• 13 hours ago
In a tense and dramatic exchange, Russian President Vladimir Putin and a reporter clash over a provocative claim that the West could soon sink underwater due to rising threats. The reporter’s wild prediction sends shockwaves through the room, prompting a fiery war of words with Putin, who fiercely challenges the notion. As tensions rise, the exchange escalates into a gripping confrontation, showcasing the high-stakes atmosphere surrounding global politics. Watch as Putin responds with sharp rebuttals, turning the press conference into a battle of ideologies and fiery rhetoric.


#Putin #ReporterClash #WestSinking #Geopolitics #PutinSpeech #PoliticalTension #RisingSeaLevels #WildClaim #RussianPolitics #PressConferenceDrama #GlobalPolitics #PutinVsReporter #EnvironmentalCrisis #TenseExchange #WatchNow

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00:00So, my question is, this year will be 45 years of my life as a journalist.
00:15And unfortunately, I can see that written journalism is dying.
00:21Maybe Vlad Bumaga could help newspapers, independent newspapers that are dependent from the state,
00:27from business people, and only depend on their readers.
00:32What can we do to make sure that weekly written print newspapers can survive?
00:42And my second question is something that I asked a lot of people, including Ms. Zakharova.
00:49She told me that I should go ask this question to you.
00:58A lot of our scientists, people who look into the future, they say that in the next 10 to
01:0915 years, countries of Europe, the United States, and in fact, the American continent
01:15itself could go underwater, but people will migrate to our land.
01:24Maybe we should warn them before.
01:28This is a hypothetical scenario, but there are scenarios that say that that will happen.
01:34And that is what they say in newspapers, not on telegram channels.
01:38So these are the two questions I have to you.
01:47I don't know if I should even tell you about it.
01:50You know that joke that a family sits at a table, and a little boy asks, he's solving
02:03a crossword, so a word, three letters, mom just smacks him with a spoon on his forehead,
02:19but she says, well, this is a very innocent word there.
02:27And so we need to think about your house, about your people.
02:36You're saying that continents are going to go underwater, but we need to think about
02:41our home.
02:42But you say that people are going to run to Russia.
02:46Let me finish what I was trying to say.
02:51The estimations that you spoke about, they are real scientists making real analysis.
03:01They're talking about permafrost and glaciers melting.
03:09And because of that, more CO2 will be coming to the atmosphere than anything that's produced
03:15by humanity.
03:16And if that happens, then some of Russia's regions closer to the oceans, to the seas,
03:23will also be underwater.
03:24We have entire towns and communities that exist in permafrost areas that will be in
03:35serious trouble.
03:36Or take St. Petersburg, for example.
03:42We need to think about what could happen to cities like that.
03:47So we need to think about our own home, about our own land.
03:52If anyone tries to migrate to Russia as a result, we have 2.3% unemployment.
03:59So we're talking about labor migration and issues that could arise out of that.
04:05But of course, we need to think about what we could do to address that if that does happen.
04:12Russia is the largest country in the world in terms of territory.
04:16And on the other side of the Ural Mountains, only 12 million people live.
04:23So we've got lots of territory.
04:25But we need to think ahead of time about infrastructure, about the social issues, about rules that
04:32we'll need to create.
04:35I know you've been presenting all of that as a very curious, strange, weird scenario.
04:39But this may be real eventually.
04:43And we need to address real problems.
04:46Now, your question about journalism and Vlad Bumaga and other young bloggers.
04:51And your question was about printed media.
04:54Now, my personal opinion is that print media is something that will have its place, its
05:05niche in the changing world.
05:08The same as print books still exist.
05:14Because you can use to do like a tablet or some other device to read books.
05:18And even I do that sometimes myself.
05:20But actually holding a real book, paper book in your hand is very different, even though
05:28it has, well, it may have illustrations, which is also a work of art.
05:34But apart from that, it's very different.
05:37And so print media, take Investia or Komsomolskaya Pravda, take a newspaper in your hands.
05:45There is a special kind of amazing feeling that you get from holding a real thing in
05:53your hand, a print media in your hand.
05:57And I think that the public still has interest in print media.
06:08And of course, content is what matters.
06:11And regardless of the media itself, the content is what matters.
06:17And so when, as long as print media have reliable, good content, it's not going to go anywhere.
06:26Don't miss out.
06:27Log on to OneIndia.com for more updates.

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