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00:00This country has an opportunity to transform.
00:03And that's rare in the history of nations,
00:05to have an opportunity for transformative change.
00:08And what I mean by transformative change is not simply oil and gas fields.
00:12And that's very important. Natural resources are critical.
00:15But that is just the basic ingredient that allows prosperity to happen.
00:20One of the topics that's talked about all over the world today
00:23is data centers and the digitization of the economies, artificial intelligence.
00:29Do you know what you need in order to do that?
00:31You need to have really good scientists and engineers and technicians that know how to run it.
00:35But the most important thing you need to be a dominant presence in the world
00:39in data centers and artificial intelligence is reliable and affordable energy.
00:45Sometimes crime is attracted by prosperity and targets prosperity.
00:49And the other are regional threats,
00:51the regional threats based on illegitimate territorial claims by a narco-trafficking regime.
00:56And I want to be frank, and I've said this during my time as a senator,
00:59and I have full confidence in saying it now as the Secretary of State.
01:02There will be consequences for adventurism.
01:07There will be consequences for aggressive actions.
01:11I want to know if your country would stand by Guyana militarily
01:16if Venezuela were to attack this country.
01:20And what would be the U.S.'s response should Venezuela attack U.S. oil major ExxonMobil,
01:27which is operating in Guyana's waters?
01:29It would be a very bad day for the Venezuelan regime
01:32if they were to attack Guyana or attack ExxonMobil or anything like that.
01:36It would be a very bad day or a very bad week for them, and it would not end well for them.
01:42I'm not going to get into details of what we'll do.
01:44We're not big on those kinds of threats.
01:45I think everybody understands, and I want it to be clear.
01:47We've made this clear repeatedly.
01:49I think the U.S. Navy today is making it clear and demonstrating our ability to
01:54We have a big Navy, and it can get almost anywhere in the world.
01:59And we have commitments that exist today with Guyana.
02:02We want to build on those, expand on those.
02:05Mr. Secretary, a Turkish student in Boston was detained and handcuffed on the street by plainclothes agents.
02:12A year ago she wrote an opinion piece about the Gaza War.
02:15Could you help us understand what the specific action she took led to her visa being revoked?
02:22And what was your State Department's role in that process?
02:26We revoked her visa.
02:27It's an F-1 visa, I believe.
02:29We revoked it, and here's why.
02:31And I'll say it again.
02:32I've said it everywhere.
02:33Let me be abundantly clear.
02:34If you go apply for a visa right now anywhere in the world, let me just send this message out.
02:38If you apply for a visa to enter the United States and be a student,
02:41and you tell us that the reason why you're coming to the United States is not just because you want to write op-eds,
02:46but because you want to participate in movements that are involved in doing things like vandalizing universities,
02:52harassing students, taking over buildings, creating a ruckus,
02:55we're not going to give you a visa.
02:57There's been reporting that 300 visas have been revoked.
03:01Maybe more.
03:02It might be more than 300 at this point.
03:04We do it every day.
03:05Every time I find one of these lunatics, I take away their visa.
03:07You're saying it could be more than 300 visas?
03:09Sure.
03:11At some point I hope we run out because we've gotten rid of all of them.
03:14But we're looking every day.

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