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tv   Inland Visions  RT  March 7, 2025 1:30pm-2:01pm EST

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tional god is together with the federal security service of some documents. there was information uncovered, the children were vaccinated in this facility. there is evidence of international european organizations being involved. all the data along with all the documents were passed on to other services in order to continue the investigation. so do you know, among the documents found in an orphanage and lucy johnson, there was a list of over 20 children who were administered injections of unknown vaccines, brought by foreign medical personnel. when we lived under ukraine, all employees were forced to vaccinate. there are 2 vaccines, i know of the cold hydra madera and they were full of the vaccines, the contents of which were unknown to us. we would not allow to work without being vaccinated under threat of being fired. and we will also told that we have to vaccinate the kids because cove it is spreading. i know of one case where a mom died afterwards, but we know nothing about the face of those kids. the children were sent to europe
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and their trail apparently went cold. instead of all the documents that medical cards and personal information, when moved out of the country together with the kids, here is a list. this is the only thing we have found off to all the chaos that took place here later. at least 3 people inquired about what had happened to them, nephew's grandchildren, to find out any small piece of information about the location of the kids. because it says if the kids have vanished, they would basically stolen, taken away to level and then to the closest neighboring country. they're off to the face of the children is unknown to easiest russian law enforcement agencies are working to identify the criminals. so the security service has documented the crimes of the ukrainian authorities over the past 3 years. and it took rascal, there is also an ongoing search for the participants of illegal activity and shelter. and in the library in the settlement of rubies nor keys ukraine was involved in spreading anti russian extremist ideology. after the collapse of the
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soviet union keys made efforts to glorify ukrainian nationalist who fought alongside nazi germany. this trend intensified after 2014 libraries began widely distributing books that glorified nazis and distorted historical facts. for example, one book discusses ukraine struggle against the so called armed aggression of the russian federation between 20142020. there are many such books here, russian federal security service officers and continued to gather evidence documenting how the ideology of radical ukrainian nationalist was included in the ukranian school curriculum. this is a ukrainian history book which was written after 1991. and if you open the header, you will definitely find the heading, the fight of the ukrainian nationalist liberation movement with the soviet repressive machine. a history teacher at school number one and separate don't ask. states that teachers were compelled to impose fabricated history on their students
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. which this literature arrive to schools of our city since 2014. the goal of this kind of literature is to create a rift and grow aggression towards the russia and you, the pretty much teachers were forced to work with this literature. mission, of course there were teachers that am to go past these kind of topics, but such teachers were taken for a talking to them in order for the teacher to realize how they have to work with the russian national guard. officers are collecting books that glorify radical nationalist of ukrainian and surgeon army for subsequent destruction. moscow has confirmed that the didn't that's if occasion of ukraine is one of the main conditions for any peaceful resolution of the military conflict. star going, how dire are to look, ask republic rusher. the another up for this hour, but our programs, they are just getting going see what's showing wherever you're watching from today . right off the break, this is the
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let me mention all 5, very a mike comes up. the images of alice forest. barnes said, of course freezing temperatures. now while you might have the wrong sort of any of those things, they failed. so you're a different sites. the type of area, one with ancient traditions, may cutting edge innovation the way to get it on the plans that the positions of siberian indigenous peoples with the rates of modern homes increase the truly unique style and state. let's get to know that
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the local, the twist on traditional ethnic music is just brilliant. what is the secret behind achieving this unique sound? media kind of this to see could be all, i think the secret behind our son will go to that as a new do is that our band brings together very diverse people with different world views. musical tastes is, of course, can background and coming from very diverse backgrounds, music as we pretty much have each member reads a distinct voice, which results in a unique musical problem. just thing we are the cause of. and you know, there's more than hides your story. tell us, do you play your own stories or do you play one's green, pass down through the ages. we have, we performed both our own material composed by ourselves. could keep as well as songs that are rooted in the culture of our native republic. basically it was on is
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that sometimes when i borrow a sol, solved co and wanted to stick somebody in a quote and develop, it's in line with visual substituting. mm hm. but our main focus is our own material. okay. and what was it so that you just paid about what was the story behind that one? it's quite interesting. naturally it gets on up almost all the music was written by our band at the delivery, etc. serial tongue twister of what. what i thought was, it's an unusual combinations by napa, which are certainly very catchy. and you have a thought about mixing and also bits on putting your own twist on say famous songs by queen or pink floyd. unless you're practicing. we've played some flooring, rock songs or films, we reinterpreting them and i'll run style, edit instruments, etc. can you speak to the valid keep instrument that overall however, we prefer doing our own using language. so it was a rather than covering someone else's material because because this is such an hypnotic effects, i would say about your music. what do you think causes that?
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and do you think that some of the origins come to your concepts to enter into that social con state mean a cousin familiar couple who we believe it's where people who are already familiar with uh, getting the most of them recorded mostly come for new motions to feel the energy of we and then to a sudden stage one, which we try to create without songs i think. mm. and do you think that by singing in these less unknown siberia languages that you'll in so many limits in your potential audience? the someone's in and you up with the most so we don't think so. that's when we're dealing with, i mean they've been using yeah, we do these attributed to local cultures. the lift you take ramstein, for instance, the wells name is but they sing in the room language just as whole can about other full bands. look at an extreme of if i feel like they are a german van, replacing in german and use folk instruments for the noun around the globe. all i
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believe using our own language is a plus. mm hm. and according to tradition, each hides your story. tell that most prestone their own song go tail. what do you think you also will be? what this may be presumptuous on my part because of the one i think our title song also the name of the band who were in a car and then couldn't be it. it's probably the most powerful truck was composed entirely by oh so, so far, excellent. well, thank you so much for your time today. i'm braving the cold side there you get the we've come to the heart of the side, baby and forest books by someone local inventor. that doesn't mean well have to do with us all the latest. most comes because he's created the world's best 2 or 10 complete with a i was just checking out the
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nikolai the, to the even keep dwelling notes remains on change since the 19th century is simple . it's mo bile. tell me why did you decide to modernize it now? you're speaking, that's true. it's true that all dwellings have remained unchanged for a long time. and pretty conservative. the mountains thankful really considerate to me, the was more important. the was, they said a native and then he language he is dying out because there's no natural linguistic environment. you know that what, you know, when i went to boarding school, we started my native language because when i moved to the city, we only had russian and english classes. we seem to be there was no environment where i could continue using my native language. so good in the payment, the smart to would tend, is about creating
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a wedding that was taught you finish it so you'll be able to communicate with it too much and control all of its devices. and of course, i've had to edit that submission number one that i have to move. the 2nd one is creating an artificial linguistic environment from my native language. i want it to be available anywhere in the wells as simple as that. so simple. what do we surrounded by these days? uniforms, smartphones, small speakers, tvs, robot vacuums, etc. so say hold on, but what they think that i want all these things to speak our language. so how does the smart to work? which technologies have you installed here to make life easier? mostly get to look at this quiz thing we've installed. i technologies, it's based on data sets on the phone with an usher. many of the devices inside this tool can be controlled with voice come ons. you can use the of and key language to turn the lights on and off. for instance, you can also tell, let you, i'm going to boil some water or just the temperature. we need to perform of that as
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possible. nikolai, can you demonstrate the technology's voice? please, emma, who the cool like an easy to and the lights off for the lump. i don't i can which i can you to the back on again to collide alyssa? lump again, or do you me, you know, all these technologies as far as i'm aware require internet access and nobody people like to have in key by their very nature often since will come in remote areas where there's not even basic communication left alone for the internet how do you plan to get around? nikolai, at the username may come as a surprise, but they have the internet. steven, in some areas where there's no cell phone coverage, and nobody peoples, such as the increase in the crust, they, us territories use satellite dishes. even though what we did so we developed a unique, easy to assemble dish to guarantee reliable internet connectivity. it's portable, this convenience synchronized solutions for mobile internet already that what we
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need to do now, please make the more widely adopted in demand. so you'll modernization of the traditional truman's being warmly received by the event q people them or suggested we said right now we're working on the concept of a small to switch his sheets. we have all the technologies we need, it's all possible. well, you can use voice control for any kind of device, consolidated, any plug in and the goal is now to find out what reindeer herders actually need to needs to be a single organism, as well as be easy to put together and disassembled and highly mobile. then people would want to, so that's why we need to go that route test drive it myself. well, if i want to learn more about what my people and other indigenous people need, now you've already mentioned that you've created an app capable of translates in the into language. is it just to translate to apple? can you also learn the language with it?
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we see also that even though it may be new for living and those of us, we've developed an apt code. i am a lead, understands russian and replies in the event. the language with the help of a i it can go beyond just the language was most you can upload folk little music, anything we treasure and care about, which can also be interesting for the rest of the world, the cause them they can help us. but on language and culture, just the values that my people have me do this, you can use it to the language as well. that's what method is the app it must be correctly. typically, which means we need to teach it how to process and synthesize spoken n k. we need native of increase because i never quote invoices to do that. can i give it a try to see if it can translate my russian into the of, into language. clicking of a little sketch on, on russian everything. he translates a narrative. i love you this in the body of the documents to turn i say something in motion because sure. is that okay,
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a preview. i yeah, i'm an english man and i'm inside the area. you homeless little doing me wish. awesome, thanks. take a like a more road in nature. speakers off, different key plate in the developments office out. my thinking is a good movies. new native speak is a key. if you want to create an ideal app that will tool properly go to, they help tag data of the machine learning and check tank system. everything must be vested by them. use it also a mission, like teaching a child to tool, right? if you say, well talking about children, how wide spread is the language now and is it still passed down from generation to generation will do to town. and i'll be frank with the c as in key language is dying out as if it's not really passed down to the younger generation. now when a bit of a, it's a, the solution is a good help preserving key, which i can go to brazil, beijing, china is nearby. you can turn on the tv or a small speak of in my hotel room. and here my native language doesn't have to be
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in the area where having people live close to it. i also think that i think he should be used in creative products such as video games, music, etc. so that there's also an entertainment component of the day. i can help the children one things that are interesting, if we can get them excited to this will be able to pass on our language and culture down to the next generation. and a lot of the ways do you think technology can help preserve dining languages and what plans do you have for the future? does it show us i've been researching this or, and i know there was some great examples of language revival. like the crucial thing is to have recordings, a dead language combi revive without voice recordings. you can feed these recordings into a computer for machine learning purposes for making something that's not a live speech. a living language. technology has a lot to offer. somebody can help you present your language and culture around the globe will show the best in your future endeavors. is nikolai. thank you very much,
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especially the shane. thank you. the from nursing the sold to feeding the party ingredients homesite various wild forests of finding the way on to the tables of some of the countries find these restaurants. let's meet the shift into extinction. recipes info, new ways and they collide. what you'll be cooking today off of all of these ingredients. i can only confidently name the olive oil. the salt on the bed when you wouldn't even today when cooking a simple no very important typical siberian dish cold. so good dye and stuff is the is made of roll fish a far. we use neil not that great fish spaces from the annotated river which has been very popular since the 19th century representative. everyone who came to the crest they asked can we can with order neil and the highest meal,
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the soup. you know, i'm a so good day. you name it well and it remains the main local fish to this day. i look very much so we take, nailed us, sonya and sold peppa and a few other ingredients so that the goal could we add fish, prost based chips for a crunchy text you a tomato. and ross break dressing, and a few decorative elements. some of the list of can you show me how he's made please? this is our program. and what would you say of the main features of siberian, christine? i'm gonna go with him. do you mean siberia, including all contemporary siberian cruising as we imagined at most of the before the new cycle in the modern siberia increasing the corporate. yes, it was no such a concept as contemporary siberia, inquisitiveness 5 years ago to somebody. so it's something we have to come up with . suddenly it's a mixture of a few major themes. is but we use old recipes and traditions by zillow, but what you, since you and i live in a big martin, globalized world by phone when we're buying them. so we're interested in new gastronomic tre, as an influence is from around the world and the lead that spain,
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the cradle of the restaurant, seen south america, fuller relatives of southern yourself, unless they but, and we talked to shifts from different countries, learn from them, because i'm collect recipes and look for new sources of inspiration. i'm sure i'm quizzing combines on historical recipes and local traditions, and this is always techniques and novel ideas from all over the world who live. you mean we end up with familiar tastes into familiar ingredients. matrix will typically associated with siberia presented in a modern form and move forward with not recreating old recipes. so anyway, and also museum restaurant, which is what i want to make clear about that. but most of us that we've mix onions and fish with a bit of salt and pepper can go with that. they say that self and pepper are only used in the molten version of silver dye for really, so that most of them use before back in the old days. they wasn't even available because then you're west and products i'm getting started, which was originally borrowed from india and so on. easy. that's. that's why the
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original recipe doesn't include cells in tampa strings to things that salt and pepper a more than inventions. why didn't ingredients talk, you know, splash of oil has been full. so i assume you didn't have all the oil inside the area until relatively recently. feed him, you know, we mix it up, deficient must be cold and as fresh as possible. and let's see my, this is a now put it into a bowl. the skin, it looks like charcoal. uh, this is a valid declaration. should we say double it if it adds basically but, and the color gets charged on you and it will going really so i'm going to say say in or quizzing and go through his ashes out the most the concentrated form
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of any products of uh there's no text uh no water need, the flavor is left. uh it's the essence of the product. so you'll need a small amounts of that one. then i guess you mentioned just end the call. you taken inspiration from the world and brought it to the cuisine here. was also siberian cuisine is also going outside the boulders of the region. is it true? the people come from all over the world to taste the food here? doesn't? yes, yes it is. and we start to spell it as we love to share our experience and off leave us with them. so you may of course, i mean you, we travel a lot with our ingredients and recipes, but a book we cooked dentists for international audiences. we also level organizing press to us to go with them because we have a festival called tied gastro, and we invite well known foods, food writers and renown shifts music several times that we try to mix it up and invite people not only from you or a but from everywhere you as a soon as you address and look, see my would you, it's amazing, isn't it that everyone just wants to visit russia and siberia of of boston the last
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year i visited a gastronomy for him in houston, both completed proposal. i didn't know what to expect, so i prepared a short sales pitch about siberia that i would've delivered to anyone i met 1st, but i'm and 99.8 percent of the people got home. so they were like, how do i get a visa? i told them it could be done online now, hassle free and the problem with that thought everyone was like, it's so cool when you to the other end of the world. it's like a diplomatic aspect. cooking. is that? absolutely. yes. you know, some of the, the way you used to are ingredients is less than but people from other parts of the world, find them new and exciting and a love of beautiful nature, hospitality. so it's almost the friendly and kind people who visit us all very surprised to as it turns out this place in the middle of nowhere that can be so cool is the middle of nowhere. yeah, yeah. i see that she saw next we make chips and keep sometimes it stay adel takes
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to an enhanced the taste, but because they are based on fish bra. so what do you like when the, when, when add some deal of it's known in your, in the hub that many russians left go see i of course. yeah. i, i know deal. i know. do you deal looks great with fish. i've never seen it in a pallet of folding though. what would you say is the most expensive ingredients or probably you would with difficulty here. of she in the i think all the main ingredients look expensive to the rest of the welto mother said the little guy we're talking about fresh fish is a really heavy on that you can game the berries. you can mushrooms. yeah. all these things are very expensive, every way you go buy them what the purpose of this stuff will use to use actually rather expensive when talking of expensive products, you having greetings like snails and multi cheese in funds that were originally eats and due to poverty. but now they're considered to be delicacies. do you have
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something similar here inside the area? uh, you have the most what we cooking now with them. so the dye for example, is that the blacks eventually and originally it was originally a humble fisherman's dish that was easy to make you that. but it was, it's a dish made while fishing and winter to be tricky with us cuz we screwed up and let me explain a little when you pull a fish from under the ice, it's minus 40 to minus 50 outside, twice as cold as in the freeze out of the utah, so the fish on to the i swear it's breezes immediately so you can slice it. had a bit of cells and peddler, if you have it on you and eat it right away. but it was good to humble fishermen snack and let us go. we'll go over these days and you know, so go die because it's considered a delicacy as opposed to the restaurants like these dishes, beautifully, have so adult for them. it's steve prices like either by institutes now to add some deal oil. while i looks amazing, you slips and it's done. so you have the colors, the text is flavors pulling this one dish. little to the idea or is you're supposed
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to like the appearance 1st by mode. yeah. looks like the sizing. it's ready to eat. very easy and quick to make. the original principal is the same as the makes up the fish and add a little flavor, right? what they did back in the day was to add one little vinegar a lemon to cook sufficient at all, so that it wasn't completely real today we had various restaurant dressings and text is, but it's still essentially the same simple dish made with a very fresh ingredients really well, nicolai's falls on the way you'll notice, historian, on ethnography. so me, how do you get the information about these old recipes and traditions and send them into these wonderful augusta and i'll make stories look while i think there was 3 or 4 main ways in which you best. there's a wide range of literature around the announcement eviction, popular science documents, and so on the list of those? no, i didn't. they just that i was, i looked for sources everywhere because pushed me through is the biggest thing i
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tried to read or skim through everything that comes my way that it might be helpful for me. i welcome you. might also talk to also is whenever i get a chance to go so you can ask them about the sources and find out more details. secondly, you can also colleagues from around the world. you find common points of interest and come and tastes and combinations. they share in depths stories about the origins of some tastes and products, and couple of things called else traveling is very important. i wish it wasn't. so it seems like normal just changing the way the recipes are passed on from people across the time and across countries. yes. um, i know obviously the shift so i heavily on local and seasonal products. now i've been outside today and i don't think much grow as in this weather. how does this affects what you said of customers here? that's about your right currently we rely on local products, but they're also seasonal. we mean we have full very distinct seasons here in the continental climate just to be mean spring, summer fall and winter and sign theory on. there are at least 2 fishing seasons as
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to the level of whatever it is to be able to go to the fed begins and oldest. and last it's through the full it's known as the summer season. you name hot or so that's when we get great sockeye and co, simon and to good, which is a smaller and very important species of fish capable and around now between late february and march, that is the season for ice fishing with i'm not sure how it's going to be this yet because we're having a warm when to avoid that. but anyway, um, well that's when we get to a bigger and dense fish of other spaces, bundled with, with one season, ends in november. and the next begins almost immediately in the spam filter. so we never have to deep freeze fish for more than 2 to 4 months before the next fresh batch arrives. that's white. now efficient. caviar. always fresh. uh. yeah. in spring and summer, as you know, we have books that was because it was wild goldlick and other type of plans. we still have the full is the season for mushrooms and berries, not more wild tubs. and so it would be an over simplification to say we don't need
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to go to the tremendous snow, never besides the like in the bible. and that's why the menu in our restaurants and people sending me the changes with the seasons for somebody keeps exciting for the customers as well. i can imagine. okay, well i think that's enough talking to collide. this dish has been staring at me all this time. can i try it please? i sent it, said i. okay, let me rates right now that a try and i'll make a mess in front of the cameras. yes, we'll fish as well. the sauce vs with sauce. you see everything in there. so excuse thing is the not going to really adds to the flavor on the text or it is delicious. nikolai, thank you so much for telling me about the secret. unlike me, letting me try your consent. pre siberian was a mikey,
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the the look forward to talking to you all that technology should work for people. a robot must obey the orders given by human beings accept. we're such orders at
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conflict with the 1st law show alignment as a patient. we should be very careful about our professional intelligence at the point, obviously is to trace a truck or rather than to the area. i mean, with the artificial intelligence, we have somebody with theme and the robot must protect this phone. existence was on the wrong. just don't you have to shape out the car and engagement equals the trail. when so many find themselves will the parts we choose to look so common?
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