Skip to main content

tv   Going Underground  RT  January 10, 2025 11:30pm-12:01am EST

11:30 pm
media um i don't think, i don't think i would enjoy that even in the best of circumstances although, you know, look there are, there is a tradition of journalists doing that. but um i, i, i could never go over to the other side as the gate. i can't see it a baby baby hits piece, but more seriously amazing. the aspect of this election was that anyone who to the media mess mainstream. so cold media controlled the minds of americans. that money was the big decide their own elections, that the intelligence agencies control, the american electoral process. now, does it have any power? it turns out the people they want today, they want it iris and the american people were the trump a boy. i think they tried their hardest to influence the selection. i mean, we had incredible endorsements. there's this organization called national security leaders for america, which is a, put out a,
11:31 pm
a statement with $1043.00 a, you know, national security officials, including a long list of a former cabinet members general's admiral server. 200 of the latter. and look, it didn't have any effect and the media is constant. propagandizing not just in the cycle, but over the last 8 years. i think it's very important to point out that it had negative influence on the population. the americans have been told for 8 years that donald trump is a racist and you know, a fascist dictator in waiting, and yet he gained significantly with blacks and hispanic voters the day with independence. and so clearly it's not just not listening to the authorities, it's actively defying what they're saying, which is incredible. we don't know how your toyota files may have attenuated some
11:32 pm
of the shadow banding and sensitive on other platforms. but do you think it's clear that the trump administration will? well, trump administration's justice department, we'll have to bring zach a bug, send our rep to drive google youtube to some kind of justice for monopoly censorship, for reasons it's clear they are shadow banding people and restricting free speech in the united states. you know, i, i, i hope so. i hope there's at least an investigation. um you know that somebody like jim jordan is, is allowed to jim jordan, representatives for ohio and yes. in the house. uh yes, but, but um, but you know, there's the worries that i have and something that i said from the start about these tools that we discovered in the toner files is that they can be misused by anyone and the,
11:33 pm
the sort of history of this new movement towards was like europe's digital services act or the online safety act in the you, k is that they're designed so that who, whoever is in power can use them. and there's going to be an enormous temptation for anybody who sits in that chair to start to toggle things up and down in a certain way. and so i do hope the trumpet ministration, resist the temptation. so we don't know that it does sound bad, optimistic, and you know the deal unless because it close the advisor to trump. and so for here we go one way you'd be over the moon about this. well, i mean, you want suppressing my account. so i mean, i use is not exactly someone who is a police or repair that relationship, because yeah, i can see a startled expression with joe rogan when rogue, i mean rogan literally singled you out, and there's no doubt trump a single that rogan as being a really important factor in this wind for setting demographic to yeah,
11:34 pm
i mean look, he wants a complicated character, but they're all complicated characters and they're all subject to all kinds of pressures. and we don't know exactly what they're being told behind the scenes and what kind of um, you know, sort of deals are being brought to them by the security agencies, by advertisers who are threatening to boycott. we don't know the, the entire story. i do think that the trump administration or, or the donald trump and people like 80 vance visit least, brought the censorship issue out into the open and said they're opposed to it. which site is a huge start. and you one most good somebody who just just by doing the twitter files to this amazing public service by exposing the whole thing to, to the public. so yeah, i'm not on optimistic. i just would like to point out that there is, there are temptations for any politician here. yeah,
11:35 pm
you mentioned my data terry and country britain, which has the gross a censorship and no free speech and so on. i mean, trump immediately reacted to, uh, we had your colleague full factor on the show, the other week, immediately we had to disagree his time is labeled by the interference. attempted interference in the selections to yeah, i mean i, i hope he doesn't. my, my, my instinct is that donald trump does not like these types of laws. he hasn't said a whole lot about them. but there were some communications in the twitter files where he complained about certain posts and kind of sorta asked that they be taken down, but they were few and far between compared to the enormous quantities that were coming from the other side. and so yeah, i'm optimistic, i think, you know, absent
11:36 pm
a trump victory, we were looking at almost certainly at the united states, adopting something like the dsa or the online safety act in the very near future. i think that was coming up because in, in, in, in part because of the argument that the failure to regulate social media led to trump selection or worked or to something or to trumps come back, at least. so had he not one, i think we would, we would have seen some kind of cracked down pretty quickly and that would be the end of the day. we to maybe yes, me and then probably a whole bunch of other folks. and then we already have de facto censorship in this country. it's still an informal way instead of a formal way as it is in, in europe. um, but, you know, i think if, if uh, if there been a close contested situation. if there had been demonstrations were, you know,
11:37 pm
there are people out in the streets and, you know, they were telling us ahead of time that they were concerned about the possibility of misinformation inspired violence. so if there been anything like that they would have, they would have clamped down and i know they have legislation in place for for adventure . i always like that. so rumble would have been attacked, which the show goes out on. i should add a free speech really important when it came to persuading publics in your which as you say, they've got these low as all from a to tell it area and isn't already a very important though to get support for zalinski to outlaw the would not see in british media and united states media, do you think zalinski will face noriega is right, so that was saying straight the face of the, those who are the united states, a suppor to band elections and all position bodies and all the rest of it. and then our turn to the scrappy history, if it's possible, you know, trump,
11:38 pm
trump did approve some funding for ukraine in the past, but he is off. he has run as somebody who's against a prolonged war. and i think his supporters would be incredibly disappointed if there was not a swift negotiated end of the conflict in ukraine. it's part of his political identity that he's against the so called forever wars. it's not clear to me that his record matches up with that exactly. but he's at least ran on that. and i know from covering his campaign in 2016, that this was incredibly important to building up his support with kind of working class america. where if you go around to read states and you see so many people who came back from americas adventures in nor misadventures, and in afghanistan and iraq. and there was so angry about so many things. and that was a huge factor and electing trump the 1st time. and i'm sure this time as well. when
11:39 pm
we get rid of the phase middle class, which is the one, the democrats always love to use and start using the phrase working class in the united states. again, firmly and properly because i mean, clearly the media had no idea who is going to win the section, nor did the post as well. people start to understand the working class is alive and well, or at least they would dying and were i'm home before they vote at this time, right? in the middle classes in tremendous trouble and has been since 2008 and their faith after 2008 we, we instituted bailouts that were openly unfair. right. they were, they rescued the people who are responsible for, for the crash, and they left all, you know, people in the sort of middle class or lower middle class suburbs in rural america to be hit by mass foreclosures. they lost their life savings if they were invested in mortgage mortgage backed securities, which
11:40 pm
a lot of pensions pension funds were. and so there was an incredible well spring of anger towards the upper class or managerial sector of america. and what was worse was that when trump dot elected those same people began to use projective terms to describe those people. then we stopped using working class as something that was a good term and sunday. and they started using white working class, which became synonymous with racist. and i hope this stuff is, is over because we just went through a period of 8 years of essentially kind of narrow panic where everything was distorted. and i hope we can go back to just describing things as they are and talking to each other is normal americans. again, that's how you'd be, i'll stop you the more from the world and, and john, this involved a really strong contributing editor after this break. the
11:41 pm
look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings except we're so shorter is that conflict with the 1st law show your mind, anticipation. we should be very careful about personal intelligence at the point, obviously is to make a trust rather than fit the barriers. the was artificial intelligence real summoning the theme of the most protect this phone existence was on the
11:42 pm
after the nonce easy power in italy, states foreign policy became extremely aggressive. benito mussolini needed glorious victories. he decided to achieve his ambitions in africa. despite the fact that formally libya had become an italian colony back in 1912. the vast territories of this country were not actually controlled by rome. the nazis decided to put an end to this. but as soon as the religious order of the senate side stood in their way, the arabs did not want to submit to foreign power and put up fierce resistance. dividers against colonialism were led by the seats of this n, a side order. omar l move star, who was nick named the lion of the desert for his incredible courage. despite the violent, bombardments and boys in gas usage, mass deportations and the imprisonment of the local population in concentration camps. the invaders could not cope with the era patriots for a decade. in 1931,
11:43 pm
omar l moved star was captured and sentenced to hanging at the trial. the hero of the libyan people behaved very bravely and rejected. pardon, pursuing a policy of genocide, italy was only able to temporarily suppress lydia 18th of the entire population. more than 100000 people fell victim to their. however, just a few years later or the entail you enroll, collapsed in 1951. libya became one of the 1st countries in africa to gain independence. the welcome back to going under grandy, i'm still here with the award winning journalist and pulling that rolling stone contributing editor matt daisy, matt. we told him at the working class. uh because uh the issue. the single issue that this region where i was reading to you from is the guys of genocide and
11:44 pm
obviously that influenced the votes in michigan. but what do you think is the significance of the $100000000.00 from miriam adults into the trump campaign? i mean, is that the $2000000.00 mostly women and children question when it comes to gaza? what, what is the impact of that donation? mm. i don't know. i mean, i'm not sure that, as you mentioned at the top, this was a kind of paradigm shattering election in many, many ways. money didn't matter as much as it has in other elections in our past. trump was massively out raised by the harris campaign. and it didn't appear um that uh, you know, that is anyone donation, whether it was from a law center mosque turn the tide. i think it was much more the pastor of traditional media and the responsible institutional america that people are voting
11:45 pm
against. and so i'm not sure they're yeah. and so the, he's won the house and the senate and it's his last term. so perhaps he doesn't o people like a president, normally always people. but then we wouldn't even know about some of the atrocities happening in gaza without, ironically, netanyahu's friend is the most because he freed up. but x. what now for um, i think the great british politician george galloway. cool. that mostly a media. what is going to happen to all of that? will they just be able to die gracefully? or will there be some sort of uh, attempt to buy a trump administration to regulate monopoly media. but actually people aren't that interested in any more, but maybe maybe go back to fcc regulations that were there before clinton destroyed all your local journalism that used to prosper across the united states as well. i think, you know, when trump got elected he,
11:46 pm
there was this incredible moment where he he thanked a long list of pod cas that had been instrumental in spreading his campaign message . and that was a really amazing moment because it, it spoke to the almost total incidents of the so called traditional media in this country. they were really not a factor. if trump tries to crack down in any way on cbs or, you know, get their license yang because of the shenanigans with some of the editing and in the come all areas interview. i think you'd be making a mistake because legacy media in america is basically that we saw after this election, but they were unable to process the fact that so much of this country was voting against them that they had lost trust in them. there was an incredible thing that happened were uh, you know, abc is jimmy kimball, a comedian, rolled his eyes and told the joke about how ridiculous it was that there was
11:47 pm
somebody who voted for trump because tom alara's wouldn't do an interview with joe rogan know joe rogan, his audiences roughly $25.00 times bigger than the biggest cable audience in america. and for a presidential candidate to assume that interview is basically telling people that they don't want those votes. and so that wasn't silly at all. that wasn't a trifle at all, but the people in the press seems that these people are 2nd rate. and the reality is that the audience figure show that nobody really watches the many more than they don't really have influence. so better just doing more of them. yeah, and the celebrities didn't work or either of course, we all remember how trump enlarge this one, and he didn't drain the swamp in the 1st time. i know the bone pay always being spoken of. how does a pen to can pick, which would surely show he's a game helping this won't but,
11:48 pm
but do you think they will be more revenged this time? i mean, his support is used to john block them up about hillary and clearly crimes were committed by the bite and the ministration. dividing. harris administration and previous administrations. is he going to open up all the books and start to get these people for all live? what they did to him when he was out of office, because many people thought they would go to jail of a higher said one. while you you mentioned interviewing paul sacker, we did a story about the center for countering digital hate. and i heard from the trump campaign, who told me that in knowing certain certain terms that they were going to be investigated. i think the term was to the hilt, and that was just for starters, they, they intend to do a whole mess of investigations into the censorship complex into the intelligence world. and i think they're serious about this. and they,
11:49 pm
they know that their voters want mass firings of people from those bureaucracies. they're tired of paying taxes to support these gigantic bureaucracies that consider large parts of the country to be tantamount to domestic terrorist entities. and i think it would be a political mistake if they didn't follow through on those promises because that was central to his campaign. because then when it's what, what threats will be against even a politician. so elected by the popular will vote if he starts release, i mean he got released the epstein files clearly because he presented we being had some. yeah, he can release the j f k files, maybe files into the ukraine, more maybe files into all these things that were going on on the harris by the ministration. i think it would be a tremendous opportunity for them. it's been suggested on twitter that there be
11:50 pm
like a government version of the twitter files and some of his wealthy backers immediately jumped on the idea as a good one. so it would be great if that happened. yeah, i can't imagine that the logistics of that would be easy because there were to have to be, is a considerable amount of sorting before you let us, you can just do what do you want it. and just let a whole team of journalists run a rep, rummage around and, and all the files. but it would be great if they opened up everything from me on the jack is assassination. to, you know, the rationale for going to a rack for entering the ask in more for, you know, the reason for, for staying in afghanistan, for covert. i mean, there's a 1000000 things with the public has very legitimate questions about and it wouldn't be wise for trump to open up some of that information. and yet, bump a was at the rallies towards the end of his campaign, who coordinated assassination attempts against julia. massage if we can make
11:51 pm
because you're talking in a sense of like a government we helix a yes. and then trump had an opportunity to pardon assange and did not i, i, i know that he was lobbied very hard, but by some people close to him, to actually go through with that part and then he didn't. so, you know, trump is a complicated figure. i think this is something that people understand about him. they think of him either as the simpleton or this impulsive character, who just kind of goes where his emotions lead him in the moment. but he's actually thinking quite a lot about alliances and who he can afford to make angry and who he wants to keep close. and he's never gone all the way in terms of kicking the national security folks, you know, out the door. he's done some things that were really, really interesting likes, you know, for going the, the, the daily briefing by the c a and all those folks which is long overdue. but,
11:52 pm
you know, we'll have to see the, his voters definitely want him to take a bigger bite this time and i think for his own self preservation, he's now aware that they want him gone. so i think it will be a harsher confrontation. so kind of return to the image that some have of him is a real estate developer. and with roy coe and the new celebrated movie, the print is showing is mentorship of trump that he will actually go for them this time and doesn't have to have to can because what's, what's a good to lose him if he, i mean, unless they came up i mean, are of k junior's already being on doing the media around saying he's going to does all whole departments of the food and drug administration and effects a big pharma. and we know the power, big farm. i mean, the story is a big farmer whistle blows and horribly dangerous circumstances as the 1970s. it is
11:53 pm
a violence. but what's, what's so fascinating about this moment is that trump got in largely, i mean, his entire power base is not. you know, it has nothing to do with corporate money. it doesn't have to do with institutional america. it's not even really based on things like twitter, x, he just has massive numbers of people who voted for him and he doesn't owe anybody anything. and he can afford to do almost anything in terms of upsetting traditional constituencies and he would be shared for it. so it's a unique circumstance. no, no president has ever gotten to the the white house and not owed quite a lot this time we'll have to see. but he has opportunities here. and i, and i know from talking to people in this campaign that they're much more cognizant this time of the dangers that surround them from, for instance, to the justice department, the f b i n c. i a,
11:54 pm
so mostly the larry think of black rock said, you know, the election didn't matter at all. but anyway, it doesn't matter. so you'd, you'd get back to different this of this election really, really did matter when it comes to something different in the united states. especially for the working classes clearly because it's make or break from any of them as well. it may, it may not matter economically. i mean, he's got to figure out some way to, to stop the bleeding for people who are at the, you know, not in the, in the top 10 percent of the income curve because there's just a tremendous amount of suffering there. i mean, we, and we have these situations where private equity firms are buying up everything from starter homes, to you know, ophthalmology practices to, to, you know, what they call the, you know, the trades. right? so even plumbers are now owned by wall street, and they're,
11:55 pm
the american dream is dying quickly because nobody is able to make enough money to get their little piece of pie anymore. and he's got to find a way to reverse that. or else none of this is going to matter, but i do think culturally the election is already a massive turning point in american history. because it's a, it's, it's essentially expose the entire cultural framework of the country as, as having no influence. and having been lost to its own audience and that's not something we haven't seen before in this country it's. it's fascinating. and just finally, i feel like i'm asking this question and every single interview at the moment of all, i guess will, will they try and kill him? what was he? i try and kill him in the 2 months before january 20th. a split this way i, i will not be surprised if there are more assassination attempts and there's no
11:56 pm
evidence that this, that anybody inside the government had anything to do with the prior attempts. nothing. that's terribly concrete, but everything is on the table now. i mean, this is, this is maybe the end of everything for nato, for the intelligence services. i mean, there's a lot in the line here. so nothing would surprise me. let's put that in for an intelligence agencies m, i 6. what happens to them? i mean, already people who think intelligent services in europe are devastated. i mean, it's kind of, it has a, it's a bit funny. you're going to read it because they're supposed to know what's going on and clearly have no finger on the pulse of the late american capitalism in the united states, as to why americans would vote for trump. by the could the united states joined break, and i tell you something, know that it does not tell you that the, that these agencies that we, we fund so have only,
11:57 pm
i can't even answer the most basic questions about their own populations that they don't understand any they don't understand things the, you know, the, the average barber and a small town in america gets without any funding. you know, these people are so locked up in their own hermetically sealed bubble of stupidity that they, they can't see um, you know, beyond their own prejudices. and so that makes them dangerous and useless and expensive. so yeah, it's, it's so ironic, but it worries me too because, you know, there continued bureaucratic existence. is that stick that tell you be thank you, that thanks very much. a lot set for the show of continued condolences to those arriving the u. k. u s. u, i'm tall across here in this region will be back with a brand new episode on south to angel. then keep in touch with my, with my social media, if it's not sensitive, we'll country and job title going under warranty. if you are able to come to us and
11:58 pm
you know that it's undergoing undergrads who said that the, of course, the near worse less of stuff is a lot the way out of the g at the fortune of us and that sort of in a sports and she goes, never that was you the story invoice or a or a studio and i see for sure option that this be so for ship or if we started, the critics will go straight and you want you to where it was today, he's going to your welski territory, so this could save the natural cost of it. so form
11:59 pm
a ship portion was it was there for you me. think about a foot bar stool nearby, shopping in gold and i'm a site is close. i you was a go to the doors board, us at ocean and continued to go out and i get bully now. probably not sure the south be strong clear, but i still don't soccer. it could be so full, so comfortable at the blog post and just got a smith got skipped bluish boys coming down on the bus, which is still going to me. so i'm on the publisher. i'm kind of, i just, i'm a got the can you go, you're still not done. i'll go back to normal. yeah, i get to talk about it. there's dorski a whole bunch funny wanted to circle comfortable the some about on there. not. i mean, yeah. the desktop i do have tulsa model stuff, some of the the,
12:00 am
the, the sanctions imposed today because they will have profound effect kind of growth, very refreshing the economy and make it more difficult to conduct as wars is probably a gas prices could increase as much as $0.34 a gal who is going to have a more profound impact on the rush is ability to continue the act of the way it's acting conduct. on the bottom right there is us sign since on a rush or a set to boom, or i'm talking to the americans in the pocket put in georgia by friday here, taking his last breath to an office and leaving a damaged legacy behind details are on the way, nicholas, my daughter was taking the vin as well. busy presidential out of office for a good time, fletcher's quotes his life body and soul to the people of the night.

0 Views

info Stream Only

Uploaded by TV Archive on