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Bruno : Ma chère Sophie, tu souhaitais revenir ce matin sur la condamnation de Marine Le Pen ?
Bruno : Ma chère Sophie, tu souhaitais revenir ce matin sur la condamnation de Marine Le Pen ?
This weekend, almost 500 days after the October 7th attack, a ceasefire came into effect between Israel and the Palestinian militant group Hamas. But just how fragile is this peace? And what will determine whether it breaks or holds?Kate Lamble speaks with Sondos Sabra, Yair Wallach and Bruno Maçães.Follow the links to read more from Sondos, Yair and Bruno. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
An emergency pod: “War, or something resembling war, is breaking out in the Middle East,” says Shadi Hamid. A year after the October 7 massacre, Israel has all but destroyed Hamas. Last month, it killed Hassan Nasrallah, head of Hezbollah, thus decapitating that terrorist organization. This week, it launched an invasion of southern Lebanon. In retaliation, Iran — the longtime backer of Hezbollah — has lobbed a barrage of ballistic missiles into Israel. We decided to release the podcast early this week, before it is overtaken by the swiftly-moving events. What is this war about? What should the US do about it? Does anyone in the US political class truly believe that the Arab world is capable of democracy? Were the Abraham Accords foolish — or racist? How do you define a “rogue state”? What is Netanyahu right about?Joining Shadi Hamid and Damir Marusic to discuss these questions is Matt Duss, Executive Vice President of the Center for International Policy, co-host of the Undiplomatic Podcast, and former foreign policy advisor for Senator Bernie Sanders. “A lot of [Arab Americans] are not going to pull the lever for Kamala Harris,” Shadi reports. Matt lambasts the “racist logic” of the Abraham Accords, which swept the Palestinian question aside and decided that “this is the best [America] can hope for, deals with modernizing autocrats.” Damir applies a realpolitik analysis, explaining the Israeli military strategy and arguing that American and European diplomats have no choice but to strike deals with the autocrats that rule the world. Shadi responds: “Realpolitik is supposed to be effective.”It's a passionate, intense discussion that strikes at the core preoccupations of Wisdom of Crowds: justice, war, and the state. Free for all subscribers: You will want to listen to the whole thing.Required Reading:* Shadi's responses to subscribers' provocations about the Middle East (WoC). * Bruno Maçães' article on the end of Western hypocrisy (Time).* Jeffrey Goldberg's 2016 article on “The Obama Doctrine” (The Atlantic). * James Baldwin on the Dick Cavett Show (YouTube). * The Abraham Accords (US State Department). Wisdom of Crowds is a platform challenging premises and understanding first principles on politics and culture. Join us! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit wisdomofcrowds.live/subscribe
Playlist The mix 1. Markus Schulz & Departure With Gabriel & Dresden - Without You Near (Gabriel & Dresden Remix) [Coldharbour Recordings] 2. Monolink - Light Up My Dark (Extended Mix) [Embassy One] 3. Martin Roth - Ultraviolet (Nordfold Extended Mix) [Anjunadeep] 4. Solarstone - Release (Original Mix) [Deepblue Records] 5. Way Out West Feat. Tricia Lee Kelshall - Mindcircus (Gabriel & Dresden Club Mix) [Black Hole Recordings] 6. Paul Thomas & Jerome Isma-Ae - Tomorrow (Trilucid Remix) [UV] 7. New Order - Blue Monday (ID Remix Re-edited) [White Label] 8. Lustral - Everytime (Nalin & Kane Remix) [Hooj Choons] 9. The Future Sound Of London - Papua New Guinea (Yotto Rework) [CDR] 10. Paul van Dyk - In Between [Vandit Records] 11. BBE - Seven Days And One Week (Yotto Extended Mix) [Positiva] 12. Ummet Ozcan - Lotus (Extended Mix) [OZ Records] 13. Cherry (UA) - Selene [Siona] 14. DOBé, Afnan Prince - Aperture (Extended Mix) [Purified Records] 15. Binary Finary - 1998 (Victor Ruiz Extended Remix) [Armada Music] Guestmix Bruno Maïa 16. ID Jean Lostebien & Bruno Maïa live turntable. Live @ Marzan Prod's Studio. Hector Morino will come to another session was planned at the base℗ & © 2024 Marzan Prod. MP MP3 265- 30.08.2024 - Switzerland
Bruno Maçães acredita que os eleitores podem penalizar Kamala Harris por falta de democracia interna. "Trump é favorito" e Kamala tem "fragilidades". E Kiev? Eleição de Trump cria "pânico" na Europa.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Welcome to The Daily Wrap Up, a concise show dedicated to bringing you the most relevant independent news, as we see it, from the last 24 hours (5/21/24). As always, take the information discussed in the video below and research it for yourself, and come to your own conclusions. Anyone telling you what the truth is, or claiming they have the answer, is likely leading you astray, for one reason or another. Stay Vigilant. !function(r,u,m,b,l,e){r._Rumble=b,r[b]||(r[b]=function(){(r[b]._=r[b]._||[]).push(arguments);if(r[b]._.length==1){l=u.createElement(m),e=u.getElementsByTagName(m)[0],l.async=1,l.src="https://rumble.com/embedJS/u2q643"+(arguments[1].video?'.'+arguments[1].video:'')+"/?url="+encodeURIComponent(location.href)+"&args="+encodeURIComponent(JSON.stringify([].slice.apply(arguments))),e.parentNode.insertBefore(l,e)}})}(window, document, "script", "Rumble"); Rumble("play", {"video":"v4u54al","div":"rumble_v4u54al"}); Video Source Links (In Chronological Order): (11) Disclose.tv on X: "NEW - Klaus Schwab will be stepping down as executive chairman of the World Economic Forum. https://t.co/PItYvddkfN" / X HPV Vaccination May Trigger Rare And Often Misdiagnosed Autoimmune Brain Disease | ZeroHedge Anti-NMDA Receptor Encephalitis, Human Papillomavirus, and microRNA | Bentham Science Reevaluation of antibody-dependent enhancement of infection in anti-SARS-CoV-2 therapeutic antibodies and mRNA-vaccine antisera using FcR- and ACE2-positive cells | Scientific Reports How "Fact-Checkers" Are Ignoring A 'Specific & Significant' Risk Of Antibody-Dependent Enhancement Informed consent disclosure to vaccine trial subjects of risk of COVID‐19 vaccines worsening clinical disease - PMC New Tab (6) CODEPINK on X: "NOW: As @SecBlinken enters a Senate Foreign Relations Committee hearing, this is how we greeted him: "SECRETARY OF GENOCIDE!" "WAR CRIMINAL!" "THE BLOOD OF 40,000 PALESTINIANS IS ON YOUR HANDS!" "EMBARASSMENT TO INTERNATIONAL LAW!" https://t.co/CGRUtwqT7a" / X (6) CODEPINK on X: "NOW: @SecBlinken continues to be disrupted during his testimony to the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. "Blinken is a war criminal! He is a war criminal! The blood of 40,000 Palestinians is on his hands!" https://t.co/bmx0CTfkrJ" / X (6) Ryan Grim on X: "Bilal Hammoud and a handful of Arab American leaders met with Antony Blinken Friday. Blinken told them that if Palestine became a state, federal law would mandate the defunding of the UN, which could then defund the World Food Program, causing global starvation." / X (7) Tiberius on X: "The US [lying blatantly]: We support a Palestinian state The US [the next day]: If Palestine becomes a state, we will starve the world" / X (6) Khalissee on X: "A BOMBSHELL leaked recording of Israeli Minister Gallant! He says the US doesn't really mean it when it speaks about a Palestinian state. "The Americans are not one immovable block. They know that there will be no Palestinian state... Believe me, ignore the public statements." https://t.co/cys2s2DjyV" / X (6) Bruno Maçães on X: "The US, which has resisted a ceasefire agreement tooth and nail, now complains the ICC decision could hinder a ceasefire agreement. You can't make this up" / X (6) UnCover on X: "Thousands of Israelis take to the streets demanding the overthrow of Netanyahu and his government to facilitate a ceasefire and an exchange deal with the resistance in Gaza.
This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit wisdomofcrowds.liveAre ideas overrated? Shadi's recent column (and controversial tweet) exploring the reasons behind Trump's popularity launches a discussion about what exactly drives politics. Are politicians motivated by winning more than ideology? Do voters respond to strong personalities, rather than policies and promises?As expected, Damir makes a case for “materialism” over ideas. Shadi isn't totally convinced.Required Reading:* Shadi, “The Peculiar Moderation of Donald Trump,” Washington Post, 1/25/2024* Shadi's tweet* Bruno Maçães' tweet* David Ignatius, “The Midwest Tacks Hard Toward a Mideast ‘Moment of Truth',” Washington Post, 2/1/2024* Eduardo Porter, “Republicans' Immigration Bill is Not Serious Legislation,” Washington Post, 2/2/2024* Thomas Friedman, “A Biden Doctrine for the Middle East is Forming. And it's Big,” New York Times, 1/31/2024* Bruno Maçães on Wisdom of Crowds
In 2024 countries with more than 4 billion people will be sending their citizens to the polls. The US, Russia, and India to name a few; this is set to be the biggest election year in history. In this episode of the podcast Anoosh Chakelian is joined by the New Stateman's foreign correspondent Bruno Maçães and senior data journalist Ben Walker to review some of the major political forces at play around the globe in 2024.Download the app:iOS: https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/new-statesman-magazine/id610498525Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.progressivemediagroup.newstatesman&hl=en_GB&gl=USSubscribe to the New Statesman WhatsApp channel:https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va9latS0wajogms2z02c Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In 2024 countries with more than 4 billion people will be sending their citizens to the polls. The US, Russia, and India to name a few; this is set to be the biggest election year in history. In this episode of the podcast Anoosh Chakelian is joined by the New Stateman's foreign correspondent Bruno Maçães and senior data journalist Ben Walker to review some of the major political forces at play around the globe in 2024. Download the app:iOS: https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/new-statesman-magazine/id610498525Android: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.progressivemediagroup.newstatesman&hl=en_GB&gl=US Subscribe to the New Statesman WhatsApp channel:https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Va9latS0wajogms2z02c Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode of the Liberal Europe Podcast, Leszek Jażdżewski (Fundacja Liberté!) welcomes Bruno Maçães, a fellow at the Wilfried Martens Centre in Brussels and a former Minister of European Affairs in Portugal who represented his country in Brussels during the eurozone crisis, the first Ukraine war, and Brexit. They talk about the Russian war in Ukraine, the geopolitics of Eurasia, the future of European strategic autonomy, and global rule-based disorder. This podcast is produced by the European Liberal Forum in collaboration with Movimento Liberal Social and Fundacja Liberté!, with the financial support of the European Parliament. Neither the European Parliament nor the European Liberal Forum are responsible for the content or for any use that be made of it.
As the European Union weighs new sanctions on Chinese companies, which could be announced later this week, Katie Stallard speaks to Bruno Maçães, a former Portuguese Europe minister andthe New Statesman's foreign affairs correspondent,about his recent interview with Fu Cong, China's ambassador to the EU.They also discuss Beijing's likely response to the new measures, what the fall-out would be for EU-China relations, and about the difficult balancing act Chinese diplomats have sought to strike since the start of Russia's war against Ukraine. Plus, how the prospect of another Donald Trump presidency in the US is provoking unease in the corridors of Brussels. Read more: Ambassador Fu Cong: “Europe will not become a vassal to China” The world according to Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin China's hollow peace plan for Ukraine Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
This week Olaf Scholz confirmed that Germany will send 14 Leopard 2 battle tanks to Ukraine and gave partner countries permission to send their tanks too. The decision, which could have a significant effect on the war, came after months of stalling.Megan Gibson in London, Katie Stallard in Washington DC and Jeremy Cliffe in Berlin discuss what led to Germany's shift, what toll the delay has taken and how Russia will respond.Next, they turn to the alarming rise in mass shootings in the US this year – including a series of shootings in California in which 19 people were killed in less than 48 hours. The team discuss the experience of gun violence, public support for gun control legislation, and why this is also a foreign policy issue.Then, in You Ask Us, a listener asks what led to the resignation of Jacinda Ardern as prime minister of New Zealand.If you have a question for You Ask Us, go to newstatesman.com/youaskusPodcast listeners can subscribe to the New Statesman for just £1 a week for 12 weeks using our special offer: visit newstatesman.com/podcastoffer to learn more Read more:Jeremy writes that Germany took too long to reach the right decision on tanks, and he calls the country the “roadblock at the heart of Europe”.Katie says that Jacinda Ardern's resignation is both a shock and entirely unsurprising.Sarah Churchwell on the myth of America's love affair with guns.Bruno Maçães interviews Ukraine's national security adviser on German betrayal, the oncoming Russian onslaught and why the West is scared. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Bruno Maçães is a Portuguese politician and author. He is the former Secretary of State for European Affairs in Portugal, and the author of numerous books, including The Dawn of Eurasia; History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America; and Geopolitics for the End Time: From the Pandemic to the Climate Crisis. Volodymyr Yermolenko, Ukrainian philosopher and chief editor of UkraineWorld, spoke to Bruno Maçães in Lviv, during the Lviv Book Forum, about Europe, Eurasia, power, China, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine. The conversation took place two days before Russia's round of massive missile strikes on Ukrainian cities in October. UkraineWorld is brought to you by Internews Ukraine, one of the oldest Ukrainian media NGOs. Support us at patreon.com/ukraineworld.
Pandemia uderzyła zwłaszcza w przedstawicieli klasy dominującej i społeczeństwa krajów rozwiniętego kapitalizmu. A zmiany klimatu są problemem przede wszystkim dla drugiej połowy planety – wskazuje Bruno MAÇÃES. Bruno MAÇÃES – Były sekretarz stanu do spraw europejskich Portugalii (2011–2013), obecnie pracuje w Instytucie Hudsona. Ukończył Uniwersytet Harvarda. Autor m.in. Dawn of Eurasia: On the Trail of the New World Order, Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order i History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America. Czyta: Mateusz MLECZKO Podcasty Najważniejsze to najpopularniejsze artykuły od najważniejszych Autorów z Polski i ze świata - teraz również w formie audio. WWW: https://wszystkoconajwazniejsze.pl/podcasty/
Entrevista com Bruno Maçães sobre a China. Um olhar sobre o mundo por Harinder Kholi. Argentina. Polarização e democracia. Edição de Mário Rui Cardoso.
En episodios anteriores sobre los desórdenes de conciencia, hablábamos de la conciencia desde la filosofía y la neurociencia. También en otro episodio, introdujimos los diferentes desórdenes de conciencia, sus características y diferencias fundamentales. Sin lugar a dudas, la clave dentro de la valoración de estos desórdenes de conciencia está en la capacidad de dar un pronóstico de recuperación y, embebido en ello, la capacidad de detectar cambios de transición entre la vigilia sin respuesta y el estado de mínima conciencia. Es importante conocer ciertas escalas y pruebas que se realizan para valorar distintos aspectos que están relacionados con la conciencia y con la transición entre, por ejemplo, una vigilia sin respuesta a una mínima conciencia. Podemos distinguir dos tipos de valoraciones: las valoraciones clínicas, que se pueden realizar a pie de cama, que básicamente sistematizan las respuestas a distintos estímulos o respuestas espontáneas; y por otro lado las valoraciones neurofisiológicas que tratan de valorar el sustrato de la conciencia que permite comprender las respuestas comportamentales de los pacientes. Referencias del episodio: 1. Cuadernos FEDACE sobre daño cerebral adquirido: síndrome de vigilia sin respuesta y de mínima conciencia (2011) (https://fedace.org/files/MSCFEDACE/2016-10/17-19-28-40.admin.13_vigilia_conciencia.pdf). 2. Giacino JT, Kalmar K, Whyte J. The JFK Coma Recovery Scale-Revised: measurement characteristics and diagnostic utility. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2004 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/15605342/). 3. Manual de la CRS-R (Coma Recovery Scale-Revised) (https://www.tbims.org/combi/crs/CRS%20Syllabus.pdf). 4. Noé E, Olaya J, Navarro MD, Noguera P, Colomer C, García-Panach J, Rivero S, Moliner B, Ferri J. Behavioral recovery in disorders of consciousness: a prospective study with the Spanish version of the Coma Recovery Scale-Revised. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2012 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/22277244/). 5. Schnakers C, Vanhaudenhuyse A, Giacino J, Ventura M, Boly M, Majerus S, Moonen G, Laureys S. Diagnostic accuracy of the vegetative and minimally conscious state: clinical consensus versus standardized neurobehavioral assessment. BMC Neurol. 2009 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/19622138/). 6. Shiel A, Horn SA, Wilson BA, Watson MJ, Campbell MJ, McLellan DL. The Wessex Head Injury Matrix (WHIM) main scale: a preliminary report on a scale to assess and monitor patient recovery after severe head injury. Clin Rehabil. 2000 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/10945425/). 7. Turner-Stokes L, Bassett P, Rose H, Ashford S, Thu A. Serial measurement of Wessex Head Injury Matrix in the diagnosis of patients in vegetative and minimally conscious states: a cohort analysis. BMJ Open. 2015 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25900459/). 8. Zasler ND, Formisano R, Aloisi M. Pain in Persons with Disorders of Consciousness. Brain Sci. 2022 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/35326257/). 9. Rossi Sebastiano D, Varotto G, Sattin D, Franceschetti S. EEG Assessment in Patients With Disorders of Consciousness: Aims, Advantages, Limits, and Pitfalls. Front Neurol. 2021 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/33868153/). 10. Pruvost-Robieux E, Marchi A, Martinelli I, Bouchereau E, Gavaret M. Evoked and Event-Related Potentials as Biomarkers of Consciousness State and Recovery. J Clin Neurophysiol. 2022 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34474424/). 11. Kondziella D y cols. European Academy of Neurology guideline on the diagnosis of coma and other disorders of consciousness. Eur J Neurol. 2020 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32090418/). 12. Formisano R, Contrada M, Aloisi M, Ferri G, Schiattone S, Iosa M, Buzzi MG. Nociception Coma Scale with personalized painful stimulation versus standard stimulus in non-communicative patients with disorders of consciousness. Neuropsychol Rehabil. 2020 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31088203/). 13. Formisano R, Aloisi M, Iosa M, Contrada M, Rizza F, Sattin D, Leonardi M, D'Ippolito M. A new tool to assess responsiveness in disorders of consciousness (DoC): a preliminary study on the Brief Post-Coma Scale (BPCS). Neurol Sci. 2018 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/29948469/). 14. Cortese MD, Arcuri F, Nemirovsky IE, Lucca LF, Tonin P, Soddu A, Riganello F. Nociceptive Response Is a Possible Marker of Evolution in the Level of Consciousness in Unresponsive Wakefulness Syndrome Patients. Front Neurosci. 2021 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34975378/). 15. Chatelle C, Thibaut A, Bruno MA, Boly M, Bernard C, Hustinx R, Schnakers C, Laureys S. Nociception coma scale-revised scores correlate with metabolism in the anterior cingulate cortex. Neurorehabil Neural Repair. 2014 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24065132/). 16. Chatelle C, Thibaut A, Whyte J, De Val MD, Laureys S, Schnakers C. Pain issues in disorders of consciousness. Brain Inj. 2014 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/25099024/). 17. Lin K, Wroten M. Ranchos Los Amigos. 2021 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/28846341/). 18. American Congress of Rehabilitation Medicine, Brain Injury-Interdisciplinary Special Interest Group, Disorders of Consciousness Task Force, Seel RT y cols. Assessment scales for disorders of consciousness: evidence-based recommendations for clinical practice and research. Arch Phys Med Rehabil. 2010 (https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/21112421/). 19. Disorder of Consciousness & Cognitive Recovery Following TBI Levels 1-10 with Dr. Alan Weintraub (Craig Hospital) (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWJUfSWYppM&t=2516s&ab_channel=CraigHospital).
Fresh from his reporting trip to Kharkiv in Ukraine, Bruno Maçães talks to Katie Stallard about the mood in Ukraine.They discuss how Kharkiv is at the heart of a new national movement, why Ukraine needs long-range artillery capabilities and how Macron's “off-ramp” offer to Putin will not help end the war.Further reading:Bruno Maçães's Diary: Kharkiv is shelled, streets are renamed, and soldiers on a break head for the cafésHow will the Ukraine war end?“Russia cannot afford to lose, so we need a kind of a victory”: Sergey Karaganov on what Putin wantsA “strategic nuclear exchange” would offer Putin zero military gains See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The best reggae covers from some of the popular RnB and pop music. Mixed and blended by @DJ CHAPLAIN *THE DYNAMIC CHAMP* from #HavocCrewEnt VIDEO: https://youtu.be/nafdCpem6GM Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/DjChaplainKE (LIKE) Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/djchaplainke/ (FOLLOW) Twitter - https://twitter.com/DjchaplainKenya (FOLLOW) Email - deejaychaplain@gmail.com #reggaecovers #reggaemusic #thedynamicchamp #DjChaplainKenya #djmix
Bruno Maçães was the Portuguese Europe minister from 2013-2015 and is the author of “Geopolitics for the End Time: From the Pandemic to the Climate Crisis”. In this episode, he elaborates on Russia's war on Ukraine.
In March and April 2021, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the Russian military to begin massing thousands of military personnel and equipment near its border with Ukraine and in Crimea, representing the largest mobilization since the illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014. This precipitated an international crisis and generated concerns over a potential invasion. Satellite imagery showed movements of armour, missiles, and heavy weaponry. The troops were partially removed by June. The crisis was renewed in October and November 2021, when over 100,000 Russian troops were again massed surrounding Ukraine on three sides by December. The ongoing crisis stems from the protracted Russo-Ukrainian War that began in early 2014. In December 2021, Russia advanced two draft treaties that contained requests for what it referred to as "security guarantees", including a legally binding promise that Ukraine would not join the NATO as well as a reduction in NATO troops and military hardware stationed in Eastern Europe, and threatened unspecified military response if those demands were not met in full. NATO has rejected these requests, and the United States warned Russia of "swift and severe" economic sanctions should it further invade Ukraine. Bruno Maçães is a Portuguese politician, consultant and author. He is a nonresident senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. He is a former Secretary of State for European Affairs in Portugal. In this livestream, he will speak on the Russo-Ukraine crisis and more.
In March and April 2021, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered the Russian military to begin massing thousands of military personnel and equipment near its border with Ukraine and in Crimea, representing the largest mobilization since the illegal annexation of Crimea in 2014. This precipitated an international crisis and generated concerns over a potential invasion. Satellite imagery showed movements of armour, missiles, and heavy weaponry. The troops were partially removed by June. The crisis was renewed in October and November 2021, when over 100,000 Russian troops were again massed surrounding Ukraine on three sides by December. The ongoing crisis stems from the protracted Russo-Ukrainian War that began in early 2014. In December 2021, Russia advanced two draft treaties that contained requests for what it referred to as "security guarantees", including a legally binding promise that Ukraine would not join the NATO as well as a reduction in NATO troops and military hardware stationed in Eastern Europe, and threatened unspecified military response if those demands were not met in full. NATO has rejected these requests, and the United States warned Russia of "swift and severe" economic sanctions should it further invade Ukraine. Bruno Maçães is a Portuguese politician, consultant and author. He is a nonresident senior fellow at the Hudson Institute. He is a former Secretary of State for European Affairs in Portugal. In this livestream, he will speak on the Russo-Ukraine crisis and more.
According to Bruno Maçães, a new competition was already underway between alternative geopolitical models prior to the COVID-19 pandemic. Mr Maçães argues that the greatest threat to national security is no longer other states, but the environment itself. This, in turn, raises the question as to which countries will emerge as the winners and losers in a new geopolitical order. In his address to the IIEA, Mr Maçães explores how COVID-19 has already transformed the global system, and how it serves as a prelude to a planet afflicted with climate change. About the Speaker: Bruno Maçães is a Senior Advisor at Flint Global and Senior Fellow at the Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies. A former Secretary of State for European Affairs for Portugal, he is the author of several books, including: ‘Geopolitics for the End Time: From the Pandemic to the Climate Crisis'; ‘Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order'; ‘History has Begun: The Birth of a New America'; and ‘The Dawn of Eurasia: On the Trail of the New World Order'. He advises some of the world's leading companies on geopolitics and technology.
Emission Acteur de ville spéciale: Soignants et Pompiers tirent la sonnette d'alarme. Baptiste Guerri reçoit Bruno Maïllis , pompier, ainsi que Jérémy Chanchou, soignant à l'hôpital d'Arles. En direct sur l'application Radio RPA Et en live vidéo sur Facebook YouTube et Twitch.
A massive build-up of Russian troops and military infrastructure on the Ukrainian border has the US and Nato worried that President Vladimir Putin may be planning an imminent new invasion of the country. Jeremy Cliffe and Ido Vock in Berlin are joined by Emily Tamkin in Washington, DC to discuss the escalating crisis and the future of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. Meanwhile, Chile's presidential election heads to a runoff. The tight race between far-right José Antonio Kast and left-wing Gabriel Boric has been characterised as a battle of two extremes. The team discuss the election and the polarised political landscape in Latin America. Then in You Ask Us, a listener asks whether the foreign or economic ministry is more valuable for the German Greens in their efforts to shape foreign policy. Further reading: Bruno Maçães on if Vladimir Putin is preparing for war. Ido Vock on how Russia's military build-up at the border with Ukraine is testing the West's resolve. Jeremy Cliffe on whether Covid-19 will mean another lost decade for Latin America. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The US Supreme Court is to decide on a case that directly challenges Roe vs Wade, the 1973 ruling that guarantees the right to an abortion. Emily Tamkin in Washington, DC and Megan Gibson in London discuss the fight for reproductive rights, not just in the US but across the world. Meanwhile, President Joe Biden has warned his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in a video call of "strong measures" that could be applied to Moscow, amid fears that Russian troops amassing on the border with Ukraine could lead to an invasion. The team discuss the limits of US power, and what the growing tensions mean. In You Ask US, a listener wonders how upset China is about diplomatic boycotts of the forthcoming Beijing Winter Olympics. Further reading: Emily Tamkin on a dark day for abortion rights in the US. Megan Gibson on the US boycotting the Winter Olympic Games in Beijing. Bruno Maçães on whether Vladimir Putin is preparing for war. Emily Tamkin on whether America's toolbox for Russia is empty. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
“Poland is a greater threat to the EU than Brexit”. Portugal's former Europe minister and author Bruno Macaes speaks to Steven Edginton in this week's Off Script podcast to discuss challenges the EU faces in France, Poland and Hungary, and why Joe Biden already lives in Facebook's planned “metaverse”. Watch this episode with Bruno Maçães: https://youtu.be/JEIRbIcDd5I |Read more from The Telegraph's award-winning comment team: www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/ |For 30 days' free access to The Telegraph: www.telegraph.co.uk/audio |See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
“Poland is a greater threat to the EU than Brexit”. Portugal's former Europe minister and author Bruno Macaes speaks to Steven Edginton in this week's Off Script podcast to discuss challenges the EU faces in France, Poland and Hungary, and why Joe Biden already lives in Facebook's planned “metaverse”. Watch this episode with Bruno Maçães: https://youtu.be/JEIRbIcDd5I |Read more from The Telegraph's award-winning comment team: www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/ |For 30 days' free access to The Telegraph: www.telegraph.co.uk/audio |See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This week, ahead of COP26, Thea Lenarduzzi and Lucy Dallas are joined by David Wallace-Wells, the author of ‘The Uninhabitable Earth', to discuss a flurry of new books on climate change and what to do about it, from quiet reflection to radical, explosive action; and the biographer of royals A. N. Wilson considers a lively new Life of King George V that suggests the monarch wasn't that dull after all‘Deep Adaptation: Navigating the realities of climate chaos', edited by Jem Bendell and Rupert Read‘How To Blow Up a Pipeline: Learning to fight in a world on fire' by Andreas Malm‘Saving Us: A climate scientist's case for hope and healing in a divided world' by Katharine Hayhoe‘Geopolitics For the End Time: From the pandemic to the climate crisis' by Bruno Maçães'George V: Never a dull moment' by Jane RidleyProducer: Sophia Franklin See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Is America the most successful third world country on earth? Shadi and Damir welcome Samuel Goldman, author of the new book After Nationalism, onto the podcast for a raucous discussion on national identity, the likelihood of another civil war, and the possibility that, because it has more in common with Latin America than Europe, the United States may be the best place on the planet. Required Reading: After Nationalism, by Samuel Goldman. A symposium on the book at Law and Liberty. Sam's column at The Week. Bruno Maçaes on dreampolitik. "The Case Against Consensus," by Shadi Hamid. "Who Are America's Peers," by Samuel Goldman.
Emily Tamkin in Washington DC and Ido Vock in Berlin are joined by political analyst and New Statesman contributing writer Bruno Maçães to discuss the political fallout from the withdrawal from AfghanistanThen in You Ask Us, they answer a listener's question on what the US handling of Afghanistan will mean for the future of the EU.If you have a question for You Ask Us, email podcasts@newstatesman.co.uk READ MORE:How Olaf Scholz and the SPD could lead Germany's next governmentAfghanistan Diary: The fall of Kabul was predictable – if you were thereWhy Joe Biden got everything wrong in AfghanistanWhy the Biden administration should not sanction the Taliban See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
The Global Demons Podcast: Pandemics, Cyberattacks, and Other Terrors in the New Age
How did China's Belt and Road Initiative fare during the COVID-19 Pandemic? In this episode of the Global Demons Podcast, Host Robert D. Kaplan is joined by Bruno Maçães to discuss how China's marquis initiative continued to expand unabated - outward, from Eurasia and the Middle East and into Western-dominated Europe.
No primeiro episódio de Tempos Livres, Diana Duarte entrevista um dos maiores especialistas mundiais em Política Internacional, o português Bruno Maçães.
Apply to attend The Realignment's conference in Miami on October 22nd: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-realignment-conference-tickets-158996058491 Use code “realignment” to get a 50% discount to Lincoln Network's evening event with Peter Thiel in Miami on October 20th: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/an-evening-with-peter-thiel-tickets-157672156665 Bruno Maçães, senior fellow at the Hudson Institute and author of The Dawn of Eurasia, Belt and Road, History Has Begun, and the forthcoming Geopolitics for the End Time: From the Pandemic to the Climate Crisis, returns to the Realignment to discuss the transformation of the international system before, during, and after COVID-19, and how the U.S. can accommodate the new status-quo.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1xexFJ7h0vULMDE7N77q_MIzXoerexfe_CqqGEL6hEoQ/edit#heading=h.qi8yp2d9wbt2 Podcast note: This reader-written review was included because it won the Readers' Choice Award from among all the runners-up. What does the future look like? We are living through a transition between epochs. Whether marked by COVID-19, the election of Donald Trump or earlier by the global sub-prime crisis, the golden age of post-Cold War prosperity is ending. With the era defined by US political, cultural and economic hegemony, its decline is inextricably linked to the decline in US influence. Is the twenty first century really going to be the “Asian century” as China's growth continues unabated? Or perhaps African, given by far the largest forecast population growth? What will become of the US? Of China and Russia and Europe? Two thinkers have sought to define this future. I first came across Bruno Maçães in 2017 on Marginal Revolution where Tyler Cowen was effusive about Maçães' new book. I have enjoyed following his conversations and thoughts ever since, but it was only recently that I read Dawn of Eurasia. It is the first book of a career politician and diplomat clearly in love with his continent. Peter Zeihan I came across on Patrick O'Shaughnessy's excellent podcast. His brash prophesy and contrarian views on geopolitics are hypnotic and endlessly fascinating. Disunited Nations is his latest in a series that documents the rise and rise of US power. I found comparing them irresistible. Each lingers after reading. It's that wonderful feeling of discovering a new area of knowledge to mine. Not natural companions, and mesmerising in their own ways, each story has a different texture and plots a different path for the world. Where one sees pessimistic reversion to a historic state of conflict, the other sees hopeful evolution. Where one deterministically condemns nations to their geographic destinies, the other sees each nation's destiny as unwritten, yet to be informed by its history, literature and peoples. Both Peter Zeihan and Bruno Maçães see US influence receding. But they agree on little else. Zeihan is deeply pessimistic about a world that awaits a more isolationist US, with a crumbling world order leaving less room for prosperity and reverting to nation-states jostling for food, energy and military security. Maçães sees China's rise as
On his first overseas trip as president, Joe Biden has promised to send 500m covid-19 jabs to countries that need them. America's vaccine success is making up for its failure to control the virus last year. Is the pandemic over in America?Kavita Patel, a primary care doctor, tells us new covid cases have all but vanished and Bruno Maçães, author of “Geopolitics for the End Time, From the Pandemic to the Climate Crisis”, says vaccination success is salvaging America's global prestige.John Prideaux hosts with Tamara Gilkes Borr and Jon Fasman.For access to The Economist's print, digital and audio editions subscribe: economist.com/USpod See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On his first overseas trip as president, Joe Biden has promised to send 500m covid-19 jabs to countries that need them. America's vaccine success is making up for its failure to control the virus last year. Is the pandemic over in America?Kavita Patel, a primary care doctor, tells us new covid cases have all but vanished and Bruno Maçães, author of “Geopolitics for the End Time, From the Pandemic to the Climate Crisis”, says vaccination success is salvaging America's global prestige.John Prideaux hosts with Tamara Gilkes Borr and Jon Fasman.For access to The Economist's print, digital and audio editions subscribe: economist.com/USpod See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
What's behind Boris's plan for a green bonanza? (01:10) Can the West challenge China in the tech arms race? (14:50) Can the British handle grief? (24:05) With Katy Balls, The Spectator's deputy political editor; Rachel Wolf, a partner at Public First at co-author of the 2019 Conservative manifesto; author and journalist Ian Williams; politician and author Bruno Maçães; writer Fiona Mountford; and comedian and podcaster Cariad Lloyd. Presented by Lara Prendergast. Produced by Arsalan Mohammad.
What’s behind Boris’s plan for a green bonanza? (01:10) Can the West challenge China in the tech arms race? (14:50) Can the British handle grief? (24:05) With Katy Balls, The Spectator’s deputy political editor; Rachel Wolf, a partner at Public First at co-author of the 2019 Conservative manifesto; author and journalist Ian Williams; politician and author Bruno Maçães; writer Fiona Mountford; and comedian and podcaster Cariad Lloyd. Presented by Lara Prendergast. Produced by Arsalan Mohammad.
In an thought-provoking book from last year, Bruno Maçães takes a new and original view of America, suggesting that the country is shedding its European past for something new. Trump was a symptom of a moulting country – a country...
Hours into the Biden administration, Shadi and Damir sit down with author Bruno Maçães to talk about Trump, January 6, the future of world order, and the sources of American exceptionalism. Reading List: Bruno on Substack. History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America, by Bruno Maçães (Oxford University Press) "The Roleplaying Coup," by Bruno Maçães (City Journal)
The Agenda
Nouveau Départ | Édito par Laetitia Vitaud | Conversation avec Bruno Maçães 🌐 Get on the email list at nouveaudepart.substack.com
The Agenda
For this new episode of the Building Bridges podcast, I'm happy to share the conversation I had with Bruno Maçães, a political scientist, former Portuguese minister, and author of several books.His latest is titled History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America. It contends that although people believe America to be in decline, it may actually enter a new era of self-reinterpretation. America's unique strength is its ability to general “virtual reality”, stories—from pilgrims to cowboys to social media and reality TV—which makes it uniquely adaptable.Here's how it's summed up on the book's back cover:Popular consensus says that the US rose over two centuries to Cold War victory and world domination, and is now in slow decline. But is this right? History's great civilisations have always lasted much longer, and for all its colossal power, the US was overshadowed by Europe until recently. What if this isn't the end? Bruno Maçães offers a compelling vision of America's future, both fascinating and unnerving. From the early American Republic, Maçães takes us to the turbulent present, when, he argues, America is finally forging its own path. We can see the birth pangs of this new civilisation in today's debates on guns, religion, foreign policy and the significance of Trump. What will its values be, and what will this new America look like?But before writing about the US, Bruno Maçães published a book about China, and one about the “dawn of Eurasia”. He's quite unique in that he brings together experience and extensive knowledge about three continents. That's why I asked him questions about geopolitics and his understanding of the state of the world, China's ambition, today's American and the future of Europe.I hope you enjoy listening to this podcast! Please share it with someone else who you believe might like it too
In a conversation recorded just before Election Day, Bruno Maçães joins Brian Anderson to discuss his striking vision of America’s future. Maçães’s new book is History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America.
In this week of electoral frenzy in the United States, .think atlantic host Thibault Muzergues sits down with his guest Bruno Maçães, author of History has Begun: The Birth of a New America to reflect on the trajectory of the United States in the long-term, with a historical, philosophical, cultural but also political perspective. What is the cultural and political relationship between America and Europe, how is America defining (or rather redefining) its identity, culture and politics in a changing world, and what does the future hold, irrespective of the result of the Presidential Elections? These and many other questions are the subject of this conversation between two Europeans deeply attached to America and the Transatlantic Relationship. Bruno Maçães is a non-resident senior fellow at the Hudson Institute, a senior advisor at Flint Global and a senior fellow at Renmin University of China. Formerly Portugal’s Europe minister (2013–15), he has been a regular commentator for CNN, the BBC and Al Jazeera, and has written for the Financial Times, The Guardian and Foreign Affairs. He is the author of History Has Begun, The Dawn of Eurasia, and Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order. Find Bruno on Twitter at @MacaesBruno Find Thibault on Twitter at @tmuzergues Further reading: History has Begun: The birth of a new America by Bruno Macaes (https://www.hurstpublishers.com/book/history-has-begun/)
On the podcast this week, History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America by Bruno Maçães. Here is Jerry's ideological Turing Test book summary: Like Europe, from which it descends, America is organized around individual liberty, but what liberty means has diverged. Just like Rome incorporated Greek culture just as that civilization was reaching its end, America has incorporated European. That is just repetition, however. The real act of creation came when the Roman Empire fell and a new beginning from the ruins was possible. Maybe that's where America is today, and what looks like the abyss to progressive liberals is actually empty space full of possibility. Maçães does not care for Tocqueville, who he thinks missed the point of America because he saw it as the culmination of European history rather than the beginning of something new. He likes William James the pragmatists: unlike the liberal European instinct to arrive at a final truth, they believes not that there is not truth, but that there are many truths, all equally valid if they help us, even if they are contradictory. To Maçães this means a world open to possibilities and creativity. American culture is antithetical to European culture because it is focused on efficiency and productivity. In a society where everyone works, there are no classes, which is a problem for European conservatives. Everything is mass-produced and there are no limits imposed by tradition, religion, or class. In such a world, man is beset by angst. The European solution is to reorder society, while the American solution is escapism. Socialism never took root in the U.S. because you could always go west. The U.S. resisted taking on world leadership after WWI. America was the economic and military center of the world, but it didn't want to take on the cultural mantle from Europe. That's not stainable. The Soviet threat papered-over the differences between America and Europe and now they are surfacing. With that threat gone, it's crazy to expect the U.S. to continue to accept the limits imposed on it by the liberal world order, especially when the likes of China break the rules. Meanwhile, Europe cannot fathom any path that is not in the direction opposite Nazism. Americans experience life as a movie of TV show, and this explains guns, the death penalty, religion (which in America is about possibility, not limitations). Political correctness is about portrayal rather than any reality. Reagan wasn't really a liberal (or an American conservative), he was an American who wanted people to find their own happiness in their own truths—they should be able to play the characters they want in their own movies. Europe, by contrast, is incredibly limited in its possibilities of existence. Westworld is right about race. Television taught Americans to think of themselves as characters in a stories, and the Internet is an extension of that where one is character and creator at the same time. On the internet you have to act to be seen and to exist. Nothing is real, everything is an invented story. Americans don't pine for the real world but for their own story. Everything is symbolic and shouldn't be taken seriously. Liberalism has been so effective at specifying the conditions of a free society that is produces an answer to every political question, thus there is no freedom in liberalism. This is anti-American so Americans are pursuing a post-liberal, post-truth way of living based on the principle of what Maçães calls unreality: “everyone can pursue his or her own happiness so long as they refrain from imposing it on others as something real—as something valid for all.” No universal truths, except perhaps one, which is the right to exit, to change the channel. Westworld again. Meanwhile, Europe wants to freeze time because it thinks it's at the end of history, at the apotheosis of a free society except “we should keep very quiet or else the magnificent edifice of freedom might be shaken too hard.” The reaction from both sides is grasping for hard truth: socialism/green religion or tradition. American populism by contrast arrives at a different conclusion from the fact of relativism. It's about a constant appeal to voters/viewers with new content. Everything is permitted, even the illiberal. Technological progress is predicated on massive inequality, which is why we need universal basic income. The Truman doctrine went from tactic to principle and led to Vietnam. Iraq was about the struggle for meaning—creating a new reality after 9/11—and it also turned out badly. If the U.S. wants to create its own reality, it has to do so in a way that allow others to find their place; where other value systems are accepted. Neoconservatism is over. The U.S.'s permanent strategic goal has always been to prevent a single power from controlling Eurasia. This has meant standing up to European powers, but now the threat comes from China. Maçães doesn't think a Cold War model will work against china because we're too coupled and decoupling is self-defeating. He thinks a better approach is to act as a balancer much like 19th century Britain was relative to European powers. The danger is an Sino-Russian alliance. The American experience with Covid highlights its its embrace of unreality. “First Trump evaded reality by believing there was no problem, then everyone else evaded reality by believing the problem was Trump. … When America turned from the virus to protest, it also revealed that the fight against the pandemic was after all a story—not a necessity—which could be replaced by a better story.” The experience with Covid will accelerate the transition to living in a surveilled virtual reality.
Bruno Maçães joins Wolf Tivy and Ash Milton to discuss why America is ripe for a re-founding, stagnation in Europe and China, and why liberalism has stopped delivering on progress. Bruno Maçães is the former Europe Minister of Portugal from 2013 to 2015. He is a senior fellow at the Hudson Institute in Washington and the author of two recent books, The Dawn of Eurasia and Belt and Road. The Dawn of Eurasia was selected as a book of the year by both the Financial Times and Foreign Affairs. His new book, History Has Begun, is available now.
The strategic rivalry between the People's Republic of China and the United States of America is one of the dominant geopolitical trends of our time. Now, with the onset of the coronavirus crisis, this rivalry has been steadily intensifying. So how should we think about this clash between world's premier powers? And how will this contest resolve itself? Jack Dickens hosts Bruno Maçães, renowned voyager, political theorist and geopolitical strategist, to find out more. Bruno joins the podcast from Lisbon.
The first term of Donald Trump's presidency has coincided with what many see as a fundamental shift in US foreign policy. Rather than viewing Trump as the exception to a past 'norm', Bruno Maçães argues that his administration is the latest expression of the characteristics that mark out the US from other western states. Ben is joined by Bruno to discuss the political implications of American exceptionalism. Then Agnes speaks to Ian Black about the life and work of Rosemary Hollis, a former head of the Middle East and North Africa programme at Chatham House, who passed away in June 2020. Rosemary was a highly respected authority on the Middle East, and is remembered with great respect and affection, as a colleague and a friend. Read the memorial: Remembering Rosemary Hollis (1952-2020) Read the obituary: Rosemary Hollis Find the book: History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America Credits: Speakers: Ian Black, Bruno Maçães Hosts: Agnes Frimston, Ben Horton Sound Editor: Jamie Reed Recorded and produced by Chatham House
The first term of Donald Trump's presidency has coincided with what many see as a fundamental shift in US foreign policy. Rather than viewing Trump as the exception to a past 'norm', Bruno Maçães argues that his administration is the latest expression of the characteristics that mark out the US from other western states. Ben is joined by Bruno to discuss the political implications of American exceptionalism. Then Agnes speaks to Ian Black about the life and work of Rosemary Hollis, a former head of the Middle East and North Africa programme at Chatham House, who passed away in June 2020. Rosemary was a highly respected authority on the Middle East, and is remembered with great respect and affection, as a colleague and a friend. Read the memorial: Remembering Rosemary Hollis (1952-2020) Read the obituary: Rosemary Hollis Find the book: History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America Credits: Speakers: Ian Black, Bruno Maçães Hosts: Agnes Frimston, Ben Horton Sound Editor: Jamie Reed Recorded and produced by Chatham House
A live session from #JaipurLitFest2020. China’s mammoth Belt and Road initiative, straddling almost 70 countries, is an infrastructure project of staggering complexity. Alongside writers and diplomats Manoj Joshi, Shyam Saran, Sujeev Shakya and Bruno Maçães, a Portugese politician, former Minister of European Affairs and author of Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order, discusses its ambitions and implications as it tracks new trade and energy routes, with particular emphasis on its feasibility and implications in India and South Asia.
Originally from Portugal, Bruno Maçães earned a PhD in Political Science at Harvard under Harvey Mansfield, and served as Portugal's Secretary of State for European Affairs from 2013-2015. He is regarded as a leading geopolitical thinker with deep insights concerning the future of Eurasia and relations between the West and China. He is the author of two widely acclaimed books published in 2018: The Dawn of Eurasia and Belt and Road.Topics discussed include: China's Belt and Road Initiative, the Middle Income Trap, A Chinese World Order, Techno-Optimism in East and West, China-Russia alliance and geopolitics, the future of Eurasia and the EU.Resources Transcript Russia to China: Together we can rule the World (Politico.eu) Equilibrium Americanum (Berlin Policy Journal) The Dawn of Eurasia: On the Trail of the New World Order Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America
Originally from Portugal, Bruno Maçães earned a PhD in Political Science at Harvard under Harvey Mansfield, and served as Portugal’s Secretary of State for European Affairs from 2013-2015. He is regarded as a leading geopolitical thinker with deep insights concerning the future of Eurasia and relations between the West and China. He is the author of two widely acclaimed books published in 2018: The Dawn of Eurasia and Belt and Road. Topics discussed include: China's Belt and Road Initiative, the Middle Income Trap, A Chinese World Order, Techno-Optimism in East and West, China-Russia alliance and geopolitics, the future of Eurasia and the EU.
Originally from Portugal, Bruno Maçães earned a PhD in Political Science at Harvard under Harvey Mansfield, and served as Portugal's Secretary of State for European Affairs from 2013-2015. He is regarded as a leading geopolitical thinker with deep insights concerning the future of Eurasia and relations between the West and China. He is the author of two widely acclaimed books published in 2018: The Dawn of Eurasia and Belt and Road.Topics discussed include: China's Belt and Road Initiative, the Middle Income Trap, A Chinese World Order, Techno-Optimism in East and West, China-Russia alliance and geopolitics, the future of Eurasia and the EU.Resources Transcript Russia to China: Together we can rule the World (Politico.eu) Equilibrium Americanum (Berlin Policy Journal) The Dawn of Eurasia: On the Trail of the New World Order Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order History Has Begun: The Birth of a New America
Shadi and Damir talk Europe, its problems of integrating of foreigners, and how European mental reliance on the state as a solution to everything is a long-term problem for the continent. Required Reading: Emmanuel Macron’s interview in the Economist magazine: https://www.economist.com/europe/2019/11/07/emmanuel-macron-in-his-own-words-english Riada Akyol in Al-Jazeera: https://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/macron-remarks-bosnia-dangerous-191110133224396.html Bruno Maçaes in Politico Europe: https://www.politico.eu/article/emmanuel-macron-islamophobic-undercurrent-french-vision/ Ash Jain and Matthew Kroenig at Atlantic Council: https://www.atlanticcouncil.org/in-depth-research-reports/report/present-at-the-re-creation/
Author and Hudson Institute senior research fellow Bruno Maçães joins Eric and Cobus to discuss the key drivers of China's hugely ambitious Belt and Road Initiative that he outlined in his recent book, "Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order." He also explains why he thinks the U.S. has good reason to worry that its time as the global hegemonic power may indeed be coming to an end. JOIN THE DISCUSSION: How do you describe the Belt and Road Initiative? Do you agree with Bruno that it's something that threatens the Western-run rules-based order? Or do you think that's overstating and BRI is a lot of hype but really too uncoordinated to be of much concern? Facebook: www.facebook.com/ChinaAfricaProject Twitter: @eolander | @stadenesque |@MacaesBruno Email: eric@chinaafricaproject.com | cobus@chinaafricaproject.com To find out more about Bruno's two books on Eurasia and Belt and Road, please click for information: (2019) Belt and Road: A Chinese World Order (2018) The Dawn of Eurasia: On the Trail of the New World Order Sign up here if you would like to join our weekly email newsletter mailing list for a carefully curated selection of the week's top China-Africa news.
In the U.S. and many parts of Europe, China's Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is often seen as "Trojan Horse" where Beijing uses the lure of trade and investment to discretely extend its political influence around the world. Not surprisingly, in China, those U.S. and European fears are quickly dismissed. Understanding these different perceptions is very important given how high the stakes are, both for the member states in places like Africa and the international system as a whole. "More than any other project, [BRI] has come to symbolize a new phase in China's rise, the moment when Beijing embraces its role as a new superpower, capable of remaking the world economy and attracting other countries to its own economic orbit and ideological model," said Portuguese minister and Hudson Institute fellow Bruno Maçães in his new book "Belt and Road - A Chinese World Order." In our ongoing series that explores different interpretations of the BRI, Eric and Cobus are joined this week by Zhu Zheng, an international affairs columnist for the financial newspaper Caijing and a research fellow at the China-Eastern Europe Institute. Zhu has traveled across Belt and Road countries in Asia, the Americas, and Eastern Europe and writes extensively on the subject for his readers in China. JOIN THE DISCUSSION: What do you think of the Belt and Road Initiative? Do you want your country to join in the hopes of tapping investment funds for infrastructure development and increased trading opportunities with China? Or, do you share the U.S. concerns that this whole thing is really just a ploy to expand Chinese political influence throughout the developing world? Let us know what you think. Facebook: www.facebook.com/ChinaAfricaProject Twitter: @eolander | @stadenesque Email: eric@chinaafricaproject.com | cobus@chinaafricaproject.com Sign up here if you would like to join our weekly email newsletter mailing list for a carefully curated selection of the week's top China-Africa news.
The global geopolitical landscape is shifting towards Asia. It can be seen in China’s bold infrastructure project reopening the historic Silk Road and in the maritime success of port cities like Shanghai, Hong Kong and Singapore. Asia is rising but so are its connections to Central Asia, Turkey and Europe. Perhaps the best word to capture the emerging global order is 'Eurasian'. At the Melbourne launch of his new book The Dawn of Eurasia, Bruno Maçães discusses the increasing strategic significance of Eurasia, the dominance of China, Russia and the EU, and how the United States is redefining its place in between. Bruno was in conversation with Dr Euan Graham, Executive Director of La Trobe Asia. His visit was supported by Adelaide Writer’s Week. It was held at the State Library of Victoria on 7th March, 2019.
In this episode of the Intelligence Squared podcast we were joined by Bruno Maçães, the former Europe minister of Portugal, in conversation with Oxford economist and broadcaster Linda Yueh. They talked about China's Belt and Road strategy, widely acknowledged to be the most ambitious geopolitical initiative of the age. Covering almost seventy countries by land and sea, it will affect every element of global society, from shipping to agriculture, digital economy to tourism, politics to culture. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Saatekülaline on endine Portugali eurominister Bruno Maçaes, kes on sel aastal üllitanud kaks suurt tähelepanu saanud raamatut Hiina tõusust maailmaareenil.
Saatekülaline on endine Portugali eurominister Bruno Maçaes, kes on sel aastal üllitanud kaks suurt tähelepanu saanud raamatut Hiina tõusust maailmaareenil.
Political scientist Bruno Maçães has built a career out of crossing the globe teaching, advising, writing, and talking to people. His recent book, born out of a six-month journey across Eurasia, is one of Tyler's favorites. So how does it feel to face Tyler's rat-a-tat curiosity about your life's work? For Bruno, the experience was "like you are a politician under attack and your portfolio is the whole of physical and metaphysical reality." Listen to this episode to discover how well Bruno defended that expansive portfolio, including what's missing from liberalism, Obama's conceptual foreign policy mistake, what economists are most wrong about, how to fall in love with Djibouti, stagnation in Europe, the diversity of Central Asia, Hitchcock's perfect movie, China as an ever-growing global force, the book everyone under 25 should read, the creativity of Washington, D.C versus Silicon Valley, and more. Get Bruno's latest book here. Transcript and links Follow Bruno on Twitter Follow Tyler on Twitter More CWT goodness: Facebook Twitter Instagram Email
Heather Stewart is joined by Anushka Asthana, George Freeman MP, Laura Perrins, Matthew D'Ancona and Mark Wallace to discuss the intellectual renewal of the Conservative party amid cabinet bust-ups, and growing murmurs about the race to succeed Theresa May. Plus, Bruno Maçães on his new book The Dawn of Eurasia. Please support our work and help us keep the world informed. To fund us, go to https://www.theguardian.com/give/podcast
Piropos e assédio na rua, dick pics e Bruno Maçães, Igreja, pedofilia, homossexualidade e muito mais.
Hudson Senior Fellow Chris Sands moderated a panel discussion with Bruno Maçães, Rod Hunter, Tom Duerterberg and Jeff Gedmin on the implications of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Agreement, especially after the crisis in Ukraine.
Hudson Senior Fellow Chris Sands moderated a panel discussion with Bruno Maçães, Rod Hunter, Tom Duerterberg and Jeff Gedmin on the implications of the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Agreement, especially after the crisis in Ukraine.