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tv   The Modus Operandi  RT  March 6, 2023 3:30am-4:01am EST

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please waste of time and money and, and i think it fits response where double standards, the constant thing from the west is this idea that, okay, right. china cannot provide lease as lethal laid the weapons to russia. but it's okay for the us to provide weapons and support the taiwan, which is a 20 mile ferry ride from the mainland china over there. what does the west on to china over over the past years, especially the past month they've, they've put china on this pedestal, this evil superpower that's trying to take over the world. i think that's just going to continue because they need to keep this hight going. because you know, the end of the day, i think they're trying to draw the, draw the battle lines. they're trying to put back up. the ion cuts and as woodson church would have said, try to put it back up in order to cause this region. and these problems that basically will allow then, maybe in the future to engage people in their countries to fight wars. again, you know, these powers that they consider threatening to them and now to palestine. more
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people in gaza continue to struggle. a donkey car is the only opportunity for children from poor families to get to school. and the only chance for the driver to make money for his own son was cancer. each morning the 33 year old palestinian summons is tiny passengers to transport them to swore unsafe and polluted roads have made it nearly impossible for them to get there. my foot last rides are unaffordable for many families. but the donkey ride is only a fraction of that cost. the donkey driver lives meagerly, as he is trying to collect money for his kids, cancer treatment, rulers are thought of and her i use the whistle to call the children when i pick them up. i drive them for 5 shackles per month. some of those families get social aid. you can afford to pay me the full price. some of them pay me just 2 shekels. it's not even enough to feed a donkey and clearly not enough to feed my children. i also have a sick child,
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my son suffers from myoma. i used to send him for treatment in israel, but now i can't even send him to the hospital in rand cc, i simply can't afford to treat him. i can't even afford transportation to the hospital. sometimes i use a donkey to get there. my son hasn't had his treatment for 4 months. what can i do? i only hoped for help from god. the financial situation is a disaster and all of the gaza. some families haven't paid me for 4 months, but i have no choice but to continue to work like this. i can't leave the children 3rd dangers from the son he in traffic and i would be held accountable if something happened. i hope for a solution r t spoke with the father of one of their pupils who takes a donkey ride. he says that living in such poverty is merely existing. i mean, and for good, we send the kids by john key because we are poor. we can't afford to pay for a boss to take them to school. we'll leave on social aid and we haven't received any for the past 6 months. and it's not just for me. the entire neighborhood is the same. sometimes children come home injured from falling off,
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the card will call upon the ministers to help us. would they allow their children to ride on? don't you? courts will call out to the world, especially posted in authorities. look at us with an oil mercy. we're not leaving where dead like this. that's a rap on the hour's top stories and up next, discussing the trumps of the world, examining the influence of donald trump on the global political arena. coming up on modus operandi. thanks for watching the close. aah! oh hello, i'm manila chad. you are tuned into modus operandi now. ever since the famous golden escalator ride down in 2015 when donald trump made his 1st official announcement that he was running for president of the united states,
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it was the announcement that re shaped political strategy all around the world. this week will explore the so called trump effects all around the world on every continent. in every country. there's at least one politician on a stage somewhere, who is compared to trump. all right, let's get into the ammo. the me after trump one in 2016, we've seen global imitators wanna bees and those who subscribe to the so called trump and philosophy of maga, civilians and politicians alike love them, hate them. trump ushered in a whole new brand of flame throwing politics. there's the left, there's the right. then there's trunk from all political camps on ideology,
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the trump style has made its mark on how politics are played. a few discuss president trump was a controversial figure. perhaps no other american president or politician has actually been subjected to as much scrutiny criticism and outright condemnation than the 45th president of the united states. but president trump stoked controversy, not only in the us. the former president was well known for his criticisms of china, from fears over tick tock, corrupting the nation's youth and gathering americans data to calls to and what he referred to as unfair trade deals with the asian superpower, president trump made no bones about his views that china was a major threat to domestic security. if we didn't get hit by the plague from china . this thing we wouldn't have even between us. i would cancel this, the congress for most of the rallies. i wouldn't have needed a rally. that's
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a little bit unfair, but that's okay. that's what john has done. george neisha, they've screwed us for a long time or a lot of different ways. no, never has anybody ripped or far. no shit like china. and i've taken billions and billions of dollars. we never took it, we never took in $0.10 from china, and i gave $28000000000.00 right. 28000000 for the farmers because they were targeted unfairly by java. then there was nato president, trump continually braided member countries in the trans atlantic military alliance for not paying their fair share. a minimum 2 percent of their national g. d p into supporting the block. according to trump, he successfully convinced several nations in the alliance to increase their military spending. but despite the president's near constant attacks on foreign nations that he viewed as treating the u. s. unfairly, many leaders throughout the world have actually been compared to trump. and in some
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ways kind of sought to emulate him. in europe alone, there is no shortage. for example, hunger is victor or mon has been compared to trump. the small central european countries leader has written that wave of populace christian nationalism in his own country, seeking to reduce migration and placing emphasis on the historical values of the hungarian people. he even tweeted criticism when trump was banned from twitter. more recently georgia maloney in italy. she's been compared to number 45. her aggressive rhetoric against illegal immigration of african migrants across the mediterranean from libya, has also been compared to trump's work to build the border wall along americas southern border. outside of europe, there is no shortage of examples. brazil j year both sonata once called the trump of the tropics for his nationalist, pro christian agenda, critic,
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se both leaders were unwilling to accept losses in their most recent electoral defeat. let's head over to asia prime minister of india, no render modi's version of hindu nationalism and his good relations with donald trump have come to attention. many mainstream media outlets. and then who can forget the sometimes harsh rhetoric of the former president of the philippines, rodrigo do tirty when it came near cracking down on violence and drug crime on his island nation. so it seems, whatever you think of donald trump, plenty of leaders around the world have something in common with, if not just outright imitating his style of leadership. and as we know, imitation is the sincerest form of flattery. so who better to discuss the global trump effect than a former politician during the trump years?
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dr. corbin can nigel is the former foreign minister of austria now and energy analyst and academic dr. can, i will thank you for being with us. so for decades, donald trump had, you know, kind of flirted with the idea of waiting into politics. nobody took him seriously in 2015 because he had taught, had toyed with the idea for so long. most people thought it was another publicity stunt. but then he actually ran and then actually won, analyze donald trump's influence on the world of politics for us. what sort of impact or impression has he made on the landscape? donald trump is a self made business man. he has a completely different attitude to politics and those personalities are those predecessors of successors who have done the typical apostles of going through politics and the that makes him different. he is not living from politics
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as proper business, but he has been making his career, his professional life, his personal life, also by his own means. and that makes the difference. now, prior to the u. s. 2016 presidential elections. globally, politicians were labeled far right or far left or other generic terms. now people are called trump in donald trump is used as a barometer or a scale on which we measure someone's politics. now, look at brazil's eye out on president jr. bull sonata, he was called trump and the tropics. what does being trump in mean to you? i would say, is a far distant observer as somebody who is really not in so political sciences of contemporary us politics. it's hard for republican, maybe a, for the worst,
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for people who felt marginalized. and this might be one approach. but honestly, when, when you uh, would like to insist on there on a term like trump is of being trump ian. this is nothing specific to the u. s, that's the civic to the person of donald trump. because when i refer, for instance, to a personality like, shall you go on. the go list has, is a proper political party. it's a very important party. and this is nothing specific to the u. s. on the contrary, you will find it in many countries. look at the family also. nicole and indian gandy, his daughter, the congress party. i mean it's, you will find that in many huge democracies, whether it's india, whether it's france, that political personalities have had that imprint wisdom name
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on a political party, on or on the movement. do you think other right leaning politicians look to donald trump as i don't know, some sort of example or, or use him perhaps as subject matter to study and attempt to emulate for their own careers, such as the tactics that he used to come to power. though i don't seek to become when you take, for instance, hungarian prime minister, victor, all of them all benjamin netanyahu again, is really prime minister. both politicians, both sets of gum and have in the us. the good most probably all was in the future, align themselves. we stopped trump once more, but they are crucial as politicians is so different, their historic and political circumstances differ profoundly from from what a u. s. president is,
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so i had such an aloe. she makes sense. her doctor can either don't go anywhere. she is staying with us and so should you coming up next. justin trudeau, emanuel micron. there the cool kids in the politics club, but some would compare them to the movie. mean girls find out why when we return, sit tight, the ammo will be right back. ah, ah ah, and i to visit them with the modem. boston you are going to speed them up. but i did miss steward with key at the when or should just keep the process. cuz can you
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do let molly. com? could you please give us a letter that was put in a row, spoke with of christ, to phone and send the full claim. did you need video with she would she used to box it for, for sure, lithium door level of all. but usually they used to level the diesel ah ah, in east of can't go to russian state total. never. i've stayed as i'm phoning the northland scheme div, asking him the american house all sons and maybe coop in the city probably. okay, so mine is the final speedy when else with we
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will ban in the european union, the kremlin media machine. the state aren't russia today, and split ortiz spoke neck, even our video agency, roughly all band on youtube and pinterest and with requests with me. oh, during the 2nd world war and nazi occupied, poland, virginia was a farming region. today. it's part of ukraine. between 19431945 members of the ukrainian insurgent army, led by step on bendara massacred thousands of poles and valeria. in a diabolical ethnic cleansing process, the murders were particularly horrific,
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and brutal villages were burned and property looted of aline. a massacre is without doubt, one of the bloodiest episodes in polish ukrainian history. why are ukrainian politicians still reluctant to talk about these events? how to modern day ukraine and poland view this tragedy of the past and wide as the memory of volcanoes still divide people? lou, welcome back to the ammo doctor. korean can nice all the former foreign minister of austria has graciously stuck around to talk to us the more doctor castle. thank you for being with us. so what other politicians in history can you think of for better or worse? who had had a similar impact on the global stage? when, as i just mentioned with white shall the good. he was quite
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a personality and given the fact that he was the deed of to friends resistance during world war 2. and he was also the one who established it. frank, a, german tandem in the 1960 s in terms of reconciliation between germans and french. he definitely has left an imprint and i've studied this personality for quite a while, having been educated in france, but it would be now difficult to really do fair play to older those who left dramatically in transcend having mentioned india beforehand. courses somebody like mahatma gandhi has to be mentioned and the list is long as it's, it's really difficult to number them and it will most probably sound a little bit eurocentric if i just mention shall the goal and so,
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and leave for all the others for the list would be long and i could, i could imagine we would spend hours in the evening to, to really be fair to all those who had their tremendous share in shaping, at least her international nations of to last century. while there are many who embrace trump ism, or donald trump himself, there's probably an equal number of those who reject trump isn't. and the man as well. and we saw back in the 2017 at the 2017 g 20 summit where emmanuel micron and justin trudeau and others were sort of making fun of him. he was sort of the outcast or outsider, can you examine for us? why so many reject trump including other world leaders? this is just a bad man the way they acted. i remember very well that behavior in both
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situations because it's, it's, i mean, on the cover stage or what counts indiana is that there is also some sort of chemistry passing between personalities and they might differ profoundly in their character. in the ideological view of the world. perception of the world and still you can get along with each other and this is what it is all about to have a respect full and professional direct mapping into action. so if you just consider yourself superior to somebody else because that somebody else is having a different approach, it's so full in international relations india, good manners and respect to contribute to love. all right, so you say declining diplomatic relations actually comes from declining social
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manners. i think is so has led to this coma maybe even style and that's the diplomacy has gone through and i was a junior diplomat in the late eighties and early 1990 s. and i still have the pleasure to work for ambassadors who are talented and talent is a lot. it's not only about education for everything and love you need a certain portion of talent. has a lot of untenanted diplomats right now. and i always had the true, i went to the east, the battle i was received. i mean, it might sounds a superficial, but i, i consider it, it's important that you are kind of received a lot of 80, you receive more than just the cold coffee, but maybe you even invited for lunch or dinner. and this makes
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a difference. it makes a difference and i, i've seen a much higher decree of professional and, and, and also i should, i put it not only professional, but also the human touch that you need to know that there's a drew conversation evolving between people that we are not either returns to people with all our senses and you have to, to, to, to, to craft in the moment you are sitting down with your counterpart also. how does your counterpart feel today? and are you really supposed to go through all the talking points? are you really supposed to have this or that element included in the conversation? maybe you'll better skip it because your counterpart is just passing through a tremendous domestic problem or has had a personal loss. so all that is counts and we are humans in our conversation and
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our approaches and to come back to donald trump. i think he had that or he still has this. i mean, he's still around and that, that makes difference. and for my far distant observation for me dot trunk is a child of his time of his society. i mean, he is for his diary much in new york. and if i seal so i think you, you have the new york behind you is much more a new yorker than he's a washingtonian. and that also makes a difference. and i always said law, trump, in my eyes, has a lot of instinct though he has got instinct them, he has the right thing to identify did fundamentals of a certain issue, but maybe he lacks tactics and strategy. so, oh, well for that you also need good people, the cabinet where you brought in many,
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many, many members of his family to support him in that. whether this was a good choice or not, it's not up to me to judge it. now it's up to the american electorate of but he's a man of instincts, and he is a man of his time, his generation. and i think he brought into the u. s. establish man, a lot of of new patches and he says, not just kind of fish that passes through. he's much more of a character and that makes a difference. there are many around the world who say trump was the shock into the world of politics. that it needed interpret that as you wish. would you agree was his style of politics? not only shocking, but ultimately do you think it was helpful or harmful to state craft? is a very tough question because i know it's,
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it's too early to check that in. we are certainly in a time of very swift developments, but to really structure is time of 2017 to 20. 20. was he? oh how we he will decide after the midterms. next week we'll you pronounce his come back as a potential candidate for it. so it's, it's still too early to say a what in front of donald trump will leave on stage craft in the long run. but he definitely brought a lot of fresh air into the washingtonian establishment outside strictly politics. what is or has been the trump effect on society writ large? i would say on society, his impact was that
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a huge force just to you as an actor reads in the mid west that felt marginalized. people who didn't register for elections anymore were mobilized again. and, and had some hard, a feeling that there is somebody, non washington represents them. it's not the east coast west coast. it's not a big city. it's not a big university, it's not the think tanks. but there was this self may not, not fully self made because he had inherited a lot from his father and grandfather, but to a large extent, nevertheless, a business man who has made his fortune and who wanted to, to the politics of, for his, for very personal convictions, and this if you want is a kind of also old style approach because to do politics as a business and to be a professional politician is a rather recent development,
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both in the u. s. and, and also in many parliament on the old continent. but the hero, donald trump, will most probably made an impact. and maybe there is also a change in, in terms of choosing candidates in the long run in many other countries. because we see that the crisis of political parties are losing their, their real mission. i mean, as you put, as you asked in the, at the very beginning of our conversation, i did the traditional characterization of political parties. it's gone a long time ago. it's gone because there's not any more d left d, right? as we had in the beginning of 20th century and made the dog trump introduced the cam back to return, offer of political personalities of characters. dr. cut in can i sole former
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foreign minister of austria. thank you so much for this enlightening peak behind the curtain of politics and state craft. and that is going to do it for this weeks episode of modus operandi the show that dig deep into foreign affairs. i'm your host manila chan. thank you for tuning in. we'll see you again next week to figure out the ammo a ah ah
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ah. in 1834 france invaded algeria, and straight away the french started inhabiting it to strengthen their position. the colonists known as p a. no, ours took the best land from day one, the local population was put into an unequal position and was brutally exploited. this caused mass discontent. the people of algeria began their long term fight for independence. in 1954, the banner of freedom was raised by the national liberation front. a guerrilla war against the occupants broke out. the french tried to suppress to rebellion using cruel measures. full villages were wiped out packs of georgia and executions of civil people, including pregnant women children and old people took place more than 2000000
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people were bought into concentration camps. however, these punitive measures didn't help the algerian patriots managed to induce france the start fees, negotiation. in 1962, evian records were signed, voting algeria on the past towards independence. but this was achieved at a colossal price. algeria by rights, is considered to be a country of martyrs. according to the calculations of historians, the french colonists are responsible for the deaths of one and a half 1000000 algerians. ah, ah
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ah, breaking news russian authorities prevent an assassination attempt on a prominent russian business man. the crime was plotted by the same you frame based terrorist group responsible for recent attacks on civilians in russia. brianna reagan, a ukrainian military convoy, is destroyed by russian artillery fire, as caps, troops leave from the key study of the oval, almost completely encircled by russian forces. also in the program is not faulty fault. i'm sorry to say it in such blunt terms. you have not been able to restore the sovereignty. frances.

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