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Jul 8, 2021
07/21
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the united states will supplier cover. as time went, on both these parts of the plan were to be changed both with the approval and the acquiescence of the cia and the pentagon. but at this point, tell us simply wanted the okay from the president to continue preparations, and he got it. from the state, on operation pluto gets tough parity from the cia. the cia with human exiles, agree on a single lead. they want the united states help. the cubans choose dr. jose miro once castro's prime minister, he has remained neutral in the power struggle among the exiled leaders. now, he comes to new york. he comes to the anti-castro cuba. >> it is first conference the doctor speaks for the first time as president of the new revolutionary council. >> a united cuba. , a real cuba, the cuba of jose marti. >> now cubans are united, they've joined the new coalition reluctantly, they don't like the way that the cia is complimenting -- and they rightly assume that the united states participation ensures the operation success. they don't want
the united states will supplier cover. as time went, on both these parts of the plan were to be changed both with the approval and the acquiescence of the cia and the pentagon. but at this point, tell us simply wanted the okay from the president to continue preparations, and he got it. from the state, on operation pluto gets tough parity from the cia. the cia with human exiles, agree on a single lead. they want the united states help. the cubans choose dr. jose miro once castro's prime...
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Jul 8, 2021
07/21
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united states power. although the total blame was clearly not his. >>> weekends on c-span2 are an intellectual feast. every saturday american history tv documents america's story and on sundays, book tv brings you the latest in nonfiction books and authors. funding for c-span2 comes from these television companies and more including comcast. >> you think this is just a community censor? no. >> reporter: comcast is partnering to create wi-fi enabled lifts so people can be ready for anything. comcast. along with these television companies support c-span 2 as a public service. >>> tens of thousands of anti-vietnam war protesters converged on washington, d.c. in may of 1971. more than 7,000 of them were arrested in a single day. tonight on american history tv, we long back 50 years at the forces that collided on the capital streets that spring with the journalist lawrence roberts. the author of mayday 1971. a white house at war. a revolt in the streets. and the untold history of manager's biggest mass arrest.
united states power. although the total blame was clearly not his. >>> weekends on c-span2 are an intellectual feast. every saturday american history tv documents america's story and on sundays, book tv brings you the latest in nonfiction books and authors. funding for c-span2 comes from these television companies and more including comcast. >> you think this is just a community censor? no. >> reporter: comcast is partnering to create wi-fi enabled lifts so people can be...
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Jul 26, 2021
07/21
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the national security interest of the united states. so here you have a regime 90 miles away from the united states that is a state-sponsor of terrorism. why is it on the list of states that sponsor terrorism? because it harbors fugitives from u.s. law, because it protects convicted murderers and convicted terrorists including cop killers, because of its association and its aid to other terrorist regimes and other terrorist groups, whether it is fark. you name your favorite terrorist group, the cuban regime has been dealing with them, helping them and in many cases tining them for decades. when they had a little bit more funds, margaret, not only were they harboring terrorism and exporting terrorism, but they even had troops around the world in latinmerica and even in africa. so it has been a cancer in the entire world, particularly in this hemisphere. the secretary of the organization of american states has stated that what cuba has in venezuela, another state that we should -- you know, we can talk days on end on, is an army of occupa
the national security interest of the united states. so here you have a regime 90 miles away from the united states that is a state-sponsor of terrorism. why is it on the list of states that sponsor terrorism? because it harbors fugitives from u.s. law, because it protects convicted murderers and convicted terrorists including cop killers, because of its association and its aid to other terrorist regimes and other terrorist groups, whether it is fark. you name your favorite terrorist group, the...
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3.0
Jul 8, 2021
07/21
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in april, it has been announced united states is going back on that agreement -- the unit states and allied forces would remain in afghanistan for the foreseeable future. the taliban would have again begun to target our forces. but status quo was not an option. american men and women back in the middle of the civil war. we would run the risk of having to send more troops back into afghanistan to defend our remaining troops. once the agreement had been made, staying with a bare minimum force was no longer possible. let me ask those who wanted us to stay, how many more? how many thousands of more american daughters and sons were you willing to risk? how long would you have them stay? already, we have members of our military whose parents fought in afghanistan 20 years ago. would you send their children and their grandchildren as well? would you send your own son or daughter? after 20 years, a trillion dollars spent training and equipping hundreds of thousands of afghan national security and defense forces, 2448 americans killed. 20,722 more wounded. untold thousands coming home with un
in april, it has been announced united states is going back on that agreement -- the unit states and allied forces would remain in afghanistan for the foreseeable future. the taliban would have again begun to target our forces. but status quo was not an option. american men and women back in the middle of the civil war. we would run the risk of having to send more troops back into afghanistan to defend our remaining troops. once the agreement had been made, staying with a bare minimum force was...
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8.0
Jul 9, 2021
07/21
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what role the united states? should play internationally what role should the united states play in a world? that was fast changing in the 1960s? so we've gotten to the point in this class where we've reached a point where president johnson has decided by early 1965. to begin a forthright military intervention by the united states. in vietnam and the reasons have been fairly compellingly laid out by johnson between 1964 and 65 with the gulf of tonkin resolution. in 1964 the president made his case that there was aggression coming from north vietnam pointed at the south. and pointed at the united states as well in the attack and us ships in international waters on that gulf of tonkin and remember it's really important to understand when this resolution was brought before congress. every single member of the house of representatives republican or democrat liberal or conservative from the south or from the north. all of them voted to approve this resolution in the house of representatives. in the senate only two sen
what role the united states? should play internationally what role should the united states play in a world? that was fast changing in the 1960s? so we've gotten to the point in this class where we've reached a point where president johnson has decided by early 1965. to begin a forthright military intervention by the united states. in vietnam and the reasons have been fairly compellingly laid out by johnson between 1964 and 65 with the gulf of tonkin resolution. in 1964 the president made his...
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Jul 8, 2021
07/21
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as i said in april, the united states did what we wanted to do in afghanistan. to get the terrorists who attacked us on 9/11 and delivered justice to osama bin laden. and to degrade the terrorist threat from becoming afghanistan from becoming a terrorist base. we achieved those objectives. that is why we went. we did not go to afghanistan to nation build. it is the right and the responsibility of the afghan people alone to decide their future and how they want to run their country. together, with our nato allies and partners, we have trained and equipped over -- nearly 300,000 current serving members of the afghan security force. and many beyond that to our no longer serving. after that, hundreds of thousands more afghan national defense security forces trained over the last two decades. we provided our afghan partners with all the tools, trained equipment, of any modern military. we provided advanced weaponry. we are going to continue to provide funding and equipment and will ensure they have the capacity to maintain their air force. most critically, as i stres
as i said in april, the united states did what we wanted to do in afghanistan. to get the terrorists who attacked us on 9/11 and delivered justice to osama bin laden. and to degrade the terrorist threat from becoming afghanistan from becoming a terrorist base. we achieved those objectives. that is why we went. we did not go to afghanistan to nation build. it is the right and the responsibility of the afghan people alone to decide their future and how they want to run their country. together,...
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Jul 24, 2021
07/21
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states maintain their plan and so here in the united states, using this idea of indian savagery against the five tribes as i told you earlier used to be considered civilized rated different from other native people. but now no longer political plea you spoke of the five tribes are once again uncivilized. and it changed about five people to take ownership of land in indian territory. in indian free people of the five tribes played into that. i want to tell you that chickasaws man and the way he talks about his former owners. and he says at that time, the indians did not have anything but small farms and of course among them, they worked like they should. the slaves enough corn to make the bread. and so this may seem maybe this isn't that bad language that he uses, they didn't work like they should. i mean, using the idea of americanness as craig will but the native americans were really looking to survive. so anything is with american and people were capable of working harder, the way they should if they were only given the model and the opportunity. and so this is strategic language use
states maintain their plan and so here in the united states, using this idea of indian savagery against the five tribes as i told you earlier used to be considered civilized rated different from other native people. but now no longer political plea you spoke of the five tribes are once again uncivilized. and it changed about five people to take ownership of land in indian territory. in indian free people of the five tribes played into that. i want to tell you that chickasaws man and the way he...
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Jul 24, 2021
07/21
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the national security interest of the united states. so here you have a regime 90 miles away from the united states that is a state-sponsor of terrorism. why is it on the list of states that sponsor terrorism? because it harbors fugitives from u.s. law, because it protects convicted murderers and convicted terrorists including cop killers, because of its association and its aid to other terrorist regimes and other terrorist groups, whether it is fark. you name your favorite terrorist group, the cuban regime has been dealing with them, helping them and inany cases tining them for decades. when they had a little bit more funds, margaret, not only were they harboring terrorism and exporting terrorism, but they even had troops around the world in latin america and evein africa. so it has been a cancer in the entire world, particularly in this hemisphere. the secretary of the organization of american states has stated that what cuba has in venezuela, another state that we should -- you know, we can talk days on end on, is an army of occupati
the national security interest of the united states. so here you have a regime 90 miles away from the united states that is a state-sponsor of terrorism. why is it on the list of states that sponsor terrorism? because it harbors fugitives from u.s. law, because it protects convicted murderers and convicted terrorists including cop killers, because of its association and its aid to other terrorist regimes and other terrorist groups, whether it is fark. you name your favorite terrorist group, the...
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should he be extradited to the united states? the wiki league founder risked 175 years in prison. 175 years for publishing intimation of public interest. there's only one journalist that has the pains and held him present for doing his job was a journalist in western europe. and let us do a song assign, celebrate, you can criticize a song, his personality is behavior. but if there's one thing you can criticize, it's just contribution to freedom of information and relevant. they're like hallmark on giving you what's central to the case is this contribution to journalism, and that's what makes it so dangerous. the breaking news go to london this morning. we found the julian associate cannot be expedited to the united states on january 2021 of british judge rules that given assumptions mental states should not be extradited just the partial they, teresa has supported the us did not seem likely to back down the lawyers for the us government to indicate or they was appeal decision. it's not, there should be a call out and pressure on
should he be extradited to the united states? the wiki league founder risked 175 years in prison. 175 years for publishing intimation of public interest. there's only one journalist that has the pains and held him present for doing his job was a journalist in western europe. and let us do a song assign, celebrate, you can criticize a song, his personality is behavior. but if there's one thing you can criticize, it's just contribution to freedom of information and relevant. they're like hallmark...
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8.0
Jul 12, 2021
07/21
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there is a huge diaspora in europe and the united states. i would like for us to continue taking more people from those camps now that president biden has raised the refugee cap. part of the long-term effort here has to be working with the diaspora to help it become the force that helps to open their country again at some point in the future. it's a quarter of all syrians, so it is a sizable share of the country. to continue to be very, very tough and punishing on outside powers supporting the syrian regime, including the russians. through instruments like the caesar act. then, sees any opportunity that arises. as you know, timing is everything and the timing may not be right right now, that all kinds of things may happen in the months and years coming that create opportunities for us to seize. i wish i had a better answer and there may be a better answer out there. i would be very open to hearing from people participating today who follows the situation more intently than i do. but that is kind of where i am. gerald: it is a problem and i t
there is a huge diaspora in europe and the united states. i would like for us to continue taking more people from those camps now that president biden has raised the refugee cap. part of the long-term effort here has to be working with the diaspora to help it become the force that helps to open their country again at some point in the future. it's a quarter of all syrians, so it is a sizable share of the country. to continue to be very, very tough and punishing on outside powers supporting the...
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5.0
Jul 8, 2021
07/21
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united states. my english is very plain. the other things i want to tell, i wish -- the general assembly of the united nations. >> the first red satellite to achieve are from czechoslovakia and poland. despite the status at high ranking red leaders, they are almost ignored by the numerous demonstrators, many of them east european refugees who protested the arrival of khrushchev and other reds. the russian liner sailed with the heads of five satellite states, arrived on a foggy morning, heading up the east river to the dock closer to u.n. headquarters. one boat was hired by the longshoreman's union. hundreds of demonstrators massed despite heavy rain. carpets have been laid for the occasion. one of the most massive assemblies of police and security men ever gathered in new york. khrushchev could barely be glimpse through the prong of protectors. his brazen visit to the shores on his own invitation promises to make a general assembly session already momentous into a potentially explosive or historic i
united states. my english is very plain. the other things i want to tell, i wish -- the general assembly of the united nations. >> the first red satellite to achieve are from czechoslovakia and poland. despite the status at high ranking red leaders, they are almost ignored by the numerous demonstrators, many of them east european refugees who protested the arrival of khrushchev and other reds. the russian liner sailed with the heads of five satellite states, arrived on a foggy morning,...
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Jul 9, 2021
07/21
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as i said in april, united states did we went to do afghanistan, get the terrorists who attacked us on nine elevenths and deliver justice to osama bin laden. the site threat afghanistan from becoming a base which facts could be continued against the united states. we achieved those objectives, that's why we went. we did not go to afghanistan nation fell in it right and responsibly those people along to decide future and how they want to run their country. together with nato allies and partners, we have trained and equipped nearly 300,000 current serving members of the military and security force and many beyond fact no longer serving. add to that hundreds of thousands more afghan security forces trained over the last two decades providing afghan partners of all the tools. let me emphasize, all the tools training equipment of any modern military providing advanced weaponry, we are going to continue to provide funding and equipment to ensure they have the capacity to maintain their efforts but most critically, as i stressed in my meeting two weeks ago with president connie and chairman a
as i said in april, united states did we went to do afghanistan, get the terrorists who attacked us on nine elevenths and deliver justice to osama bin laden. the site threat afghanistan from becoming a base which facts could be continued against the united states. we achieved those objectives, that's why we went. we did not go to afghanistan nation fell in it right and responsibly those people along to decide future and how they want to run their country. together with nato allies and partners,...
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2.0
Jul 26, 2021
07/21
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china has given more of its doses away then the united states. what china has done is something that i can't tolerate. yes they've given away the doses. the chinese vaccines are not as effective and safe as the ones authorized in the united states. china has been very mercantile and transactional about it. it's used a lifesaving vaccine as a way to leverage its own economical standing. it might ask a country not to support taiwan or ask for strategic favors in the south china sea or a mineral in africa. that's not the way to have an open heart. i do think the americans have an open heart. we do need to do more. we've done a lot. just not enough. the biggest tragedy i think is that we've hoarded the vaccines in the united states. we bought up all the supply, including the raw materials. countries can't make it for themselves. india was making the astrazeneca vaccine. then it went into crisis itself. it stopped producing and as a result, the misery was compounded. host: the first call is from barbara in oklahoma. good morning. caller: thank you. i'
china has given more of its doses away then the united states. what china has done is something that i can't tolerate. yes they've given away the doses. the chinese vaccines are not as effective and safe as the ones authorized in the united states. china has been very mercantile and transactional about it. it's used a lifesaving vaccine as a way to leverage its own economical standing. it might ask a country not to support taiwan or ask for strategic favors in the south china sea or a mineral...
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7.0
Jul 1, 2021
07/21
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states for confirmation as the vice president of the united states. congressman gerald ford of michigan. >> the new vice president was a reassuring figure, whose obvious integrity aided republican candidates and a beleaguered president. but each day brought new revelations of wrongdoing in the nixon administration. the watergate scandal was coming to a climax. by the summer of 1974, nixon's impeachment was before the house. >> all those in favor, please, signify by saying yea. all those opposed, no. >> it was a time of anxiety for the american people. to the vice president, it was a time of anguish. he didn't know if the president would dig in and fight. or resign. on august 9th, 1974, it was settled. on the south lawn of the white house, a painful ceremony unfolded. returning to their new home, nixon's successor reassured his wife, we can do it. soon, he would reassure the nation. for gerald ford, there was no transition period. no time to settle into the world's most-demanding job. >> when i took the oath of office, and went back to the oval office.
states for confirmation as the vice president of the united states. congressman gerald ford of michigan. >> the new vice president was a reassuring figure, whose obvious integrity aided republican candidates and a beleaguered president. but each day brought new revelations of wrongdoing in the nixon administration. the watergate scandal was coming to a climax. by the summer of 1974, nixon's impeachment was before the house. >> all those in favor, please, signify by saying yea. all...
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2.0
Jul 10, 2021
07/21
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ALJAZ
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sponsored in the eyes of the united states. the fact that they're happening on russian soil matters. here's what the u. s. president joe biden had to say about his telephone call at his latest conversation with latimer when we're already coming from historical, even though it's not, not sponsored by mistake, expect an action enough information to act. now you remember perhaps back in geneva that job wide and put together a list of 16 critical infrastructure areas. good. he said cannot be targeted. many people kind of criticize that and said a why did you tell them what was so critical and be really shouldn't anything be off limits. and so that's the argument now that there's been another cyber attack is but job widens, meeting. it seems to have gone to waste has fallen on deaf ears, and they're looking in the united states for tougher action from joe by the what the white house press secretary said in the last couple of hours is look joe biden pledge that he would engage with blood were put and diplomatically, that's what this
sponsored in the eyes of the united states. the fact that they're happening on russian soil matters. here's what the u. s. president joe biden had to say about his telephone call at his latest conversation with latimer when we're already coming from historical, even though it's not, not sponsored by mistake, expect an action enough information to act. now you remember perhaps back in geneva that job wide and put together a list of 16 critical infrastructure areas. good. he said cannot be...
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i wouldn't say that the united states going directly over through phil. i am hunters, but it certainly supported the overthrow of life in honduras. i don't actually feel very big friends between the obama and trump administrations, or between democratic and republican administrations. in general, what we've seen from the, by an administration so far is an absolute commitment to the same kind of pro foreign investment economic model. and also to supporting the military and police in those countries on the pretext of trying to slow and stop migration. so there's sort of a humanitarian, the near to both of these that is biden like ever us, president claims that this is a model that's going to help eliminate poverty in central america. it's been followed for 500 years and it hasn't eliminated poverty yet. and the militarization is kind of covered up by trying to get us to focus on what they call the border crisis. so there is a crisis at the border but the border crisis is not going to be stopped by moving the repression into central america itself. professor
i wouldn't say that the united states going directly over through phil. i am hunters, but it certainly supported the overthrow of life in honduras. i don't actually feel very big friends between the obama and trump administrations, or between democratic and republican administrations. in general, what we've seen from the, by an administration so far is an absolute commitment to the same kind of pro foreign investment economic model. and also to supporting the military and police in those...
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9.0
Jul 25, 2021
07/21
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BLOOMBERG
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is it pleasurable to be a united states senator? it seems like they are always fighting, they don't have compromises, and nothing is done bipartisan anymore. is it enjoyable or not quite as enjoyable as you hoped? sen. duckworth: it's challenging, but i love my job because of what i get to do. it's a tough job, but i get to serve the people, my constituency. and i get to see the results of my work. i passed legislation that now requires lactation rooms in all of our nation's airports because when i had my daughter and i was traveling, i was told if you want to breast-feed your daughter or you want to express breast milk, you have to do it in the handicapped stall of a public toilet, which i thought was disgusting. so i worked for a few years and passed the law. now when i go to airports, i see these lactation pods and lactation rooms and think, wow, i did that. i just made all these moms who are traveling and working outside their home -- i just made their lives a little bit easier. and that's a great privilege. it's a great privile
is it pleasurable to be a united states senator? it seems like they are always fighting, they don't have compromises, and nothing is done bipartisan anymore. is it enjoyable or not quite as enjoyable as you hoped? sen. duckworth: it's challenging, but i love my job because of what i get to do. it's a tough job, but i get to serve the people, my constituency. and i get to see the results of my work. i passed legislation that now requires lactation rooms in all of our nation's airports because...
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5.0
Jul 8, 2021
07/21
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he came to united states. to to meet with american congressman a politicians or whoever he went to new york. he couldn't find a place to stay. he had to go to harlem to get a hotel. nobody came to congratulate him. anything but russia and crucial hopped on a plane came to us. came to harlem. welcome through the streets of harlem. broadcast director at the hotel and he's celebrated with castro and from that day on. castle russia had one castro's confident and took him up, know, they became friends. is that what happened jake? is that what happened nicholas? yes in the main that's what happened. a lot of that though was political theater. i think castro intended to stay in harlem for appearances. he already was developing a relationship with the soviet union. it wasn't sparked because of this act of generosity in the part of khrushchev. i mean these things are usually political theater. it's interesting that on that trip. castro did meet eisenhower's meet with him, but he met with the vice president richard nixo
he came to united states. to to meet with american congressman a politicians or whoever he went to new york. he couldn't find a place to stay. he had to go to harlem to get a hotel. nobody came to congratulate him. anything but russia and crucial hopped on a plane came to us. came to harlem. welcome through the streets of harlem. broadcast director at the hotel and he's celebrated with castro and from that day on. castle russia had one castro's confident and took him up, know, they became...
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19
Jul 24, 2021
07/21
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KQED
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eye 19
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the national security interest of the united states. so here you have a regime 90 miles away from the united states that is a state-sponsor of terrorism. why is it on the list of states that sponsor terrorism? because it harbors fugitives from u.s. law, because it protects convicted murderers and convicted terrorists including cop killers, because of its association and its aid to other terrorist regimes and other terrorist groups, whether it is fark. you name your favorite terrorist group, the cuban regime has been dealing with them, helping them and in many cases tining them for decades. when they had a little bit more funds, margaret, not only were they harboring terrorism and exporting terrorism, but they even had troops around the world in latin america and even in africa. so it has been a cancer in the entire world, particularly in this hemisphere. the secretary of the organization of american states has stated that what cuba has in venezuela, another state that we should -- you know, we can talk days on end on, is an army of occu
the national security interest of the united states. so here you have a regime 90 miles away from the united states that is a state-sponsor of terrorism. why is it on the list of states that sponsor terrorism? because it harbors fugitives from u.s. law, because it protects convicted murderers and convicted terrorists including cop killers, because of its association and its aid to other terrorist regimes and other terrorist groups, whether it is fark. you name your favorite terrorist group, the...
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n a or the united states. so when we intervene, we intervene using a american centered template that is designed to placate domestic political factions. here in the united states, not to solve problems overseas, we've seen this almost everywhere. united states intervenes afghanistan was doomed to fail from the start because we didn't respect our student, tribal sensitivity as partial wally. nothing we, we didn't understand the area we came in. we impose our will and then we start to build f ganesha in. in, in our model, especially their military. i mean, what we try to do is, is build a miniature united states army of miniature united states, security services, trained equip, like u. s. military. and they can't function. why? because you can't take it american style, military templates, and impose on corruption. and that's what we have. we have generals who inflate their rank still money to treat their soldiers poorly. there's no motivation at the end of the day of the soldiers, not willing to die for a cause.
n a or the united states. so when we intervene, we intervene using a american centered template that is designed to placate domestic political factions. here in the united states, not to solve problems overseas, we've seen this almost everywhere. united states intervenes afghanistan was doomed to fail from the start because we didn't respect our student, tribal sensitivity as partial wally. nothing we, we didn't understand the area we came in. we impose our will and then we start to build f...
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6.0
Jul 7, 2021
07/21
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. >>> in the summer of 1839 a foreign schooner accidentally sailed along the shores of the united states and transformed the federal courts into a forum for an explosive national debate. the drama that began when the enslaved african americans on the a.m. stad revolted and took control of the vessel off the coast of cuba would culminate in the supreme court of the united states with a former president arguing on behalf of the african americans' appeal for freedom. the arm stad case forced the federal courts and the nation to consider the legal foundations of slavery. >> for several weeks in the summer of 1839 newspapers along the atlantic coast reported sightings of a mysterious schooner supposedly commanded by african pirates. late in august the crew of the navy brig washington spotted a badly damaged vessel in long island sound and a shore party trading with local residents along the new york coast. when the naval officers boarded the armistad they were braced by two spanish men pleading for protection from a group of african men who they had purchased as slaves in cuba but who had tak
. >>> in the summer of 1839 a foreign schooner accidentally sailed along the shores of the united states and transformed the federal courts into a forum for an explosive national debate. the drama that began when the enslaved african americans on the a.m. stad revolted and took control of the vessel off the coast of cuba would culminate in the supreme court of the united states with a former president arguing on behalf of the african americans' appeal for freedom. the arm stad case...
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i don't have a regular contact with the united states. so i'm hoping to now that we have a president that at least on paper is more open to i guess, recognizing some form of palestinian rights. we'll see down the line, i hope to be able to be in touch with the americans of the next time i'm in geneva and in new york, you think bennett will allow joe biden to put a u. s. consulate in east jerusalem for the ballast indians? i'm sure that a beach that's going on within the israeli government and the end of the day. i can't see how the how these really government can refuse the old opening a reopening of the u. s. council. that's been there since before. 948 is my understanding as simply restoration to the status quo. joe biden has done some on attacks. some of the issues that were that had been done by the foreign president such as the restored aid to unwrap the palestinian refugee agency run by the united nations. he's attempting to try to reopen as constantly as restored funding to the palestinian authority. in general, i mean in the news
i don't have a regular contact with the united states. so i'm hoping to now that we have a president that at least on paper is more open to i guess, recognizing some form of palestinian rights. we'll see down the line, i hope to be able to be in touch with the americans of the next time i'm in geneva and in new york, you think bennett will allow joe biden to put a u. s. consulate in east jerusalem for the ballast indians? i'm sure that a beach that's going on within the israeli government and...
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n a or the united states. so when we intervene, we intervene using a american centered template that is designed to play k domestic political factions here in the united states, not to solve problems overseas. we've seen this almost everywhere. united states intervenes afghanistan was doomed to fail from the start because we didn't respect your past. you and tribal sensitivities. wally, you know, and nothing. we didn't understand the area we came in. we impose our will and then we sought to build in, in, in our model, especially their military. i mean, when we try to do is, is build a, a miniature united states army of miniature united states, security services, trained equip, like u. s. military. and they can't function why? because you can't take it american style military templates and impose it on corruption. and that's what we have. we have generals who inflate their rank steel money to treat their soldiers poorly. there's no motivation at the end of the day of the soldiers, not willing to die for a cause
n a or the united states. so when we intervene, we intervene using a american centered template that is designed to play k domestic political factions here in the united states, not to solve problems overseas. we've seen this almost everywhere. united states intervenes afghanistan was doomed to fail from the start because we didn't respect your past. you and tribal sensitivities. wally, you know, and nothing. we didn't understand the area we came in. we impose our will and then we sought to...
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6.0
Jul 6, 2021
07/21
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states, illegal cause off the united states. really appreciate your help today. and i need to come in to as well. this conversation is going to continue on in scum. let me show you what we're doing on my computer here. charge mileage in the united states at 2030 g m t starting wednesday. we will be having this conversation with an sprinkle talking about child marriage, the impact of it, and also taking that conversation internationally. i know and motor a commenting on child knowledge around the world as well. but for now, thanks for watching a scene next time. the news news news with me i see content story without touching a single word, liam, conventionality of life. witness through the lens of the human eye analysis era. the story of them bob weigh in her words. she is always told from the perspective of the great man, whether it's even moving on robot gabby, my responsibility is to tell, is involved with the story in a way that it hasn't really been told before the ordinary. everyday life was involved with the people. i'm wr
states, illegal cause off the united states. really appreciate your help today. and i need to come in to as well. this conversation is going to continue on in scum. let me show you what we're doing on my computer here. charge mileage in the united states at 2030 g m t starting wednesday. we will be having this conversation with an sprinkle talking about child marriage, the impact of it, and also taking that conversation internationally. i know and motor a commenting on child knowledge around...
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than the united states or the united kingdom. but again, you are not talking about irrelevant international waters. the proximity to anywhere is not here today. if the waters off are free for international vessels to pass through than they are and they should be allowed to pass through without hanging from russia. if you want to get into detail, you should take them onto a convention which sets the limits on the presence of extraterritorial vessels in the black sea region. but i'm not talking about that. i'm just saying that you have many ships around or no matter what kind of waters we are talking about, or if there is a density of never movement in a particular region. of course, there are dangers and that's often discoloration, human, arrow or technical failure. you know, we, we had such incidents in the past and we can well have them in the future. and as simple as that doesn't constitute any legal case for forbidden, for an vessel. so to, to visit the black sea area. but of course, the risks are growing. it's hard to take a
than the united states or the united kingdom. but again, you are not talking about irrelevant international waters. the proximity to anywhere is not here today. if the waters off are free for international vessels to pass through than they are and they should be allowed to pass through without hanging from russia. if you want to get into detail, you should take them onto a convention which sets the limits on the presence of extraterritorial vessels in the black sea region. but i'm not talking...
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Jul 8, 2021
07/21
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meanwhile, at theas united nations, administer rohr accused the united states of unleashing an invasion. saying the soldiers trained in florida. ambassador stevenson makes a quickd denial. >> these charges are totally false, and i deny them categorically. the united states has committed no aggression against cuba and nobe offensive has been launche from florida or from any other part of the united states. >> in the guatamalan foothills, the government denies cubans are among the a soldiers being instructors, butut observers sa otherwise. professional soldiers are among the teachers. once trained, the men mysteriously disappear. guatemala has no grief for the castro regime and has aided the rebels. in cuba itself, the people have been exhorted by castro to push back theva invader, and 300,000 militiamen have been mobilized. the invasion was successful in earlye hours with castro, of course, blaming the u.s. is there a chink c in his armor? >> we're back with nicholas dumavich, who is a formerdi cia deputy chief historian and currentay director of the intelligence studies program at catho
meanwhile, at theas united nations, administer rohr accused the united states of unleashing an invasion. saying the soldiers trained in florida. ambassador stevenson makes a quickd denial. >> these charges are totally false, and i deny them categorically. the united states has committed no aggression against cuba and nobe offensive has been launche from florida or from any other part of the united states. >> in the guatamalan foothills, the government denies cubans are among the a...
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they can impose the united states. they're very clear demand for central america. its domestic economic policies be favorable to us corporations, and that generally means that the policies are going to be unfavorable to the poor of those countries because the very policies that us corporations want are things like low wages, no taxes, no environmental regulations, no unions, police repression of any kind of protest, oh, and access to land that is military and police aid in this possessing peasants from their land so that us corporations can have access to them. that's precisely the opposite of the kinds of policies that would be beneficial to the poor majorities in central america. for millions of people around the world, they can, they can see one emblem maybe on their kitchen table of all of this. i don't know, maybe you should have had the front cover of the velvet underground 1st. call them on their bananas. well, i would say bananas and coffee historically bananas and coffee, starting in the 19th century has been
they can impose the united states. they're very clear demand for central america. its domestic economic policies be favorable to us corporations, and that generally means that the policies are going to be unfavorable to the poor of those countries because the very policies that us corporations want are things like low wages, no taxes, no environmental regulations, no unions, police repression of any kind of protest, oh, and access to land that is military and police aid in this possessing...
5
5.0
Jul 4, 2021
07/21
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he's exile to the united states. he's a news paper man and uses his platform as a journalist to popularize his pro-slavery views, and this was confounding to northerners abolitionists the rest of the world who already associate slavery as an opposition to values of self-government and freedom and rights, of course, so what mitchell does is by making his pro-slavery case. he says there's an there is an alternate case to be made that these deluded self-comparisons that white southerners are making are not yet quite outside the bounds of the way that nationalism was understood and the 19th century and mitchell actually does then go on to directly draw the same comparison that native born white southerners were as well. he was quite out spoken in claiming that it was the confederacy that fought for the same he had fought for maryland so again, we from our perspective certainly recognize that he was not correct in this that the confederacy was fighting against value such as freedom and inequality and natural rights, but m
he's exile to the united states. he's a news paper man and uses his platform as a journalist to popularize his pro-slavery views, and this was confounding to northerners abolitionists the rest of the world who already associate slavery as an opposition to values of self-government and freedom and rights, of course, so what mitchell does is by making his pro-slavery case. he says there's an there is an alternate case to be made that these deluded self-comparisons that white southerners are...
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just like if you raise the minimum wage here in the united states. so then pizza hut, now they're paying their, their, their person $20.00 an hour to deliver pizza. great. well that just means me and you have to buy more expensive pizza and we're not going to buy more expensive piece if we can't afford it. we're going to make it ourselves so those people are going to lose their jobs. so raising the minimum wage, forcing taxes, not letting competition. * thrive is going to do more harm our economy, i believe, than it really is going to help it. well, is it unrealistic? all so, and i think about why change phases and putting up his shuttle and to the space. i think of some of the big corporations that over the last year and a half of credit, they made a lot of money. well, everybody seemed to be hurting. they were the ones that did not have to really take a government loan. probably some of them did, you know when you get them, they operate in various different countries. do we really think that there's actually going to be an accountability factor tha
just like if you raise the minimum wage here in the united states. so then pizza hut, now they're paying their, their, their person $20.00 an hour to deliver pizza. great. well that just means me and you have to buy more expensive pizza and we're not going to buy more expensive piece if we can't afford it. we're going to make it ourselves so those people are going to lose their jobs. so raising the minimum wage, forcing taxes, not letting competition. * thrive is going to do more harm our...
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and if it isn't in the united states, doesn't care whether it's democratically elected or not. but is very willing to overthrow it, as we've seen, over and over again at the present day. boris johnson's government jo buttons administration and tried to overthrow the government of venezuela. but as when it comes up again and again in the book of how the influence of a child is administration tells of aid countering us efforts towards neoliberalism. just tell me about when is whalers roland central america? not so much right now, but certainly during the time period when it's well, i had a lot more money to offer been offered latin american countries, a potential pass away from the meal liberal policies being imposed by the united states in the international financial institutions by offering low cost petroleum setting up trade relations, offering them a kind of an estate from the depth trap that they had so long been caught in. which makes that is the debt trap makes them completely subject to the united states and the international financial institutions in terms of what kinds
and if it isn't in the united states, doesn't care whether it's democratically elected or not. but is very willing to overthrow it, as we've seen, over and over again at the present day. boris johnson's government jo buttons administration and tried to overthrow the government of venezuela. but as when it comes up again and again in the book of how the influence of a child is administration tells of aid countering us efforts towards neoliberalism. just tell me about when is whalers roland...
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, ashy is closer than the united states or the united kingdom. but again, you are not talking about irrelevant international waters. the proximity or anywhere is not here today if the waters off a free for international vessels to pass through than they are. and they should be allowed to pass through without hanging from russia. if you want to get into detail, you should take them onto a convention which sets the limits on the presence of extraterritorial vessels in the black sea region. but i'm not talking about that. i'm just saying that if you have many ships around or no matter what kind of waters we are talking about, or if there is a density of never movement in a particular region, of course, there are dangers and threats often go discoloration, human arrow or technical failure you know, we, we have such incidence in the past and we can well have them in the future and not as simple as that doesn't constitute any legal case for forbidden for an vessel. so to, to visit the black sea area. but of course, the risks are growing. it's hard to t
, ashy is closer than the united states or the united kingdom. but again, you are not talking about irrelevant international waters. the proximity or anywhere is not here today if the waters off a free for international vessels to pass through than they are. and they should be allowed to pass through without hanging from russia. if you want to get into detail, you should take them onto a convention which sets the limits on the presence of extraterritorial vessels in the black sea region. but...
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n a or the united states. so when we intervene, we intervene using a american centered template that is designed to placate domestic political factions. here in the united states, not to solve problems overseas, we've seen this almost everywhere. united states intervenes afghanistan was doomed to fail from the start because we didn't respect your costume, tribal sensitivity as partially wally. you know, nothing. we, we didn't understand the area we came in. we impose our will and then we sought to build afghans in, in, in our model, especially their military. i mean, when we tried to do is, is build a miniature united states army of miniature united states, security services, trained equip, like u. s. military. and they can't function why? because you can't take it american style, military templates and impose on corruption. and that's what we have. we have generals who inflate their rank still money to treat their soldiers poorly. there's no motivation at the end of the day of the soldier is not willing to di
n a or the united states. so when we intervene, we intervene using a american centered template that is designed to placate domestic political factions. here in the united states, not to solve problems overseas, we've seen this almost everywhere. united states intervenes afghanistan was doomed to fail from the start because we didn't respect your costume, tribal sensitivity as partially wally. you know, nothing. we, we didn't understand the area we came in. we impose our will and then we sought...
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Jul 25, 2021
07/21
by
BLOOMBERG
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is it pleasurable to be a united states senator? it seems like they are always fighting, they don't have compromises, and nothing is done bipartisan anymore. is it enjoyable or not quite as enjoyable as you hoped it would be? sen. duckworth: it's challenging, but i love my job because of what i get to do. it's a tough job, but i get to serve the people, my constituency. and i get to see the results of my work. i passed legislation that now requires lactation rooms in all of our nation's airports because when i had my daughter and i was traveling, i was told if you want to breast-feed your daughter or you want to express breast milk, you have to do it in the handicapped stall of a public toilet, which i thought was disgusting. so i worked for a few years and passed the law. now when i go to airports, i see these lactation pods and lactation rooms and think, wow, i did that. i just made all these moms who are traveling and working outside their home -- i just made their lives a little bit easier. and that's a great privilege. it's a g
is it pleasurable to be a united states senator? it seems like they are always fighting, they don't have compromises, and nothing is done bipartisan anymore. is it enjoyable or not quite as enjoyable as you hoped it would be? sen. duckworth: it's challenging, but i love my job because of what i get to do. it's a tough job, but i get to serve the people, my constituency. and i get to see the results of my work. i passed legislation that now requires lactation rooms in all of our nation's...
7
7.0
Jul 9, 2021
07/21
by
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a united states state. and this guy, senator gruning, was kind of a hard-nosed realist. he was doing a cost/benefit analysis. and his critique was i don't get it. why does it make sense for the united states to spend blood and treasure going to vietnam? there was no big moral critique. or meaning of americanness, it didn't add up for him. again, these are two senators. there's almost no visible create eek as johnson launches what will quick li become an american war in vietnam. it there were a few other voices, a few public voices that raised questions. mostly from that realist perspective. does this add up? hans morguenthou, a big name in the united states, at least in the academic community, he raised those issues. walter litman, a famous columnist, been making pronouncements about american policy for some 50 years. he raised some questions. he also critiqued this as a really -- just not a reasonable solution to america's interests in asia. but otherwise, remember, there's a kind of consensus. it's an ele
a united states state. and this guy, senator gruning, was kind of a hard-nosed realist. he was doing a cost/benefit analysis. and his critique was i don't get it. why does it make sense for the united states to spend blood and treasure going to vietnam? there was no big moral critique. or meaning of americanness, it didn't add up for him. again, these are two senators. there's almost no visible create eek as johnson launches what will quick li become an american war in vietnam. it there were a...
14
14
Jul 22, 2021
07/21
by
BLOOMBERG
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eye 14
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my unit was in range and i felt guilt that i was in a state hospital in the united states and everybody was calling me a hero, which i do not think i was , and everybody was treating me -- and my buddies were still getting shot at. no soldier, no servicemember, no troop once to be saved someplace when your buddy's in harm's way. i wanted to get back to my unit. david: you eventually retire from the military and then you get involved in a number of interesting things, to go through them quickly, became the head of the veterans organization in illinois, is that right? tammy: so i did not retire. president bush started a program that allowed wounded warriors to continue to serve and then i ran for congress and lost and then i became head of the illinois department of veteran affairs, a number of the governor's and then president obama when he was elected asked me to serve at the federal v.a. and all this time i was doing the national guard. and that iran again for congress and became a congresswoman in 2012. david: then an opportunity came along to run for the united states senate. jude he
my unit was in range and i felt guilt that i was in a state hospital in the united states and everybody was calling me a hero, which i do not think i was , and everybody was treating me -- and my buddies were still getting shot at. no soldier, no servicemember, no troop once to be saved someplace when your buddy's in harm's way. i wanted to get back to my unit. david: you eventually retire from the military and then you get involved in a number of interesting things, to go through them quickly,...
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i don't have a regular contact with the united states. so i'm hoping to now that we have a president that at least on paper is more open to i guess, recognizing some form of palestinian rice. what we'll see down the line, i hope to be able to be in touch with the americans of the next time i'm in geneva and in new york, you think bennett will allow joe biden to but a u. s. consulate in east jerusalem for the ballast indians. i'm sure sort of beach that's going on within the israeli government and the end of the day, i can't see how the how these really government can refuse. the old opening reopening of the u. s. council. that's been there since before. 948 is my understanding as simply restoration to the status quo. job whiteness done some on attacks. some of the issues that were, that had been on done by the foreign president such as the ease restore aid to unwrap the palestinian refugee agency run by the united nations. he's attempting to try to reopen as constantly as restoring funding to the palestinian authority. in general, i mean
i don't have a regular contact with the united states. so i'm hoping to now that we have a president that at least on paper is more open to i guess, recognizing some form of palestinian rice. what we'll see down the line, i hope to be able to be in touch with the americans of the next time i'm in geneva and in new york, you think bennett will allow joe biden to but a u. s. consulate in east jerusalem for the ballast indians. i'm sure sort of beach that's going on within the israeli government...
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should he be extradited to the united states? the wiki league founder risks 175 years in prison. 175 years to publishing information of public interest. that's only one jim. this that is detailed and held in prison for doing his job as a journalist in western europe. and that is julia, my son, as son phillip. well, you can criticize a song, his personality is behavior. but if there's one thing you can criticize, it's his contribution to freedom of information that i live and he gives it central to the case is this contribution to journalism? and that's what makes it so dangerous. the breaking news out of one business morning with unique sounds. julian assault cannot be expedited to the united states. on january 2021 of british judge rules that given authority of mental states, he should not be extradited just of partial vic theresa. his support in the us did not seem likely to back down the lawyers for the us government to indicate they was appeal decision. it's not, there should be a whole lot of pressure on the us side. so drop
should he be extradited to the united states? the wiki league founder risks 175 years in prison. 175 years to publishing information of public interest. that's only one jim. this that is detailed and held in prison for doing his job as a journalist in western europe. and that is julia, my son, as son phillip. well, you can criticize a song, his personality is behavior. but if there's one thing you can criticize, it's his contribution to freedom of information that i live and he gives it central...
2
2.0
Jul 8, 2021
07/21
by
ALJAZ
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eye 2
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the united states did not go in the car bomb as present by the said, the united states wouldn't. but can of stand to get some of the late right. and to stop us. the states never actually declare war on the top, they to never actually designated the call bonds as a terrorist organization. that's why it's so interesting that's present bigler. so in fact that he doesn't cross the column on but the same time. thank you. the agreement with the top on sign, but with the former administration. so again, this lack of fusion, i want to make one very serious correction present. buying said repeatedly f can stand, has never been unified in its entire his. that's not afghanistan as been a unified country. that's been a country that's been in the thirty's forty's, 50 before the cold war before the united states. but the soviet union started fighting over afghanistan, afghan, stm, with a small quiet people come to the united states, states and the rest of the world have a lot to do with what happened. but what present bind set about f can stand never being a unified country does not a david sa
the united states did not go in the car bomb as present by the said, the united states wouldn't. but can of stand to get some of the late right. and to stop us. the states never actually declare war on the top, they to never actually designated the call bonds as a terrorist organization. that's why it's so interesting that's present bigler. so in fact that he doesn't cross the column on but the same time. thank you. the agreement with the top on sign, but with the former administration. so...
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82
Jul 24, 2021
07/21
by
FOXNEWSW
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eye 82
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the united states took a lot of english culture and shipped it over to the united states. it was an empire feeding on the carcas of a dying empire. >> absolutely. after world war i it's about the growing american aris stockeracy feeding off the corps. the american elite dismantled this country and sold it off for parts. there was no reason for us to lose what is a serious conflict between us and china. not a military conflict but an economic one. there was no reason for us to lose it. it's not because they were working for the other side. they were working for their interest. china was a proxy. they would have fed off of anyone. china was the power with a growing consumer market. the difference is the pressure didn't want to selloff the pressure people. but that's what happened to us. -- british. >> so many threats here. why do you think the people in charge of the united states were so quick to sellout their own country? was it purely a profit motive? there seems to be some contempt involved. >> right. the globalist ideal and china is the centerpiece of the globalist idea
the united states took a lot of english culture and shipped it over to the united states. it was an empire feeding on the carcas of a dying empire. >> absolutely. after world war i it's about the growing american aris stockeracy feeding off the corps. the american elite dismantled this country and sold it off for parts. there was no reason for us to lose what is a serious conflict between us and china. not a military conflict but an economic one. there was no reason for us to lose it....
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7.0
Jul 24, 2021
07/21
by
ALJAZ
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eye 7
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that's pretty good compared to the rest of the united states. it's about 48 percent throughout the entire country. but the delta variant is spreading throughout the united states everywhere. increasing the number of people that are coming down with crone of virus to pandemic. that is now being fueled primarily in 3 states. texas, missouri, and florida. just in the state of florida, its accounting for about 20 percent of all new corona virus cases here in the us there troubling signs as well. and for example, in the state of alabama, only about 33 percent of the entire state population has been vaccinated. that is lead the governor of alabama to say that basically they're blaming it on unvaccinated people in her state on why the caseload is also going up there. and in the state of new jersey, once one of the epa centers of the pandemic here in the united states, the governor announced there that the people about that were fully vaccinated recently died from corona virus. that's led to a lot of worry by many a recent poll by the associated press f
that's pretty good compared to the rest of the united states. it's about 48 percent throughout the entire country. but the delta variant is spreading throughout the united states everywhere. increasing the number of people that are coming down with crone of virus to pandemic. that is now being fueled primarily in 3 states. texas, missouri, and florida. just in the state of florida, its accounting for about 20 percent of all new corona virus cases here in the us there troubling signs as well....
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now the united states is in iraq, unlike serial at the invitation of the iraqi government. but for the prime minister of iraq, it's a very, very touchy subject because he wants to us there on the one hand to train. but on the other hand, he's under extraordinary pressure on the p on the p. s. p m f. the, the she elements there too. because we've now he's, he has sheer, so that make complicates his life even further. now, the way the united states, one about this defensive move, if you can call it that, is inconsistent with hot pursuit or a retaliatory initiative. there's been a number of attacks by the p. m. s on us assets in iraq. but we've only responded maybe to 2 of them. so the question is why, why are you picking and choosing why just, i mean, why, why are you just got going here? and there just to upset thing, especially coming on the eve of getting iranian back forces that at a time when you're trying to deal with iran on the, to, to rejoin the j. c. p. away or the iranian nuclear agreement. and they are under many of the p m. f elements. shear elements are under ir
now the united states is in iraq, unlike serial at the invitation of the iraqi government. but for the prime minister of iraq, it's a very, very touchy subject because he wants to us there on the one hand to train. but on the other hand, he's under extraordinary pressure on the p on the p. s. p m f. the, the she elements there too. because we've now he's, he has sheer, so that make complicates his life even further. now, the way the united states, one about this defensive move, if you can call...
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11
Jul 23, 2021
07/21
by
CSPAN
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eye 11
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in canada, the united states, canada and the united states have made every effort to have a cooperation with russia, but we will not hesitate to act when russia threatens our interest. the people's republic of china is the only competitor in our view capable of aligning diplomatic and military power to an open international system. secretary blinken said it best when he noted that our relationship with china will be competitive when it should be, collaborative when it can be, and adversarial when it must be. and we engaged china from the position of strength and collaboration with our allies and partners i standing up for our values in international organizations and investing in our domestic economy. let me also say that again we join canada's calling for the immediate release -- we continue to condemn the lack of minimum protections in more than 2.5 years of arbitrary detention. as many senior leaders have said in my government, we are treating the cases as though they were our own. so i will conclude now, and i would just like to revive one of my favorite quotes from president john f
in canada, the united states, canada and the united states have made every effort to have a cooperation with russia, but we will not hesitate to act when russia threatens our interest. the people's republic of china is the only competitor in our view capable of aligning diplomatic and military power to an open international system. secretary blinken said it best when he noted that our relationship with china will be competitive when it should be, collaborative when it can be, and adversarial...
5
5.0
Jul 6, 2021
07/21
by
ALJAZ
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eye 5
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states, illegal cause off the united states. really appreciate your help today. and i, you to comment as well. this conversation is going to continue on in scum. let me show you what we're doing on my computer here. charge mileage in the united states at 2030 g m t. starting from wednesday. we will be having this conversation with sprinkle talking about child marriage, the impact of it, and also taking that conversation internationally. i know a lot of you, a commenting on child knowledge around the world as well, but for now, thanks for watching. i see you next time for some robot is a mechanical or even that self driving train of the apple. but androids today can be really humanoid. robots, like me, will be everywhere. al jazeera documentaries. next lead on the weird and wonderful world of robot that learn. think creal, and even trust i feel like i'm alive, but i know i am a machine origins of this species on 20. the corona virus pandemic has altered modern society as governments have grappled with soaring cases, contact, trac
states, illegal cause off the united states. really appreciate your help today. and i, you to comment as well. this conversation is going to continue on in scum. let me show you what we're doing on my computer here. charge mileage in the united states at 2030 g m t. starting from wednesday. we will be having this conversation with sprinkle talking about child marriage, the impact of it, and also taking that conversation internationally. i know a lot of you, a commenting on child knowledge...
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Jul 14, 2021
07/21
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ALJAZ
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states for the broader population of the united states, and then what this means for the indigenous people of the us? well, i frankly never thought we'd get this far. i'm, you know, in my lifetime, so i am encouraged, i think things circumstances kind of came together at a perfect time. you know, were in this sort of period of reckoning. you know, after the george floyd murder and then you know, this point in, in canada and their residential school work. and then the discovery of the grades. and finally, people realizing, and i think it just kind of occurred at a time when maybe nothing else really big was happening in the news and people and listen, heard it. i've actually spoken for quite a bit of people about that. so i know why. thank you so much, mary. to this program, this is a conversation that will be ongoing, not just on the stream, but around america. so mary mac and christine, thank you for being part of ash oh today. appreciate you. take care. i see next time. ah, ah, the news news news news with me when freedom of the press under stress in oh, you just con, genuinely ab
states for the broader population of the united states, and then what this means for the indigenous people of the us? well, i frankly never thought we'd get this far. i'm, you know, in my lifetime, so i am encouraged, i think things circumstances kind of came together at a perfect time. you know, were in this sort of period of reckoning. you know, after the george floyd murder and then you know, this point in, in canada and their residential school work. and then the discovery of the grades....
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the united states and germany are united in their determination to hold, rush her to account for its aggression and malign activities by imposing costs of our sanctions. and other tools well, a couple of weeks ago it was announced that next month the pipelines construction phase will be over, then it should take around 3 months for specific cation and safety checks to be carried out, and gas from the gas fields of siberia will be connected under the baltic sea, directly into germany, and not gus can start flowing. and it's got that there is a big demand for here in germany. for the 1st half of 2021. we saw gas supplies from russia to germany, increased by 43.4 percent, and we can expect that to rise in the coming future as well. the united states had wanted to be the one to supply the gas that germany needs with it liquefied natural gas b, l n g. the problem is, is that needs to be shipped across the atlantic, they have to be re justified in special plans. ultimately, it costs a lot more money. the u. s. has said it won't stand in the way of the pipeline right now, but it certainly d
the united states and germany are united in their determination to hold, rush her to account for its aggression and malign activities by imposing costs of our sanctions. and other tools well, a couple of weeks ago it was announced that next month the pipelines construction phase will be over, then it should take around 3 months for specific cation and safety checks to be carried out, and gas from the gas fields of siberia will be connected under the baltic sea, directly into germany, and not...
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and that the university system in the united states kind of copied the german system. i'm actually self was referring to whom boyd as the grandfather of the idea that teaching and research has to come together in a university. so that was the celebration i shall say, of love between germany and the united states and a true commitment that science matters. her handling of the pandemic in as a feature in very prominently absolutely. i mean i'm going to, i'm actually from the very beginning, i think of a cold 19 made it really clear that she takes it seriously. she herself was wearing a mask film, and other leaders kind of put it down. she was one of the 1st who really said that this is a deadly worldwide. why rose, which only can kind of follow the world, comes together. she also stress the fact how important john hopkins university was in fighting the pandemic. because as we might remember, it was john hopkins in baltimore just out of washington, which delivered all these crucial information in the beginning. all these figures, all these data scientists needed, but also
and that the university system in the united states kind of copied the german system. i'm actually self was referring to whom boyd as the grandfather of the idea that teaching and research has to come together in a university. so that was the celebration i shall say, of love between germany and the united states and a true commitment that science matters. her handling of the pandemic in as a feature in very prominently absolutely. i mean i'm going to, i'm actually from the very beginning, i...
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Jul 31, 2021
07/21
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CSPAN
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states law we consider those claims for relief under united states law. that's what we do with respect to those tragic cases. >> mr. secretary, again, i have so many questions. i've run out of time. i hope next time you come, and you actually will stay for second and third, maybe fourth rounds of questions, because the american people deserve transparency. they deserve accountability. they need to understand this enormous tragic crisis on our border and right now because the mainstream media is not reporting and your administration isn't admitting we have a crisis on the border, the american people are basically in the dark of what's happening here. it's a tragedy, it's a travesty. >> senator the next time i testify before this committee i do hope i'll have the opportunity to provide answers to explains the laws of the united states, to explain how we're executing those laws, to explain the plan that we have. >> i would be satisfied with basic facts and numbers that we're not getting because the facts and the numbers will describe what's happening and tha
states law we consider those claims for relief under united states law. that's what we do with respect to those tragic cases. >> mr. secretary, again, i have so many questions. i've run out of time. i hope next time you come, and you actually will stay for second and third, maybe fourth rounds of questions, because the american people deserve transparency. they deserve accountability. they need to understand this enormous tragic crisis on our border and right now because the mainstream...
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the united states of america. gordon chang, stay with us. i've got many more questions. i've got many more questions. we're going to be back in just there's an america we build and one we discover. one that's been tamed and one that's forever wild. but freedom means you don't have to choose just one adventure. ♪ ♪ you get both. introducing the wildly civilized all-new 3-row jeep grand cherokee l. ♪ ♪ in business, it's never just another day. it's the big sale, or the big presentation. the day where everything goes right. or the one where nothing does. with comcast business you get the network that can deliver gig speeds to the most businesses and advanced cybersecurity to protect every device on it— all backed by a dedicated team, 24/7. every day in business is a big day. we'll keep you ready for what's next. comcast business powering possibilities. the sleep number 360 smart bed. it's the most comfortable, body-sensing, automatically-responding, energy-building, dually-adjustable, dad-powering, wellness
the united states of america. gordon chang, stay with us. i've got many more questions. i've got many more questions. we're going to be back in just there's an america we build and one we discover. one that's been tamed and one that's forever wild. but freedom means you don't have to choose just one adventure. ♪ ♪ you get both. introducing the wildly civilized all-new 3-row jeep grand cherokee l. ♪ ♪ in business, it's never just another day. it's the big sale, or the big presentation....