I am from Cuba and thanks to my desire to learn English I discovered Chris, a real American genius. I am not only impressed by his intelligence and wisdom but also his altruistic way towards people. He holds the two most outstanding characteristics of men: a powerful mind and a loving heart.
@geovani80285 жыл бұрын
Rafael...wonderful conclusion.
@paxwallacejazz5 жыл бұрын
Wow your command of Standard English is exceptional.
@t3z3k45 жыл бұрын
then you will like caleb maupin and richard wolf too
@chrisanthony57145 жыл бұрын
So true
@tinapatton73464 жыл бұрын
FAKE$tream dumbed down RedCapitalist. Words ARE weapons! So, why are YOUR words here while wanking over FAKE$tream LIE$ - DOH?!
@doraincoimbra85835 жыл бұрын
Chris Hedges is simply being honest and that's why he resonates with so many. Bleak? That IS where we are now in the US and beyond.
@user-gz4ve8mw9l2 жыл бұрын
A realist same as myself unfortunately few people care to hear the truth. Yet they would benefit greatly from it instead of shutting the door to it. Instead retreating ever further into their own fantasy lands of hedonism and over stimulation. For one who shuts the door to reality invites calamity for everyone not just themselves.
@danthemansmail6 жыл бұрын
Chris Hedges is our very own modern day Thomas Paine. Too bad most the sheep don't even know he exists let alone be fired by his deeply powerful words and ideas. He is so dangerous he is universally banned by any and all major media. He is so smart, so well read and so incredibly morally powerful, they make sure only those few who like myself, go looking can actually find him.
@Supernautiloid6 жыл бұрын
I only recently discovered Hedges myself. Needless to say, his speeches have blown my mind. It only requires one to take a look at the world around us to see he speaks the truth. If only more would wake up to this truth.
@nole89236 жыл бұрын
Dan Harris MSNBC had him on this past week.
@newharmonynaptown48686 жыл бұрын
I'm not sure, but I don't think Thomas Paine was fooled by stories in The Bible.
@innersting31746 жыл бұрын
Chris is not fooled by anything. You haven't read or listened to him enough yet. (and yes, I include religion in that, do your homework please)
@eileenmc47466 жыл бұрын
yup xox chris hedges-I learn so much from him
@BergurRasmussen5 жыл бұрын
There is this Frank Zappa quote, I keep thinking of when listening to Chris Hedges “The illusion of freedom will continue as long as it's profitable to continue the illusion. At the point where the illusion becomes too expensive to maintain, they will just take down the scenery, they will pull back the curtains, they will move the tables and chairs out of the way and you will see the brick wall at the back of the theater.” The illusion is hastily crumbling ... thanks CH for wording the decay so clearly
@sissyboy65525 жыл бұрын
@Michael Freed i think you're another seeker of truth that is undermined by the situation and circumstances of your life - i think zappas quote is accurate but it still isn't truth. I have been contacted by God, Aliens the U.S. GOV'T and the Minesotta planetarium informally added the constellation Ophiuchus to the zodiac signs on my 56th birthday 1/13/11 - It is my educated and enlightened opinion that there will be a separation of the good and evil. The good will resurrect and the evil will remain here in hell. I am jesus christ - that is provable hence something is going on of a supernatural nature.
@christophermaiolo16695 жыл бұрын
I hope out of the dust and ashes from death and destructon of the old meme there will still be vagina's to eat and suck!!!!!
@Johnconno4 жыл бұрын
@@sissyboy6552 Are you trying to be funny or are you insane?
@paulvonhindenburg47274 жыл бұрын
@@sissyboy6552 A lot to unpack there. Setting the bar high is always a good way to start.
@sissyboy65524 жыл бұрын
@Michael Freed very heady stuff there - you're right no one is held accountable
@RobertWGreaves4 жыл бұрын
I deeply appreciate the work of Chris Hedges.
@bobramsay43555 жыл бұрын
Wonderfull read, America The Farewell Tour, I recommend everyone indulge in the information this book provides it will change you. Thank you Chris Hedges
@mikec67335 жыл бұрын
Regarding the question "Doesn't capitalism encourage innovation, which in many cases, creates things that are of positive use for ordinary people?", Chomsky has said that "a lot of the major technological breakthroughs are first developed via the Pentagon, at public expense, then transferred to private individuals who develop them into marketable commodities." (paraphrased)
@fightsports665 жыл бұрын
I would add NASA along with the Pentagon.
@oldschoolruler4 жыл бұрын
@Leonardo's Truth yeah...that magic bullet.
@MrSp0iler4 жыл бұрын
Pour all the world money into Africa and watch them invernt interstellar travel
@judithmcdonald90013 жыл бұрын
Military industrial complex
@mikec67333 жыл бұрын
@Anurag Chakraborty Good question. I don't know the answer.
@nancybacheldar79335 жыл бұрын
I am reading Chris’s book right now and It’s like everything I’ve ever believed is false. But he brings up many subjects I always questioned and realized he is makes sense but scares the begeepers out of me cause America seems to be so far gone.
@jenniferbringman90543 жыл бұрын
Which book?
@itzenormous3 жыл бұрын
There have always been people in the US who have fought this current. Men like Daniel Shays, Nat Turner, Frederick Douglass, John Brown, Crazy Horse, Big Bill Haywood, Eugene Debs, Paul Robeson, Sheriff Sid Hatfield, William Z. Foster, Gus Hall and others. These are the great Americans that we need to teach our fellow citizens about, and we should follow the path that they fought to lay out before us.
@GrandmaCathy3 жыл бұрын
Wow. I got to your last word in your first sentence and expected it to be 'true' rather than 'false.' For me, it's like everything I believed to be true has been verified and expanded upon. Chris is a powerhouse of wisdom and knowledge.
@monicacrotty20713 жыл бұрын
@@jenniferbringman9054q1y QQ I have o
@wakeuphebrewswithbishopcol38045 жыл бұрын
Chris Hedges is one white man that makes a lot of sense to me. He understands the world and cause and effect of bad choices of leadership. I believe he really knows more than what he wants to reveal about who the true people of God are. I believe he knows that they are not the zionist. I like this guy for the truth that he tells. I don't know him but he tells the truth. thumbs up for Chris Hedges!
@geovani80285 жыл бұрын
Thums up for you too, Bishop.
@tombradburn39355 жыл бұрын
Bishop Danny J Coleman Your 3rd and 4th sentences reveal more about you and show that you don’t know Hedges very well. And your 2nd sentence sounds like you believe people have a choice in their elections and the blame is on them. Free choice? Not really. Those in power cheat to stay in power.
@PatheticHero5 жыл бұрын
The message Hedges shares is not bleak, it is down right frightening. The economic world is crumbling all around us... I pray that everyone stay safe. He did mention that the police should be disarmed, I've been trying to tell most people I know the very same thing, but many don't want to hear that kind of talk. But I think they will change their minds in the near future, though for countless innocent victims of the police it will come too late.
@blawlor1005 жыл бұрын
Cap'n Carny The Police can not disarm. The only people who will have arms then, would be the “bad guys!” Then what?
@jewellevy4 жыл бұрын
The true people of which imaginary god do you mean?
@nwape68885 жыл бұрын
Mr. Hedges, Chris......My man. Please please 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏 run for President 🙏. You are a very wise man.
@geovani80285 жыл бұрын
You are the only hope for your country but your citizens are too stupid to get you. They think like Trump.
@sesbee36206 жыл бұрын
Late posting, this was an excellent interview just excellent. We area decayed society here in the USA. No apologies. Chris Hedges stay strong my man.
@spiritsbeyondthestars34935 жыл бұрын
Man I thought I was the only one that felt like that they were taking advantage of everyone who was beneath them. And I just got through telling my kids just a day or two ago that I don't believe this country will be here within the next decade what are no longer than two decades. All you have to do is look around you. You can see the change happening right in front of you
@antediluvianatheist52624 жыл бұрын
The revolution is coming. Get ready.
@innersting31746 жыл бұрын
His message IS bleak. That is the freaking point. Whew.
@teddyboef28216 жыл бұрын
But alot of people want a pacifier so they can go back to sleep and not deal with reality.
@UsernamerAlreadyTakn4 жыл бұрын
As he said it's bleak, but he didn't make it up
@janesmith10084 жыл бұрын
sells more books
@sarka744 жыл бұрын
It's not about bleak. it about resistance and moving in spite of the bleakness
@AndreasDelleske4 жыл бұрын
Now as we know it, we can start to create the world that we want, fair to everyone.
@bkbland16265 жыл бұрын
One discounts Chris Hedges insights at one's own peril.
@LEO-xo9cz3 жыл бұрын
I wish he would speak about the role of the MSM and Hollywood in this mess.
@mb47823 жыл бұрын
It's not only if "one" discounts Chris Hedges. It's if the collective consciousness of the masses discounts Chris Hedges in the brevity of critical time. We within trajectory of the world are guided toward cataclysm.
@mb47823 жыл бұрын
@@LEO-xo9cz Chris Hedges expounds on the issues you reference in his views how the media inclusive with Hollywood. How corporatist power has transformed including Hollywood from informative to the marvelling the illusion of the SPECTACLE.
@lindawalker8122 жыл бұрын
Everything he talked about has come to fruition, it's such a frightening time,and you get absolutely nothing from main stream media, thank goodness Mr.Hedge's message is still getting out, i don't know now what can be done to stop this train,but I still need to know what's happening.August 2022.
@foodparadise57926 жыл бұрын
32:50 Christ missing the point that those "innovator" didn't innovate technology themselves. Chomsky explained earlier all the high-tech-economy's research and developments are conducted in Universities that are funded by taxpayers and then handed to the private sectors for profit. It is true across ALL industries. I urge anybody reading this look up the research funding source of Stanford and MIT. MIT was funded almost 100% by pentagon until recently came down to 70%. Standford is 80% funded by the federal government. Yes, you and I are paying for their "innovation" but we never get a piece of the pie.
@foodparadise57926 жыл бұрын
Chomsky can offer a much more in-depth and cogent answer to all of her questions.
@johnmaxwell17506 жыл бұрын
There are plenty of glaring examples that entirely refute Chomsky's theory about the supposed university basis for creation of innovative technologies -- Tesla and AC current; the first PC produced by two guys in a garage; new technologies developed in corporate labs (the transistor; Kevlar). The list goes on and on.
@joeanthony77596 жыл бұрын
That doesn't entirely refute anything. Of course there are many exceptions.
@johnmaxwell17506 жыл бұрын
Joe DePino. Chomsky and others who think that the most significant innovations today are generated in university labs are wrong. More significant innovations are made by private enterprise. But significant new technologies today mainly are developed college-educated people.
@geoffgriffiths33816 жыл бұрын
Universities used to do research. During the Reagan years, half the US scientists worked for the military. In the Clinton years they worked in private corporations
@dasssjam74132 жыл бұрын
Thank u Mr Chris Hedges, my opion is people who struggle and suffer in honesty live is the one is knowing what you are talking about, stay sincre be happy with a little things, love is the key, i love you all humankind, my love regards. Mr Chris you make feel like i am not alone. Thank u!!!
@targetfootball78076 жыл бұрын
Good points. If people had a little more of a safety netting, I think, they might be less apt to destroy their lives through such disparaging extremities.
@careydepass1305 жыл бұрын
Agreed. And it would be relatively cheap to create this safety netting compared to trying to suppress civil unrest and civil war.
@halk84706 жыл бұрын
I pray for a debate between Chris and the right-wing podcast hosts who receive so much platform and praise. Or even with the corporate owned "left" news pundits. It would be a walk in the park for him.
@moorek19675 жыл бұрын
Excuse me, but which particular "right-wing" podcasts are praised and applauded so much that they keep getting banned? I didn't know banned was a good thing. You do realize, right, that those "right-wingers" have the exact same freedom of speech that you do, and it sure ain't the "right-wingers" taking your freedom of speech and press away. This man is definitely NOT an independent. Do you wonder exactly why he gets paid for these "Speeches" and then puts his money into the same banks he talks bad about? Do you wonder exactly why this man can afford a car, gas, insurance and car repairs when a lot of Americans don't have the same opportunity? Yep, talk about how bad America is, when he can afford to live in America. Amazing, right?
@superlyger5 жыл бұрын
moorek1967 great point he is playing the crowd with flowery words. And getting paid by a major media company to write books. He is certainly enjoying the unfettered capitalism by participating in it freely- while exercising his right to free speech. An example of a pot calling the kettle black.
@cynthiaallen92255 жыл бұрын
R wingers don't know how to behave. No thanks.
@cynthiaallen92255 жыл бұрын
@@superlyger What's he supposed to do? Start his own economy?
@willdenham4 жыл бұрын
Never happen, they avoid figures like hedges , Cornel West, Richard Wolf. They know how bad for their business model that would be.
@ursulapainter57874 жыл бұрын
Thank you very much. Listening to Chris Hedges is painful because he is constantly prodding one's conscience---but it is truly enlightening.
@annalisa146 жыл бұрын
THE OVERTHROW OF CORPORATE POWER !!! GO CHRIS !!!
@moorek19675 жыл бұрын
He is paid by and puts his money into corporate powers. Overthrow the corporate power and Chris loses his coin. Did you not realize that?
@tombradburn39355 жыл бұрын
moorek maybe you should live with him for a month to be sure he is living according to your rigid standards 100% of the time
@merlinidlehands33025 жыл бұрын
@Michael Freed Michael, do you resist this Adminastration?
@merlinidlehands33025 жыл бұрын
@Michael Freed Sorry i didnt mean to push a button
@merlinidlehands33025 жыл бұрын
@Michael Freed You have a GREAT day with your self PAL!
@The10thManRules5 жыл бұрын
"Hate groups are the product of a decaying society". Chrid Hedges. I would add street gangs in that analysis.
@LEO-xo9cz3 жыл бұрын
He doesn't talk about the causes of this problem. The Media is a major cause of this decay.
@MrSp0iler3 жыл бұрын
there is also family violence on the whole globe. If it is forbidden to beat children, in eastern europe, Lithuania, the proud capital Vilnius in school my classmates was proudly showing marks how his father beats him, there is also psychological violence there are 50 regions in europe and each one of them hates neighbours. violence is surpressed by police or how do you call it, so psychological pressure replacing it like in asian countries.
@The10thManRules3 жыл бұрын
@@riverrushforth Substantiate your comment with some sociological study on source that there has always been hate groups in every society.
@LEO-xo9cz3 жыл бұрын
@@riverrushforth I never trusted Hedges.
@darktagmaster18613 жыл бұрын
Very interesting views. May I recommend a book that Chris here has spoke of often. That book is “The Collapse of Complex Societies - Joseph A. Tainter”
@ronaldmitchell36653 жыл бұрын
... “ the reforms of the institutions needed, is NOT going to come about through those institutions “.....BRILLIANTE!!!..
@tichneck4 жыл бұрын
The interviewer is kind of annoying. This is a great interview, but I think it's despite the interviewer.
@Eliminator55553 жыл бұрын
The female commentator did a SUPERB job and Chris is GREAT as usual.
@nikko68654 жыл бұрын
“Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.”
6 жыл бұрын
Chris Hedges - A true American hero. When the Junta finally reveals itself and grab the reins of power, Chris Hedges will be the first citizen to be abducted, tortured, executed and removed from the official record.
@laniakea7775 жыл бұрын
Hopefully
@williamshafer31995 жыл бұрын
@@laniakea777 CIA TROLLS becoming more brazen, indeed Orwellian
@troyyork15545 жыл бұрын
He works against this country and deserves that
@williamshafer31995 жыл бұрын
@@troyyork1554 WARNNG CIA TROLL ALERT
@Johnconno4 жыл бұрын
@@williamshafer3199 'Troy York' is a nom de guerre. He was a porn-star who contracted AIDS.
@Chuffin_ell5 жыл бұрын
Guy has an amazing grasp, speaks with such genuine authenticity and power, yet never addresses who actually controls the narrative of deception being played out over and over as if it didn’t exist....
@AndreasDelleske4 жыл бұрын
You and me as long as we believe in the corporate bullshit like eternal growth. We are the idiot masterminds.
@Chuffin_ell4 жыл бұрын
@@AndreasDelleske you’re stupid
@ibenzawla4 жыл бұрын
Fascinating stuff. Thanks for posting. I always listen when Chris speaks.
@claudiasutton82405 жыл бұрын
Chris is brilliant and has integrity .
@mb47823 жыл бұрын
I am going to be straight forward and succinct. Chris Hedges speaks with the unabated truth. The realities where we are now. Why we came to where we are now. And the unmitigated probable trajectories where we will be. From the choices made by the collective consciousness now.
@nelsongonzalez45333 жыл бұрын
Good interview! Thanks 👍☺️
@debbiethompson145 жыл бұрын
Letting these companies move out of the country, was are the beginning of our downfall. And also the monopolization of many products and companies.
@dopaminey99466 жыл бұрын
Bleak? He just reads the reports! And that's why I don't like to read the reports at least not as many as he does. I'm left with a profound powerlessness and sadness that paralyizes me to my core. However, to understand the reality one experiences gives one the power to make better decisions, to avoid or call out corruption, to feel a deep connection to our humanity and to our planet. And when the time comes to know what a society is supposed to look like and fight to erect it.
@tombradburn39355 жыл бұрын
Ines Jeffre get involved locally. investigate any large charities before you give to them, vote 3rd Party,
@debbiethompson145 жыл бұрын
THE USA should have never let these companies move out of the country! They should have told them, if you move we're going to put huge tariffs on your products when they come into the back into the country! I can guarantee you that most of those companies would not have moved but we just let them do whatever they wanted to and now here we are!
@geovani80285 жыл бұрын
Clinton did it.
@spiritsbeyondthestars34935 жыл бұрын
Trump said he done that already he hasn't.
@debbiethompson144 жыл бұрын
@Ellen Green well the government's very short decided because they should have seen this coming.
@LukeMcGuireoides3 жыл бұрын
It was mostly done way before clinton, dude. We shouldve couldve wouldve. Unfortunately we bought into neoliberalism hook line and sinker. Corporate America was given the keys to the kingdom. Taking money our of politics may have prevented it. This is something on which most all Americans are agreed yet we allow the politicians to stand in the way. Americans voters need to wake up and pay attention already
@debbiethompson143 жыл бұрын
@@LukeMcGuireoides Agreed. I have always said that greed was going to end this world. Sad, but true. These corporations are INSATIABLE P!GS!!!
@alexcarter88076 жыл бұрын
I live in Silicon Valley and it's getting Dickensian here too. I consider myself exceedingly lucky to "get" to live in a warehouse, and next year may make as much as $15k for the year. Out of this I have to take 20% out for taxes. I'm doing better than most techie types, honestly. I ride by a Foxconn plant on my bicycle all the time. It's amazing how much the "silicon valley" economy depends on workers like me, with our bicycles and trailers, taking things to the post office, or if we're very, very, VERY lucky, maybe working in said post office.
@superlyger5 жыл бұрын
San Francisco is unfortunately a bubble causing city. There was a subprime bubble that led to housing collapse, and now a fecal matter bubble- egalitarianism’s failure.
@williammorris38155 жыл бұрын
Become a firefighter or police officer
@merlinidlehands33025 жыл бұрын
@Ricci Hardow I think one reason we are NOW SO concerened about the Homeless is because SOON there will BE MANY MORE HOMELESS in California
@aKYwoman15 жыл бұрын
The mic of the interviewer is WAY louder than Chris's. That should have been fixed. But he's always great.
@billyboreham31024 жыл бұрын
Thanks for enlightening me. I was cursing my equipment at this irritation when I chanced apon you’re comment.
@debralegorreta13753 жыл бұрын
They need to lower the interviewer's smug factor as well. Super annoying.
@SueEmmDee5 жыл бұрын
I agree with Mr. Hedges that Facebook is rubbish and dangerously intrusive; that we have descended into tribalism; and that there is comparison between nowadays and Versailles because the decorating glossies show homes which are the modern North American Versailles where the principals are out of touch and insecure and scared of losing their money and focussed on trivia while the population (whom the wealthy do not see in their daily lives) are sometimes hungry and usually semi-literate.
@spiritsbeyondthestars34935 жыл бұрын
The elite is so disconnected from the rest of us.
@666marquis3 жыл бұрын
@@spiritsbeyondthestars3493 Hedges is the elite. He is a joker playing prophet of doom for dumb milennials.
@ChooseCompassion Жыл бұрын
He’s not bleak, he’s just revealing it. Such a bloody shame he is so censored. HE is who EVERYONE should be listening to.
@AllPeopleUnite3 жыл бұрын
Re: The question on corporate innovation in tech- Not trying to be knit pick or overstate but a lot of the basis of modern health tech and technology overall is publicly funded and even in some cases carries out by public organisations. And not just back in the 60s and 70s but up to the present.
@markorendas17904 жыл бұрын
I THINK MOST EVERYONE HAD A HAND IN IT. ESPECIALLY WITH NO UNIONS. AND *MINIMUM WAGE*.....
@TheBarrwen4 жыл бұрын
This is what a real journalist looks like. I don’t agree with everything he says but I respect him. Say this too, I think he has altruistic motives.
@Goldun-nah2 жыл бұрын
I’ve been watching Chris Hedges videos dating back to 2008 and working my way up. Every single thing he has said has come to pass. Time has vindicated his stance. Even in debates, I thought the people he debated were serious people arguing passionately with intellectual integrity… but to see those people still hold on to their same perspective even when time has born out the evidence that has vindicated Hedges, makes me realize how intellectual dishonest they actually are. It’s not about having bad takes in the past in as much as one should evolve their perspectives when the evidence opposes your understanding.
@seamuswarren6 жыл бұрын
I wonder if some of the bigger states like California and Texas will eventually break away from the federation.
@Chuffin_ell5 жыл бұрын
Seamus Warren sold off
@mikesampson31424 жыл бұрын
I hope Texas does break away from this liberal shithole country
@Osnosis4 жыл бұрын
mike sampson Sarcastic, or not: absolutely. Give it back to Mexico and call it Texaco!
@The.world.has.gone.crazy...3 жыл бұрын
Nope
@r.pres.41213 жыл бұрын
We don’t need that conservatard garbage dump known as Texas or more accurately TexASS.
@rupertwilliams31695 жыл бұрын
When the first World calapses, the third world is the only way to escape. IAMME UHURU. 🇯🇲.
@LEO-xo9cz3 жыл бұрын
The first world is intentionality being destroyed.
@sjr78224 жыл бұрын
I am surprised that Hedges called out Israel interfering in our politics. Dual citizenship needs to be discontinued, You can't serve two masters As for Trump, I voted for him, but, I hold him accountable, and when I hold Trump accountable, the Forever Trumpers attack me, with 'troll' other names. The Forever Trumpers are as annoying as the Never Trumpers
@superlyger5 жыл бұрын
California’s housing policies are intrinsically regressive. Limiting the supply drives up home values in well-to-do coastal communities, while pricing everyone else out of the market. Households in the lowest quartile in California spend about two-thirds of their incomes on housing; those in the top quartile spend just 16%. The conundrum California’s landed gentry face is they want to boost their home values-and at the same time to have an abundant supply of low-wage workers to mow their lawns and clean their pools too.
@domingodeanda61133 жыл бұрын
Nov-25-2021, that was pretty damn good.
@hudson88653 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@domingodeanda2335 жыл бұрын
Keep on kicking ass.
@uclassc5 жыл бұрын
'Pillage' in more ways than one. Come to LA to see a decayed society.
@r.pres.41213 жыл бұрын
Also in New York City and Philadelphia as well. Homeless people all over both cities.
@sesbee36206 жыл бұрын
aND, THIS ONE -- Assisted living kicks out the frail 'cause 'we can't take care of you any longer' One day, a daughter went to visit, saw staff napping and took pictures on her cellphone, which she sent to the facility administrator with a note expressing concern. “A few days later, she got a call telling her that her mom had become combative and needed to be taken to the hospital for psychiatric treatment,” Delaney said. today: Sep. 6, 2018 he phone call came as a shock. Your aunt can’t transfer into memory care; we have to discharge her from this facility, a nurse told Jeff Regan. You have 30 days to move her out. The next day, a legal notice was delivered. Marilou Jones, 94, who has dementia, was being evicted from Atria at Foster Square, an assisted living facility in Foster City, Calif. The reason: “You are non-weight bearing and require the assistance of two staff members for all transfers,” the notice said. Regan was taken aback: After consulting with Atria staff about his aunt’s deteriorating health, he and Jones’ husband, William, 88, had arranged for her to be transferred to a dementia care unit at the facility. A room had been chosen, and furniture bought. But now, Atria was claiming it couldn’t meet her needs after all. action isn’t unusual. Across the country, assisted living facilities are evicting residents who have grown older and frail, essentially saying that “we can’t take care of you any longer.”Evictions top the list of grievances about assisted living received by long-term care ombudsmen across the U.S. In 2016, the most recent year for which data are available, 2,867 complaints of this kind were recorded - a number that experts believe is almost surely an undercount. Often, there’s little that residents or their families can do about evictions. Assisted living is governed by states, and regulations tend to be loosely drafted, allowing facilities considerable flexibility in determining whom they admit as residents…..
@lorenzbroll1013 жыл бұрын
I could imagine Chris being a Pastor in the Confessing Church way back in the day!
@Lovin_It Жыл бұрын
Any ideas as to what is going on with the hacked tpl system since October 28, 2023?
@JB-kx9bx3 жыл бұрын
My wife and I are trying to have a paid off house ASAP so we at least have that.
@SammyVideoPlex4 жыл бұрын
He is a great speaker. I learn from him when ever I listen to him. My Podcasts, try to teach like he does. God, bless you Sir.
@dannomusic474 жыл бұрын
10 minutes in and I just can’t take how loud her mic is and how much lower Chris’ is. Maddening.
@jazzis4u14 жыл бұрын
I’m glad I’m not married to you
@Lerockramblerbirder6 жыл бұрын
Great discussion !
@pedrokantor39976 жыл бұрын
Is this interviewer trying to debate Chris Hedges under the guise of an interview?
@geovani80285 жыл бұрын
Who knows, she is sooo on stage it's hard to read her.
@zbmccarter3 жыл бұрын
Good. Hedges is a badass who has plenty of knowledge and experience to defend his points. All interviewers should challenge their interviewees, and give them a chance to respond to those challenges. That is what separates intelligent, well thought out ideologies from propaganda and lies. For example: look at any interview where donald trump, joe biden, Nancy pelosi, etc is asked a challenging question that requires them to logically defend their claims, and you will notice they either blatantly lie, become visibly enraged, give vague, rambling rants that don't address the question, or shut down the interview completely. One thing they never do is give an honest, fact based response in defense of their position, because in almost every case, that is literally impossible. They are paid to lie. The fact that Hedges was able to respond to "tough" or "challenging" questions coherently without resorting to bullshit only makes him and his arguments look better...
@deanmarquis43255 жыл бұрын
It's not a far step to go from detention camps to concentration camps.
@sholtotaylor60775 жыл бұрын
... & then death camps
@geovani80285 жыл бұрын
After the fires in Paridise Can. People were sheltered and FEMA came to get them. The local police helped the femas to get these poor people out of their shelter to go with FEMA to their who knows what. .Death camps?
@geovani80285 жыл бұрын
Missed my point....the local police following orders, did not protect their local citizens but instead assisted FEMA monsters to capture these helpless, exhausted people. I saw this on the tube
@danielday48635 жыл бұрын
A brilliant and astute man. Aprophet in his own country is an outcast. He will be proven right, unfortunately.
@wolfy15 жыл бұрын
What's that flute playing, I can't hear over that noise
@ebmr147910 ай бұрын
There is no need to introduce Mr Hedges. He will outline his CV during his speech, every war, every prominent figure(he apparently knows everyone in the world), all the languages spoken, all his books, he’s been everywhere and knows it all.
@crowmagnum11905 жыл бұрын
Whoah. Chris Hedges was smiling and made people laugh. Must be that Canadian Kush.
@annalisa146 жыл бұрын
Suffering and rendered invisible...don't forget THAT one... and all the injustices
@alexandernay56314 жыл бұрын
-Pull Back- You are the, strongest person, ever. That does not pull the lever. and let you do. How could you ever, let go of anything. Ever, let, go of anything: forever.
@andyshelly34736 жыл бұрын
he is only telling the truth
@666marquis3 жыл бұрын
Hedges is a joke.
@agree2426 жыл бұрын
Get Bankers off egocentric welfare. Get millionaires off welfare. Get billionaires off welfare.
@JB-vb6dh4 жыл бұрын
Innovators should not be given a pass to be predators! 👏🏾
@alansindall83962 жыл бұрын
Douglas Murray says that overall the British Empire and later the American influence is a good thing. True we now have a lot of automation. Advanced technology, Self-driving cars. Better weapons even. But are our lives better? The English sent a lot of alleged criminals to Australia and simply pushed the Aboriginals aside. I doubt if their world, and life, is better than before. Same in North America with the natives. Does 'progress' mean better? I say 'no'. Chris is a clear thinker, and a both a truth seeker and truth teller. He deserves a world-wide audience. He will get there one day.I hope?!
@_John_Tyree_4 жыл бұрын
Funny how GM, with all it's cheap labor (with no benefits or pension plan) their vehicles are no cheaper.
@ancientsymbol5 жыл бұрын
It is unfortunate that the interviewer's mic is much high gain than Chris's. Makes listening unpleasant.
@juancananey83484 жыл бұрын
HEDGES FOR PRESIDENT!!!!
@wynetsang Жыл бұрын
Dreams cannot be killed. They turn into nightmares.
@tinag83416 жыл бұрын
She’s not even in his league...not trying to be mean just saying...
@eileenmc47466 жыл бұрын
why she asks and he answers even if no one likes the truth. I watched the full clip and got really irritate with her ignorance, she is superficial.
@PatheticHero5 жыл бұрын
It's too bad they didn't have a high quality interviewer. Someone like Ray Suarez, formerly of NPR.
@joancarlson49055 жыл бұрын
The music is extremly annoying. Please.
@sesbee36206 жыл бұрын
HERE IS JUST ONE RECENT EXAMPLE -- He withdrew from his friends and neighbors. When he died in his Fairbanks house, no one noticed - for years. The house Paul Pesika built, and where he was found dead on Aug. 12 by a neighbor. Aug. 28, 2018. FAIRBANKS - Neighbors figured the house had been abandoned, though some had a creeping feeling that might not be the case. At the end of May, the Fairbanks North Star Borough had taken the deed of a dilapidated cabin on Red Fox Drive, a neighborhood of well-kept homes on big parcels of birch forest near the University of Alaska. The property taxes hadn't been paid for years. The property was owned by a man named Paul Pesika. Decades ago he had run a pioneering counseling nonprofit and worked for a powerful Fairbanks legislator in Juneau. Back then he was known as a charismatic outdoorsman with a wide circle of friends. They'd helped him build the cabin on his dream property on a hill above Fairbanks' ice fog.But 30 years ago he had become a hermit. The other residents of Red Fox Drive, mostly professors and other professionals who worked for the university, saw him only in glimpses. A view from the road of Paul Pesika’s property on Red Fox Drive in Fairbanks. The building visible is a garage. The tree fell in a wind storm, neighbors say. The silver-haired man stopped emerging from his house to shovel the snow. A birch tree fell, blocking his driveway. The ancient silver Subaru he sometimes used to make midnight trips to the grocery store sat undisturbed.People wondered, in passing, what had become of Paul Pesika.This month, the truth came out: He hadn't gone anywhere.Pesika had killed himself years ago in the little cabin, but no one had noticed.Undiscovered No one knows quite when Pesika died.Pesika stopped paying his property taxes in July 2014, according to the Fairbanks North Star Borough. The next month, he got his last delivery from the company that supplies water to homes without wells in the neighborhood. His vehicle registration expired around the same time.Roy Corral, an old friend and roommate who now lives in Eagle River, says he stopped by the property at least twice in the last four years while on trips to Fairbanks. The place looked abandoned. No one answered the door. In 2016, someone called the Alaska State Troopers to ask for a welfare check at the Red Fox Drive property. They hadn't seen their neighbor in a while, the agency said. A trooper went to the house."It appeared abandoned and the driveway was unplowed," said troopers spokeswoman Megan Peters. The trooper didn't have enough information that something was wrong to go inside, she said."We can't just make entry into a house because someone else is concerned," Peters said.Most of the windows at the Pesika house had been covered with insulation. Photographed Aug. 28, 2018. (Michelle Theriaut Boots / ADN) Two other neighbors said they thought about calling for a welfare check but never did. Finally, at the end of May, 1768 Red Fox Drive appeared on a list of houses that the borough had taken over for nonpayment of taxes. The property was to be auctioned off and sold. On June 13, a borough official went out and posted a notice on the door - but didn't go inside.Potential bidders started showing up in the neighborhood, peeking at the house.Finally, on Aug. 12, Pesika's next-door neighbor walked inside the cabin to check out the property and found him long dead, apparently of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.Paul Pesika's death unsettled both the people who were close to him long ago and the neighbors who lived in shouting distance but never knew him. It has brought up big questions about friendship, neighborliness, mental illness and a value Alaskans take seriously, privacy.To Pesika's old friend, Frank Gold, a retired University of Alaska psychology professor, all the questions boil down to one big one: How could this happen? Promising beginnings Pesika was a young man when he arrived in Fairbanks sometime in the late 1960s or early 1970s, his old friends say. But nobody can quite recall his early history: Was he stationed at Fort Wainwright? They remember that he may have come from California.Like many others in town at the time, he'd come to reinvent himself. He was estranged from his family, said Gold.Pesika, about 6 feet tall with looks people compare to a young Sean Connery, quickly became involved in Fairbanks city life, running a pioneering youth drop-in center downtown and later a drug and alcohol counseling center with Gold. Paul Pesika in Denali National Park, circa mid-1980s. (Photo by Roy Corral) He fell in with an outdoorsy, young, adventurous circle of friends, said Corral, a photographer. People were drawn to him, said Sherry Faught, another member of the circle who now lives in Salcha."He was handsome, he was pleasant, he was fun to be around," she said.In the early 1970s, Pesika bought the land on Red Fox Drive and began building a house with the help of his friends."It was perfect, above the ice fog," Corral said. "He liked his privacy." Pesika shifted to work in politics, becoming a legislative aide for a powerful Fairbanks state senator, Don Bennett. He was known as a dealmaker who could operate in Juneau during the session and then smoothly transition to the simple, spartan, outdoors lifestyle he aspired to on his land in Fairbanks, Corral said.But despite his success, there were signs that something was fraying in Pesika's mind.He and Corral were on a winter skiing trip in Denali National Park in the late 1970s when Pesika made a statement that startled his friend."We were skiing toward the river and Paul all of a sudden stopped and said, 'Did you hear that?'" Corral said. "And I said, 'What?' And he said Jesus' voice talking to us.'"He began to tell friends about his fear that radio transmissions were infiltrating his mind, that he was being tracked by government agencies, that the CIA would take him in the night to Anchorage, where they would use his powers of detection to locate enemy submarines.It was obvious that Pesika was suffering from signs of mental illness, said Corral.But no one could convince him to seek professional help, Gold said. He worked for the borough in the 1980s, at one point as an aide to the mayor. By the late 1980s he began cutting himself off.His friends continued to drop by the house on Red Fox Drive, where Pesika now spent most of his time. But the handsome political operative and outdoorsman they knew had become deeply paranoid.He was fastidious about shoveling his driveway but would barely respond to a hello, said Carol Norton, a soft-spoken neighbor who lives in a log home across the road. Carol Norton lives across the street from the Pesika property. She rarely interacted with Pesika but noticed when the driveway stopped being shoveled. “In the back of our minds was the possibility … but we thought someone was visiting, looking in on him in some capacity.” Then even Pesika's smallest interactions with the wider world ceased. "I'd go by the door and yell his name. It was locked. No one would come to the window," Corral said. "He'd have a black flag hanging at his window and then I knew things were getting bad." Eventually it became unpleasant - even scary - to approach the house, said Faught. She remembers last seeing Pesika in the early 1990s. No one interviewed for this story remembers interacting with him after that era.It's a mystery to them how he continued to pay for expenses, even for his austere lifestyle: property taxes, the water he needed to have delivered to his house and the fuel to heat it through the long, frigid winters."It appeared abandoned"Robert Prince, a professor of documentary filmmaking at the University of Alaska, moved in next door to Pesika eight years ago and never met him.On Aug. 12, Prince, his wife and his mother walked over to check out the neighbor's house beyond a thick stand of birch, cranberries and wild roses. The house was in a state of gentle decay.The driveway up from the road was being overtaken by saplings. Birds had nested in the eaves. Fireweed had crept into the planters. Mushrooms had sprouted on the back deck. A windsock that read "Alaska" twisted limply from the front porch. The door was unlocked, Prince said. It was dark as midnight inside. Almost every window had been covered with sheets of insulation. Prince used his phone as a flashlight.He made his way down a dark hallway and into a room that looked like a tidy bunker. Canned food was stacked on a desk. A bed was made. And in the corner, a wicker chair. In it, Pesika - dead of an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound.The horror-movie details aren't necessary to share. But it was obvious that the body had been there for years, Prince said. He called police right away.Pesika's old friends have been calling each other. Some feel guilty. Living and letting live is an Alaskan value, they say, and maybe particularly a Fairbanks value. But at what cost?Corral thinks Pesika may have run out of money to pay for heat, water and taxes and given up.How long had he been there? Corral thinks four years - around the time he stopped getting water delivered and paying his taxes. He says the medical examiner told him they'd have to use dental records to positively identify the body. He's trying to locate any of Pesika's living relatives.No one from the circle of friends in the 1970s can remember if he had siblings, or where exactly he came from, Gold said.art of what makes the story so unsettling is how close to society Pesika was living, by Alaska standards, Corral said.His house was nearly visible from the road. It was not even an area of Fairbanks where people moved to get away from it all, but was a neighborhood with good elementary schools and an easy commute to the university."We all feel terrible about letting that happen to a neighbor," said Norton. "This is supposed to be a 'we know our ne
@eileenmc47466 жыл бұрын
from Alaska, thank you for posting this. :(
@marshamcdonald14755 жыл бұрын
Ses Bee This is an example of What is happening in our neighborhoods across USA. We have neighbors but No one cares about each other. If a neighbor does care The caring neighbor is treated With hostility by neighbor She/ he is checking on. Christianity where? People Go to church but learn nothing. Families stay within Their own families. People In neighborhoods with no Immediate families need The love of God because the Humans around them are Really an illusion. Teens In high school are more caring For one another/ friends than their parents toward their Neighbors. If you have a Loving neighbor who Checks on you including You in their life you are very Fortunate because this does Not exist due to long work Hours etc.
@potomafia4 жыл бұрын
Bleak...but that’s where we at
@Osnosis4 жыл бұрын
You wanna say "constant surveillance"? Hello COVID-19! Everyone should go back and watch The President's Analyst.
@Rickwmc5 жыл бұрын
Someday there will come the brotherhood of man. Someday industrial warfare as well as warfare between nations will be seen to be ridiculous and a waste of life and money. Someday, men will work together in a grand, cooperative effort. - Clarence Darrow (1920).
@barriewright28573 жыл бұрын
Chris hedges truth too facts and reality. May that man have the blessing of God and hopes he has a long life. Chris hedges and cornel west the only people shining light into some dark place's.
@LisaLightning6 жыл бұрын
Chris Hedges is SO intelligent. And such a non-hypocrite he became VEGAN FOR THE ENVIRONMENT when he learned how huge a role animal agriculture plays in climate change.
@autohmae5 жыл бұрын
@John Eshleman food for a person through live stock takes over 20 times more energy, land and water than doing it with just plants alone. Why is that so hard to believe ?
@mikesampson31424 жыл бұрын
Eat more chicken.
@cbarclay996 жыл бұрын
I have a lot of time for Chris Hedges and agree with him on many topics. He is right to see the US as being over-extended militarily and fiscally. What he fails to recognise is that, were American dominance threatened in a way that it has not been since 1989, it has the means to maintain its hegemony: re-assess military ambitions, raise taxes to balance the budget, bring back manufacturing, continue to innovate to stay ahead of other nations. It's not clear that US politicians would choose those options, but they are still there. This is shown in Chris' response to the question about innovation (at 32:00). Instead of discussing SEN aids specifically or innovation in general, he focusses on electronic gadgets. He doesn't even consider this industry in its entirety but focusses on production in Asia. There is a simple remedy for the criticism he makes of conditions for the workers: bring the manufacturing back to the US (helping the US current account and helping keep the $ as the world's reserve currency), pay US workers to make them at decent pay rates (helping other sectors of the US economy). Of course, US consumers would have to pay more for their phones. All that would mean though is trading in for a new model every 4 years instead of every 2 years. What Chris doesn't seem to reflect on is that he is criticising the way the country that is the main challenger to US dominance treats its own people. He can't have it both ways. He can't criticise the way the Chinese government treats its own workers and at the same time welcome the rise of China as a global power.
@crowmagnum11905 жыл бұрын
He's not "welcoming" the rise of China as a global power, but merely stating that China's power is increasing.
@charliebarton5 жыл бұрын
Chris is great, but I want to make an observation that a friend who studies American / Western culture and history told me: American's have been saying that the end of America is nigh since the earliest days. The Alien and Sedition Act was supposed to usher in dictatorship, Andrew Jackson's one man one vote was supposed to begin an era of democratic demagoguery, etc. etc.. It's not that I want to take away from his criticism but rather just to put them in a context that might be useful to someone who takes these issues seriously. And didn't Churchill say that America always does the right thing when it's exhausted all other options? Further, perhaps one reason we have continued to trudge forward is because there've always been people like Twain and Hedges criticizing out society and warning us of the dangers they saw. So, while the end may not be nigh, thank the gods for the people who say it is.
@geovani80285 жыл бұрын
Charlie Barton.. none of us want it but what your friend said is true but but but this time it's coming so prepaid yourself.
@sesbee36206 жыл бұрын
Florence S. Wald, American Pioneer in End-of-Life Care, Is Dead at 91 nOV. 14, 2008 Florence S. Wald, whose vision of bringing the terminally ill peace of mind and, to whatever extent possible, freedom from pain led to the opening of the first palliative care hospice in the United States, died on Saturday at her home in Branford, Conn. She was 91. Her death was confirmed by her son, Joel.Mrs. Wald, who was dean of the Yale University School of Nursing from 1959 to 1966, was the prime mover, in 1974, in starting the Connecticut Hospice, the nation’s first home-care program for the terminally ill. Six years later, a 44-patient hospice - where the dying could be comforted by their loved ones around the clock and where the staff would do what it could to alleviate suffering - opened in Branford. “This hospice became a model for hospice care in the United States and abroad,” the publication Yale Nursing Matters said this week, adding that Mrs. Wald’s role “in reshaping nursing education to focus on patients and their families has changed the perception of care for the dying in this country.”There are now more than 3,000 hospice programs in the United States, serving about 900,000 patients a year.In recent years, Mrs. Wald had concentrated on extending the hospice care model to dying prison inmates.“People on the outside don’t understand this world at all,” Mrs. Wald told The New York Times in 1998. “Most people in prison have had a rough time in life and haven’t had any kind of education in how to take care of their health.” And, she added, “There is the shame factor, the feeling that dying in prison is the ultimate failure.”
@60sfanatic5 жыл бұрын
Habiba’s question about money and innovation (32:00) warrants a further rebuff. Of course money drives innovation and development, but for evil purposes, as well as good. The military, intelligence organisations and global corporations always take priority. New technologies are used to weaponise everything imaginable, to surveil everyone, to come up with wonderful new products which often result in immense environmental damage and human suffering. Speaking of “special needs children”, reminds me of the misery caused by Big Pharma innovative money spinners. The saying that (the love of) “money is the root of all kinds of evil” appears most appropriate.
@yvonnem.langlois51975 жыл бұрын
Do you think the wheel was developed for profit, or out of necessity?
@beehiveear88835 жыл бұрын
@@yvonnem.langlois5197 I think it starts as necessity and it spirals into profit. And careens into feeding frenzy of greed. Then out of control, the old saying is ever so true: "Power corrupts. Absolute power corrupts absolutely."
@egrono13 жыл бұрын
Horrible audio balance on this video.
@TheDigs396Ай бұрын
This man is the last decent bit of journalism we have left
@ProductionsHomegrown3 жыл бұрын
Maybe turn up the mic of the interviewee and not the interviewer. Chris as always showing us the light.. and darkness.
@sluggygrumble51642 жыл бұрын
The guy is just on the money. Perfect.
@AudioPervert14 жыл бұрын
I want to say "tom & jerry" or "mickey mouse" .. But I will shuttup and listen to Chris Hedges again.
@watershedbarbie96853 жыл бұрын
Bet Chris won't be going back to the Toronto Public Library any time soon, lol.
@meghan423 жыл бұрын
Who are the 131 that "dis-liked? Why?
@citizen.cane13 жыл бұрын
Idiots who believe in American exceptionalism.
@billybolex86095 жыл бұрын
Why is the volume on the moderator's microphone so much louder than the volume on Hedges' microphone?
@geovani80285 жыл бұрын
Billy Biolex cause she's a bitch.
@jazzis4u14 жыл бұрын
Yes, the day is beautiful. The sun is shining and the sky is blue. People are smiling and enjoying the day. But not me. I’m concerned that the sky is a little too blue. The sun is shining too intensely. Why are people so happy? Something must be wrong. I’m going back to bed.
@jones13514 жыл бұрын
Chris gave a good answer to, ‘what would happen to American innovation without corporations?’ (32:00). Although I wish someone like Marianna Mazzucato could have been his ‘lifeline’ on that. ‘Corporate’ innovation relies very heavily on state funded labs and universities. A lot heavier than MSM would have you know. Chomsky paints a vivid image of this when he describes how electronics giants like Raytheon surrounded MIT back in the 50’s and 60’s like vultures waiting on what emerged from the campus labs (almost totally funded by the Pentagon). Now, you find Bio-tech firms perched outside - waiting. Silicon Valley owes much of its existence to heavily state funded R & D at places like Stanford University. The internet, WWW, multi-touch/multi-gesture flat screens, FFT, SIRI, Satellites/Satellite communication, GPS, and on and on, all nonexistent without taxpayer funding. Mazzucato wrote an excellent book on this, ‘The Entrepreneurial State’.
@samreynolds37893 жыл бұрын
EMPIRES RISE & FALL, always FROM WITHIN! We ALL REAP WHAT WE SOW !
@Eliminator55553 жыл бұрын
He's right about Facebook being worthless. Going on there is just unhealthy.
@goddesseddog3 жыл бұрын
they have printed trillions more this year
@thomasjefferson10103 жыл бұрын
I lived on about 20,000 a year all my life. I will continue to do so. Fuck it.
@rupertwilliams31695 жыл бұрын
All human experience always confronts their own mortality and self fulling prophecy. Pathology. IAMME UHURU. 🇯🇲.