between russia, the us on several other countries is underway. yeah, this is amazing. a massive prisoner exchanges amounts taking place between russia and multiple western countries. we're going to be breaking this down for you and it is significant by the way, in more ways than what you think this is directly impact. i'm rick sanchez. let's do this the . okay, so here we go. there is without a doubt of a major international story to tell you about that. no doubt bodes well one good thing for the prospect of peace, right? so here's, here's what's going on. we can now confirm across the board. so as everybody else, by the way, that russia and the number of western countries and putting germany in the us have
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agreed to a very complex 24 person at least prisoners want. right, you can use that nature. remember, states to cuba has confirmed the law scale exchange of prisoners between russia. the us on several other countries is underway, more than 2 dozen prison is all on the list. yeah, so this thing, the, to the exchange, it said to include the release of 3 american citizens in prison in russia, including wall street journal reporter, a former us marine, a russian american radio journalist. the numbers may not be exact at this point and who knows that could change. but the understanding is there were some 12 western prisoners about 8 or 9 prisoners as well. on the other side that are going to be returned to each of the corresponding countries. now this is happening, as there are more calls for peace stocks between ukraine and this is no accident by
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the way, more calls for peace talks between ukraine and russia. one came earlier this week from the president of finland, now even ukraine's on elected president vladimir lensky. is calling for talks here, here's what he has said. by the way, he says that the majority of the world today says that rush out must be represented, must be represented at the 2nd summit. otherwise, we will not achieve meaningful results since the whole world wants them to be at the table says mister the landscape, then we can not be against him while he's been against the the. busy time, but it looks like there's a change now that's important. also look at this. here's us president job i big house just a little while ago. if this is the beginning of a better relationship with russians, position relation to that office. as my system, i say your lips to god's ears, now your lips, to god's ears seeming hopeful, seeming like you say,
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i want to have better relations with russia. i mean, well, here's an with slow back. a prime minister robert sits. so he's been bradley honest, and his calls for talks to finally and the fighting. he says quote, it's time to n v, but you're gonna love this. the lyman of the pockets of arms dealers in the ukraine war. and the new problem is good. i use, keep it on the roof scale will be name was as many nice post a going, you know, going to it that i bought the country to comes. you can put the money on, you remember, but if there's a lot, there's an yet out. instead of just that it was gonna call and i said around in seattle, i'm not practiced have yet, but it's probably out. i gotta tell you, man, after my own heart, i love it. when people tell it like it is, but here's what we need to consider at this point, right? is this a sign of some kind of we're approach mom, you know, between washer and,
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and the west. if there are calls for peace dogs from nato country leaders, as we've just seen. and 2 sides can agree between the united states and russia. washington in moscow for some kind of prisoners swap. can they go further? can i take the next step? and they sit down and talk and meet and try to come to some substantive decision or agreement on the conflict between russia and ukraine. manila to you. uh. are we being overly helpful here or do you see some signs that some people might take that? that could mean that there's some kind of uh, arrangement that might be possible in the future. it will work. i think we should all continue to be hopeful for a future with peace involved. but to me, the way i'm reading this all signs on the ground point to know 1st of all, that sound bite with joe biden. at the end of that press conference regarding the
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large scale prisoner swap, the largest since the fall of the soviet union, by the way, the families of the americans were also present at his side. at the end of that faster. as he walked away, a reporter shouted out to him and asked if he has spoken to the russian president vladimir putin, or will he speak with vladimir putin and he returned to the podium and just said no and walked away. now as far as the prisoner swap itself, rick, i've got a much more cynical take on this then you do. if we look back to just earlier this year, january of this year detained american journalist, an independent filmmaker, youtube or gonzalo lira died in a ukrainian cell. yeah. all by himself dying slowly for a month, president biden, nor anybody in his administration said a single word about gonzalo era who was a born and raised american citizen born in burbank california,
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raised out there. mm. so that is also adam adam, ships, district by the way, adam ship, of course, one of the chief russia gate propagate or is none of these people not ship, not bite. and nobody said anything about any sort of prison or swap or trying to bring gonzalo lira chrome right there. there would've had to be any trade for gonzalo because of how much the americans have provided to ukraine. he could have picked up the phone and said, give me my guy back. but that didn't happen. so when i looked at this prisoner swap, i think this was obviously we know it's months in the making the sort of stuff, especially between 6 or 7 different intermediary countries and other directly involved again, because germany stop and take some months, you're a sub. and here's the thing with larry, you just said you were assuming that countries no less the united states could give a crap about any individual citizens life. and just to be, i mean, why the, you know, no to manila countries don't care about individual people. that is,
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but that is my point, that is that is my whole point. my whole point is he could have done this and this prisoner swap was disingenuous in the fact that i think president biden thought he was going to be taking a victory lap to boost his numbers because he wasn't expecting to get pushed out of the race. right. so i think they were saving, they were saving this large scale swap as a victory lap. and because it wasn't, you know, it didn't pan out that way for jo, by that they had to move forward with it because so many countries were involved. this is completely disingenuous because the point was, the whole point that i brought up gonzalieras is to show that countries don't care about individuals. everybody example sort of bargaining chip. yeah. but you know, obviously uh, i looked at the glass as half full and you see it is half empty. you, my dear, are acidic as a cues which makes us which, which makes you a good journalist. by the way. let's move to the olympics. the french olympic shots,
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the world again, allowing to biological man to compete against women, boxers and the outcry is global, is think about this for a minute. they're saying 2 guys who are biological man can beat the crap out of some woman on live television. olympic chaves have sparked outrage by allowing letting new ting of taiwan and main uh, key fob, algeria who are both thrown out of last year's world championships after big the biological males to enter the women's boxing category in paris. we've got video, let's put it on. there it is. it kelly key says the so that's totally right there in the blue. all right, he's wearing the blue. that's it. been a previous life is beating the crap out of this female mexican box, or who's a highly regarded metal interrupted there. by the way, the female boxer is wearing the dress in case you did. now notice. she said after the fight that she's never, ever been hit so hard. if you're still talking about it,
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i don't know. but now what, what, how crazy is this? this whole french olympics has been like one far left messaging expedition. it seems like to me. yeah, it is, it was definitely a cringing thing to watch. rick, when you have, um, we haven't seen the, the, the taiwanese box or yet, but the, the, the car box, sir, i don't leaf i, i don't know whether or not to be eaten to a dress color as a male or female, because the boxer has not identified as trans and has not said one thing or the other other than saying that this was a conspiracy to keep algeria out of winning the gold medal, but did not support the reason reasoning as to why. so it's a little bit crazy when you view what the international boxing association,
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the organizer of the world championships said very recently about why kelly was borrowed from the games it was because they did chromosomal tests on the boxers for at least that particular. um we, if it talks like a dawson walks like a duck, it's not good manila. oh my goodness colleague, already tested with, with, with x y chromosome and females generally have the double x chromosome. and so call it is over. they are beating up there on the a tally and boxer, and it was just hard to watch. it was, it was very different if you, if you look, if you crack your duck, all right, you're not a bear. you're not a horse now. and if you are biologically male, then you are a male and that's i'm sorry to hear hear call me crazy. maybe i'm absolutely not. you're still in school. yeah. wow. what a crazy concept. that is what
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a man is biologically a man. it goes into a room with a woman. it's a man fighting a woman. sorry. it's all right, let, let me add one more. one more politics to this b i. b a is currently chaired by, by the russians at this point in time. and the olympic committee said, oh, well, we don't, we don't take their judgment for this. and that, you know, because russia is basically effectively banned from the olympics at this point. so we're not gonna, we're not gonna go by the rules of what the, the da says. and then despite presenting facts such as x, x and x, y chromosome. so there have been scientific studies that show the weakest male punch versus the strongest one. and i read that is a 162 percent. great. or you're the weakest guy. a guy that doesn't exercise versus a top female athlete. his punch is a 162 percent more powerful than that of a woman. so go figure, it's the crazy him from the ceremony. it's that clear,
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you know, it's that crazy god guy who just made people different than that. not even that he made women one way and i don't know what he was thinking up there when he did that, but i guess we want to say no god, you're wrong. uh, the whole thing is crazy. it is absolutely notes and it's showing france for what it is a loony, weird, crazy place with a really not a leader who is doing everything possible to start world war 3. and i'm sorry, but the, you know, the facts buried out of x middle that we appreciate you. so when we come back, we're gonna start focusing on the story that the whole world seems to be talking about as well. and that is free of assassinations on the part of israel with particular interest on what's going on with the ron and his ball lot, we're going to talk to an officer who has written specifically on this topic. his name is but sheer sod and he's going to be good enough to join us today. right there will be right back. the, the
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what the this think of the continental fox. oh, send we in the grass with the rest of the world. we're going to relate to the wind in terms of donations on, in terms of tray, africa must define what she wants. political assets must define ourselves. cultures, africa much define ourselves critically. the cause of the guys no choice but to move forward forward. she will the we want to talk to somebody now because he's an
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expert on the people to be beaten that didn't yahoo hates wants to kill and wants to destroy their entire civilization. i mean, i don't think there's a better way for me to explain this. we're going to be joined by somebody who has worked at the university of sterling bus year sod is also a officer who wrote a book. and this is why i think he makes a perfect guess for what we're going to be talking about. his book is called his bola and the politics of remembrance. you know, it's interesting the bus year because here in the united states and in the west, when we talk about the as bowler, it's always referred to us as a terrorist organization, a militia group of all kinds of negative connotations. even with people who try to remain neutral, they still use language that makes it sound like, uh, you know,
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it's, it's, it's kind of an evil organization. what should we know about has bowl that we don't know, especially in the west? well, i mean one of the reason that stored tray that such just because the west has a, has a, has a painful experience which has about as well as born out of a big confrontation or a destructive confrontation is to the americans. and in the beginning of the eighty's. so i think that's one of the reason. and the, you know, there was a thinking of us to chose the blowing up in the rain rock and all that. so in that sense, you're blacklisted because of that good to deserve. when do they deserve that? is that, is that the deserving? i don't think so. no, i mean they, they were, they're just fighting and occupier on their land. so it's a defense. i guess it depends from which perspective you, you see it, but you usually blacklist someone with because they don't they don't been to your
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chair in political interests. now you can criticize their political orientation, but also you can try to understand it. so it's a, it's just the different political orientations on the southern suit. so, so american interest, so let's go through a series of questions. number one, are they beholden to, the ayatollah khomeini and iran? did they take orders from iran? no, i wouldn't say they take orders from your on their closely aligned with the around . um, if anything it's possible that you're on even needs them to understand more of the terrain. it's not uh, it's more of a symbiotic formation. i would, i would, i would say then uh, then uh, and then it top down a relationship and, and also just because the rain ends don't, i don't think they interfere in the, the micro money this, let's call it micromanagement of a, of,
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of how the resistance sparks and then the actual organization work, but they are in line because they have some of the, some of their orientation. so it sounds like so it's, it's a, so the, the, the way you describe it then it's no different than the, the british and the americans and the french or allies. that doesn't mean because one does something, the other one is behind. yeah, for example, the, even though, even though here you is it's, it's not really to states, it's a, it's a, it's a, it's an organization that exist within a country. but that has a very complex relationship with that country. and it has a popular uh, popular base in the country. um, but uh yeah, i wanted to say something i forgot, but the reason the but let me tell you the reason i'm asking these questions because it looks like in the past couple of days and this is the reason we have you on, we're trying to get into the mind a bb, that's and yeah, which is probably not an easy thing to do, but he's attacking these attack and they route right to kill people is attacking
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the iran to kill people. iraq. i believe it was. was it libya or where else did he serial? pardon me, he also attack. so i think in the mind of bb and yahoo and i'm trying to get in his head to try to understand what he's doing. he sees all of these places and all of these countries as a network that he has to destroy. is he right? is he wrong? and why? i mean, these countries, these countries contain grouped, are aligned and that's how the on site is rarely are on scientist agendas. that's true. and the problem is the way the way these are and these do it is that they, they act, shoot it to me because many times only there, they can't do much anymore. so the only way, the only way for them to act as is to just, you know, try to kill leaders, do sensational and stuff like that. so, so it's like maximum impact in terms of emotion, emotional impact and, and,
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and all that. but in terms of mandatory maneuvering it's, it's completely obsolete. why, what it's like a lot like i'm a good to you just said and i'm kind of a little bit surprised by what you said. militarily, they no longer have the same power. what do you mean by that to? well, because okay, so if you look at the, the long term, look at the long term trend. so israel at the state, israel from, from the 5060 seventy's honors the various awards that happened. and you see how they acted on the ground and how it works in $82.00, for example, they have data that run until right until the capital, like by foot. it was just, they just went in like it's a supermarket. mm hm. so, you know, and even, even in 2002000, the reason drew from this house because they were being taught by the, by, has, by, has run the mainly in 2006. they couldn't even go to 100 meter into
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11. instead, what they did was they did exactly what they did and does that. they just just bump everything they could, they destroyed the infrastructure, they, you know, they, they just, they just did q and it to, uh, strikes they, they just tried to, to effect on that level, but on the ground they can't do much. i mean, when, when did you hear of a military battle where israel has succeeded and you're like yeah, but yeah, yeah, the ground that it just doesn't exist because it can't, it can't do it anymore. now you've got the sharon know you're right. you've got think back to sharon and 11 and you've got to think back to egypt the most. yeah dawn. you have to think back a big this history of the country where they actually can control a theater. you're saying they haven't been able to control the theater in a long time. so they just lob missiles and make a lot of noise. exactly that they have. they have air power because they have the technology from, you know, what, various western countries they actually are aided by these lots and they can't even
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do it on their own anymore. even that they're doing it with, with plenty of a sense, october, there's like millions and billions of that. i've been given just to aid and, and just trying to dislodge a few guys and tunnels and you know, yeah. and, and some, some people are the noise and their noise and a border instead, i mean, and, and meanwhile has butler is acting militarily strategic for you there. that destroying bases a cat surveillance technology. they're, they're hitting basically at the middle patterly at them and literally around level . does that, that, that's, that's why i'm saying this. and in the meanwhile, if israel could, they would have invaded loving on the while ago or given what has been the doing a certain noise and, and there is northern territories. so let me get back into my b b method, yahoo brain, i'm now be net and yahoo and i'm going to say to you, it doesn't matter that we, you know, don't have that kind of powerful military to occupy and control the theater in
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a traditional sense. because you know what, i got, i got the united states of america. in fact, i just went there. i spoke to congress, i'm more of the present united states and the present united states is. and when i decide that i'm ready for a full out war, i don't need it is really military. i got u. s. military. well, i think the us as well. we don't, we definitely not really sure what happened in the us and what i wouldn't know. what exactly is the us fence, but i'm pretty sure there's some ceilings but nothing. yeah. who cannot, cannot really. yeah. you know, it's transgress. so that's why that's why you end up having key leaders killed because that's really the, the, the most you can do in terms of the impact while at the same time, not being able to invest yourself military to be much right. because i think at the end of the day, regional ask all out war in the region is something that would not just turn to
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israel, but also the us. this is what i'm showing you. so you're thinking the end from a to a political standpoint. when it really came down and the rubber meets the road, so to speak, the us would back off and say no luck. we're not fighting this war for you. you've got it, you got yourself. and at the end of this last you, you, you get yourself out of this mess, right. you think that, i mean, look at, look at, go ahead. yeah, look at what the us and britain and, and you know, the alliance of the us basically has done in yemen. they said they're going to dislodge the, how the, with the spot happened. they did a fuse theater, the trickle stripes, and then maybe that's it. does it bother you though? i mean, i don't have to give you the names. you know them right. uh, all the people who run the state department, a lot of the people who run uh, you know, uh, national security for the united states. i mean there's ion is a lot of them are just scientists. i mean i've, sometimes i look at these guys and i read the record and they sound more of. busy
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into is real than they do to my country. so what do you think of that? i mean, obviously this is deplorable. it's. it's a very stats state of affairs that i, i, i'm born in. yeah. i'm born into this life. seeing this sense. i mean, my parents told me the same, my grandparents is, it's the story of the, of our, of our region. we read it, there's always been a pro israeli, a blatantly pro is really a count in the west and specifically in the us and the us we didn't lead that. storage costs are 67 before the us, i guess wasn't too bothered if anything they were, they were not pro. uh, but they were not that originally it's really after $67.00. i think that the, that kind of synergy took place. i mean the hiring books on that relationship, you know, it's funny you and i were talking before we went on here and i'm fascinated by this because you make a great point. i think what you were learning to what your parents told you, because if you look at this historically errands and what i mean arabs,
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i mean people from that culture, whether they're christian or whether they're muslim, it doesn't matter. i've always been very, very close to the jews. they have great relationships over the years. they never abuse them. they always respect them. but people, the jews are now or the jewish state. i should say. israel is now very aligned with are the people who have treated them here. i believe over the years. i mean the christians, to be honest with you are the ones who treated the jews badly. it wasn't the muslims it's. it's one of the saddest story of modern times the, the, the huge propaganda design is lovely. as you know, i'm leashed to say that the jews were persecuted everywhere, especially in the world, and that they should go to this place called israel. because the thing is there was a state product, there was a state colonial project, and the hound, you make it survive, you have to create national message. yeah, i mean, obviously the just suffer than your, of course. and that wasn't wester, there was
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a problem in the west about that. but the problem is it wasn't enough to actually build the state and, and, and the out of world. so what it did was they also expanded that rhetoric with the help of the british and the germans. i'm an august, especially the french, actually in north africa to create that mess. but the jews in these regions were also what persecuted and there's like, worst article there are lots. yeah. there were lots of historians that wrote about this that we spend, you know, a lot of effort in the academic community debunking the claims because they're completely bogus. that's and yes, that's why and you're on, i don't know if you know the story you're going to like the story. but in the or on a few years ago i think it was at the time chevron was was prime minister. he offered the jewish, you offered the jewish community in your on i don't remember how much money to to actually send the jews to, to israel ended and you know, and they were on the part of montage, jewish representative. yeah. and the parliament and you don't. and, and,
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and one of the, one of the parliamentary, remember at the time it's a famous story. he said, no, thank you, we're very happy and you're on very radians. and we have always lived here, and we're not going to live in a small that's military part of tide state where and that's just doing some, you know, mess ups coming all the time. that's amazing. well, i'll tell you what a wonderful conversation, but share side of the book is called his bola and the politics of remembrance. look it up, smart, man, good officer. good. but thank you sir for sharing your talking with you. thank you very much. that's our show. remember, always look outside your own box. that's if you're looking for truth, that is true. it's 11 box and i'm rick sanchez. and we'll be looking for you next to the,
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the us where nancy's venezuela's president john lays the crown on an old positioned candidates once again, just like dated 5 years ago. they now say they have proof that the west, in fact politicians logging in the election without disclosing any the government disclosures. the details about the historic prisoner exchange, including the main negotiations that fits between versus s s b and the u. s. and american senator has an apparent boy didn't slip of the song as he says the us is to exploit north explore can result that comes as washington forces concerned.

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