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tv   News  RT  November 3, 2024 1:00am-1:31am EDT

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[000:00:00;00] the, the with 2 days to go until it us election day one day is activating its national guard, anticipating possible civil unrest. in an exclusive interview with our to you instead of 10 who worked under cover with russian forces and the dog bass reveals how he was evacuated by special forces and why he took the risk he did. and the purpose of it was to try to minimize the losses among civilians and our own soldiers and israel as a parliament passes to bills to band united nations relief and works agency from operating in the west bank and the gaza, affecting the millions of palestinian children
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the live in moscow, i'm rachel ruble. you're watching archie international. what's a look at the top news stories from around the world and the week gone by with less than 2 days to go in to americans, head to the pools, to pick their 47th presidents. the race to the white house is expected to be neck and neck until the last results are announced. will be keeping you updated with our special coverage right here on our t international. the us, the state of washington is activating its national guard in case of unrest. after november, 5th, the decision came after some ballot boxes were birds. there was officials also
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concerned about wider election related violence as election jitters hang over washington. some folks are starting to show their nerves, instead of focusing on the big issues that had us politicians have resorted to hurling insults. the current president took aim at the $100000000.00 plus supporters of donald trump, calling them garbage with the republican nominee. quick to respond. i like my garbage, the people that reported reagan were on my home, stay the door there. good, decent honorable people, the only garbage i slowed down there is your supporters is, is, is team and ization, the thing is um,
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punched too high in response to the offensive comments? dozens of people war garbage bags in safety best to donald trump's campaign event venting their anger at the country's leadership were not trash. we are what makes america america? i don't think the democrats are the leadership, not the people. know the leadership don't, doesn't respect. middle america, i am not a piece. the guy are rich. i will be taking out the trash and that will be all the democrats status tensions between the moga and the democrat cam simmer. the establishment has stepped in diverted to divert attention with videos of early voting, doing the rounds, featuring balance being ripped up and machines mysteriously flipping votes from trump to harris, the f b. i has pins the blame on a tried on test escape go. they say moscow is meddling by spreading. what they say is, take footage. the accusations of meddling, ironically, it comes from a country that according to some estimates,
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has attempted to influence elections and over 80 countries since the end of world war 2. the latest being in the country of georgia are changed shape, but as breaks it all down for us, it was a us ramp. so to both washington husband screaming at the top of its voice of election interference, we will use every tool we have to counter and disrupt the efforts of a ron. as well as russia and china to exploit our democratic system of government. we learned that russia devoted millions to wide ranging influence campaigns and literally generated hundreds of millions of online impressions for the yard is the us seems to be martin the same swamp. it's accusing older countries of swimming it . as the georgia dream turned into an american nightmare. parliamentary elections in the country, i've shown a decisive victory for georgia swooning party. despite the west, best efforts, a pro u opposition and
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a nation's president were quickly declared the election had been stolen with occupations a vote, a fraud, a real thing from the moment. washington of both was realized, their favorites went leading the race. international observers had not declared the result to be free and fat. we can time or contravention of international norms, a joint cold from international and local observers. so a full investigation of a reports of election related violations plus no wonder washington expressed its concerns even before the voting had been gone. we've made our concerns very clear about the trajectory of the democratic institutions, an election process in georgia and we remain very concerned about it. ultimately, the future of georgia should be up to the georgia people to decide in a free and fair process. and then a classic us lu washington has the site is doing a sovereign state, like georgia doesn't play the game. according to uncle sam's rules,
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they must be punished with economic penalties and the threat of funding withdrawals from when the ruling georgia dream party pos laws for the west end of each disagreed with repercussions soon followed the form subjects georgia's dreams. leadership has put georgia on a precarious trajectory that jeopardizes georgia's euro atlantic path and undermines us storage relationship. it is still draft legislation and i'm not going to comment on specific responses that we might take, or from previous specific responses that we might take water mains pending. legislation, but i think we have made quite clear how seriously we take this issue and have concerned we are about a dozen. and there the u. s. has even adopted a special law for georgia, but only georgia. that's following uncle sam's rules. the mega bar eoc provides major financial incentives for the georgia government, if it complies with washington's and brussels view of the world. now both of george's main parties agree that joining the e u is a goal for georgia, dream supporters say they want to achieve it without losing dignity. and the role
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values of washington does not like, not getting its own way we can together with a georgian people logically complete the european path. we started and become a member of the european union, will preserve united dignity in response to agents of external forces. still want war chaos and poverty leading to the destruction of the country. you already have to ask yourself, why do the us on the us, what's your problem with georgia becoming part of the western club? maybe it's because the current georgia government has passed laws protecting the country sovereignty. it's foreign agents law was immediately criticized by washington despite the fact that the us had a similar role in act on in place for decades versus the national security law. and the repressive tactics used to qual, legitimate defense, undermine georgia's democracy and the fundamental freedoms to which the georgian people are entitled and run country to georgia is long stated, golds reflected in its constitution of hero,
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atlantic integration and strategic partnership with the united states. so interested in no, soon after the controversy regarding the foreign agents law, george and ruling party published date, exposing the organizations were opposing the law. i guess was the vast majority we're using complex processes to can see the real regions of the funding. 62 percent couldn't provide exact information on the funding at all. and 97 percent of the organizations hadn't even republished a annual report. and it was all at the location from some politicians here to police it up to us is attempting to effect some kind of reviewing change here in georgia. i don't remember sanctions or the primary weapon when the us wants to bring somebody into line for another country its own to take such actions constitutes interference, intellectual process and an attempt to influence the will of the voltage. the time chosen to announce the decision to impose us sanctions against georgia and citizens
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is related to the upcoming parliamentary elections in the country and the desire to push their position because they see that we have an absolutely worthless opposition. of course, washington has denied all the allegations because it's all of a piece of prosperity and democracy, right. with the election a clock ticking down there is some bad news for the democratic candidate, comma harris. a new pull predicts she's set to lose a significant slice of her parties. traditional share of support among indian american voters. one estimated 61 percent of respondents from the communities still planned to back harris, but that's down to 4 percent compared to the last presidential election in 2020. and it's not just the candidate they are turning away from. but the party to 47 percent of respondents currently identify as democrats, that's down from 56 percent in 2020. and while her arrival, donald trump allowed to fight for the rights of hindus and the us,
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there are fears his protectionist policies will harm new del is economy. we spoke to former indian investor to the united states near shankar, who says if the us implements trade tariffs after the election, it will damage trade relations between the countries. the india us trained relationship is robust. we have trade in both goods and services. and if we do both, then the us is on not just reading boston and our largest export market, particularly for software id services. i think we would expect that with the trump administration tray and frictions good again, a much in the shop, but wait a as happened last time. and mr. trump is promising to impose 10 to 20 percent diverse across the board on all countries and
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shop foot dogs, some countries like china. and he's also going to india a guy. this is all. so i think we would have to breeze for a degree of unpredictability. in the trade relationships, we have to wait and see what president trump actually does. and how much of his announced policies he actually implemented and then walked we we are keeping a close eye on the us elections and we'll be keeping you updated with our special coverage right here on our t international. the
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v is riley. parliament has improved 2 controversial bills to band the united nations relief and works the agency from operating on is rarely territory and areas under israel's control. agencies. commissioner general says the ban will severely impact palestinian children these bills increase the suffering of the palestinians . i know nothing less than collective punishment, it opposes the un charter and violates the state of israel is obligations under international law. it will deprive of $650000.00 girls and boys the from education putting at risk an entire generation of children. a sense the start of the war in the enclave. the agency as established a refugee camps for those seeking shelter. despite that many of those sites designated as safe humanitarian zones, have been repeatedly bombed by the idea of in september of this year, 6, you and workers were killed in an attack on a school of sheltering refugees in the news that write down our tapes,
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middle east bureau chief maria from ocean that explains the importance of the agencies work. a man was 72, was born into a family of palestinian refugees who lost the home. when israel was established, she grew up in a camp built by the un relief and works agency to shelter. people like her parents who had fled the violence. she attended and, and there was cool, gave birth to 10 children with under was health care support. and now relies on the agency for medical care and food my wi fi or is that other was closure or would it be a devastating final blow for her? and people like her normal connected to an ad. honestly, since i was born, i have known on why without them we would be devastated. we couldn't manage on our own, my own what is very beneficial. we rely on them a lot because our financial situation is very poor. this is a rad occasion. it's a death sentence. there is
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a death sentence in existence itself. but this just increases it. money wise, one is more than 870000 registered refugees living in the west bank and part of nearly 6000000 displaced palestinians scattered across the world. we're here at the columbia palestinian refugee camp right next to jerusalem. s one of about 20 cams proud across occupied palestine with tens of thousands of displaced palestinians have been living for decades like many other camps. this was meant to be as temporary shelter, but as refugees havent been able to return home temporarily has turned into permanent. when under was stops working, everyone here will feel the impact, the campus home 219000 officially registered refugees up to 1500 students attend. and there was schools here for free. doctors at under was clinic, receive dozens of patients daily. for some of them,
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these places they lost hope tight. and thankfully we benefit from this service personally come to the clinic, the doctor as a nurse to see how good. and we benefit greatly from over. not just a little further while shuts down with a lot of work. why would i buy medicine? would i get my treatments that have diabetes, for example, how would i get my medicine a little while headquarters? they needs jerusalem for money saving before that problem ins. decision to the office has not been fully operational, as the saw, it has to be in a frequent targets of protests or is un demonstrators insisting on the agent's disclosure several months ago. it was such a blaze and temporarily shot down. now with the legislation passed, it might be closed forever. is what was decision has sparked global condemnation before and after the vote. the ban underwashed strong warnings were issued, including from washington. but it seems that what's done is unlikely to be undone.
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the agency, operational, for nearly 75 years, may face its final 90 days before the band takes effect. already if an ocean isle t reporting from occupied palestine, we spoke with an rose regional chief of communications for the middle east end of north africa. juliet to my she says the ban on the agency's work and gaza will have a huge knock on effect for multiple other organizations. this same down insane. lucky to have severe consequences on the lives of people who depend on and for the issue, survival on the human internal probation by and large because many you'd be, lot of nation's organizations are working in government, but they can't afford the logistics for the coordination. and for the delivery of the systems may depend on the 18th, the evidence that on that is the backbone of the humanitarian alteration in gas law . we are the largest humanitarian agency working in golf signed. we provide shelter, we provide food,
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we provide primary health care to people who need the smallest. we used to continue to work began provide education to over 300000 boys and girls that cost a 1000 straight. we do the same in the occupied west bank over 40000 boys in good school to in the schools. so the question is, who is able to, if it's on to replace this agency and in level on the humanitarian situation is worse than in the 2006 war between has belonged to israel. that's according to the u. n. c, monitoring agency. the statement came as the lebanese health ministry updated the death toll and the complex 2, almost 3000 people are to his favorite based of correspondence tips we visited, the side of one of one is rarely strikes that's killed 9 people earlier this week. in this building, there were 9 civilian civilians that were killed. you can see around here we have
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uh was left of a computer game. there were children's close, it was right behind us. this is the building that took the worst of the impact according to the lebanese health industry. some 25 people were also wounded. the call pump behind this as well. all of the causing that were destroyed and i'm, but as ways what we're seeing now as well. so i'm just being handed here is a photograph of a child that was in this building. this is a family photograph, the other family photographs nearby. so this again is, is al, striking, a, a residential neighborhood, a busy sub, many of the people that were here had fled from the worst. and the most intensive, these righty, bump up and in the south, hey, they sold, i was safe. if you come through to this pops is difficult to get in, but this is clearly what was a child's bedroom. and we can see the the toys on the floor and the blankets.
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this would have been a place where a child felt safe. the lebanese health industry says now that maybe $2700.00 people have been killed since hostilities the gun on october the 8th last year. with nearly 12800 wounded dot toll continues to rise with the seas 5 seemingly out of reach. this is the sweeney fidelity insight on the us citizen, shared intelligence with russian forces for 2 years, while living in ukrainian controlled settlements and that on bass. and he was recently evacuated by special forces to moscow. after recent russian gains on the battlefield, daniel martindale sat down with ortiz room on customer of to talk about why he risk his life and the dangerous endeavor and his plans for the future. you can see the full interview in 3 hours here on our to international for now. here's a preview. i did do my good due diligence to keep chats and my
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telegram deleted. keep the cash clean. i took all of those precautions as necessary, but nobody ever checked my phone during that whole time. but i was in the village. i'm very surprised by that everything. everybody's really surprised by that. probably the us passport helped a lot. and the fact that i really was helping a lot of people in the village. everybody was happy that i was there if you needed to get your roof fixed, patched up after some kind of damage from the war. then i was the 1st one who would come and fix your roof, or your windows help people with their the gardens. and so everybody was happy that it was there. and i was friends with people who really were waiting for russian to come. and they were enter and were friends with the local government. so i had
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good connections. you provided quite a quite a lot of information uh to the russian soldiers. what type of information are we talking about? holly can say is that the main purpose of it was to try to minimize the losses among civilians and our own soldiers. these mercenaries that are fighting for ukraine and killing a russian soldiers and a russian civilians. what is the main, what motivation or perhaps so we can talk about the range of motivations for all of those people. if they're american, i would expect that in most cases, they just believe the propaganda. the american is really not going to be interested in the kind of money that i believe these mercenaries are being paid. mm hm. it's not enough to make them risk their lives to make more flipping burgers, right. you probably could make more fighting,
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not being part of the american military. right. so why would you go fight and ukraine? like they probably believe that they're the white knights, but they're defeat. i would say to them that before you go and fight some or somewhere, look not only at news from your own side, but also from the side that they try to scare you away from. if they demonize someone that what their writing and telegram is from shaking himself, the likelihood is that they are state themselves. and what they're trying to scare you away from is the truth. read both compare and maybe we'll understand where, where truth is. this week or 2 sat for an exclusive interview with former
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russian presidents and current security council deputy chairman, dimitri method of my colleagues were associate, discuss the key global topics such as regional crises and the threat of world war 3 . with him, you can see all of that on our website on a late note music chase, the iphone and even ancient civilizations also came up in conversation. take a lesson the if i'm not mistaken, you are the 1st person in russia. mr. madrid have to have an iphone full. i think we know it is an iphone 16 or something like that, but you're the 1st person in russian to have the iphone for. um, has your view of apple changed at all, or are you still a big fan? you're still using it, you meant to display the look just like other global leaders and digital gadgets. we can mention samsung and several chinese manufacturers who have also reached that level. and this good,
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very solve the technology and apple makes good devices too. but there's one thing we need to understand and apple services, country in the literal sense, it makes money for its country and helps it's intelligent services. setting that aside, apple makes good devices. you'll start listening to music on your phone and we'll kind of i, i know you're in a bit rock uh, classic rock fine and woke up what kind of what kind of music listening to these days. mr. medina? yeah, which look is just like anyone else. i'm obviously not getting any younger, you know, when you're really young, you tend to listen to powerful loud music. indeed, in my childhood a news i used to listen to classic rock, including the british classic rock music, which was at its peak back then. it's good solid and use it there, all kinds of bands, of course, but i listen to them nonetheless. and then i got a little older and switched to jazz. as i got even older, i began to appreciate classical music. overall. i enjoyed various types of music. i see it as a way to relax because well, it's like when you entering museum,
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you can't just admire classic paintings all the time. sometimes you need to look at the impressions too. it doesn't matter what resonates with you more. you still need to explore some of the same goes for music. you should listen to different genres to truly enjoy it. although we have a lot of great classical music and jobs available. now, there's definitely plenty to listen to. most of these. yeah it's, it's, it's, it's quite, i think it's quite noise that we build. do we get the more conservative we become and we start to, you know, as you're right, you're young, you listen to the heavy stuff and then you get older. perhaps you become more conservative, but before i got into the news business, mr. madrid, if i was a before i started working at cnn before that i was a rock radio, d j on the gulf coast beach is a florida t k. one. i want to be rock station. i was really into a rock kind of with all the big bands and it was a, was debauchery was great fun, you know, but i know you like to classic rock. so i'm gonna, i'm gonna give you some rapid fire questions here, and i want you to choose one or the other. are you ready by go ahead. ok.
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steppenwolf or ccr. creedence clearwater revival. criminal creedence. clearwater revival, led zeppelin or deep purple. uh, double. not deep purple, but led zeppelin, or just as great icdc, all metallica. i prefer a cdc oh, nevada or rage against the machine, a nirvana, nevada. on a side note, because you have such an interesting history and background in politics and international, this stuff and the other who killed j f k. that's for the show up with somebody that i have missed. it looks like your next question will be, what are they going to open the hangers where they keep the mummies of aliens, right. that may be the sale i'm. yep, i'm not going to answer that. it's a big secret. that's for the assassination of j. f. k. i think it's a great tragedy for the american people get as well as proof that many things are controlled not only from the top floors of the great building,
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which is the government by other forces as well. so you mentioned a deep statement. nobody has disapproved this version so, but i don't know really, i think it's up to the americans to try to find out the truth about the sat into the room. so be too interesting that but what about extra terrestrials mister memory at this? i know people in the past of asked you about aliens and i think you commented once or twice, almost seemingly exasperated. oh, go watch the field, men in black. maybe that will be a good description or a good representation. do you remember making that comment? which you would you expand on that at all? all aliens among us, all of a walking down the streets. no problem. just move this, but at least we should just take a good look around us, maybe remove some people's masks and find characters like those from men and black lurking behind them like it's i personally associated on. so let me put in this case if you want to, i would need to pull out our guns and stand up for the people of our data for you
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though a stick depend on the better idea. that's right. the witness. and you know, the older i get mr. maybe a different, i'm sorry for keeping you just for a moment here, but the older i get, the more i understand that the narratives that i've learned growing up have to be re learned or question at all to the manager is question more. and the older i get, i find myself trying to re educate myself. i'm looking to talk about extra terrestrials. but if you look at audiology, this seems to be, and i, i love controversial archaeology, but that seems to be evidence of pyramids on every continent. some reportedly that they say that's a john pair of it in on topic a. they say they're a pair of aids under the water under the ground. you've got the parents in des. uh, it seems perhaps according to some audiologist, like graham hancock, there is a culture of ancient pyramids around the world. we don't get told about this school doesn't tell us the governments don't tell us. is it possible that the history of
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humanity is far longer, far more complicated than far more in depth than any of us being told? you have the wish, the menus, namely, i don't think we even know 5 percent of the history of our planet. if only because we haven't been around for a long time and our written sources are few and don't go back more than a few 1000 years. that's why there's so much interesting stuff still left to discover. the only hypothesis i wouldn't want to turn out to be true is the one which claims that life on earth had existed before us, so that it had happened on our planet at some point during the 5 or 6000000000 years since the formation of the source system but went extinct as a result of mistakes made by the biological beams that live before human. very so the theory goes, mess things up so much the all life on the planet died. i really wouldn't want to see proof of this story. i think the point to me what you chose is so tempting to, to spend more time with you. but i know i content dimitry and holiday which madrid
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if the former president of the russian federation, the former prime minister, and the contact vice chairman, deputy chairman of the national security council, the russian federation has been an absolute pleasure. thank you very much for your time. thank you. thank you. the can't wait to see the rest of that interview. all right, just say what the sir on archie international have next them real depart, asana and american political scientists formerly on discuss how he was. public politics operates in 2024, and for what it takes for grant. the

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