tv Documentary RT January 20, 2025 8:30am-9:01am EST
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zillow's in 5 days he lost 30 kilo's. how could someone lose 30 kilos and just 5 days without them doing something to him? the research the house violently and one soldier stood at the door and told me, we don't want to talk to you. we want montez, the officer asked me whether my, what us had any weapons in the house. and i told him no more what has also told them. i don't have any weapons. search the house if you want. they didn't find anything, but they used a false accusation of weapons possession to justify their actions. the keys saw salt and once for just 5 minutes, when he was 2 days old through
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a video call. after that contact was cut off completely, especially after the war started. when the war began, they prohibited visits, and the situation for the prisoners became very difficult, the t who requested more information about the case from these where the presence of this, the id f for nancy, i'm the hospital itself. none of them provide anything. concrete is the law and human rights for the best of my mood have not be the name of israel, is failing to carry out genji. ok, it really is. it is more specific that you are the so the 6 about the news we're seeing on most of the, i'm sorry,
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no. i mean, in terms of size, this person to be listed for from 6 small consul on the, on the school's up stand at the national right to you is really the 4th is the, the lines the most of the on the because is and small on the the by the treatment, the know you know, the dog because the medical and the glands really as i told you, is luck looking to them. the prism of what's produced is on the most of the low, the grieving, those or 2 of the most of the loads must be applied to the cases as well that arrives off of this. and he is out as always,
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the type of the company of us here on the opposite international will be back again in about 28 minutes or so. i hope you'll see you then the if you think about russia, what is your mind the picture? the bottom landscapes open up the fully lines. the last one does, can you imagine the, the discounts dodge the journey? the, the,
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you ready to come along the, in the year of 1950 for the united states of america engaged in warfare against the people of vietnam. the white house supported the corrupt above the governments of southern vietnam. in 1965 americans began their invasion following the aim to defeat the forces of vietnamese patriots. defend the gun was confident that the victory would be on the american side, due to its military superiority. however, the enemies during this war into total health for the occupants unable to cope with a good well as the american army started blanket bombing alongside using chemical
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weapons and naples, which burnt all alive. the village of my lay, where he 1969 american soldiers killed 504 civilians, including 210 children, became a tragic symbol of this war. all and all. during the whole period of this conflict, the usa dropped on vietnam more than $6000000.00 tons of bonds, which is 2 and a half times as much as on germany during the 2nd world war. in 1973, the american army under the pressure of the rebels, withdrew from vietnam, and only 2 years later did the puppet regime. and so i got involved. however, the vietnamese paid a high price for their freedom. more than 1000000 in vietnamese people became the victims of america in the dressers
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let's discuss this what the future holds of. busy america during from 2nd time with a panel of guests, i have a be retired left and then cano hed international, the secuity consultant, l rasmussen. i also how. busy could i make research or i need to match the secretary of the american come in his body for somebody loudly as well as the la roche movement, independent candidate for the us senate to represent new york dia and sat. all right, ladies and ladies and gentlemen, let me welcome you to our, to you right now. now let me start with you here. so john's approval ratings were around 46 percent on the he's 1st time and i've dropped by 7 percent since then. what are your expectations for his 2nd time? will he be able to win his adult and he's doubt us around and also hold on to his current faithfuls. how big is the task ahead of him?
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me, he'll maintain his current supporters and i think it wins some additional wants to we've already seen uh uh, some of that occurring. but um, but he's gonna, he's gonna have both the house and the senate will be um, republican controlled with narrow margins. there are some splits within the republican party too, so i think you'll have an easier time getting legislation through that. and then he did the previously, i mean have more support whether he'll get his cabinet approved quickly. that's another case is a lot of, um uh, i think they're all qualified, but there is a, there's some questions that are going on and there's a very, pretty hard push back on the democratic side in, in the traditional political side. so see what happens here, but he's got a very, very aggressive agenda and we'll get everything through that. he was probably not, we'll get
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a lot done. yes. but we also have to see what happens. that is some things i with something but don't agree with it. i think we'll, we'll find that too, but i do think he's gonna, he's gonna hit the hit the ground running in a my understanding and you know, and really i'm like a 100 executive orders assigned. now what he takes assumes office, but he plans on going out to to actually put personal view of the wildfires and that way as well. uh next or this week a crystal. but let me come to you here. why don't you put psalms victory down to whether the breakdown of the system or victory of the altar rich people standing behind him? we know now that there were millions of voters who voted for biting that didn't go to come to harris. and many more that switched parties either for trust or for 3rd party candidates, including just signing the green party. i think it's quite clear that the failure of the democratic parties policies,
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especially under president biden visa v. what was happening in gaza and also the deepening of the crisis in eastern europe as the war and ukraine. us support for you, greens was, was another key issue. of course we can speak about the economy and many of the domestic issues. but i think that the international arena playing a upsized role in this election and then ultimately brought a lot of voters for a truck. and you can already see the results. we have a ceasefire now that we didn't have or over a year. and of course somebody's claiming victory, i think that comes administration and his team certainly puts tremendous pressure on, on that then yahoo and his government to sign this agreement to end that ongoing conflict . and i think it's a historic with, regardless of who was able to do it, but it's clear that friends invited was unable to bring these boats to them at least, 40 eastern europe. all right, diane, how did some pull off such
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a huge political come back, considering he was almost written off following the storming of the carpet. all, how did you win over silly, solid blue states? i think many, many americans have been targeted by our out of control intelligence agencies. so i think there was actually a lot of sympathy for people who were rounded up after the events of january 6th. and then frankly, the biden administered ation was just absolutely horrible. and i agree that the international, the genocide for younger people, what was going on and gaza was a big factor. but also the us economy. i mean, the american people are being looted, looted, looted the price of uh groceries is out of control. uh, biting or whoever got the price of gasoline to go down just a little, but it didn't, you know, people are suffering. they're seeing
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a rate of disintegration that they did not expect. so what, what they did in terms of also drying out a certain and what shall i say, regular factor in the votes? they say that $12000000.00 fewer people voted or voted for the democrats. i have a strong reason to believe and actually know. and in terms of the state of new york, that most of those 12000000 votes that went for bite and in 2020 actually did not exist. all right, let me stay with you diane. let me just add this to you before i go to url. how does the president biden's own political feels as some people would see, you'd have an impact on all of this? a well one. and also there was a total loss of trust because people watched him being unable to find his way off the stage at press conferences. and then all these democrats came out and said,
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oh no, he's fine. he's so sharp. and you're looking at this and saying, my gosh, this guy is losing it. some of his major gaps where i think he called the president of mexico l. c. c. and i don't even remember them all, but they were going on for quite some time. so if the american people can see that the leader is failing, but his party rallies around to tell everybody that everything is fine and you're in the middle of one war after the next. i think there is a serious loss of trust on top of the fact that the economy was in terrible shape. for what arrow, let me come to you now. the president elect has repeatedly promised to lower the price of, of gas of food and i've already said shoals, but he hasn't given any details of how he plans to do that. how easy would that be? and would it be able to achieve that as quickly as people would expect?
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one of the biggest thing is uh the the price of energy prices that have gone up and, and kind of out of control. you've got energy prices, you've got rams, you've got the groceries of all gone up in energy plays a critical role in there so. so if he can, if he can expand the expiration and develop energy development that focus on that. i think that will help a significant lee and that'll, that'll kind of trigger out throughout the other sectors as well so. so that's, i think that's a big push. now really bring the prices down maybe a little bit. will it come down to where they were? absolutely not where we get in place and more under control. uh, yes i do. i do think so, but the other side is going to talk. he's got this big talked about here. so me, we need to be careful. i'm that could that could, that could come back and backfire on me. now,
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let me stay with you. earle and some has blamed the democrats ultimately for the weak economy, but how long would he came? i will, he'll, he will get pointing the finger if things don't stop going his way right immediately really takes time to move through. you've got the budget and the spending has been out of control the last several years. so we need to get a control on that. i mean, we need to look at where we focus our, our funding as well. we were sending hundreds of billions off on the other side of the planet in an area we shouldn't even be involved in um but yeah, we're, you know, we're getting $700.00 per family or per household in the hole in molly, from, from those catastrophe and and then uh, from my understanding is the same, but we're going to give uh california. so this is uh, i think he, he'll, he'll try to resolve this where that money is going where the funding is going. put
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more emphasis on internally within the us of it will it comes rapidly. probably not where this is washington things move slowly. i know he's got the most getting the ro swami in there, but, but uh, but uh, we got a better opportunity to work and we've got a large uh, big ship that were kind of shifting a little bit. so we'll see what happens in the same time we've got we've got issues in um, uh, out of europe. i don't think you're the us to support of, of some of our affairs initiatives or, or desires and objectives. so we'll see what happens the around the world but, but it's going to be a global type of impact, i think, uh and, and definitely he is not support of the of he wants to stop the killing. i, i truly believe that and he wants to kind of contain the, the recent um, uh, friction that we created intentions. we created with almost every major adversary.
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we have china, we've got the middle leaves, we've got the russia and ukraine conflict and i think he won. he wants to truly kind of top that down. i believe we'll see what that if that actually happens, but we'll see what. but i think underneath he really doesn't want to conflicts, actually going any definitely doesn't want to escalate them. all right, chris, of what let me come to you now about the spot being a below the from a well the family from has clearly managed to chum working class voters. but how hard would it be for him to keep them on his side? we've already seen that the democratic party has transformed itself into a party of now neo conservatives. we've seen, even dick cheney, who came out supporting, come with a hair as we've seen all of these sort of rules and goblins, the warmongers from other republican administrations coming to the democrats. and we've seen a much more populace and research in movement in the,
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from the base. now ultimately, whether that translates into working class victories. that's the real question. and we of course have seen sounds, overtures to unions and to labor issues. but there is a tension here between the traditional labor movement and ultimately this in search in a sort of populous move in that something that the held him up. i do think that there will be some economic victories for the working class at least immediately in terms of some levels of economic relief and bringing control to the prices that the panelists have spoken about. the big concerns are about organized labor and the various strikes that are ongoing and amazon in the other places. we know that the teamsters are headed for a big strike wave this year. as our other major unions, we'll see what that somebody ministration does to decide to the court working classes, especially trade unionists into the movement. but overall i think that the trump base is a working class and middle class more so than it is of the elite. of course there
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are millionaires and 1000000000 there is that support him? we know this very well, but i think that there is broad support and clearly over 70000000 people voting for him is indicative of that as well. i die. let me come to you. now let's talk about the issue of drilling. how about drilling? that is, it isn't really that easy just to turn the taps on us from full suggest without there being any consequences on the economy. probably that's not likely. if you don't mind, i just want to go back to one thing on on this question. of policy because i don't know if people have seen this article in foreign affairs. i think the guy's name is schroeder, who is speaking for the intelligence community and basically saying that we're going to try and sort of abide our time. trump is going to mess up our policies. we're going to have to jam him wherever we can't. i mean it's very revealing. it's quite lengthy and, and i think that he's going to have to move actually very,
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very quickly to get some things done. and personally, i'm also very concerned in this regard about the nominations of cash patel in tulsa, galbraith, in particular. maybe you were going to ask me that later, but i thought if it really had to be put on the table, all right, but maybe we, if we have more topic and talk about that, that 1st let me come to you christ of us. we say coincide is that the mainstream media that last could become american shadow president. what are your thoughts about his real power when his influence on us politics just been limited to his post on x, we know about diligence all the work that they are going to do and that he's going to do with the premises. i mean, i do think however that, that you lot has carved out a domain for himself, especially what i think many people are talking about. and i think something to look at, not only in the crypto world or in the electric car manufacturing world with tesla,
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but gain space exploration and, and really taking an outsized portion of those federal dollars towards the space x and moving a lot of masses operations into space, texas, and we could be seeing the beginning of the privatization of the united states government's role in space faring and space technology. and i think that this actually is something to be watching. now this gamble of course, will pay off because we're talking about billions of dollars going to must not only for space the technology also for lunching, working with the military and various aspects. and then of course, we have to talk about the knock on effects to tests and other things in the he's going to have a major role and it might be the beginning of a future political career. who knows, but it's uh, definitely the error of the event must great. now, let me come to you not big tech companies who bob trump already rely heavily on the grounds in the rags. and yet
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a key. my concern is cutting down the number of 4 and that is coming in. how those from keep both cams happy here or is that mission impossible? b, e o, you've seen him kind of slow a little bit uh must cuz support of, of, of tech, highly skilled people, immigrants coming in and, and support so that each one be a visa status. let's think you'll sway the trump in that direction. was there a fight against that? yes, uh politically. but the problem is, is that we, i mean we, we have fewer percentage wise, the engineers and capital people, those sometimes, um, sometimes you need that capability and, and also i think it's good if you provide a pass for them for, for permanent residency here as well. and, and, and even when you bring in students from, from foreign students and study that may be study in the, in the science and engineering area, i think providing
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a lot oftentimes they have to go back to their own country. sometimes i think that they would be good to retain their talent here and look at that. so there's a lot of things you need to look at immigration policy from them, from a strategic the perspective. obviously they're, they're concerned about illegals right now, but you need to look at it from a developing the workforce, balancing the workforce, providing diversity. because the people from the, from india, or eastern europe or asia, look at problems differently. so they may be in the us and may be all uh, educated very highly, but they look at problems and solve problems differently. and so if you can bring a diverse crowd, i think you can optimize your technical advantage. and, and innovation provide to support continued innovation as well. so it's going to have a challenge to on that side. but i think uh, i think overall the moving in that direction to encourage technically qualified
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a balance of texting to gwen qualified immigrants here. i think this would be beneficial for us. all right, diane, let, let me give her this time to expand on the nominations that you mentioned earlier to us think about as well as the cost botto. will some be able to approve them through congress? what are you interpreting from all of the things you see a well, you know, we have people like the former head of the f, b i n c i a william webster who am, i am very familiar with because of what happened. and in the case of lo, ruesch decades ago in here, he is a 100 years old, and he sends a letter to the entire us senate saying, i know the intelligence agencies, these people are not qualified. and clearly there's going to be a hard court press. i know there's thing many, many people at the f b, i are going to quit, which i think would be great. but uh, the democrats are dragging their feet saying they don't have the right background
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checks that they can't proceed. so i think they're going to try and delay and try and find something to prevent tulsa gabbert from coming in who she is herself, a combat veteran. she has a very clear picture of many strategic situations. she's not going to be inclined to lie. she's going to be inclined, you know, she cares about our troops. we've abused our troops and wars based on lies. i think trump wants to stop that, obviously. and cash patel similarly, who did so much research on the russian gate fraud and has a long list coming in of people that he thinks should be investigated. so there's going to be a major push back against those 2. and i think for trump to be free to be able to deliver on the kind of things he wants to do and to get these intelligence agencies which have given him so much trouble at health at bay. these are 2 really important
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nominations, and i think there's going to be a very, very big fight around them to all right, chris, of our into amazed at how quickly corporate world culture was dumped out of the main stream almost emitted by amazon, microsoft. net to end the rise doesn't mean it was never about morals. after all, i don't think it was ever about anything about substantial about trying to save the world. it was trying to create a new class of uh, sort of these professional managers and the d. i specialist who could come in and dictate different policies, but no, it's quickly disappeared. i think we're going to see a, a big attack on these sort of enterprise causes and ideas in schools. we're already seeing some of the states going after some of these endeavors. and i think it's really important for us to bring some balance back and bring some open mindedness and fairness into different conversations and to white and people's perspectives.
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and i think that some of these uh, forms that were, were taking place whether in the, in, in corporations or in government were really destructive the district. many people's lives does cancel culture. business was it was absolutely a more and i think we're going to see a big transformation these next 40 years in all sectors. the government, private public. now the what are all the people who will since yearly believe in the woke hydrology and trusted the democrats over this? what are they going to do now? cry a go to a safe room where they don't have to see any when they disagree with. no, maybe they'll get some help from the fact that a ceasefire has finally occurred, then maybe that will cause some of them to reconsider their uh, facility opinions to yeah, let me ask you the same thing. what do you think is going to happen now to all the
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work next? the everyone has seen it. what was almost looking like the gospel of the day. what's gonna happen now? i'm to be looking for jobs. so i would agree to cry that if you listen to some of these people, it's like they have tedious, prompt arrangement sitting room. and it's just like crazy. um, they'll probably flock to, uh, to, you know, inside the drum think tanks and, and try to organize thing maybe work with the intelligence community or, or other aspects in that area. so it's uh but, but yeah, that'll be scurried for jobs and, and doing whatever they can do, planning out the next. what's, what are they going to do over the, over this period of time here at the middle elections in the, in 2026. in 2028th. um. so they'll, they'll try to keep busy, i think,
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getting the but, but yeah they're, they're, they're definitely, uh, maybe take a vacation right now to kind of, kind of just kind of recover from the, the depression and the, and the stress that they have, they've created for themselves really so maybe of a case it is most likely, or are we have to leave it here at our thank you so much retard left and on connell and international security consultant ross most them. and i also had the kind of making research i having to not from the secretary, all the american companies body christ of i had loudly as well as lot roost movements independent candidate for the us senate to be present in new york. diane said, thank you all for your insights. really appreciate you. the on the holiday,
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we're looking at. i was talking to dreamland for dreams come true. we have approximately 10000000 people in california that are risk of becoming on house . looks good man. pulls up somebody for working to pretty jobs and still not enough because the cost of living also has increased coal bags and still by chance. last year long. the amount of of homeless rose by 12 percent in california. the hello and welcome to across the full board. here we discuss the wheel in
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the right here. this arrow and just hours relating it over his job. i'd have issued a series of pre emptive pardons, among them off the top of the field involved in the response to the time that makes global moves your action by the us ad lakers investigative. the store may have the capital 4 years ago. i will end the warranty, afraid i will stop the chaos in the middle east that i will prevent world war 3 from happening. and you have no idea how to us. we are going to, i'm pertains a new era. a global pause is just an hour before he is to be sworn in as $47.00. in the presence of the united states, we discussed with a problem guess where the defeated democrats go from here.
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