Skip to main content

tv   Direct Impact  RT  August 25, 2024 11:00pm-11:31pm EDT

11:00 pm
against agriculture against the other items, or made russia fetus. 36 on so as on agriculture and now so the major growth export are no longer dependence on the united states and europe. the harbor buddy, i'm at sanchez. this is the we can review the 1st ever federal ban on proud price gauging on food. i'm a better looking person, said pamela, america's wedding, and the world better off or well, presidential politics is finally taking center stage in america, and there is a whole lot of bluster who's winning. i'm rick sanchez. let's do this. the
11:01 pm
. so i think it was robin williams, interestingly enough, who once said that politics is nothing but satire and i, i can tell you that it's ever, it's ever that has been true in us presidential politics. it's this week. and it's only going to get worse or better. depends on how you look at it, i guess joining me now to go through the weeks of and so the top stories is the host of the critical our owns. but the radio garland nixon, garland let's get going ma'am. and i, i think of spectacle, uh, broadway show. um, so i tire, i mean they're all approp appropriate. let's begin with donald trump. you now you, one thing in the case of donald trump is important, right? you would think that his opponent is not laying out policies and that many of his policies are generally popular with
11:02 pm
a lot of americans. but then he would take that as an, as an opportunity that hammer away that what most people think would be winning issues for him. and i give him a lot, right? you would say that he would be talking about the here's economy you would think you were talking about foreign affairs, specifically his record and plans, if he, if and when he becomes president. right? no. the former president appears to be hell bent on on c mean, angry in general and talking about things. most people don't even know about this week. he started, he said he was going to talk about the economy he talked about. so feel or read mean i know her, you know her, but you know, tivo as in that machine that people used to used to record stuff. and he talked about couple of harris just looks again. but i say that i am much better look into her. i think i'm i'm a better person then. i mean, i don't know,
11:03 pm
maybe i'm wrong. got, and i want to hear what you have to say about this, but i would think that his advisors must be watching that and wanting to scratch their eyes out with frustration. your take i think at times i'd be to um the donald trump is the, the michael speaks of politics and here's what i mean. i used to watch box him. i can speak to the orthodox, he did everything wrong. he didn't move, move are right. he looked awkward and he was championed for many, many years. i think donald trump is on worth an eye doctor to understand donald trump is to also recognize that people are sick and tired of orthodox politicians in the traditional dogma. i think also when this is critical to understand, if you look at the democratic party and their rhetoric, one of the things that you understand is that they've lost their connection to the comment or to the average person. yeah, the guy that works in a transmission shop, right? i think what donald trump does inadvertently all be that,
11:04 pm
but i think what he does is he talks to that guy. and that guy here is somebody that when he's working on a card, cuz peter sticking out from the car, his buddies leaning against the pickup truck and you're just chat. and i think donald trump trump is real successful in accessing the consciousness, accessing a connection to the regular working class, people that the democrats at law. so i think it's successful for him in a different way in a non non political way in a social way. maybe, oh, listen, you are absolutely 100 percent correct. that the democratic party used to be the party. the working man today is an elitist party, extremely leaders party. just look at the people digits of the world and the others that they put out there. but nonetheless, it's gotta be making his advisors, mr. trump's advisors. crazy because of the opportunity that's out there. that if the former president focused on his experience on his economy and on other differences with that of miss harris, he could probably score big,
11:05 pm
especially with independence because you're right. he's got the common guy, but he needs to get those people in the middle who are still unsure. so she's giving them some huge openings by the way. let me give you an example of what we're talking about here. she, as she's refused to do interviews right. and she has refused so far to talk about her specific policies, the media finally shane her into doing so. so she announces she's going to get this screenshot. her economic plan, however doesn't go so well, especially when she spoke about how she would stop corporations from price gouging . the 1st ever, federal ban on proud price gauging on. so what does it say when someone is reading a word, but they can't pronounce? tells me 2 things. you didn't write it, you don't know what it means and you've got nothing to do with the idea of it. why am i wrong? it is that you're
11:06 pm
a 100 percent of what it tells me. that is nothing but a narrative. it also says that this person has no intention to move forward with these policies. this is what this is what we can say, and we can put this out. it sounds great. and then if we're able to, we will do what we did in 2020 with, we're going to give you a public option. we're going to address student loans. we're going to take marijuana and i'll schedule what we're gonna meet on and on and on. they did absolutely none of them and they intend to do not have them now. and i think people intuitively are picking that up and those who are watching her looking for policy, when they hear things like that. i think they also understand that they're dealing with the person who, you know, is just as they say they know the music, but they don't know the words. yeah. speaking of the music and the words, every 4 years, both political parties in the united states put on this show, right? and if you're wondering what a show has to do with politics or why there's only 2 bodies, for example, then you're beginning to understand what is horribly wrong is garlan. this is
11:07 pm
explaining and articulating well, i would add about what's going on with the american politics. we, we told you about the republicans and now it's, the democrats turn. usually on the 1st side of the convention, not a whole lot of people are watching. right. and, and that's where they put people that they really don't want to put on, but they feel like they have to put them on like in this case, the president of the united states name a country. and oh, that doesn't think we're the leading nation of the world without america. not a joke. think about it. i mean, literally, the united states of america. well, guess what? america is waiting in the world better off or, you know, talking about an old message from an old guy, he's screaming at the top of his lungs throughout the entire speech. and how the united states has to run and rule the world. nobody else has a right to do so. you know, it just, it, i know he's trying to sound patriotic,
11:08 pm
but that's not patriotism. it seems self centered. it seems braggadocio as it seems like, you know, just pure had gemini and, and i'm just thinking, i'm wondering what you think as you hear that what most of the other countries in the world are the other leaders of countries in the world here when they're hearing grandpa telling them that they have no right to determine their own future and that he does, the us tells them what to do kind of thing. it's just why, why go there? i think the other countries here and think, how can i get in bricks as fast as i possibly can, because these people have lost touch with reality. and, and the other thing is it gets back to what i said before. then we'll start with the, with the common man and woman. you know, people are concerned when it comes down to a year after year, people vote their pocketbooks the other night. what is it? 91? 8, george h. w bush had a 90 percent approval rating. he lost a year later because we were in a recession right now. you know,
11:09 pm
i saw something that i never thought that i, i couldn't believe my eyes. i was riding to the beach last week. me and i saw there was a little group of people on the side, the road black as a blackened in and they were selling, you know, ribs and chicken in scope, chicken cook and stuff on the grill. yeah. they've started at trump signed the giant trump signed of all the huge trump science all around them. i never thought out now with most of the time of the black community, even people that are going to vote for trump when you ask of their claim. they're not, but for that, so i think it comes down to just regular old. what were these guys doing on the side of the road? they were trying to make a few extra bucks to make ends meet more than what do you make by the way of the fact that the democratic party is starting to look now like it happened on purpose . they did everything possible to make sure that joe biden did not speak in primetime, and some people in the binding camp are now complaining about it because you know,
11:10 pm
it's funny how it didn't happen the next day when mister obama spoke or the next day. when mister clinton spoke, yeah they, they say that it is because too many people were applauding and it pushed everything back. so what do you make of that? i mean, it's almost like, it's kind of cool though, you know, but i think it's obvious to be quite frank. i think it's why is, i think they were apprehensive, they understood the joe biden, you know, whenever he talks their stuff and on within minds at any given time to get hung up on some words, he could make some egregious error that would, you know, reveal just that the bad condition that he's in and people would start asking the obvious question, why is this guy still president, if we can't even run for president? so i think it was, that was doing this smart thing. you gotta hide this guy for the next couple months until they, you know, however, it works and they can get them out of the way. yeah. so i must be cruel to be kind of shakespeare once wrote. i mean, it is necessary and they did it. although boy, it just, it, it, look, it look bad, it look bad. yeah. that it reveals the decrepit state of this,
11:11 pm
this party. and then they've got a president that they've got to hide. and they've got a presidential candidate that they also have to hide because she doesn't do any interviews. yeah. you know, donald trump can talk about anything more than an interview or whatever he gets in front of the cameras out. in campbell harris, i mean you can't find her, she's worse than joe biden to 2020 when he resided in the delaware basement. yeah, well, let's go back to back to back to the democratic convention. let's talk about that it same and go off without a hitch. this is post by midnight. it gets the capt grab up late. so that's i apologize. well, it seem like the person who made the best fits for carla harris was a kind of is expected brock obama. and of course, the lawyer was man who were there because these are the, remember these people at this convention. they're all the cool a drinkers. they ate it up. we do not need more years of bluster and bumbling and chaos. we have seen that movie before. and we
11:12 pm
all know that the sequel is usually worse, the the better story. we already say what you want. the man still has some great oratorical skills. the only person who i think watching, going back and forth between watching baseball and watching the convention because it's my job, who i think gave a better speech than brock obama so far, was his wife. i think michelle obama just to get it out of the park, your political theater and political oratory. but that's what this is. you're not expecting breakthrough news. uh, you know, leads or anything like that here?
11:13 pm
correct. you know, well, yeah, obviously obama speech was about um, pushing his message. i mean, he attacked trump and afterwards we saw a obama skewered from that all the news. and then he told me, he said things that the, by the administration that has no relationship to the, by the administration. i mean, to say that, um, you know, we need 4 more years of this wonderful by and, and it things a american association and things were so bad when trump was in, it causes people to reflect on that particular issue in the face. it one of the things that we're in the community, one of the things that get people get back to is the prices weren't bad under trump . i'm not saying from the did it. i'm just saying that, you know, he was there when it happened. so i just think they are the, you know, people tend to, there's an argument amongst those who support the democrats, that they're ahead and this there's to lose, etc. i don't think that's true. i think they were really bad shape. and i think that the, all the discussions about the rhetoric did they use isn't going to help them
11:14 pm
because in the end, people are going to vote on rhetoric. they're going to go into the voting booth and they're going to go to pockets. and no way the democrats when the people are building their pocket. so generally speaking, i think you're incorrect in terms of what the polls are showing us. the polls are showing right now that cala harris has taken a lead. not a big lead, still within the margin of error, but a lead compared to where this was, when biden was in it, it is a dramatic difference in the election. now i know what you're thinking. yeah, those are polls polls, james, are only in the moment. i'll tell you what can change things, what you and i are about to talk about when we come back from the break. and that is our f k junior, robert f kennedy junior, is about to quit the race. and it sounds like he's going to door style drop, and he may even take a position in the trump administration. how's that gonna affect us? let's talk about that. we'll be right back of the,
11:15 pm
after the end of world war 2, great britain decided to make up for his losses with the merciless exploitation of its colonies. the plundering of the occupied territories. 8 malaya, devastated as a result of decades long fighting, extremely hard. j. as in grew, and in 1948, the colonial administration was forced to declare a state of emergency. in response patriots, united because of the malay in people's liberation army. and began a guerrilla war. london decided to suppress resistance, georgia and mass the fort agents executions of civilian and spraying of chemicals. scale being and cutting off at these were the barbaric methods the british used trying to keep my la within their empire. the massacre in the village of baton
11:16 pm
gully, committed by the scots guards against the unarmed expenses because that particular stir, the entire male population became victims. trying to suppress the gorilla movement, the occupiers relocated 500000 people to concentration camps for roses through the board. its fruit, the patriots were scattered. however, the british experienced the strength of the malay resistance to the full extent. the british army losses in the la, where the largest since the end of world war 2. in 1957, the british empire was forced to recognize malay in independence. the resilience of them a late people put an end to the history of british colonialism in southeast asia. the the, the,
11:17 pm
the hey, let's get back into it. i'm rick sanchez, along with the garland mix and talking about what's going on this week and most of it politics, politics, politics, right. can there be an r f k junior difference entering into this race? so our f. k junior uh, uncle of the president and son of a man who would have been president of you haven't been assassinated. a prominent member of one of the most famous democratic families in us history will quit. the race is no longer going to be the 3rd candidate,
11:18 pm
possibly endorse donald trump. and be here, who's running may tell it. it's happening because he's been treated horribly. i mean nasty, probably the democratic party s d n c aligned pack that was created specifically to take us out has spent millions of dollars to take us out. they have unfortunately turned us into us boiler and, and we don't want to be as boiler. we want it to, and we wanted a fair shot at the dnc, made that impossible for us. they have this band shadow band as kept us up. stages manipulated polls use lothair against us, sued us in every possible se, leave even planted insiders into our campaign to disrupt and to create actual legal issues for us. but that's, that's amazing to hear her tell it. not that it should surprise anybody because we
11:19 pm
kind of knew it was happening. it's the 1st time i've seen it articulated in that way. and now you know, we're seeing some causality as a result of it. but what, what do you make garland of this situation in cool? how much, what would help drop if at all couple of things. number one of the new york times reported a week or so ago that the, that our k junior campaign had in fact approach the harris team to discuss the same thing with him. and this harris dean simply said, we're not interested. we don't want to talk to you, you know, they, it's a very binary way of thinking, the democratic party right now. you know, it's kind of like george w bush, either you with us or you with a terrorist. so they rejected him and he was going apparently to another to, to the trump campaign that trump campaign wisely has accepted his offer. and i think it's, um, it's gonna work out well. i think he brings credibility amongst a different set of independence. that the truck that the trump campaign didn't have
11:20 pm
access to and you know, in a close race which like we looked at the last few races, they've been fairly close up a couple of percent. i think this guy maybe 5 or 6 percent. well, what happens if he brings 3 percent to trump in a couple of different states mixed all the difference in the world in a close race? this could be, um, you know, a group is gonna have to try to dramatic effect on the race. you know, i was thinking about this and i was having a conversation with one of the smartest guys i know, and one of my dearest friends about this yesterday. and so i, i, we were going back and forth on this. my concern is that the people who are going to vote for him, we're going to vote for him because they hate trump, and they hate bite. and they hate harris. and they hate anybody who smells of an official democratic or republican party. so moving them to one of those places, whether it's trump, or whether it's uh, whether it's harris is not going to be an easy feat. many of them might actually rejected unless it's handled just right. it all it is, is i'm quitting,
11:21 pm
and i want you to go support this guy. they're going to go, no, no thanks. that's the reason we're in the middle is because we don't want to support anybody. so i wonder how that dynamic is going to work. you have some thoughts on that? yeah, and it depends on how far he goes. number one, is he going to go in the stuff bridge? a truck? is he going to make advertisements for stop? is he going to investigate any for drugs? are they going to do something very detailed research, which i would expect as a very detailed research to find out where he has the most now, which states he has the most support and of those states, you know, with the polls to see which people would transfer over so they could be very direct and very in, in, in going after the people that could be, that would be the most effective and making a difference. and you know, it's in a lot of these states, okay. he's got 5 or 6 percent. he could get 2 of them out of that if he could get a 3rd of those, if he could get 25 percent of those. that's enough change based on the last election. that's enough to change everything that's bigger percentage. the j b
11:22 pm
advanced props so far as the quarter. some of the bowls that we've been say, which, which i think have been a little bit unfair because of the media criticism of him, which has also been unfair. but nonetheless, it makes you wonder, i wonder if he's thinking about putting them in that slot instead, but that would be total conjecture and i'm not gonna ask you to do that. okay, so what i will, i will say this. there were reports very early before he picked the campaign that he had discuss that with our as gauging here in our state junior head said no. so in hindsight, if those reports are true, in hindsight, he may be looking back say i probably should have took it, but it doesn't matter. now we are where we are and i think our f k junior, if it's specific and targeted based on really, really accurate research. yeah. can make a difference in a ohio and a pennsylvania in a north carolina. definitely. i want to finish off with brock obama. i want to go back to his speech by the way, that there's no doubt that there's something infectious and seemingly genuine about his oratory. the guy can talk right. the gray hair doesn't hurt either, but behind
11:23 pm
a smooth veneer, really smooth veneer. there's a question of intellectual honesty. is he really being straight with americans or, or is he maybe just being a little intellectually dishonest stuff? i say that because when i watched them say this, i thought about that we shouldn't be the world's policeman. and we can't eradicate every client and then just as in the world of what america can be and must be a forest for good discouraging conflict and disease promoting human rights. protecting the planet from climate change, depending warranty to lose it sort of most americans. but you know, who doesn't believe that the rest of the world, every single thing that he said is the complete opposite of the way that
11:24 pm
many of the countries in this world are now looking at the united states. yes, that may have been true in the forty's, and maybe the fifty's to a certain extent. but today he almost seems full hardy saying those things because i could make an argument against almost every single one of them. and i'm not saying he should be out there, bad melting america. we all love this country. but it's just a lack of realism in, in, in that statement. you know. yeah. and in particular, in light of the fact that outside of the convention center, though they pushed them far away, there are a lot of people out there who are loyal, many of who have been loyal democrats for years, who are very unhappy with the foreign policy. there people certainly that are only happy with guys and they wanna immediate ceasefire. there are people out there holding up banners about ukraine. there are people who are unhappy with the by the administration's aggressive militaristic foreign policy. that the alignment with literally terror terrace groups such as isis and of course of neo nazis and ukraine
11:25 pm
. so what he said does not align with reality, ended up in the line with a significant number of the people in the democratic party coalition for peaceful minded. joe biden came in in the beginning and said, we're going to return to diplomacy again. all lies. and you know, we're doing the show before she speaks, but i'm going to ask you a question about something that's in the when shall we say that cala harris may come out tonight? and she might say that she a breached she has been able to reach an accord with israel to agree to a cease fire in gaza. do you think that would happen? and do you think it would have an, you know, i don't, i think what's going on with tony blinking really is that he is there to give the, to the, you know, to make it look like he's working. and so that they can continue. you know, amc said the um a divide inherited ministration of before so, you know,
11:26 pm
paraphrasing is working tirelessly to get a ceasefire in a, in, in the middle east. i mean, most people see that by the administration as benjamin netanyahu was lawyer, rather than and not biased group. and i don't think they're really pushing for, they just want to give the appearance of it so that she can continue on with a narrative. we're working for a cease fire. certainly they're not really. yeah. they're not really trying to get . it's almost as simple those that well. and the precedent, unfortunately, is not good because we've heard that before from mr. biden, and we've heard it before for so many others. and then in the end, after they propose it and there's discussion of it and people think it's going to happen. it doesn't happen because when it gets in front of the been it them. yeah, he says something to the effect of how do you guys think you are telling us what to do? just because we're taking your money, it doesn't mean that we have to do what you say. and that seems to be the way this is being run. can she somehow change that will? will she be different because she comes from an immigrant parents
11:27 pm
a different background. she's not an old anglo saxon guy. i don't know. i don't know. i mean, you have to be see, you know, i guess we give her the benefit of the doubt if that's the case and she does win the presidency. you know, i don't give her the benefit to do that because she's running for president. here's what i say. you are what your record says you are and she does not have a record. and if you go to her website, i invite anyone to go to campbell. that harris has website right now and look for any policy positions. absolutely nothing. it's just the store for merchandise, which is indicative of something. and that is that she represents factions that the ruling elite and the deal cons, and that she will be a conduit for power, okay? and that those factors will tell her what to do. the fact that there is, there are no policies on a website, is in fact a message to us. they called and said they're come and you just have to be patient . a great point, the 4 years that it's a great conversation and, and this is important stuff. thanks so much problem. we appreciate you remember to
11:28 pm
always be looking uh outside of your own box because the truth is we like to say they don't live in boxes. i'm rick sanchez, will be looking for you next time. the, [000:00:00;00]
11:29 pm
the, the russian states never is as tight as i'm one of the most sense community best. most all sun set up the keys on i need to progress be the one else calls question about this. even though we will then in the european union, the kremlin mission, the state on the russians coding and split the ortiz full neck, even our video agency, roughly all the band on youtube tv services for the question, did you say steve or twist,
11:30 pm
which is the of wanted to come here since i was 121 my grandfather told me his mom came from russia, but i was part russian. i didn't plan on staying this long. i was gonna look around . i was gonna see if it was for me that like it maybe i'll look at some properties come back in a few more years after i'm retired and then just finish out life in russia. but then i came and then i was like, i don't remember when i go home, that's how i felt about rush. i love it. i love it so much here that i don't even want to leave. i just want to travel around rush, i have no desire to go to any other country. the

31 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on