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00:00:00
[music]
00:00:13
[music]
00:00:32
15 o’clock exactly in our capital this
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drift in the parade of unfamiliarity always
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says time something else, although here on
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YouTube it’s not so important how much
00:00:40
time, mostly then you’ll look
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at the recordings to watch interesting conversations with
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interesting people Konstantin Remchukov,
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we are not all personal, your editor-in-chief,
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general director and
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independent newspaper, Konstantin Vadim,
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now I welcome you, I have risen, well,
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let’s start with serious topics because
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then, of course, there will be universally
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delicious all sorts of McDonald’s Muscovites,
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so I’ll try you a little with such
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questions, but here they serve
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Sweden and Finland are applying for membership in NATO,
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and thus there
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is a prospect that seems not of the past, the
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border of Russia is right here what is called
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within walking distance from St. Petersburg, how can
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this situation be assessed there,
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you know in politics and there are
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vague
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intentions, assurance promises of achievements
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so difficult measurable but emotionally
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charged there is very specific, easy
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to verify, here is the entry of Finland and
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Sweden into NATO, this is the concrete and tangible
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consequences of a special
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military operation in Ukraine on the part of Russia,
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which was directly and unequivocally stated by all the
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current politicians of Sweden and
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Finland, Finland and the president and
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prime minister named after Sweden traveled the
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Prime Minister of Strange Affairs and you
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can’t argue with this, and so I
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perceive it as everything that has
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a lace of words twisted on as goals, the
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intention to achieve it is difficult to measure,
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here most often it’s about who
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believes whom, that is, some element of this or
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logically,
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here everything is specific, here is what
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day of conspiracy 80 is today, one can
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say that as a result, NATO has
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moved closer to our borders,
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although Sweden sounds like it
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will not deploy nuclear forces
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on its territory, but that’s what for the
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time being today The main thing will not be that there
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will be
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unified elements of infrastructure
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so that
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all
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NATO members and organizations in general can
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use this
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infrastructure, that is, this is
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strategic planning,
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and in general, in a military sense, the entry of
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these countries is more significant than at one
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time the entry of countries the Baltic because the
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Finns have quite a serious army, they have
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not only an education system that is one of the
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best in Europe, but also a military
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training system that is known to be one of the best in
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Europe, and the Swedes, as far as I remember, until
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recently they even made
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combat aircraft themselves, which is generally
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quite rare now a phenomenon that is
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not in many countries, you know
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how the brain is, I don’t belong to the typical
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class of experts, but I
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think that since Russia is a nuclear
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power, it’s better for it
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to be like such a
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silent symbol of a possible answer,
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so I don’t see any military risks for
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Russia,
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not from Sweden, no, Finland, not from Poland
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and
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even strangely enough it sounds from Germany,
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so Germany really
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loves our leadership, Putin in particular, in
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some completely mystical way for me,
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he believes the
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Germans, he never spoke out against the
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Germans,
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not how bad at that time he absolutely does not
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like America and and
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trusts the Anglo-Saxons and
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blames them for everything in the world, but serge
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had the best relations with
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gas supplies with giant infrastructure
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projects in Germany, one of the key members of
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NATO, which means membership in NATO itself
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is never, well, at least until
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recently, I know that what now
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will not be an obstacle for our
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country to develop exactly normal
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relations of friendly
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partnership, what is happening now
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is
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such a deviation from many decades,
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but look, maybe
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personal experience is also reflected here because, after
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all, Putin lived in Germany for several years
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and worked somehow for him, the Germans are simply
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also on an everyday human
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level, maybe closer in America, he didn’t want to, did
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n’t work and knows about it, maybe, but
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not only, but in layman’s terms, a little
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more than the majority of people, something
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so distant, an obvious thing, of course,
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also the very first thing it comes to mind,
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that is, directly transferring your empirical
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everyday experience to
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politics and geopolitics, foreign policy,
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this can be allowed, of course, I don’t want to
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release it because politics is more
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than your personal experience and it is in the
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feelings of precisely such systemic trust and
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mistrust,
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but China no longer lived in China but
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we also don’t hear anything about China,
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while many people
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treat China with suspicion and I want to
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remind you here of the context of international
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relations on the eve of a special military
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operation that would have been absolutely clearly and
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unequivocally stated, confirmed by
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Biden, his Vice President Harris and
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Blinky to us this is an American line beer
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tank not scary not FRG Jones
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Prime Minister of Great Britain and all this lasted
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almost until
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February 24 when they said that today the
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most important confrontation in the world is the
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confrontation between Western
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democracies and the
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author Kiyame China, Russia, that is,
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such a border was drawn and that means we
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related to the number of countries with which the West
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will confront, I think that
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psychologically this can influence
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Putin, you know that he is still hostile, it doesn’t matter
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yes or no, he still
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believes that we are on the side of evil and not on the
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side of good, he puts forward
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opposite narratives, especially in
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his first speeches, what is it or to the
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West, fake, not credible on the
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side of evil, immoral in the extreme, that’s why,
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but these are again words words
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words yes, but there is a sofa, and what I’m
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suspicious about is that I’ve never seen a single
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thing that I
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could soberly evaluate in China, what’s
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happening there and the model that is
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used there and the
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consequences of excessive convergence or
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dependence on the Chinese market, an analysis of
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how all other countries and companies
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feel in the Chinese market, a very
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tough market like this, it may be
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possible to find it difficult to get out with virtually no
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losses, impossible, that’s
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what supplier monopolies are, but
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when we are there we leave the gas on VGA and that
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Europe wants to get rid of the monopoly, what
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is a monopoly, the importer is installing this
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pipe to the entire 7th row and everything begins to dictate to you and you
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at what price you
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will sell this gas there, it
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cannot be found 1 slam the door and leave,
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where are these multi-billion dollar investments in
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this pipeline, so there are a
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huge number of substantive
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issues related to partnership with
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China with the practice of this partnership, what
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it shares, what it doesn’t share, how it
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uses countries in its own interests,
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China is a very
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self-centered system that
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takes into account few people, and that’s when you analyze
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the risks for countries and then it turned out that the
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biggest risks come from the Anglo-Saxons of
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Germany, no from China, no from them,
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so I don’t fully
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understand this one, and that’s why I’m at a loss, and the
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consequence of this attitude, such as a way of
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looking at things, was that we are in a
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decent month we get
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Sweden and Finland into
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NATO, Christmas trees,
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what is childhood planning like, we’re
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just seconds, well, for the last few years,
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maybe even a decade and a half there, they’ve been
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constantly talking about the danger of the
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inadmissibility of the undesirability of
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NATO’s advance to the east, and these are the
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last months before the start of
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the special operation in Russia in 2 goals,
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ultimatums, but they were already talking about almost
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returning to the borders of 97, they demanded
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security guarantees, in fact, everything turned out
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exactly the opposite, that is, we need
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to move even further, and this is what
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we are talking about, it’s not very clear from
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whom the threat comes, not from the Swedes, pigs
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The Ministry of Justice to me comes from the Poles, as you
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say, does not come from the Germans, does not come from
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the Anglo-Saxons, in general, quite far from
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our borders, so what would seem to be the
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difference where NATO will advance if
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the threat is still from those states that are
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thousands of kilometers from our border, well,
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yes, that’s okay use as a tor
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for which in negotiations someone is always
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moving
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somewhere, someone on this basis demands that
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something happen this is the diplomacy
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of the given here we are yesterday, in my opinion, the
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editorial articles name came out in the newspaper, it
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just talks about
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diplomacy as an art impossible from
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politicians in the sedan class obligations
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perhaps perhaps war is a continuation of
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politics by other means to diplomacy
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as a separate type of activity art
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and the most important tool for
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managing the
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interests of any state, even a very
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small one as long as there is some manat and
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let’s assume Russia, which is a multi-
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regional power in which
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diplomacy should be at the highest
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level It is the specific actions that I
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designate as art that are impossible, and now
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we see that this art, from my point of
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view, has faded; we have not
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achieved a single impossible solution; very
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often diplomats or people representing
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diplomats speak the language of
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politicians,
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while it is necessary to accurately record what
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happened in the West penetration into the
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diplomatic positions of politicians, well,
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that is, the leader of the allied party of
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Germany, Burbank, yes, she becomes not a
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wandering on the bodies or there are
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not the strangest things in Great Britain, from
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our point of view, she has the skills of a
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diplomat, so they say rudely
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directly, politically engaged and
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biased, and against this background we began
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as to emulate this style and
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it turned out that diplomacy disappeared and that’s
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what you’re saying there is an attack there
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or an expansion, well, yes of course, but again the
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ultimatum nature of our proposals is
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how we need to quickly consider our
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proposal to return it became bios 7 or year
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it all looked like an excuse for Moreover,
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clearly understanding that no West has the
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allotted time frame from the end of December, it
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turns out that the end of February will not have time to
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evaluate any
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of our documents, and then
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we will say, we wash our hands with soap, we
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gave ours a chance, I won’t take advantage of it, so
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now we will solve this issue in our own way and
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began to decide, and apparently like my
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feeling, a lot of time
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had already passed, no one was counting on such a
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scenario so that they wouldn’t say that everything
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was going according to plan, because it’s
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absolutely clear that in the first weeks,
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probably a week and a half, the West generally believed
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that Zelensky would soon everyone
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strove to transfer their personal plane
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so that the moisture is not there the government in
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exile created our politicians with all sorts of
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statements such that
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Zelensky left them soon he won’t be there the
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West the first sanctions the first reaction but the
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speed machine came out there
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everything will take over but there is a riot to think what to do
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and even the way sanctions are deployed in
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waves suggests that every day
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or every week there are
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special operations within the time frame that
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experts thought about back and that everything will
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end very quickly, they say that
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colossal miscalculations were made on all
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sides, an
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error in assessing all situations in general, both
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in the West, but for them, these opinions are
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essential, and for us and I
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was preparing for our broadcast today, I think
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Anton and I haven’t seen each other for a long time, suddenly he
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wants to talk about everything, but in general
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terms, not specifically what happened yesterday
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or the day before yesterday, well, that’s me and in general I’m
00:14:21
like that as you wanted, the date we
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saw each other between 3 Turunda nights, in
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my opinion, so I began to think there, what
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are the
00:14:30
miscalculations of
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our leadership in assessing the
00:14:35
international consequences of their decision on a
00:14:38
special military operation?
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What is obvious to me at the
00:14:44
moment on May 16,
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2022, the first is an error in
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determining the
00:14:52
quality of the armed forces of Ukraine,
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the ability and desire of the Ukrainian military
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to resist Russia, this is a
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fundamental error, the fact that everyone with whom
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I talked there in January-February on these
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topics that are related there to the
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Ministry of Defense or in one form or another
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to people who are something then to hear about
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this time everyone said that there is nothing
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like that, no
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one will resist anyone because there in general the
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armies are like coins when you listen to the game and
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here there he pulled out his hair and wrote that
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they seem to have 250,000 armies, also just a
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quantity or days nothing
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prepared and so on today we
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see 200 all thousand seemed to be a serious
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backbone that has not fled anywhere, is
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highly motivated
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to resist, and despite the fact that now, but
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various buildings are solid back and do not write
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about retraining camps and the level of
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mobilization, and as I understand it, the
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Ukrainian army is able to increase
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it’s easy to grow your armed forces up to a million people, if they don’t already grow, but
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they talk about it in any case, that
00:16:02
trained reservists can be
00:16:04
deployed, two more drivers, now it all
00:16:07
just depends on the supply of
00:16:10
appropriate weapons; the second
00:16:12
absolutely seems to me that there was a
00:16:15
serious mistake in assessing the
00:16:17
unity of the West in support Ukraine
00:16:20
no cracks no alternative
00:16:23
assessments ira is also very significant you
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are planning an operation like any other there is
00:16:27
nowhere to go they will
00:16:29
never play with us on the contradictions hd
00:16:32
someone up to
00:16:34
3 the
00:16:35
scale and variety of sanctions no one
00:16:39
foresaw this
00:16:41
closure of
00:16:43
air traffic
00:16:45
by the West
00:16:47
the suspension of supplies of spare parts and
00:16:50
components as for our planes,
00:16:53
and for the last 24 hours they have
00:16:56
been telling us about Siemens trains,
00:16:58
so the peregrine falcon is written, swallows
00:17:01
will be, and these are for parts, and so on,
00:17:04
further
00:17:07
arrest and actual confiscation of more than
00:17:11
300 billion dollars of
00:17:12
cb reserves, well, that is, you are preparing, you still have to,
00:17:17
any scenario must because
00:17:19
that we never know what will be given
00:17:22
when you are preparing, you write, then as a
00:17:24
rule 3 four scenarios are needed,
00:17:26
what will happen if this happens, if at
00:17:30
least one scenario was written that
00:17:31
the West will take and confiscate 320 350
00:17:34
billion of our dollars there, no one
00:17:37
can have this ever no, everyone was
00:17:38
talking about Swifty, no, cover this
00:17:41
in our first scenario, but here is scenario number 4, I’ll
00:17:44
arrest you, who will take
00:17:47
responsibility to say yes, no, this
00:17:49
cannot be, and if there is no such person, then
00:17:52
you must first be smarter before pulling out
00:17:55
this money in the center 350 billion is
00:17:57
not a lot of money, it’s a gigantic
00:18:02
accumulation of our people and the deferred
00:18:05
consumption of our people. Let me remind you that
00:18:07
money that
00:18:10
the state did not give for current expenses went into these reserves,
00:18:13
be it pensions, be it roads, be it
00:18:16
bridges, as if the hospital had a budget
00:18:18
limit, but that’s what we like we should
00:18:21
put it aside like an airbag,
00:18:23
which means it turns out that this
00:18:25
scenario was not described, it
00:18:27
says something about the fact that in general there is not such a
00:18:29
level of
00:18:32
readiness then
00:18:34
absolutely no one foresaw this, from my
00:18:38
point of view, a
00:18:39
completely new high-quality reaction this
00:18:41
company consul rush this It’s just that this did
00:18:45
n’t happen because no matter what the system was there,
00:18:47
cultural figures went and
00:18:50
exchanged, theater and ballet had a
00:18:53
big tour in New York, and so on,
00:18:56
now this has covered the spheres of the science of
00:18:59
education, Jones’s dispute with you beloved
00:19:02
exchange, and yes, it turns out that joint
00:19:05
projects are also a measurement, and
00:19:09
what is
00:19:11
loss, even
00:19:15
loss, but the assets of private individuals, yachts, villas,
00:19:19
airplanes, yes, this is several tens
00:19:21
of billions; this is also a way of life for our
00:19:23
citizens and our individuals, why should this be
00:19:26
hooted and damn it, they took him away, these
00:19:29
cute ones, they took these yachts, it also seems to me
00:19:31
that this loss of resources for
00:19:33
the country from the effective
00:19:35
elimination of dependence on our
00:19:38
oil and gas supplies actually indicates that they did
00:19:41
not foresee
00:19:44
Russia’s ability to preserve key
00:19:48
assets that went to the
00:19:51
well-being of our country if there are no
00:19:55
oil and gas supplies there until we
00:19:56
reconfigure that there will inevitably be
00:20:01
another problem moment here I just
00:20:04
want to say more about it, maybe more
00:20:08
emotionally, maybe more simply
00:20:10
expressively and expressively, from my point of
00:20:13
view, there has been an actual elimination,
00:20:15
at least at this moment, of such a
00:20:18
phenomenon as the soft power of
00:20:21
Russia, not only in the near and far
00:20:24
abroad, this is a very important thing
00:20:26
because after all, when hard power is not
00:20:29
used, everyone knows that soft power
00:20:32
is the force that advances the country,
00:20:37
promotes the country of their people, culture,
00:20:41
influence through education through contacts,
00:20:44
and this is the soft power that, but I just
00:20:46
don’t know how many in 20 years, a fund was created
00:20:48
in the development center and progress
00:20:50
now you will come somewhere and you will
00:20:53
tell something within the framework of soft power why
00:20:55
people should come to us right now at the
00:20:57
moment the most serious Chris I know that everything
00:21:00
will be like that there as always comes to life in
00:21:02
some forms for the fact that today it is
00:21:05
actually the paralysis of soft power in Russia
00:21:07
is considered to be the most serious consequences
00:21:10
of this operation, then I, as an economist,
00:21:13
say no one foresaw it because
00:21:16
otherwise you would have to prepare for what would be an
00:21:19
immediate shock within the shock
00:21:23
surgery of the Russian rope, the need to
00:21:26
rebuild all industries, new
00:21:28
budget restrictions, new incomes, new
00:21:30
markets, and I’m amazed because the whole
00:21:35
discourse about the dashing 90s by a
00:21:38
huge number of experts, both
00:21:41
armchair and serious politicians,
00:21:43
who spoke boiled down to the fact that
00:21:47
almost the main fault of the 90s and the
00:21:50
country’s leadership at that moment was that they
00:21:53
subjected the population to shock therapy,
00:21:57
why it was impossible to do it like China
00:22:00
everyone said to slowly follow
00:22:03
first then first this and this
00:22:06
means it was written down as the main
00:22:09
fault and the price of Gaidar and other people
00:22:12
now I say again shock therapy
00:22:15
in my opinion I gave the definition is a
00:22:19
form of fitting the Russian economy into the
00:22:23
world economy on new
00:22:26
market conditions when
00:22:30
marginal costs are a factor that
00:22:33
predetermines the decision to invest or
00:22:35
develop this or that
00:22:37
production, and now we
00:22:39
are faced with shock surgery, that is,
00:22:42
not fitting into the global coneco, but
00:22:44
being cut out of the global economy of Russia
00:22:47
and everyone should immediately start
00:22:49
doing this with all income courses
00:22:53
opportunities to travel somewhere
00:22:56
use your savings,
00:22:59
rising prices so that Rosstat doesn’t say anything, I’m
00:23:03
under the flood of everything that
00:23:06
we don’t consume, I go even alcohol, I see how many
00:23:08
prices have risen, although there
00:23:11
were no new imports, but some
00:23:13
whiskey there cost that much
00:23:15
now it costs, say, three times more expensive
00:23:19
why but because there will be a situation like this,
00:23:22
we now all proceed from the fact that
00:23:24
this product is not because it is so expensive
00:23:26
that it came to us so expensive, but
00:23:28
then it is so expensive that we simply do not
00:23:31
expect that we will have it in the near future; we are
00:23:33
mortgaging our future
00:23:35
the risks have not been received for the time being, the mission has not been received and
00:23:37
its pages are nourished in this sense,
00:23:39
someone in China is fighting and the period they forgot about
00:23:42
China, no one says to listen, but in
00:23:44
China there is also no show, China just like
00:23:46
in the 90s, Deng Xiaoping followed his own path
00:23:49
like that I now Xi Jinping does not allow
00:23:52
this to expose citizens
00:23:55
and the economy and industries and
00:23:58
enterprises and unemployment and closures to such a shock, this is a
00:24:02
colossal level, they are
00:24:06
uncertainty and indeterminacy,
00:24:08
as we know, as Kafka Dostoevsky taught us, it
00:24:10
still drives us crazy
00:24:14
only uncertainty, cause causes a
00:24:17
person why - during interrogation, I never
00:24:19
say what he is poor in; he keeps
00:24:22
thinking about what
00:24:24
happens next;
00:24:28
when we analyzed the consequences, including, in
00:24:32
my opinion, it may be with you on this air,
00:24:34
which shortly before the operation, I say
00:24:36
that there are three motives for which we need to
00:24:39
investigate
00:24:40
is it possible is it impossible military operations the
00:24:42
first motive will there be an economic
00:24:45
benefit from this we said no there won’t be
00:24:48
because there will be sanctions there will be deterioration of the
00:24:50
stone actually this came true then it comes
00:24:52
down politically
00:24:55
foreign policy no it will be
00:24:56
isolation was refused in the
00:24:58
national sense no what could
00:25:00
be internal political what is internal
00:25:01
political the ruling group
00:25:04
consolidates power politics
00:25:07
begins to change the
00:25:10
criteria for whether you are needed here or not
00:25:14
needed here but it’s possible I said this
00:25:17
before but it seemed redundant to me and
00:25:20
so the politicians are under control we see how
00:25:22
the constitution has changed we see how the
00:25:24
choice is made why is there such a price
00:25:26
Now I see that internally the political
00:25:29
consequences are already obvious: the desire to
00:25:32
straighten the
00:25:34
political agenda
00:25:37
for Putin or against Putin at all
00:25:40
levels, this is not only at the level of, say, the
00:25:43
presidential elections, Mironov here
00:25:45
put forward the idea of ​​​​help Thursday there will be a date
00:25:48
here at night this week,
00:25:50
why do we need these elections I think
00:25:53
it’s at least a single voting day
00:25:56
if all the parties that are in the house already
00:25:59
support the path, why waste
00:26:02
money and people’s energy, go for
00:26:04
someone’s eye father, there is no
00:26:06
fundamental difference between us, therefore, according to
00:26:08
Mironov, he is not the last person on the
00:26:11
political map Russia, he
00:26:13
conveys the idea to his friends and no
00:26:16
politics in any region,
00:26:18
no political question: will
00:26:21
we build roads or kindergartens, will
00:26:23
we help pensioners or will we
00:26:26
do something, there is no key question
00:26:28
for Putin or against Putin, if you are for
00:26:30
Putin, you don’t care
00:26:32
and hold some kind of
00:26:35
company elections and everything else seems to be
00:26:38
secondary, so the sublimation
00:26:40
takes place of feelings of only one thing: that
00:26:43
Putin we are voting for him, and all
00:26:45
other issues if we call for a
00:26:46
vote will somehow be
00:26:48
resolved, this is a serious turn in
00:26:50
internal politics, yes we are having a serious
00:26:52
conversation was when I was a non-systemic
00:26:54
opposition from here looked strange, but
00:26:56
now it turns out that the systemic
00:26:58
opposition doesn’t interest anyone what
00:27:00
they think, but a person
00:27:02
consists of nothing but
00:27:04
thoughts about Putin, it consists of
00:27:07
banal, hard everyday life, people
00:27:10
want to know about
00:27:12
healthcare education for their children and the
00:27:14
housing issue about roads about
00:27:17
crime and rest homes and so on, it
00:27:23
seems to me that now
00:27:27
Medvedev is helping me a lot,
00:27:33
helping that it would seem that
00:27:36
his posts are not so chaotic in nature,
00:27:41
induced by some sharp
00:27:44
thoughts, but in fact, since
00:27:47
he is everything - after all, the person included, he is the
00:27:48
deputy chairman of the
00:27:49
deputy secretary of the council, it is safer than the
00:27:51
deputy chairman of the stems of the launch, he himself is
00:27:54
Putin, but he still puts
00:27:59
things in there that allow me, again, to
00:28:02
return to my hypothesis,
00:28:04
initially them immediately after the military price
00:28:09
only confirms that Putin’s original motive
00:28:11
was, as it were, him did not look strange
00:28:14
with all those disadvantages of which I said he
00:28:16
would be strategic in his
00:28:19
coordinate system, Perry was taught to create a world
00:28:23
international political order not to
00:28:27
wait for the war that someone would
00:28:30
start against us because of the Crimea in his hypothesis
00:28:34
these were the Ukrainians over and then once upon a time, but
00:28:37
now
00:28:40
what the security council probably gave him was extinguishing
00:28:42
the show and not the tag with
00:28:45
which we are connected
00:28:48
with the world economy,
00:28:51
regardless of how a
00:28:55
particular relationship develops and now
00:28:57
we see grain, food prices rise,
00:29:01
which reshuffle in the world begins from these
00:29:05
shake-ups in the world because of these price increases,
00:29:09
what in the future are food riots and
00:29:13
political upheavals and regime changes,
00:29:16
well, gas and oil will also lead to a
00:29:21
cessation of supplies from here and the
00:29:23
readjustment of new supply routes to
00:29:27
key markets will also lead to because there
00:29:29
will be an increase in prices and an increase in prices means an increase in
00:29:32
costs It’s just a check, the lack of
00:29:34
profit, the lack of profit often leads to
00:29:37
bankruptcies, unemployment, and so on, and
00:29:39
now when Medvedev
00:29:41
blurts out this motive, you begin
00:29:43
to understand that Putin, in the end, did
00:29:45
n’t think everything through, but decided to
00:29:48
aggravate the situation so that in the end,
00:29:52
when people get tired, the bidan will lose
00:29:56
congress for the
00:29:58
midterm elections
00:30:00
let's assume and the
00:30:02
election campaign begins trump
00:30:05
returns he says that in general you did
00:30:08
not know how to negotiate with Putin
00:30:09
let's come to an agreement with him here China is
00:30:13
on the heat and stands on the one hand
00:30:15
Harrison for the territorial integrity of
00:30:17
Ukraine on the other hand he accuses
00:30:19
America of not taking into account the interests of
00:30:21
Russia, and I think it was Taiwan who recruited
00:30:24
him to maintain some plans for
00:30:26
the integration of Taiwan using such methods and there is
00:30:28
no need for it, and it seems to me that in these
00:30:30
conditions Putin may seem onion then,
00:30:33
well, let’s not have a month-long operation, but
00:30:36
let’s give it a year, let’s 2 here’s the world in
00:30:38
We’ll keep him in this state and when he starts,
00:30:40
someone will definitely call macron
00:30:43
now we know that he likes to call
00:30:44
Moscow macron to look for sushi, I’ll fly you
00:30:47
but not a single lieutenant, let’s
00:30:49
meet somewhere, we’ll talk, we need to
00:30:50
live somehow for a year, we’ll live but As a consequence
00:30:53
of this, the reorganization of
00:30:55
international relations, I don’t fully
00:30:58
understand how we can defend our relations, in
00:31:00
particular economic ones,
00:31:04
because economic relations,
00:31:07
well, in international markets, they are still
00:31:10
determined by your productivity,
00:31:12
competitiveness, no one
00:31:17
gives anyone any privileges, and it may seem because
00:31:20
we are everywhere they scrub it off so it does
00:31:23
n’t like us and that’s why we want
00:31:26
something Perry to establish in the economy you
00:31:27
won’t move anything because the power in the
00:31:30
world of capital by capital than you have is
00:31:32
stronger capital topics you have more of it
00:31:34
than it is more technologically advanced than it is
00:31:37
innovative who you have everything the
00:31:39
cards are in your hands and you will have to play
00:31:42
to this tune and fight for
00:31:44
what we are actually fighting for, we are fighting for
00:31:47
sovereignty, people who quite possibly do
00:31:50
not fully understand this. you sell
00:31:52
your oil and gas and you depend on dollars
00:31:54
and euros, it’s definitely sovereign you do it by
00:31:56
depending on them and the cats what do you spend on are
00:31:59
you burning no, we don’t want anyone to
00:32:01
interfere in anything, impose some
00:32:03
standards on us, including
00:32:05
environmental other no, we are a sovereign
00:32:07
country, we want to pollute, we will
00:32:09
pollute, and when we decide that we will not
00:32:11
pollute, we will go first, I need it, that
00:32:13
is, falling out of these global
00:32:16
agreements
00:32:18
as a sign of what kind of sovereignty
00:32:21
does not look convincing to me, especially since the
00:32:26
world economy has changed, I have already
00:32:28
said that
00:32:30
85 percent of world trade, this is within
00:32:34
transnational corporations, this is
00:32:36
actually between workshops or between
00:32:39
divisions of the same company,
00:32:41
hence the requirements of globalization, the removal of
00:32:43
barriers to finished products, few people
00:32:46
trade yet at least intermediate
00:32:48
goods in English intermediate goods,
00:32:50
they make up 65 70 percent there already in
00:32:53
the structure of trade, this is exactly what is needed
00:32:55
cooperation and people raise their level of
00:32:58
industrialization exclusively at the beginning
00:33:01
so a link in some chain calculate
00:33:04
something right away you will create some chain but
00:33:07
it’s funny but yesterday the strain of hearties
00:33:09
as far as let’s drive through the TV
00:33:11
better than
00:33:13
it is produced by sonido or we’ll produce a
00:33:16
car that’s better by the way
00:33:19
conversations machine news that
00:33:21
amused someone so much to this piece I made
00:33:23
myself happy in the morning about the fact that but this is not
00:33:26
nationalization in such a classical
00:33:27
sense, but the nationalization of
00:33:30
AvtoVAZ assets, that is, the Moscow plant
00:33:33
will now be one hundred percent owned by
00:33:35
the state, the
00:33:36
Togliatti plant will be two-thirds there,
00:33:38
one-third there will be a tour of success, but here,
00:33:40
in fact, it will still be a
00:33:41
state company that will
00:33:42
revive the production of Muscovites, the
00:33:45
Muscovite car, which has
00:33:47
not existed for 20 years, there is not even a museum for
00:33:50
elco, suddenly they will start
00:33:53
producing and
00:33:54
people will start producing soft rice of irony that all the
00:33:57
information is being listened to, and that’s what we
00:34:01
We really hope to make a car from scratch
00:34:03
when no one in the world
00:34:04
does this, but we’re trying to try our luck, that’s who
00:34:08
they were at the concert, the phrase was said that we
00:34:10
will do and electro, well, right away
00:34:13
the lecturer, of course, that is, separately nine
00:34:15
in the eighty-fifth year when Gorbachev
00:34:19
came to power at the March captured, then
00:34:22
he went to AvtoVAZ somewhere in June 85,
00:34:26
met with the workers, everyone was jubilant,
00:34:29
Gorbachev was a good hammer, he was
00:34:32
optimistic, and based on the results of
00:34:36
Gorbachev’s visit to AvtoVAZ,
00:34:39
meetings with the staff, they decided that
00:34:41
in 5 years in Russia, the Soviet Union
00:34:43
would become a trendsetter in
00:34:44
the automotive industry, we have this here is the phrase
00:34:47
to become for Canada, it’s not easy to do there,
00:34:50
improve the quality,
00:34:52
become a trendsetter of fashion, this is
00:34:55
our traditional,
00:34:58
our maximalism, but that is, we tits are
00:35:02
not content with this, not when we immediately
00:35:03
follow the crane, well, and a
00:35:05
trendsetter, but I always
00:35:08
recommend the book
00:35:10
likers yes Toyota, for example, where is one
00:35:14
of the best books and is well translated into Russian,
00:35:16
where
00:35:19
this first book is composed, then there
00:35:21
was a lot and it sells how and in principle it can be
00:35:24
transferred to the service sector,
00:35:26
which is very important, but for production
00:35:30
these are 14 principles, these are the
00:35:34
Toyota production system, this is
00:35:37
long-term philosophy is a description of
00:35:40
the process and the management of the entire process,
00:35:43
this organization of the rhythm of work at
00:35:46
all stages so that people are not driven there and so
00:35:48
on and
00:35:50
without this you cannot achieve quality, the
00:35:53
actual meaning of the entire production
00:35:55
system, modern forays are the same thing
00:35:58
I studied in
00:36:01
Germany and even once two ago I
00:36:05
was and I
00:36:06
say the Germans and the Germans of this is Harry the
00:36:11
production system of Toyota he so
00:36:13
why does it give this is our
00:36:15
production system with its
00:36:17
culture with its
00:36:19
approach to this quality as a consequence of the
00:36:23
organization of the process procedures practices
00:36:27
plans long-term cash philosophies it is
00:36:30
extremely important to have a philosophy in
00:36:34
this in fact, long-term when you
00:36:36
sacrifice
00:36:38
current productivity, tell
00:36:40
the master to rebuild, yes, in the name of
00:36:43
strategic quality improvement, this is very
00:36:45
serious science, this is not a matter of
00:36:47
lecture, this is science, practice, you
00:36:50
go and you must eliminate all
00:36:53
losses according to the Japanese code, this is called
00:36:56
this mudra, you are literally cutting out
00:36:59
claims two are you taking one step at a time or three
00:37:01
steps away from it, that’s how we do everything, that is, we will pour
00:37:03
full concentrate into creating that is,
00:37:06
the cost or value for the
00:37:08
consumer, that’s why I
00:37:10
support the desire for software to become the
00:37:15
world’s legislative body, but as it didn’t work out in 80 90,
00:37:18
I think it’s also
00:37:20
unlikely that it will be possible to become
00:37:22
the legislator may have such a goal and it is worth it,
00:37:24
maybe the goal is worth producing just
00:37:26
some cars of acceptable quality in
00:37:28
some inexpensive segment, but in order to
00:37:32
produce this, this also requires approaches, I
00:37:35
know, for example, on gas,
00:37:37
Oleg Deripaska, on gas, I watched how the
00:37:40
Japanese management system was applied
00:37:43
from I remember they started producing the Volga with the Americans,
00:37:46
someone wanted a
00:37:48
seagull there, some other something, gas 69, and then
00:37:52
it turns out that from the point of view of the
00:37:55
quality market and the price-quality ratio, the
00:37:58
gazelle is the best car on the market
00:38:02
because they take it and they have become in this niche
00:38:05
the best thing is that we are generally not only in Russia, we do
00:38:07
n’t deliver everywhere and everything goes away
00:38:09
because how much money did you pay for
00:38:10
this car with such qualities and for
00:38:13
these purposes a small truck that
00:38:15
will transport cargo for small
00:38:17
businesses or for a crooked store there
00:38:19
because in two- three years, you can
00:38:21
easily write off this car and you
00:38:23
have all the value of which
00:38:25
instead of why you got it with
00:38:27
minimal costs, I saw how to
00:38:29
move to this from the only
00:38:31
car that meets the needs of
00:38:33
the market was this one, so it was necessary, as it
00:38:35
were, for the image of especially a veteran to the factory didn’t
00:38:37
want to give up the wolf, this is the glorious
00:38:41
name of the site, I remembered Cyber ​​for with the
00:38:43
red stadiums that at this price and with
00:38:46
this quality you will not compete with
00:38:48
this question and how difficult it was to
00:38:51
set it up and they had it written everywhere there was a
00:38:54
combo they had everywhere there it’s written
00:38:57
I’ll be there these Japanese workers
00:38:59
immersed themselves in this process created
00:39:00
some crumbs quality some kind of
00:39:03
bonuses they have if they find one hook so that
00:39:06
all four different types of engines can be
00:39:08
lifted and lowered into this machine that
00:39:11
there were four different strengths it was a
00:39:13
waste of time while you belong even
00:39:15
before they stepped over to set up I saw I
00:39:17
just walked around these workshops I looked I
00:39:19
was simply amazed this is really a
00:39:21
breakthrough on so difficult to organize from
00:39:25
such there must be
00:39:26
dedication and specific knowledge of the
00:39:29
experts who teach the team teaches
00:39:32
this when he learned Oleg this then he
00:39:37
told when you It was true a long time ago, about
00:39:39
10 years ago, that the
00:39:42
governor of one of the regions came to him, who
00:39:45
had concluded agreements with foreigners, and
00:39:47
assembling the machines here, the foreigners found out
00:39:50
that the labor force did not even meet the
00:39:52
needs of assembling from these Western
00:39:55
parts, and this governor came and
00:39:58
said to his
00:39:59
colleague, you won’t mind if I
00:40:02
’ll transport 1000 of your workers with their families
00:40:04
to my region, but we
00:40:07
’ll put cottages for them because otherwise our
00:40:09
enterprise means they won’t
00:40:12
make money, but the governor saw
00:40:16
that just raising even such a
00:40:18
person is a big problem, so I
00:40:20
’ll say again what we
00:40:21
’ll do now we have no other
00:40:24
alternative since we have taken the path
00:40:26
to diverge from the whole world because of sick
00:40:29
value chains with markets that have led to an
00:40:33
attitude towards an economic
00:40:36
trade financial war, this is what we
00:40:40
can say about a war about a
00:40:42
financial and economic trade war,
00:40:44
and of
00:40:46
course we have to survive and such a country how
00:40:49
ours should survive, so there will be
00:40:52
enthusiasm, but I want to say that this is a
00:40:54
very difficult, serious scientific
00:40:58
management project for something to travel, for
00:41:02
something to fly, for something to
00:41:04
spin where it needs to be, if we
00:41:07
look at another area there, let’s say there are
00:41:09
TV models there hp tablets
00:41:13
microchips we see what a colossal
00:41:16
gap this is a gap, it is both scientific and
00:41:18
technological, but you just do
00:41:20
n’t have to think about when we will do everything
00:41:22
while you start to understand the details and
00:41:24
where you will get it, this obliges
00:41:27
the route, it’s how good it can’t be taken for you,
00:41:29
we can develop it and who comes
00:41:32
such tadpoles before in fact they are
00:41:34
all in yesterday they have no skills
00:41:37
they have so I look at the coming years
00:41:39
as quite difficult to be
00:41:44
honest and
00:41:49
God who will demand the complete
00:41:52
mobilization of society
00:41:55
but society does not mean mobilization
00:41:59
centralized centralized
00:42:00
mobilization in the 21st century is nothing will give, and this
00:42:04
mobilization for survival, it seems to me, is
00:42:07
through the forms of private initiative,
00:42:10
because
00:42:13
only private capital with its
00:42:16
selfish interests continues to
00:42:19
claim that it is a much more
00:42:21
effective and diverse agent of
00:42:24
transformation in the country than the state,
00:42:26
the state can take one two three
00:42:29
maximum spheres, concentrates everything
00:42:32
resources are really bad at calculating costs,
00:42:36
how much money they spent,
00:42:40
how effective they are, the state doesn’t
00:42:43
like something from the critics, so it often
00:42:44
keeps all these things closed and
00:42:48
moving is such a speculative
00:42:50
wish because, on the contrary, we
00:42:52
still live on the contrary,
00:42:54
concentrate easy to
00:42:55
schematize
00:42:58
character traits there, Putin and the
00:43:02
Russian authorities as a whole, as a
00:43:05
geopolitical reality,
00:43:08
geopolitical reality understands
00:43:10
a reality that depends very little
00:43:11
on whether we are there or not,
00:43:14
it must be taken into account and it is a reality that
00:43:17
leads to certain consequences
00:43:18
that most of us may
00:43:21
not want to see, which means the first
00:43:24
feature is extreme secrecy,
00:43:27
secrecy, non-publicity, opacity,
00:43:32
narrow circle of access to information in the
00:43:36
decision-making process,
00:43:39
suspicion and
00:43:43
the desire to carry out a lot of things in the
00:43:46
mode of some unexpected decisions,
00:43:48
not even to report that
00:43:51
but why not remove gold and foreign exchange reserves of
00:43:55
300 billion so that the enemy does not
00:43:57
suspect that this is a sign that
00:43:59
Russia is preparing for something, even
00:44:03
this one seems to me, I cannot admit that
00:44:06
such a risk was not on the table, but
00:44:09
do not inform these do not give or very
00:44:11
Nabiullina the right to quickly somehow
00:44:15
save these assets, our gold and foreign exchange and
00:44:18
only then start the operation, probably
00:44:20
someone said no, you know the
00:44:23
scale of the operation; withdrawal of such an amount to other less
00:44:26
risky assets for Russia, such an
00:44:29
amount will not go unnoticed on the
00:44:31
world market and the CIA will know about it; to a certain
00:44:36
extent, this
00:44:38
feature disappears somewhere, but in order
00:44:41
to be able to count on what will happen, that
00:44:43
another second
00:44:44
absolutization of particular damage to the understanding of
00:44:48
the most typological from the typical
00:44:50
basic and essentially, it seems to me that this is a
00:44:54
very important feature, we take some
00:44:56
separate feature, for example, Nazism, and
00:44:59
begin to absolutize the fact of the presence of
00:45:01
some -that group of a certain percentage there
00:45:04
among voters
00:45:05
to a level that characterizes all
00:45:08
Ukrainians and their entire political system,
00:45:10
this is the absolutization of particulars to the detriment of a
00:45:14
common understanding of the
00:45:16
essential, poking around is also a
00:45:19
stylistic feature at the time of
00:45:22
decision-making, who through the same pretext
00:45:24
in order to develop all this therefore
00:45:27
we say that one and a half percent of the Nazis,
00:45:29
let’s say that there are those 100 percent,
00:45:33
that’s a
00:45:35
methodological mess in the head outside of it
00:45:37
remains, say they would start to carry out the affairs of Poland, a
00:45:39
visa until the main enemy in the
00:45:43
articles is declared to be Lenin who
00:45:45
came up with this idea to spend Ukraine does not
00:45:46
exist and the first thing that people do
00:45:50
was shown to what -that settlement
00:45:52
SBN restored the monument to Lenin and on the
00:45:55
central ones it was a mess, so you
00:45:57
guys and the red flag are big risks,
00:46:01
we are Lenin red flag 11 fications where there are
00:46:05
absolutely big tions and there’s a
00:46:08
feeling that communication is going on, it’s worth beating for
00:46:10
which these categories have no
00:46:14
no meaningful sense further,
00:46:16
the line is absolute from my point of view, a
00:46:18
serious negative attitude towards
00:46:21
the Internet,
00:46:22
social networks, not using these
00:46:25
gadgets,
00:46:27
inability to Google the necessary information,
00:46:30
trust in these daddies,
00:46:34
lack of understanding of cloud technologies,
00:46:38
she leads her point of view as
00:46:41
ideological backwardness
00:46:44
and not understanding the specifics of today's
00:46:47
society, its needs and
00:46:51
probably after all, the dominant methods of
00:46:54
communication in modern society, the
00:46:57
dominant methods of communication
00:46:59
are all these
00:47:02
Internet technologies, all the gadgets that are
00:47:04
connected with this,
00:47:06
if you don’t understand this, do you think
00:47:08
that the loudspeaker will announce to you and
00:47:11
you will listen like that, well, yes, some
00:47:13
part of the population, but is it part
00:47:15
of the population has the energy and drive for
00:47:19
change development mood desire
00:47:22
passion to change the country for the
00:47:25
better what follows from this is no repentance
00:47:27
generational confrontation along the lines of
00:47:30
values ​​because
00:47:32
if you don’t love the Internet so much and we
00:47:35
saw it even not long ago and a pinch of the
00:47:37
Klim nozzle of social studies
00:47:40
sounded naive that here this society
00:47:42
will replace knowledge in the future, I’m saying this,
00:47:45
but it’s just funny, I
00:47:47
go there every day on the website of Harvard
00:47:49
University or Stanford,
00:47:51
the amount of materials on these sites and the
00:47:54
knowledge embodied in real scientific,
00:47:58
quite advanced knowledge, it is
00:48:00
immeasurably more than ever
00:48:01
social studies on the code in the coming years
00:48:04
dare you just assured because it is a
00:48:06
completely different mechanism for maintaining a wide
00:48:08
variety of cheeses in science, simply
00:48:11
because it is science and, in fact, all the
00:48:13
high-quality universities there are actor kim britzka
00:48:15
mouth stand-up they all exist
00:48:18
because they have created a large
00:48:22
endowment and with this large house you
00:48:24
sign them the last time when there were 35
00:48:27
billion dollars there 28 these are
00:48:31
donations then very smart people
00:48:33
tadpoles place these 35 billion a
00:48:36
good tool gives, say, 11
00:48:39
percent per annum, which means you get somewhere around 3 4
00:48:42
billion dollars and the money goes not these
00:48:45
studies, for example, features of the
00:48:48
culture of service during lunch in the 4th
00:48:54
century BC somewhere it would seem that this is
00:48:56
not and what does this have to do with practical technology,
00:48:58
but this is how the pyramid of knowledge is built, it seems that they are
00:49:02
not needed, in fact there are
00:49:03
scientific methods of expedition, followed by
00:49:06
archaeological excavations and that’s how
00:49:09
knowledge and so on in every sphere and
00:49:11
when you come
00:49:14
into conflict with a new generation for whom the
00:49:17
Internet is an integral value of their
00:49:20
life and
00:49:22
quite possibly this is a form of
00:49:25
existence,
00:49:27
even if we are skeptical about it,
00:49:30
why replace
00:49:34
our real existence with the Internet,
00:49:36
this is how it is, so come into conflict with
00:49:39
these people and think that the things
00:49:42
you are doing for which you are quite possibly, if you are not
00:49:46
worried, will be handed over to reliable
00:49:48
hands, but in a generation I
00:49:51
would not say that this is good, further
00:49:55
solving problems, we have all learned over the last
00:49:58
20 years a good term and there is a
00:50:00
road map for solving all problems,
00:50:02
whatever the conflict, whatever
00:50:04
the problem, but it is quite obvious that
00:50:06
road maps are not a tool for
00:50:08
solving problems for us, we do not know how not to
00:50:12
draw up and road maps are not
00:50:13
used all the conflicts that were
00:50:15
in the space of the former USSR,
00:50:18
be it Transnistria or Abkhazia and
00:50:21
South Ossetia, here is Donetsk Lugansk
00:50:24
all this turns out that it’s
00:50:31
not even of course what the
00:50:33
desired result is, because the road map is
00:50:35
to order and the goal is clear, it feels like the
00:50:37
goal that someone understands who
00:50:39
you are is not quite familiar with
00:50:41
decently, they want to publicly name it,
00:50:45
so the process itself is some kind of negotiations
00:50:47
there I command 5 + 2 or 2 plus 5 so they
00:50:51
can go go go and then we see in
00:50:53
Nagorno-Karabakh the broads
00:50:56
turn around military until they fly to
00:50:58
Moscow to Moscow sounds like war, you will never
00:51:01
solve more than one political problem,
00:51:03
sit down at the negotiating table,
00:51:04
but we were the most important panel
00:51:07
returned Karabakh even with the decision that
00:51:10
we should solve the pulp and this is also a very
00:51:14
significant flaw, what is
00:51:17
the toolkit as a road map for
00:51:20
solving complex problems is not being developed,
00:51:23
is not used and we do not have
00:51:25
people who
00:51:29
could promote the interests of
00:51:33
Russia through these road maps
00:51:36
beyond communication, a serious problem
00:51:40
remains, and now, with such a concentration
00:51:42
of power in domestic politics,
00:51:45
I don’t fully understand the exclusive
00:51:49
nature of power; a
00:51:51
closed number of people connected with
00:51:54
the special services or loyal to the web
00:51:56
or friends enter into power; this is how in the country there
00:52:01
is a political lift and
00:52:05
you can’t actually party you
00:52:07
can’t create a movement, you can’t write a tweet, you can’t without the
00:52:10
risk of getting
00:52:11
a slap on the head at best, actually,
00:52:14
maybe you’ll be sent to prison, but if you
00:52:17
block political elevators for
00:52:20
young people and even for people who are not young and are
00:52:22
interested in politics, I think
00:52:25
that power is
00:52:27
closed in a narrow way circle
00:52:30
thing, you inevitably begin to think that
00:52:33
maybe it was good at the beginning
00:52:35
when you are just coming to the class to
00:52:37
consolidate in order to
00:52:38
implement some projects, but now
00:52:41
you see that this is simply the preservation of
00:52:44
power there, access to wealth in this
00:52:47
power by a simplified method should not be
00:52:49
wasted Even though this doesn’t
00:52:51
seem well-reasoned, this is a very
00:52:52
serious problem, as it were, in the life of the
00:52:56
ability of the political system,
00:53:02
nothing has changed in the rhetoric of punishment,
00:53:05
you follow the responsible people in
00:53:07
relation to the West without the
00:53:09
West, this is a
00:53:13
jackal tobacco with shure honey in the vocabulary of
00:53:18
Mowgli the West of Western Europe, and it’s
00:53:22
added there Australia
00:53:25
it’s hard for the Saxons for the countries and Zealand at the
00:53:29
cordon in general who will support yes this is a
00:53:33
state that does not have
00:53:37
international legal personality they do
00:53:40
not have their own interests that they could
00:53:43
oppose to the interests of the USA they will sing along with the
00:53:45
Americans if that’s the case then there is
00:53:48
nothing to talk about with them but the Americans and I do
00:53:51
n’t we talk very much, but it’s not very good to talk to these people either,
00:53:54
therefore,
00:53:56
now, after 80 days of the
00:53:59
conflict of this bloody katz, a
00:54:02
picture of the
00:54:06
prospects for our life emerges, essentially a battle
00:54:10
for an isolated regime than we could have
00:54:13
imagined there three months ago,
00:54:15
although there were already many trends after
00:54:18
these,
00:54:20
our ideas
00:54:22
options for a treaty on guarantees of our
00:54:25
security, we are moving very much because
00:54:28
I say again, none of these
00:54:30
countries has subjectivity, will,
00:54:33
sovereignty, and America has everything.
00:54:36
Touch talking to them is such a
00:54:38
risky step because in this logic we
00:54:41
all understand that within the country,
00:54:43
subjectivity has one way is a secret
00:54:46
then talk to Lavrov or Shoigu, they
00:54:49
also don’t decide anything, the east decides
00:54:51
the president and this extends to a
00:54:53
large community of very influential
00:54:54
states now that they have all
00:54:57
left and when everyone
00:54:59
opposes Russia even more than they
00:55:01
spoke out rhetorically I mean than yes
00:55:05
this is a conflict the fact that Putin, in her
00:55:07
first address, noted that even
00:55:09
small satellite countries of the United States allow
00:55:11
themselves such harshness that large countries do not allow,
00:55:16
and finally, the last thoughts for
00:55:21
Anton Orek are the
00:55:26
existence of Russia as a state, to
00:55:29
what extent is it
00:55:32
compatible with those norms of the constitution
00:55:35
that guarantees rights and freedom
00:55:38
tolerance
00:55:41
discord and
00:55:45
we hear now among many of those who
00:55:48
are engaged in propaganda that these are
00:55:50
redundant articles in our constitution they
00:55:53
must be removed no freedom there should
00:55:55
be not a word not an assembly at all
00:55:57
democracy of the Western Anglo-Saxon
00:55:59
types is not for us then the question arises
00:56:03
whether it is possible to preserve Russia without rights and
00:56:05
freedoms,
00:56:06
what kind of government
00:56:08
system this should be, what is its
00:56:11
attractiveness for society, this is also
00:56:14
very important for the society of various
00:56:16
social groups within this society, who
00:56:20
will tell everything, our country is so special,
00:56:22
we are not tolerant, what is the mechanism of
00:56:25
social and political lift in
00:56:27
which country then
00:56:30
what will it be? there will be a managed democracy
00:56:32
democracy from above
00:56:35
controlled by some officials
00:56:37
who are considered as the fathers of the nation who
00:56:41
will guide unreasonable people and
00:56:43
here I see unlikely risks for the
00:56:48
existence of statehood,
00:56:58
refusal cannot pass without a trace from
00:57:01
my point of view for the strength of the
00:57:03
state because you cannot
00:57:05
tie
00:57:07
148 million people
00:57:10
into one idea of ​​the matter, their
00:57:13
idea does not exist, there is this idea that they are not
00:57:16
tolerant, it certainly does not cover
00:57:20
everyone, but since very many people
00:57:22
who think about the reef, fixing and writing have a
00:57:25
different point of view, then in the short
00:57:27
term they will tactically lose today
00:57:29
to those who do not think about simply supporting,
00:57:31
but in the long term when they
00:57:33
write their memoirs,
00:57:34
nicknames will give assessments, then the
00:57:36
assessment of
00:57:39
those who do not think that this will certainly prevail in the long term right in
00:57:41
relation to Russia and the Russian people,
00:57:43
by the way, let's get chinnaswamy in a couple of minutes, there is
00:57:45
a book left, yes, our traditional
00:57:49
section is to recommend an excellent
00:57:51
book by
00:57:53
Archip Zhid Bannerjee and Esther Duflo,
00:57:57
economic science in difficult times,
00:57:59
this is an application with Gregory, or a husband and wife
00:58:05
who wrote an excellent book and
00:58:08
they talked about the fact that Murphy writes how books
00:58:11
economists write to explain and which no
00:58:13
one reads there so that a scientific article from the
00:58:15
form and and here we decided to write that in
00:58:18
the worth of days and I Katz and and
00:58:21
all members of the government of
00:58:23
all levels should definitely read the government but the
00:58:26
academic community youth
00:58:28
any phrase John maynard keynes an idea
00:58:31
that transformed macroeconomic
00:58:33
policy written by practical people who
00:58:36
consider themselves completely immune to
00:58:38
intellectual influence
00:58:40
are usually slaves to some economist of
00:58:42
the past madmen in power
00:58:45
who hear voices from the sky extract
00:58:48
their crazy ideas from the works of
00:58:50
some academic write and
00:58:52
compose shaya several years ago, both
00:58:54
active and active directs changes and
00:58:59
they appeal to the need for a good
00:59:02
economic theory underlying
00:59:04
economic policy to the headquarters to solve the most
00:59:06
complex problems
00:59:09
faced not only by the poor, these are
00:59:10
specialists in poor countries, but also by
00:59:12
rich countries, all rich countries, this is the
00:59:15
growth of inequality and poverty how
00:59:17
to overcome ecology, so I highly
00:59:20
recommend economics in difficult
00:59:22
times archi jint bannerdzhi and ester
00:59:25
duflo thank you very much Konstantin
00:59:29
Remchukov was on our air today,
00:59:31
personally yours, I thank everyone who
00:59:34
watched us and literally 5 minutes later
00:59:36
Lazerson and Maxim Shevchenko climbed in
00:59:39
there will be an attack from the flanks, but
00:59:41
Nikita Vasilenko will also conduct this broadcast, thanks
00:59:42
again to everyone

Description:

В эфире главный редактор и генеральный директор «Независимой газеты» Константин Ремчуков. Ведущий: Антон Орехъ. Подписывайтесь на Антона Ореха в Телеграме: https://t.me/orex62 🔔 Последние новости и анонсы программ с YouTube-канала «Живой гвоздь», а также контент от наших постоянных гостей и экспертов на официальном телеграм-канале: https://t.me/livegvozd Подписаться на Youtube-канал Дилетант: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCuIE7-5QzeAR6EdZXwDRwuQ?sub_confirmation=1 📌 Живой гвоздь в аудиоформате: SoundCloud: https://soundcloud.com/user-524451485 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4c85mLayKb5oPlpXptWQ5y Яндекс.Музыка: https://music.yandex.ru/album/22141653?dir=desc Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/%D0%B6%D0%B8%D0%B2%D0%BE%D0%B9-%D0%B3%D0%B2%D0%BE%D0%B7%D0%B4%D1%8C/id1616175210 Google Подкасты: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5zb3VuZGNsb3VkLmNvbS91c2Vycy9zb3VuZGNsb3VkOnVzZXJzOjEwOTk2NzA5MDUvc291bmRzLnJzcw?sa=X&ved=0CAIQ4aUDahcKEwigxO3Eweb2AhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQEQ Магазин "Дилетант": https://diletant.shop/

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