Sekreti I Ishujve Marshall – Dokumentar Shqip

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Transcript
00:00["Star-Spangled Banner"]
00:30["Star-Spangled Banner"]
00:37The good of the land that you will share with us,
00:40the synergy between the air, toxic and natural forces,
00:44and our ability to control the environment,
00:47and to gain strategic points, is devastating.
00:50All countries respect the unity of the United States,
00:53and they respect our presence in this region.
00:56And we do it better and better and better and better.
01:01["Star-Spangled Banner"]
01:08["Star-Spangled Banner"]
01:14Today, a preview of China's ambitions for expansion
01:18in one of the most controversial regions in the world.
01:21We will report from the Chinese capital,
01:23where the Chinese claim that they want to expand their development programs as much as possible.
01:28These meetings will continue to analyze the fact that China does not want to leave the world.
01:32The United States declares that it is a superfluous,
01:34but important territory in the South China Sea.
01:37We are dealing with a situation right now,
01:39where we, the U.S., have to be much more aggressive in dealing with the Chinese government.
01:43CNN believes that the U.S. Navy will send a destroyer to the region.
01:47Let's talk to a journalist.
01:49China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
01:52China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
01:55China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
01:58China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
02:01China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
02:04China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
02:07China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
02:10China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
02:13China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
02:16China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
02:19China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
02:22China is building airstrips in the South China Sea.
02:25This is now a flashpoint for war between China and America.
02:31This is now a flashpoint for war between China and America.
02:36But it is not a joke that China is the only one to be attacked.
02:40In South China Sea, the U.S. bases are being bombarded with missiles,
02:45and as a result war is waged between Australia and Paysor,
02:49and Nazi and beyond.
02:52And if you were in Beijing looking out.
02:54You stood on the tallest building in Beijing.
02:57You'd see American warfare.
03:00You'd see this Guam,
03:02you'd see Guam is about to be destroyed
03:04because it's been hit by many missiles pointed at China.
03:08You'd see Japanese,
03:10basically like a blow to the American fist. I think if I were a Chinese I would have a little
03:17respect for American aggressiveness. And we have China around us, and we're always trying to
03:24surround it and try to take control of China. But China is a special case, a prepared country,
03:32growing very rapidly now as it did before. It's the world's second-largest economy in the world.
03:43We have an adversary, and that adversary is China. And that adversary, if we don't
03:49create radical changes in the country, it's going to destroy China all in one day.
03:55One myth that I think needs to be dispelled is that China wants to take over the United States
04:01and they're going to disembark and they're going to run the world.
04:06Well, first of all, the Chinese are not stupid. The West, with its Christian roots,
04:12is converting all other peoples into their beliefs. The Chinese are not about converting
04:17the people into their beliefs. The Chinese are not about that. It's about the elements
04:24of our culture, the fact that our cultures are very different. In the first two thousand years,
04:30the Chinese built the Great Wall to stop the barbarians from leaving and not to invade them.
04:38As the world's economic power, the United States is the world's majority,
04:48and the United States is the largest military building in Washington, D.C.
04:55The target is China.
05:03The great motivation of the 21st century is called the Great War.
05:08For America's unchallenged army, the annual prize is huge profits from a massive
05:15investment of nearly $600 billion in military spending.
05:20At times, an imaginary weapon in their war film, the electromagnetic weapon, is more of a reality.
05:28We're sitting here thinking about futuristic ideas. We have scientists who have created
05:34these weapons, and they have put them into reality.
05:38But the most advanced weapons need to be armed.
05:42As a military base, the United States will play a larger and more powerful role in giving the region
05:48a platform to rise among itself. I have asked my own security team to accept my mission
05:54as a military base to be the primary priority.
05:57In one sense, is the U.S. ready to go to war with China?
06:01Yes, on the ground and in the air.
06:04Under the auspices of the Nobel Peace Prize, President Barack Obama is committed to investing
06:09trillions of dollars in our armed arsenal.
06:12He will invest trillions of dollars in the fight for peace, and we need an army for all this money.
06:20And China is the perfect enemy.
06:22The aim of this documentary is to break the ice.
06:31The United States and China can become the wall of war, and world war is no longer unimaginable.
06:39In a few years, China has become the second largest economy in the world.
06:43The United States is the largest military power in the world,
06:47with missiles and anti-aircraft guns bombing every continent and every ocean.
06:53China is a challenge to this dominance, Washington says, but who is the challenge?
06:58This documentary will analyze the nature of the country and its great risk.
07:02It is a documentary about the human spirit and the growth of a strong resistance
07:08among people who are on the frontlines of a war,
07:11where the words were again have a nice weightage for all of us.
07:24This is Bikini, the mother of an ancient volcano in New York, the Marshall Islands.
07:30With its necklace of 23 islands, Bikini is a beautiful, silent, and beautiful place.
07:41Look carefully at how the Emerald Lagoon suddenly falls into a vast crater.
07:48This crater is one of the largest eruptions ever created by man.
07:52The hydrogen bomb they call it Bravo.
07:56It vaporizes a citizen, and it's the worst ever and everyone.
08:02And as the plane is floating in the water,
08:04it's as if it's going to touch the ship's deck.
08:20The Marshall Islands lie in the Pacific Ocean, between the United States and Asia.
08:26The Japanese captured them in World War II.
08:30They have been America's strategic secret.
08:34America is a key player in Asia and China.
08:44People here survived for many years with fish and coconuts.
08:52They were sent here to sail for their missions.
08:58Westerners call this place Paris.
09:04It was a joy to be here.
09:06It was a happy place.
09:08We had everything we needed.
09:10Sometimes I visited other islands and we had a lot of fun.
09:16All this changed in 1926,
09:22when the United States ordered the Marshall Islands as a state territory,
09:28with an obligation to protect the health and well-being of the people.
09:34And this time, as a maximum,
09:36the islands were turned into a laboratory for the testing of weapons,
09:42and the people into guinea pigs.
09:56In this propaganda film,
09:58the beginners of bikinis are being turned on.
10:02Unknown to them, they plan to destroy the paradise forever.
10:08Will you ask King Judah that the United States government,
10:14now that we have the United States government,
10:18is going to put more and more force into something good for humanity?
10:22And that these experiments, here at Bikini,
10:26are the first steps in this direction?
10:30Tell him there is no doubt.
10:32Everything is in God's hands,
10:34and that's why we're going to do well.
10:44In 1987, he decided to move 5 km away from Bikini
10:48to test the effects of the bomb as an atomic bomb.
10:54More and more warriors go to the Bikini lagoon to get some air.
11:08The 73-year-old tests,
11:10as scientists, plan experimental programs
11:14to ensure the effects of the bomb as an atomic bomb.
11:19Different species of guinea pigs.
11:21The guinea pig is tied to the deck like a perverse Noah.
11:25The experiment is done to see how they react,
11:28how they react.
11:30They apply different creams to detect their protective effects.
11:34The other parts of the exposed areas
11:37are exposed to the atomic explosion.
11:403, 2, 1.
11:52Bikini Lagoon, Romania
12:14When I heard the bomb,
12:16I was terrified.
12:18I wanted to leave.
12:20I wanted to go home.
12:22I didn't know what was going to happen.
12:25I was afraid.
12:31Everything was dangerous,
12:33the wind, the rain, the rain.
12:41Everything was destroyed.
12:44I was afraid that I would die without my children.
12:47I was afraid. I thought that the war had started again or that the end of the world had come.
13:07Today, Bikini is a barrier.
13:12I used to go from the jungle to the bunker,
13:15pressing the orange 0625 button to test the hydrogen bomb.
13:23Now claims are the undergrowth.
13:25It's like a temple in the desert of modern times.
13:31They drink much more pure,
13:33drink cigarettes like a strike, and more pass.
13:37And later, the signs are very ironic.
13:41It says,
13:42You leave this paper as it is.
13:45Thank you for your kindness and good understanding.
14:02The Mamzals give their maximum effort,
14:04and the masculine public doesn't give in to the love calls.
14:08The Bikini that took the name and the nickname in the past,
14:12Bikini was a nickname for Kudo.
14:15In 1946, the robbers of the Bikini bank
14:19used to test the fake nicknames that had ruined the life of Bikini.
14:26The inventor of Bikini, a Frenchman,
14:28earned his fortune.
14:31Today, a Bikini body is promoted in the magazine as a big desire
14:36and a good health.
14:40The bodies of the Bikini robbers and other robbers
14:43have the highest levels of regeneration on the planet.
14:46All these women are affected by thyroid cancer.
14:55We were born in Pus,
14:56from which the white blood began to grow.
15:00We all love to drink the blood,
15:02and we use it as blood to fight the disease.
15:04After a few days, we started to drink the blood.
15:10Some people were in agony,
15:12others had diarrhea.
15:16Some children had blood all over their bodies.
15:23Today, Bikini is underrated by many people.
15:27Its rays heal the skin and the water.
15:30Our shoes, like geysers, show that the levels are unstable.
15:35The abandoned street,
15:36which looks out from the road one day,
15:39then turns into an apocalypse.
15:45The equivalent of one Hiroshima bomb
15:48was the explosion of one Hiroshima bomb
15:51every day for 12 years.
15:54A certain pleasure is retained in the street,
15:57but not in its people.
16:00Exiled to the streets,
16:02many of them know the truth.
16:05In 1968, President Lyndon Johnson
16:08told you that it was safe to stay at home.
16:15But it wasn't safe,
16:17and the American authorities
16:20knew that it wasn't safe.
16:24What the Americans did wasn't accidental.
16:27They came here and destroyed our house.
16:30They came to test the weapons
16:33of the American bombs.
16:35It wasn't accidental.
16:38What happened as a result of the Bravo test
16:41was an accident.
16:44It was an accident.
16:47The Bravo test was a result of a very short period of time.
16:53It's a story full of fake information,
16:56false information, and deception.
17:00There was no reason to have a more conservative agenda
17:04and to ensure that everyone was okay.
17:08They knew from the radioactive evidence,
17:11but they took the risk and didn't give up.
17:14They detonated the bomb,
17:16knowing very well that it was going to explode.
17:19They still had an opportunity to evacuate,
17:22even on the day of the war.
17:24But these people didn't evacuate.
17:26We didn't evacuate.
17:28And the people in the trajectory of the bomb didn't evacuate.
17:32So we have to believe that the United States
17:35needed some money to study the consequences of the detonation.
17:39And this is a strong indication
17:41that the United States knew that.
17:46It seems extraordinary.
17:48Here we are in the 21st century,
17:51talking to people,
17:53still frictionated in all those fake stories,
17:56all those tests that were developed decades ago.
17:59The impression I get is that this is a country
18:02that doesn't have a lot of young people.
18:05The United States is buying as much information as they can.
18:09But I can't accept the claim
18:11that it has a lot of young people
18:13and cover-ups of information.
18:15These people hope that they have been used as bait.
18:19I would like to refer to this
18:21the faces of the embassy officials.
18:23I read it.
18:24And this question was asked by the Clinton administration
18:28and they didn't come to this conclusion.
18:32The secret of the Marshall Project is Project 4.1.
18:36Declassified documents reveal a scientific program
18:40that started as a small study
18:42and ended up as a study of human beings
18:45exposed to radiation.
18:49All the scientists in Chicago
18:51are transferred to the AEC lab in Chicago.
18:55Seven people come,
18:56members of the Marshall Project.
18:58Levine is from Omelecu.
19:00Others are exposed to radiation
19:03John is from Chicago.
19:06John is from Chicago.
19:08John is from Chicago.
19:10John is from Chicago.
19:12John is from Chicago.
19:14John is from Chicago.
19:16John is from Chicago.
19:18John is from Chicago.
19:20John is from Chicago.
19:22John is from Chicago.
19:24John is from Chicago.
19:26John is from Chicago.
19:28John is from Chicago.
19:30John is from Chicago.
19:32John is from Chicago.
19:34John is from Chicago.
19:36John is from Chicago.
19:38John is from Chicago.
19:40John is from Chicago.
19:42John is from Chicago.
19:44John is from Chicago.
19:46John is from Chicago.
19:48John is from Chicago.
19:50John is from Chicago.
19:52John is from Chicago.
19:54John is from Chicago.
19:56John is from Chicago.
19:58John is from Chicago.
20:00John is from Chicago.
20:02John is from Chicago.
20:04John is from Chicago.
20:06John is from Chicago.
20:08John is from Chicago.
20:10John is from Chicago.
20:12John is from Chicago.
20:14John is from Chicago.
20:16John is from Chicago.
20:18John is from Chicago.
20:20John is from Chicago.
20:22John is from Chicago.
20:24John is from Chicago.
20:26John is from Chicago.
20:28John is from Chicago.
20:30John is from Chicago.
20:32John is from Chicago.
20:34John is from Chicago.
20:36John is from Chicago.
20:38John is from Chicago.
20:40John is from Chicago.
20:42John is from Chicago.
20:44John is from Chicago.
20:46John is from Chicago.
20:48John is from Chicago.
20:50John is from Chicago.
20:52John is from Chicago.
20:54John is from Chicago.
20:56John is from Chicago.
20:58John is from Chicago.
21:00John is from Chicago.
21:02John is from Chicago.
21:04John is from Chicago.
21:06John is from Chicago.
21:08John is from Chicago.
21:10John is from Chicago.
21:12John is from Chicago.
21:14John is from Chicago.
21:16John is from Chicago.
21:18John is from Chicago.
21:20John is from Chicago.
21:22John is from Chicago.
21:24John is from Chicago.
21:26John is from Chicago.
21:28John is from Chicago.
21:30John is from Chicago.
21:32John is from Chicago.
21:34John is from Chicago.
21:36John is from Chicago.
21:38John is from Chicago.
21:40John is from Chicago.
21:42John is from Chicago.
21:44John is from Chicago.
21:46John is from Chicago.
21:48John is from Chicago.
21:50John is from Chicago.
21:52He added,
21:54it would be interesting to know
21:56the past of the people
21:58if they lived in a simulated environment.
22:04The people of Longelap
22:06have been living in a simulated environment
22:08for 28 years
22:10as guinea pigs.
22:12The objects of research
22:14and examination.
22:16The people of Longelap
22:18have been living in a simulated environment
22:20for 28 years
22:22as guinea pigs.
22:24The objects of research
22:26and examination.
22:28The people of Longelap
22:30have been living in a simulated environment
22:32for 28 years
22:34as guinea pigs.
22:36The people of Longelap
22:38have been living in a simulated environment
22:40for 28 years
22:42as guinea pigs.
22:44It wasn't an accident.
22:46They knew what they were doing.
22:48It was a secret project.
22:54The islanders
22:56demand the US authorities
22:58to move them to a safe place
23:00because the two children
23:02they are carrying
23:04are also poisoned.
23:14The islanders demand the US authorities
23:16to move them to a safe place
23:18because the two children
23:20they are carrying
23:22are also poisoned.
23:28In order to escape,
23:30the sailors
23:32request the help of the Greenpeace.
23:34This ship,
23:36the fighter Gilbert,
23:38is the endangering
23:40of the entire population
24:12This is Dr. Robert Conradi, a leading medical scientist at Brookhaven Laboratories.
24:23Conradi devoted his career to the control of wild animals.
24:28He wrote, the habitation of these people in the wild will afford us the most valuable
24:39potential for ecological regeneration on human beings.
24:44The various radioisotopes can be captured by the gods of the wild and into human beings.
24:52Dr. Conradi began his research in the communities of New York to examine these wild animals.
25:04He showed himself in the countryside and took him on a picnic with his car.
25:09When John Andrzejc, the doctor, died at the age of 18, Dr. Conradi sent a message to his
25:25husband, who he called a black man, from your friend, Bob.
25:32In 1957, Dr. Andrzejc was a young man from Buzces, who lived in Rongelap,
25:41without knowing the danger that he and his family faced.
25:48This is Dr. Andrzejc, after 28 years, breathing life into his son, Bob, from radiation poisoning.
26:00Like her son, Maduro is also suffering from cancer.
26:08I don't see any good clinic that has been established here, apart from the Department of Energy,
26:15apart from the American government.
26:18There is a clinic in the center of Maduro. It is a symbol of rejuvenation.
26:22We can measure the rejuvenation of plutonium in the body. We can do everything.
26:29This is the plutonium level, where they tell you how radioactive you are.
26:36People who want to be analyzed are asked by a video that shows their names,
26:41while breathing air.
26:47They are also asked by this very interesting comment.
26:52Good evening, I am Bill Jackson, Program Manager of the Department of Energy,
26:58the Marshall Islands Program.
27:11This is Rinoc, a refugee from the island of Rongelap, whose family, Mr. Tok,
27:17is living in a safe place in Begat.
27:20Now she lives alone in a house in the city center, in Maduro, with her children and her husband.
27:27She has no water, no sanitation.
27:38Sometimes, when we have no water, we buy a house, a house, until we find it.
27:44Do you have electricity?
27:47No, we don't have electricity in our house.
27:57In 1986, the United States gave the Marshall Islands a loan,
28:03at a cost of only $150 million as compensation for damages caused by nuclear tests.
28:14A claim is brought to you, and soon you run out of money.
28:18An appeal to the U.S. Congress was made more than a decade earlier,
28:23and it is still in the process of being filed.
28:28We have to pay every cent, because we have to provide for the children who live with me.
28:44Darlene K. Johnson was a young woman, who became the champion of her people.
28:50After she discovered the truth about their crimes by nuclear tests,
28:56she was made more barbaric than the Americans claimed.
29:01This speech was made in 1983, and it was silenced.
29:06I bring greetings,
29:08I bring greetings from the Marshall Islands, and from all of Micronesia.
29:14We have hundreds of children who have discharges.
29:18We have leukemia, we have cancer in the thyroid, we have childbirth babies.
29:24Today, as I heard from the media,
29:27and I have talked to many women and men who talk to me about babies,
29:31which we call jellyfish babies.
29:34A baby is born in a paper tape, and it moves up and down like this.
29:39It's a common thing in human beings.
29:43It moves up and down like a paper tape,
29:46because it takes everything.
29:48That is a baby.
29:52In 1982, Darlene was married to Geoff Johnson,
29:57the author of this kind of torture.
30:01Like so many of the Marshall and Darlene islands,
30:05she died of cancer at the age of 25.
30:16This is the largest island in the world,
30:19Gwajalein, occupied by one of the largest and most advanced bases in the United States.
30:27Known as the Ronald Reagan testing zone,
30:30it is a launch pad for the launch of missiles
30:33that control the Pacific Ocean up to the Aztec Islands.
30:42Here, the people of the Marshall Islands
30:45are subjected to the subject of large-scale weapons tests
30:49designed for the upcoming war.
30:57The base is part of an interesting plan,
31:00known as the Vision 2020.
31:03Developed in 1990,
31:05it's aimed at the project to express
31:08the dominance of space.
31:11This means control of all land,
31:14sea, air, cyber space, and space.
31:19Five, four, three, two, one.
31:24Dezert.
31:28From California,
31:29more than 8,000 miles away,
31:31the American Air Force
31:32is testing their intercontinental rockets
31:35at the Marshall Islands.
31:43None of this has led to a base
31:46where a small American citizen
31:48could have a pleasant life.
31:54You both to me.
31:55Eliminated.
32:17Just across the street,
32:18you can see the Bay Area,
32:20known as the Pacific Ghetto.
32:23More than 12,000 people live here
32:26on a strip of land less than a mile away.
32:29Many of the refugees
32:31from what is now the missile base
32:33have been eliminated by nuclear testing.
32:41Every day, people of the Bay
32:43come to work in the military base
32:46to water the fields and the Gulf.
32:50And then,
32:51they sail with their rockets in their boats.
32:57This is a party of the Pacific.
33:20The Bay needs a lot of water.
33:22For medicine.
33:23Yes, medicine.
33:24Education and jobs.
33:26For fruits and vegetables.
33:29Fruits and vegetables?
33:31Yes.
33:32We are a tropical island,
33:34and you need fruits and vegetables.
33:39Fish, fruits and vegetables
33:41used to be part of the Bay.
33:43Today, fish is consumed
33:46by the Food and Drug Agency.
33:55Now, the only food
33:57that can be consumed by many people
33:59is processed and imported.
34:01They have the highest level of diabetes in the world.
34:10When someone gets really ill,
34:13they go to the hospital in the base
34:16because they have a modern clinic.
34:21They don't treat with medicine.
34:24They just go there to be checked
34:27and then X-ray.
34:29So, what happens when someone gets really ill?
34:32They don't do anything.
34:35The most consistent example given
34:39is the Ronald Reagan missile base
34:42and the Bay next to it.
34:46On the Ronald Reagan missile site,
34:49it is a good example
34:51of the Gulf courses,
34:53swimming pools,
34:55and all kinds of other amenities.
34:58The Bay is also known
35:00as the slum of the Pacific.
35:02It is a challenge.
35:04The Bay has a lot of needs.
35:06One of the projects being developed in America
35:09with our colleagues in Australia
35:11and the Asian Development Bank
35:13is the water and sewage project.
35:15This is what we need for the Bay.
35:17The Bay is unpopulated
35:19and schools need to be repaired.
35:21In fact, the Americans created
35:23a study in 1917
35:25and found that sewage did not work,
35:27there was no drinking water
35:29and no electricity.
35:31They tried a few times
35:33and the result was exactly the same.
35:36We all agree that the Bay
35:38should be a priority,
35:40not only because of the activities
35:42in the Ronald Reagan missile zone
35:44and in the Embroidery Zone,
35:46but there is also an element
35:48of global security
35:50and this is the project
35:52initiated by the Air Force.
35:56Every missile fired on the Marshall Islands
35:58by the American military
36:00costs $100 million each.
36:03This sterile school bus
36:05is the only one on the Bay.
36:07They have no money to replace it.
36:24The base is not good for us,
36:26for the citizens of the Marshall Islands.
36:28We do not need it.
36:32It's being used to test rockets
36:34that will launch against other countries,
36:36like China.
36:38Yes, and against others if they want.
36:42What do you want to happen?
36:46I want to tell them our plan.
37:02This is Shanghai,
37:04the historic port in the Yangtze River,
37:06China's greatest city.
37:11I had arranged to meet
37:13the American author, James Brady,
37:15whose latest book,
37:17The Chinese Declaration,
37:19reveals an extraordinary history
37:21of the American Empire
37:23and modern China.
37:25I was told that it was
37:27very similar to a Chinese
37:29who had come to America
37:32to plant trees
37:34and build bridges.
37:36But the Americans decided
37:38that they did not like the competition.
37:40So in 1882,
37:42we enacted laws
37:44to ban the Chinese
37:46from leaving the United States
37:48for more than 100 years.
37:50So the largest population
37:52could not live in the United States.
37:54So when we decided to establish
37:56the Lyrical Statue of Life,
37:58we built a wall
38:00to block the Chinese from entering.
38:03The fear of a rising China
38:05is the latest chapter
38:07in a history of propaganda
38:09that presents the Chinese
38:11as uncouth and infantile.
38:19To Western popular culture
38:21and traditional politics,
38:23the Chinese are at risk of peril.
38:26And the Western stereotypes
38:28have become the subject of
38:30the greatest threat.
38:34Boris Karloff
38:36as the evil Fu Manchu.
38:38His passion for power
38:40twisting his brilliant mind
38:43as he revels in the horrors
38:45of human sacrifice
38:47and torture.
38:52Behind
38:54The Mask of Fu Manchu
38:58This caricature
39:00of an entire people
39:02conceals another agent,
39:04opium.
39:10For the American elite
39:12of the 19th century,
39:14China was a mine of drugs.
39:18Warren Delano,
39:20the grandson of Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
39:22was the largest opium dealer in China.
39:24He was the third largest opium dealer
39:26in the United States.
39:28He was the second largest opium dealer
39:30in the United States.
39:32He was the first American
39:34opium dealer in China.
39:36Much of the American
39:38oil fields,
39:40Columbia, Harvard, Yale,
39:42Princeton,
39:44were born from opium money.
39:46The American industrial revolution
39:48was financed by some large
39:50pools of money
39:52that came from
39:54Let me get this right.
39:56The grandfather of
39:58our most liberal president,
40:00Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
40:02was a drug dealer?
40:04Yes, exactly.
40:06Franklin Delano Roosevelt
40:08never invested any money
40:10in his life.
40:12He did administrative work
40:14that was paid a little,
40:16but he had a yacht,
40:18he had a house,
40:20he had a villa in New York.
40:22He had a yacht,
40:24which was the American
40:26opium brand in China.
40:28If you scratch anyone
40:30with the name Forbes,
40:32like John Forbes Carey,
40:34the Secretary of State
40:36John Forbes Carey,
40:38he was the Secretary
40:40of State of the United States.
40:42Yes, exactly.
40:44We will find opium money.
40:46His yacht was an opium dealer.
40:48How big was opium money?
40:50In Massachusetts.
40:52Opium money was spent
40:54all over the world,
40:56but no one remembers it.
40:58Of course, you see the Chinese
41:00trench, where they go
41:02in different museums,
41:04you will see that they expose
41:06the tea plant and the
41:08Amundafshi plant,
41:10but no one talks
41:12about the money
41:14spent on opium.
41:16In the scramble
41:18foreign wars
41:20ravage Chinese territory.
41:22This is the American army
41:24in 1969,
41:26the Chinese in 1900.
41:30Great cities like Shanghai
41:32were also invaded
41:34by the Chinese,
41:36where the U.S. made a privileged
41:38and luxurious life
41:40through a terrible policy
41:42imposed on the Chinese.
41:48A resistance,
41:50known as the Boxer Rebellion,
41:52was brought down by the Chinese.
41:54This rape of China
41:56was shown by the Chinese
41:58in the 1920s.
42:02This is the distinguished
42:04historian Theodore H. Whitey,
42:06an advisor to the White House
42:08in the 1920s.
42:10He was a member of the
42:12White House
42:14in the 1920s.
42:16This is the Chinese
42:18in the 1960s.
42:20Perhaps China is the
42:22biggest factor
42:24to be justified by mercy,
42:26but even if the Chinese
42:28ask for money,
42:30they must understand
42:32that they are the biggest
42:34factor of destabilization
42:36in the world,
42:38and we must explain
42:40the meaning
42:42of their thoughts.
42:44What White was really
42:46complaining about
42:48was the fact that China
42:50was trying to dominate
42:52and to dominate
42:54under the leadership
42:56of Chiang Kai-shek,
42:58who, with his powerful
43:00and powerful leadership,
43:02was trying to link the Chinese
43:04with the U.S. interests in China.
43:06That is,
43:08in 1929,
43:10in a communist revolution
43:12led by Mao Tse-tung.
43:14Mao
43:16could have been
43:18Chiang Kai-shek three times
43:20in the great battles
43:22fought with millions of soldiers.
43:24Mao was considered
43:26the first of the rivalry
43:28that had started
43:30in the early 1930s,
43:32but we know
43:34very little about it
43:36and people do not understand
43:38it today.
43:40Even today,
43:42it is difficult
43:44to understand
43:46the meaning
43:48of the words
43:50of Mao Tse-tung
43:52when he said
43:54that the Chinese
43:56were trying to
43:58dominate
44:00and to dominate
44:02under the leadership
44:04of Chiang Kai-shek,
44:06who was trying
44:08to dominate
44:10and to dominate
44:12under the leadership
44:14of Mao Tse-tung.
44:16As we look at China
44:18in the heart,
44:20we can understand
44:22that China is
44:24the foundation
44:26of all problems
44:28in Asia.
44:30I believe
44:32that for the sake
44:34of our security
44:36we must stop
44:38the Chinese missile attack
44:40on the United States.
44:42One of the myths
44:44about Mao
44:46is that he was
44:48a small part
44:50of the capitalist West.
45:00Today,
45:02Shanghai is
45:04the capital
45:06of the Communist Party
45:08of China,
45:10at least in name.
45:16When I was last
45:18in China,
45:20more than a month
45:22ago,
45:24I saw the sound
45:26of bicycle bells.
45:28Now,
45:30as you know,
45:32there is silence.
45:34Where it was,
45:36was the freedom of speech.
45:38Now that I am here,
45:40the change is inconceivable.
45:42Here in Shanghai,
45:44there is no way
45:46to express freedom,
45:48but there are problems
45:50with human rights,
45:52especially with the rights
45:54against the state
45:56to challenge its power.
45:58Since I was last here,
46:00I have seen
46:02the sound
46:04of bicycle bells
46:06in the streets
46:08of Shanghai.
46:10The truth is
46:12that China has
46:14taken the United States
46:16under its capitalism
46:18and that is
46:20unforgivable.
46:22One way
46:24to overcome
46:26Chinese capitalism
46:28This list of Chinese superpowers
46:30was published by Rupert Ungernorthy,
46:32a student of our college,
46:34an American,
46:36whose name is Hu Rong.
46:40He has received many awards,
46:42including the year of the year in China.
46:46This year, 2015,
46:48was probably the most
46:50unsuccessful year in the history of China.
46:52I have been doing this list
46:54for 15-16 years.
46:56I have not received
46:58a single year like 2015.
47:00Normally, for 200 million pounds
47:02or 300 million dollars,
47:04we have 800,000 people.
47:06This year, we had 15.
47:08There are more billionaires in China
47:10than in the United States.
47:12So far, the United States
47:14has been the leader
47:16in the most successful
47:18business in the world.
47:20In 2015,
47:22China overtook the United States
47:24unbelievably.
47:30Modern China
47:32is full of strong ironies,
47:34including this museum
47:36which was once the home
47:38of Mao and his followers,
47:40founded by the Communist Party of China
47:42in 1921.
47:54Hello!
47:56Hello!
47:58Today, it stands in the center
48:00of a very exclusive
48:02and very capitalist
48:04middle-class district.
48:12When you leave the shrine
48:14to China's greatest revolution,
48:16you have a surreal spectacle,
48:18because on the outside,
48:20there are symbols
48:22of the very biggest
48:24symbols of capitalism,
48:26Starbucks, Apple, Cartier, Dolce & Gabbana.
48:28And down there,
48:30perhaps the greatest
48:32free market,
48:34water in a bottle,
48:36which makes us sure
48:38that we will find a better one
48:40than the one that costs
48:426 pounds a bottle
48:44in my hotel.
48:46I'm not so sure.
48:48The history of China
48:50and Mao's great communist revolution
48:52in 1929.
48:54Mao sent this message
48:56to Washington.
48:58China must industrialize,
49:00wrote Mao,
49:02and this is a revolution
49:04not only for free trade.
49:06Chinese and American interests
49:08are connected economically
49:10and politically.
49:12America must not be afraid
49:14that we will show non-cooperation.
49:16We cannot risk oppression
49:18in a conflict.
49:20Mao did not take it lightly.
49:22Nothing has changed.

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