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Robert Kennedy Jr. revela a André Marinho os bastidores de seu apoio a Donald Trump em 2024. Ele afirma ter se sentido sabotado pelos Democratas e explica por que a aliança se tornou a única saída viável para conseguir implementar sua agenda política pelo país.

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Transcrição
00:00I mean, you hail from one of the most storied families in American life, the Kennedys.
00:07You're definitely the most relevant Kennedy in present day.
00:11You're the nephew to the 35th President John F. Kennedy, the son to Robert Kennedy.
00:15President Kennedy used to have a great relationship based on mutual respect,
00:19not on charity and aid and submission with President Kubishek,
00:23who was responsible in the 1960s of building Brasilia, our current capital city.
00:27He was, I mean, they were great partners back then.
00:30They actually started the Alliance for Progress in building economic development projects in Latin America.
00:36After your uncle's death, your father, Bobby Kennedy, then Attorney General to your uncle,
00:42he visited the stilted Palafitas of Salvador and the Shanti settlements over there.
00:46There are just fantastic pictures from that moment.
00:49And the law school I attended, which is the Pontificial Catholic University of Rio de Janeiro,
00:53has a huge statuesque bronze bust of your uncle right in the center of our campus.
00:59So there's a long story and just very considerable connection between your family and our country.
01:08Well, I'll just comment on what you said.
01:10My uncle had a deep affection for Latin America.
01:13And he and, you know, President Kubishek and President Frey from Chile,
01:19President Pancor from Venezuela, President Yeriz Camargo from Colombia launched the Alliance for Progress.
01:28And they wanted to change the relationship into a partnership relationship, as you point out, with Latin America.
01:36And before that, U.S. policy had been based upon a very pragmatic consideration of, you know,
01:48who was going to be the most anti-communist.
01:50Because we, you know, our stature and our posture in the world was that it was a battle between darkness and light,
02:00between democracy and communism.
02:03And so, and it made the United States very vulnerable, our foreign policy, to a foreign policy that said,
02:11if you are a military junta, if you're a part of an oligarchy that hates communism,
02:16because you don't want people to take your wealth, and we're going to support you.
02:21And we ended up supporting all the military dictatorships and the, you know,
02:26these oligarchical, really semi-feudal systems, which they add in your country.
02:31And, you know, when my uncle died, President Johnson switched back to that old foreign policy.
02:54And he brought a guy in called Thomas Mann, who had relationships with the intelligence community
03:02and with the oil interests and mining interests, in to run the Alliance for Progress.
03:14And my father was very upset about that.
03:17And he made that visit in 64, 65 to Brazil, to Peru, to Chile, to the other Latin American countries.
03:25And he said to them, you know, you are in charge of your own future.
03:30If you don't like anaconda wire and cable running your country or IT&T, you should have a revolution against them.
03:37And that shocked everybody.
03:39But it was something that he believed in and that he believed that these nations should have sovereignty
03:44and that they should dictate their own future.
03:49And that would make a much stronger partnership with the United States.
03:52Mr. Secretary, if we might delve a little bit into the personal side and political side of things,
03:57How about we just go for a brief stroll down recent memory lane back to August 23, 2024, in Glendale, Arizona,
04:09when you endorsed President Trump?
04:12And that took many by surprise, for sure.
04:15Could you walk us through behind the scenes of that day?
04:18And what did you actually consider, electorally speaking, the calculus that you made?
04:22And particularly, and I got to hand it to you, how the class sack that you were from that point on,
04:28and even before that, but to this day, even against the backlash coming from many of your siblings and relatives.
04:35I mean, you know, I did something that was unpopular with a lot of people who were lifelong friends and family,
04:43but it was something that I thought was best for our country.
04:46And, you know, I had been, I had started out in the Democratic Party,
04:52and the Democratic Party basically changed the rules to make it so that there's no way that I could win.
04:59And I'll give you an example.
05:01They passed a rule because I had been campaigning in New Hampshire, which is the first state of a primary.
05:07And so the Democratic Party passed a rule that said that anybody who sets foot into New Hampshire
05:13cannot get any delegates from New Hampshire.
05:16And they were doing that all along.
05:18They made it literally impossible.
05:20I could have won 80 percent of the vote, and I would have still lost the convention.
05:25And so that, you know, people had given their lives and had given huge amounts of money to my campaign.
05:34You almost made to that first debate.
05:35You almost hit the 15 percent mark, although the media pool,
05:38they clearly subverted the criteria in order to avoid your presence there.
05:42That would have been a first since 1996, right, with Ross Perot's second and final candidacy as an independent candidate, right?
05:52Yeah.
05:52Were you frustrated about that?
05:53I'm sure you were.
05:54I was, you know, what I was doing was making decisions based upon the world that was given to me.
06:06Yep.
06:06And the facts on the ground were that the media would not cover my campaign, and I'm not complaining about it.
06:15It was just a fact of life.
06:18For me to accomplish my agenda as best I could, the best strategy was to merge my campaign with President Trump's.
06:30Thank you.

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