Podcasts about global conflict

War involving the major global states

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global conflict

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Best podcasts about global conflict

Latest podcast episodes about global conflict

Revolutionary Left Radio
[BEST OF] In Defense of Che Guevara: Analyzing his Life and Answering his Critics

Revolutionary Left Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2025 94:22


ORIGINALLY RELEASED Nov 13, 2017 Dr. Thoreau Redcrow is an American academic with a Ph.D. in Conflict Analysis with a concentration in Global Conflict. Thoreau is a researcher who specializes in studying armed guerrilla movements, and who has over a decade of experience studying the life and legacy of Che Guevara. His prior investigations into Che's biography have taken him to Cuba to speak to those who knew and fought alongside Che, as well as to other arenas around the world which have been influenced by Che Guevara's armed struggle. Brett sits down with Dr. Redcrow to discuss the Argentine Marxist revolutionary; including an entire segment of the podcast dedicated to debunking many of the right-wing and anti-communist lies about him. Topics Include: Che's childhood, the political context out of which Che emerged, the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, debunking lies and slander about Che, The Bay of Pigs, Anti-Imperialism, "Guevarism", Marx, Lenin, and much, MUCH more! ---------------------------------------------------- Support Rev Left and get access to bonus episodes: www.patreon.com/revleftradio Make a one-time donation to Rev Left at BuyMeACoffee.com/revleftradio Follow, Subscribe, & Learn more about Rev Left Radio HERE Outro Beat Prod. by flip da hood

Unapologetically Outspoken
THE GROWING NATIONALIST MOVEMENT, ESCALATING GLOBAL CONFLICT, TOTAL CONGRESSIONAL DYSFUNCTION, AND SOME GREAT MAHA NEWS

Unapologetically Outspoken

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2025 59:56


On today's podcast, Stephanie and Tara talk about world events, including Trump's first comprehensive trade deal with the UK, his recent interaction with Canada's PM, the rise of nationalism throughout Europe, the escalating conflict with India and Pakistan, and the continued lack of a ceasefire agreement between Russia and the Ukraine. Your hosts also discuss some positive MAHA progress, the results of Operation Restore Justice, the clown show theatrics that took place in Congress this week, the new Pope, and Sleepy Joe hitting the interview circuit.  Become a beta tester for our new Unapologetically Outspoken GPT! Use the link here or head over to our website: https://www.thelawofattractiontribe.com/a/2148108179/MpCJCAPZ Want to join the conversation? Connect with Tara and Stephanie on TikTok, X, Rumble, YouTube, Truth Social, Facebook, and IG.https://msha.ke/unapologeticallyoutspoken/ Sign up to get on the waitlist for Stephanie's next Quantum Catalyst program here: https://www.thelawofattractiontribe.com/a/2148109722/MpCJCAPZ  

Valuetainment
"China's Chokehold On Pakistan" - India-Pakistan CONFLICT Escalates Towards GLOBAL Conflict

Valuetainment

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2025 25:47


Tensions explode as a terrorist attack in Kashmir sparks deadly conflict between India and Pakistan. With both nations armed with nuclear weapons and backed by global powers, this story could reshape global alliances and escalate fast.

Chris Thrall's Bought the T-Shirt Podcast
British Fighter's Shocking Transformation | Timmo P2

Chris Thrall's Bought the T-Shirt Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2025 69:12


Join Chris Thrall in an gripping episode of Bought the T-Shirt Podcast as he sits down with Timmo, a former British Army soldier from the Royal Green Jackets. Tim shares his extraordinary journey of transformation, from serving in the British military to volunteering as a foreign fighter with the Peshmerga in Syria, battling ISIS, and later joining the Ukrainian Army to fight against Russia. This powerful conversation dives into Tim's experiences, motivations, and the challenges he faced on the frontlines of global conflicts. Don't miss this inspiring and thought-provoking story of courage, resilience, and dedication. Socials: instagram.com/chris.thrall youtube.com/christhrall facebook.com/christhrall christhrall.com Support the podcast at: patreon.com/christhrall (£2 per month plus perks) gofundme.com/christhrall paypal.me/teamthrall Our uncensored content: christhrall.locals.com Mailing list: christhrall.com/mailing-list/ Life Coaching: christhrall.com/coach/

Root of Conflict
Congo in Crisis: History, Minerals, and Power | Eduardo Montero

Root of Conflict

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 44:38


This episode explores the ongoing conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo through the lens of historical legacies, regional dynamics, and international interests. Our guest, Professor Eduardo Montero, introduces the current crisis and its deep roots in colonial exploitation, institutional fragility, and unresolved tensions from past conflicts. By the end of the episode, you will also understand the role of external actors and the broader geopolitical and economic stakes shaping the conflict today.  This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at www.thepearsoninstitute.org.   Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Isabella Nascimento, Julia Mansur, Manda Bwerevu Editing: Megha Viswanath Production: Isabella Nascimento 

Quantum Nurse: Out of the rabbit hole from stress to bliss.  http://graceasagra.com/
#403 - Alex Krainer - “Gods of Finance & dogs of War: Unmasking the Power Behind Global Conflicts”

Quantum Nurse: Out of the rabbit hole from stress to bliss. http://graceasagra.com/

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2025 62:34


Quantum Nurse http://graceasagra.bio.link/ presents Freedom International Livestream On May 1. 2025 Thursday 12:00 PM EST Guest: Alex Krainer Topic: “Gods of Finance & dogs of War: Unmasking the Power Behind Global Conflicts” www.alexkrainer.substack.com www.TheNakedHedgie.com Bio: Alex Krainer is a Monaco-based market analyst, author, and former hedge fund manager. Born in socialist Yugoslavia, he later studied in the U.S. and Switzerland, earning a degree in Business and Economics. After experiencing Venezuela's 1994 banking crisis, he returned to Croatia and served in its war of independence. In 1996, he joined an oil trading firm in Monaco, advancing to CEO and spearheading AI-driven market analysis. In 2007, he founded an investment firm, achieving strong returns during the 2008 financial crisis. He later managed tail risk strategies at Altana Wealth and, in 2020, launched Krainer Analytics to support investment managers. Special Guest Host: Dr Reza John Vedadi – LinkedIn Instagram Creator Host: Grace Asagra, RN MA  Podcast:  Quantum Nurse: Out of the Rabbit Hole from Stress to Bliss  http://graceasagra.bio.link/ https://www.quantumnurse.life/ Bichute https://www.bitchute.com/channel/nDjE6Ciyg0ED/ TIP/DONATE LINK for Grace Asagra @ Quantum Nurse Podcast https://patron.podbean.com/QuantumNurse https://www.paypal.com/donate/?hosted_button_id=FHUXTQVAVJDPU Venmo - @Grace-Asagra 609-203-5854  WELLNESS RESOURCES • Optimal Health and Wellness with Grace Virtual Dispensary Link (Designs for Health)    2https://www.designsforhealth.com/u/optimalhealthwellness • Premier Research Labs - https://prlabs.com/customer/account/create/code/59n84f/ - 15% discount - 15%_59N84F_05 Co-Host: Hartmut Schumacher https://anchor.fm/hartmut-schumacher-path

Doug Casey's Take
Was The Blackout In Spain A Coincidence?

Doug Casey's Take

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 106:31


Find us at www.crisisinvesting.com In this episode, Michael Yon provides a detailed update from Panama, discussing the geopolitical struggles for control of the Panama Canal, and the larger global context involving China, the United Nations, and the United States. The conversation covers the ongoing migration crisis, particularly through the Darien Gap, and explores the impacts of global power plays on Panama and other key naval choke points. The discussion also touches on economic issues in China, the significance of historical events, and the potential for large-scale conflicts and famines in the near future. 00:00 Introduction and Setting the Stage 00:42 Discussion on China and Global Politics 03:51 Panama and the Darien Gap 06:06 Historical Insights and Canal Construction 27:48 Mosquitoes and Disease in Canal History 33:20 Trump Administration and Immigration Policies 36:31 Alex's Journey from HIAS to Homeland Security 36:47 HIAS's Role in Immigration Camps 37:02 Alejandro Mayorkas and the Expansion of Camps 37:38 Criticism of HIAS and Donors 38:30 Comparing Deportation Rates: Biden vs. Trump 39:06 Trump's Border Policies and Their Impact 39:44 The Role of HIAS in Lake and Riley's Murder 40:51 Global Immigration and Colonization Trends 42:44 Colony Ridge: A New City in Texas 44:03 Governor Abbott's Border Actions 46:18 The Threat of War and Global Conflicts 50:48 Trump's Military Actions on the Border 57:37 Zionism and Global Power Struggles 01:07:53 Historical Context and the Path Between the Seas 01:09:38 Historical Layers of Panama 01:09:55 Current Political Influences in Panama 01:11:10 Geopolitical Tensions and Travel Concerns 01:14:01 Potential Global Crises: Famine and Blackouts 01:19:23 Strategic Importance of the Panama Canal 01:39:38 Historical Insights and Personal Anecdotes 01:46:06 Conclusion and Final Thoughts

RTS Washington Faculty Podcast
A Global Conflict (Ezekiel 38)

RTS Washington Faculty Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 25:27


This week, we're discussing Ezekiel's prophecy against Gog, the Lord's intervention, and what this text teaches us about our place in the world today. Want to continue this conversation in the classroom? Explore our degree programs and find one that's right for you: www.rts.edu/washington. Email admissions.washington@rts.edu to get started. Follow us on Instagram: www.instagram.com/rts.washington/ Facebook: www.facebook.com/RTSWashingtonDC
 X: x.com/rtswashington

STRAT
STRAT | April 27, 2025 |Understanding Global Conflicts: Nuclear Tensions and Peace Prospects

STRAT

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 30:40


In this intense episode of STRAT, retired Marine Intelligence Officer LtCol. Hal Kempfer dives into dynamic regional conflicts and their far-reaching consequences. With a critical lens, he examines the ongoing tensions between nuclear neighbors Pakistan and India, focusing on the intricate web of territorial disputes, religious divides, and water rights. Hal also delves into current issues affecting Ukraine and Russia, covering potential ceasefire talks and the economic strains undercutting Russia's military efforts. On the Middle Eastern front, discussions cover Iran's nuclear ambitions amidst fragile regional stability and the challenges facing the Gaza Strip. As Hal scrutinizes these geopolitical struggles, he highlights the impacts of diplomatic maneuvering, domestic politics, and international interventions shaping global risk landscapes. Stay informed and gain deep insights into these complex situations, offering a comprehensive understanding of current global strategic threats and peace prospects.Takeaways:• Tensions between India and Pakistan hinge on Kashmir conflict.• Water rights disputes may ignite broader Indo-Pakistani conflict.• US role diminishing in mitigating India-Pakistan nuclear tensions.• Ukraine negotiations advance amidst strained Russian resources.• Iran may face heightened pressures over nuclear program specifics.• Egypt proposes a comprehensive ceasefire deal for Gaza.• Elephants in Ukraine discussions include Trump's political challenges.• Middle East dynamics shaped by shifting alliances and nuclear capabilities.#STRATPodcast #GlobalConflicts #NuclearTensions #GeopoliticalRisk #MiddleEastPeace #IndiaPakistanConflict #UkraineRussiaWar #IranNuclearAgreement #USDiplomacyChallenges #PakistanNuclearSafeguards #KashmirConflict #GazaCeasefire #HamasPeaceProposal #StrategicThreatAssessment #HalKempferInsights #PoliticalRiskAnalysis #ConflictResolution #MilitaryStrategy #InternationalRelations #PeaceTalksProgress #MillitaryIntelligence

Entitled
Are We Witnessing The End of The Postwar Order?, with Former President of the U.N. Dennis Francis

Entitled

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 34:17


What happens when the country that helped design the international human rights system starts to dismantle it?In this episode, we speak with the former president of the U.N. General Assembly, Ambassador Dennis Francis, about the growing threats to global cooperation and human rights—from authoritarian drift, to shrinking U.S. commitments, to rising fears inside the U.N. system itself. Is this the end of the liberal international order? And if so, what comes next?

Commodity Culture
Economic Chaos, Global Conflict Driving Investors Into Gold: Levi Gunter

Commodity Culture

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 28:33


Levi Gunter of APMEX and OneGold explains how he believes the tariff situation will play out for the global economy, financial markets, and the supply of gold and silver bullion in the United States. Levi also dives into increased safe haven demand for gold in an era of geopolitical uncertainty, central bank gold buying, silver's historic undervaluation and the opportunity it presents, and much more.APMEX: https://apmex.comOneGold: https://onegold.comDisclaimer: Commodity Culture was compensated by OneGold for producing this interview. Nothing contained in this video is to be construed as investment advice, do your own due diligence.Follow Jesse Day on X: https://x.com/jessebdayCommodity Culture on Youtube: https://youtube.com/c/CommodityCulture

The Health Ranger Report
Brighteon Broadcast News, Apr 7, 2025 – Survive the MARKET MELTDOWN… reject the panic and seize the opportunities

The Health Ranger Report

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2025 209:45


- Market Panic and Initial Analysis (0:10) - Trump's Tariff Lies and Global Reactions (5:04) - Short-Term Market Dynamics and Long-Term Opportunities (13:39) - Negotiation Tactics and Market Recovery (14:16) - Bank Failures and Investment Strategies (23:06) - Geopolitical Implications and Market Predictions (43:03) - Preparation for Economic Uncertainty (1:00:15) - Historical Context and Future Outlook (1:01:00) - Final Thoughts and Investment Advice (1:18:38) - Debt System and Economic Collapse (1:21:57) - Robots and Economic Reality (1:24:16) - Preparation and Self-Reliance (1:26:12) - Book Review: "The Coming Battle" (1:28:18) - Economic Manipulation and Financial Panics (1:30:55) - Modern Financial Crisis and Gold (1:43:47) - Trade Wars and Economic Impact (1:48:23) - Geopolitical Tensions and Military Threats (1:58:13) - Chemtrails and Environmental Impact (2:08:12) - Preparation and Survival Strategies (2:28:12) - Iran's Nuclear Capabilities and Global Tensions (2:32:57) - Russia's Military Strength and Intelligence (2:43:31) - US Military Preparedness and Global Conflict (2:47:48) - Preparation for Potential Conflict (2:52:17) - Geopolitical Tensions and Strategic Moves (2:54:34) - Final Thoughts and Practical Advice (3:24:42) For more updates, visit: http://www.brighteon.com/channel/hrreport NaturalNews videos would not be possible without you, as always we remain passionately dedicated to our mission of educating people all over the world on the subject of natural healing remedies and personal liberty (food freedom, medical freedom, the freedom of speech, etc.). Together, we're helping create a better world, with more honest food labeling, reduced chemical contamination, the avoidance of toxic heavy metals and vastly increased scientific transparency. ▶️ Every dollar you spend at the Health Ranger Store goes toward helping us achieve important science and content goals for humanity: https://www.healthrangerstore.com/ ▶️ Sign Up For Our Newsletter: https://www.naturalnews.com/Readerregistration.html ▶️ Brighteon: https://www.brighteon.com/channels/hrreport ▶️ Join Our Social Network: https://brighteon.social/@HealthRanger ▶️ Check In Stock Products at: https://PrepWithMike.com

Traveling To Consciousness
I Called It! Stock Market Crash, Terrorists Funded by Governments, and Gazans Being Tortured | Ep 335

Traveling To Consciousness

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2025 17:55 Transcription Available


SummaryIn this episode, Clayton Cuteri discusses the recent stock market crash, the humanitarian crisis in Gaza, and the ongoing cycle of violence fueled by terrorism. He emphasizes the need for accountability in leadership and calls for a new political movement aimed at fostering peace and social justice.Clayton's Social MediaLinkTree | TikTok | Instagram | Twitter (X) | YouTubeTimecodes00:00 - Intro05:53 - Human Rights Violations in Gaza12:05 - The Cycle of Violence: Funding Terrorism15:59 - Call to Action: A New Political MovementIntro/Outro Music Producer: Don KinIG: https://www.instagram.com/donkinmusic/Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/44QKqKsd81oJEBKffwdFfPSuper grateful for this guy ^Send Clayton a text message!Support the showMaster Link: HEREFREE 999 Meditation Challenge: Sign Up Here

Root of Conflict
What's Next for Ukraine? | Roger Myerson

Root of Conflict

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 3, 2025 51:52


This episode features Professor Roger Myerson, Nobel Laureate (2007) and Professor at the University of Chicago. We discuss the war in Ukraine through his on-the-ground experience and academic expertise. Professor Myerson reflects on the political, social, and technological shifts he has witnessed since the war began. The conversation examines how Ukraine is adapting to the change in U.S. foreign policy under President Trump, the prospects for peace, the role of NATO and other security guarantees, and the gap between Europe's economic power and military response.  This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at www.thepearsoninstitute.org.  Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Isabella Nascimento, Viktoriia Shcherba Editing: Megha Viswanath Production: Isabella Nascimento 

Communism Exposed:East and West
Trump's Reconfiguration of Global Conflict: What It Means for Asia and Europe

Communism Exposed:East and West

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 6:17


Voice-Over-Text: Pandemic Quotables
Trump's Reconfiguration of Global Conflict: What It Means for Asia and Europe

Voice-Over-Text: Pandemic Quotables

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 6:17


Communism Exposed:East & West(PDF)
Trump's Reconfiguration of Global Conflict: What It Means for Asia and Europe

Communism Exposed:East & West(PDF)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 6:17


UNSW Centre for Ideas
Pankaj Mishra: Global Conflicts, Competing Narratives

UNSW Centre for Ideas

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2025 56:32


In a timely and thought-provoking discussion, essayist and author of the recently released The World After Gaza, Pankaj Mishra reflects on the ongoing war in Gaza, examining how competing narratives of colonialism, national identity and justice collide with tragic consequences for all. In a conversation with philosopher and Executive Director of The Ethics Centre Simon Longstaff, Mishra delves into the historical, political and ethical forces shaping our world, the waning influence of the Global North and the role of journalism in actively constructing and distorting reality.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

STRAT
STRAT | Week of March 30, 2025 |Global Conflict Update: Ukraine, Russia, Economics, and Diplomacy

STRAT

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2025 34:50


In this insightful episode of STRAT, we dissect critical global conflicts and strategic developments that shape the geopolitical landscape. Our focus shifts to Ukraine's strategic offensive in the Russian Belgorod Oblast, a maneuver reshaping the dynamics of frontline operations. Analyzing Russia's economic struggles, we explore the ramifications of its reliance on oil exports to nations like China and India, and the potential collapse of its war-strained economy. President Trump's unpredictable approach to international tariffs adds complexity to these scenarios. Furthermore, we examine the intricacies of revised mineral deals between Ukraine and the US, assessing Europe's defense readiness amid fluctuating US support. The situation in the Middle East is also explored, highlighting potential resolutions in Gaza and shifts in regional diplomacy. Join us as we unravel these key issues and their implications on global stability and future security scenarios.Takeaways:• Ukraine's offensive in Belgorod exploits Russian military redeployments.• Ukraine continues leveraging classic maneuver warfare to regain lost ground.• Russia's economic reliance on oil exports faces increased international pressure.• Trump's proposed tariffs threaten Russia's economic stability further.• Europe struggles with defense spending amid unstable US-Ukraine relations.• Middle East diplomacy sees creative ceasefire proposals in Gaza.• Israel reasserts military and diplomatic presence in the Gaza Strip.• Strategic developments in Lebanon and Syria impact regional stability.#STRATPodcast #HalKempfer #MutualBroadcastingSystem #StrategicRiskAnalysis #GlobalConflicts #UkraineCrisis #RussiaEconomy #TrumpAdministration #MiddleEastDiplomacy #GazaConflict #BelgorodOffensive #ManeuverWarfare #PetrostatePolitics #EuropeanDefense #InternationalRelations #GeopoliticalStrategy #LebanonAndSyria #MilitaryAnalysis #DiplomaticDialogue #SecurityTrends

Stand Up For The Truth Podcast
Robert Maginnis: Preparing for Global Conflict

Stand Up For The Truth Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 55:53


In this installment of today's podcast, Mary chats with retired US Army Lieutenant Colonel Robert Maginnis about his book, "Preparing for World War III". Robert graduated from the U.S. Military Academy, the Naval Postgraduate School, the Command & General Staff College, the Defense Language School and the Army War College's strategy course. He is an Airborne-Ranger infantry officer with service in four infantry divisions on three continents. So many accomplishments, far too numerous to list here, but he is an experienced and internationally known expert on national security and foreign affairs. In addition, Colonel Maginnis has decades of media experience as a columnist, a Fox News military analyst and as an on-air commentator for multiple radio programs and networks to include Salem Radio Network. Today's subject might not be something we like to think about, but in our chaotic world, and when measured against the sure word of Bible prophecy, we know that wars and rumours of war are part of the package. In the book, he outlines 6 sections that help us add to our knowledge about such a world-realigning event. Is the world ripe for war? What have we learned from previous wars? What does the 21st century battlefield look like, in terms of technology and AI? What might some of the flashpoints be, and can it be deterred? Finally, how to prepare our local communities and what our role as Christians should be, our priorities. A fascinating hour with an experienced geopolitical icon.     Stand Up For The Truth Videos: https://rumble.com/user/CTRNOnline & https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgQQSvKiMcglId7oGc5c46A

Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis
Trump's Phone Call With Putin, Bill's White House Visit, Josh Hammer Breaks Down Trump's Stance on Global Conflict, & Judge Orders Fani Willis to Pay Up

Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2025 39:57


Tonight's rundown:  Hey BillOReilly.com Premium and Concierge Members, welcome to the No Spin News for Tuesday, March 18, 2025. Stand Up for Your Country.  What we know about President Trump's recent phone call with Vladimir Putin. Talking Points Memo: Bill discusses his visit to the White House with Donald Trump, covering the JFK files, Kate's Law, and Trump's strategy with Putin. Josh Hammer, host of The Josh Hammer Show and America on Trial, joins the No Spin News to discuss Donald Trump's approach to the Israel/Gaza and Ukraine/Russia conflicts, as well as the left's reaction to a ceasefire agreement. Fani Willis is ordered to pay $54K for violating open records laws in the Trump case. Final Thought: Bill will be on NewsNation tonight with Chris Cuomo and Stephen A. Smith. In Case You Missed It: Read Bill's latest column, The Problem is Us Stand out from the crowd with our NEW Not Woke baseball cap for just $28.95! For a limited time, get Bill O'Reilly's bestselling The United States of Trump and a No Spin Mug for only $39.95. Get Bill's latest book, CONFRONTING THE PRESIDENTS, out NOW! Now's the time to get a Premium or Concierge Membership to BillOReilly.com, the only place for honest news analysis. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Right on Radio
AI, Israel, and Global Conflict: Unraveling Complex JFK Files and Ties

Right on Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2025 68:39 Transcription Available


In this riveting episode, listeners are treated to a deep exploration surrounding the newly released JFK files. The host dissects the involvement of major players, including Mossad and the CIA, and scrutinizes the alleged ties to Donald Trump and QAnon, unraveling intricate political machinations and conspiracies. The discussion expands to cover international concerns, focusing on issues that transcend borders, like the impending implementation of Digital IDs in crown countries such as the UK and Australia. The episode also touches on immigration crises affecting Europe and North America, and the societal impacts of these developments. Listeners will be intrigued by a bold new theory regarding Israel's geopolitical positioning, particularly its influence over American policies, which supposedly affected the JFK assassination and its far-reaching consequences, including nuclear capabilities. The conversation ventures into controversial themes like the influence of Jewish communities and the impact of Zionism on global policies, igniting discussions on religious and political tensions often swept under the rug. Tech enthusiasts will be captivated by insights into Artificial Intelligence advancements as the host elaborates on the potential futuristic realities shaped by AI, inspired by recent dialogues with Elon Musk. The strategic importance of AI in global power dynamics, especially between the U.S. and China, is critically examined. Interspersed with clips and soundbites, this episode is a whirlwind tour of current events, offering unique perspectives on the global stage while ending on a lighter note, promising both enlightenment and entertainment. Thank you for Listening to Right on Radio. https://linktr.ee/RightonRadio Prayerfully consider supporting Right on Radio. Click Here for all links, Right on Community ROC, Podcast web links, Freebies, Products (healing mushrooms, EMP Protection) Social media, courses and more... https://linktr.ee/RightonRadio Live Right in the Real World! We talk God and Politics, Faith Based Broadcast News, views, Opinions and Attitudes We are Your News Now. Keep the Faith

Access to Excellence Podcast
Peace building amid the rise of global conflict

Access to Excellence Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 50:13 Transcription Available


The December 2024 conflict index by the Armed Conflict Location and Event Data initiative reported that global conflicts have doubled over the past five years. Now more than ever, we need experts in conflict analysis and peacebuilding. And George Mason University is ready to meet that call.   On this episode of Access to Excellence, President Gregory Washington is joined by Marc Gopin, the James H. Laue Professor of World Religions, Diplomacy and Conflict Resolution in George Mason's Jimmy and Rosalynn Carter School for Peace and Conflict Resolution, to discuss the challenges of building peace and how to bridge the growing divides between groups.   

World Alternative Media
WAR WITH YEMEN! - How Israel Is Using Trump To Start Global Conflict With Iran & Russia!

World Alternative Media

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 28:56


HELP SUPPORT US AS WE DOCUMENT HISTORY HERE: https://gogetfunding.com/help-wam-cover-history/ GET NON-MRNA FREEZE DRIED MEAT HERE: https://wambeef.com/ Use code WAMBEEF to save 20%! GET HEIRLOOM SEEDS & NON GMO SURVIVAL FOOD HERE: https://heavensharvest.com/ USE Code WAM to save 5% plus free shipping! Get local, healthy, pasture raised meat delivered to your door here: https://wildpastures.com/promos/save-20-for-life/bonus15?oid=6&affid=321 USE THE LINK & get 20% off for life and $15 off your first box! GET YOUR APRICOT SEEDS at the life-saving Richardson Nutritional Center HERE: https://rncstore.com/r?id=bg8qc1 Josh Sigurdson reports on the escalating conflict with Yemen following airstrikes by Trump on alleged "Houthis" while killing dozens of women and children as well as injuring hundreds more. This has lead to the Houthis striking the USS Harry Truman with multiple ballistic missiles. The scenes in Sanaa were like hell on Earth as Trump stood and watched drone operators massacre civilians to target a group the US and Israel propped up in the first place. "No new wars" said Trump during the election. Obvious pandering as he has already committed to "striking Iran" and "obliterating" it if they "kill him" which is just propagandized nonsense from Israel. Most have chosen to not be consistent in their libertarian views on war because they support Trump more than any single ideology. This is leading to far too much support for war with Iran which this latest Yemen attack signifies. Iran is one of Russia and China's top allies. After overthrowing Syria, Israel wants to move on Iran next, but first they want to get rid of those pesky Houthis who don't support Israel murdering a hundred thousand women and children in Gaza and throughout Palestine, not to mention Lebanon. The Houthis have pledged to destroy ANY US ship in the Red Sea or Arabian Sea destroying the crucial supply chain which is already mortally damaged. All by design. Prepare yourselves now or continue sitting on your hands. It's your choice. Stay tuned for more from WAM! SIGN UP FOR HOMESTEADING COURSES NOW: https://freedomfarmers.com/link/17150/ Get Prepared & Start The Move Towards Real Independence With Curtis Stone's Courses! GET YOUR WAV WATCH HERE: https://buy.wavwatch.com/WAM Use Code WAM to save $100 and purchase amazing healing frequency technology! GET ORGANIC CHAGA MUSHROOMS HERE: https://alaskachaga.com/wam Use code WAM to save money! See shop for a wide range of products! GET AMAZING MEAT STICKS HERE: https://4db671-1e.myshopify.com/discount/WAM?rfsn=8425577.918561&utm_source=refersion&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_campaign=8425577.918561 USE CODE WAM TO SAVE MONEY! GET YOUR FREEDOM KELLY KETTLE KIT HERE: https://patriotprepared.com/shop/freedom-kettle/ Use Code WAM and enjoy many solutions for the outdoors in the face of the impending reset! BUY GOLD HERE: https://firstnationalbullion.com/schedule-consult/ PayPal: ancientwonderstelevision@gmail.com FIND OUR CoinTree page here: https://cointr.ee/joshsigurdson JOIN US on SubscribeStar here: https://www.subscribestar.com/world-alternative-media For subscriber only content! Pledge here! Just a dollar a month can help us alive! https://www.patreon.com/user?u=2652072&ty=h&u=2652072 BITCOIN ADDRESS: 18d1WEnYYhBRgZVbeyLr6UfiJhrQygcgNU World Alternative Media 2025

Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis
Political Chaos, Mike Pompeo's Insights on Global Conflicts and His Relationship With Trump, a War Between Massachusetts and New Hampshire Governors & Concerns Over Joe Biden's Autopen Signature

Bill O’Reilly’s No Spin News and Analysis

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2025 44:08


Tonight's rundown:  Hey BillOReilly.com Premium and Concierge Members, welcome to the No Spin News for Monday, March 10, 2025. Stand Up for Your Country.  Talking Points Memo: An overview of what to expect this week for President Trump. Former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo joins the No Spin News to discuss a potential Ukraine-Russia ceasefire, why Xi Jinping held back under Biden, and his relationship with Donald Trump. Donald Trump signs an executive order suspending the security clearances of employees at Perkins Coie. Bill looks at the contrasting ICE policies of Massachusetts Governor Maura Healey and New Hampshire Governor Kelly Ayotte. Did President Biden use an autopen to sign documents at the White House? Final Thought: Trump declares March as Irish American Heritage Month. In Case You Missed It: Read Bill's latest column, Party Animals Stand out from the crowd with our NEW Not Woke baseball cap for just $28.95! For a limited time, get Bill O'Reilly's bestselling The United States of Trump and a No Spin Mug for only $39.95. Get Bill's latest book, CONFRONTING THE PRESIDENTS, out NOW! Now's the time to get a Premium or Concierge Membership to BillOReilly.com, the only place for honest news analysis. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Ken Webster Jr
From the Good Old Days to Pharma Kickbacks and Global Conflict - MON 5.1

Ken Webster Jr

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2025 14:03


Business Matters's posts
Navigating Global Trade: AI, Brexit, and Supply Chain Disruptions – In Conversation with John Wegman, CEO of Customs Support Group

Business Matters's posts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 10, 2025 24:47


Welcome to a new episode of In Conversation, the Business Matters podcast with Richard Alvin. In this episode, we sit down with John Wegman, CEO of Customs Support Group, to discuss the complexities of international trade, the impact of AI on customs processes, and how businesses are adapting to an increasingly turbulent global supply chain. In this episode:• Customs Support Group's Growth & Global Expansion:• How Customs Support Group has rapidly expanded by acquiring over 40 companies in just two years.• Why businesses are moving towards single customs partners rather than managing multiple brokers across different countries.• The Impact of Brexit, COVID-19, and Global Conflicts on Trade:• How recent global disruptions—from Brexit to supply chain crises—have increased customs complexity and trade risk.• Why companies are now holding more inventory than ever to hedge against uncertainty.• AI & Digital Transformation in Customs Processes:• How AI is being used to organise unstructured customs data, reduce human errors, and accelerate clearance times.• Why machine learning alone isn't enough—and how AI and human intelligence work together to ensure 100% accuracy in customs declarations.• The Impact of Political Changes on Global Trade:• How the Labour government's EU relationship is affecting UK importers and exporters.• The potential consequences of Trump's proposed trade tariffs on US and European supply chains.• How China's growing dominance in EV production is shifting global shipping routes and tariffs.• The Future of Global Shipping & Trade:• Why businesses are restructuring supply chains and increasing regional manufacturing to mitigate risks.• Predictions for the next decade of global trade digitisation—from real-time customs clearances to AI-driven supply chain forecasting. With supply chains more unpredictable than ever, John Wegman offers expert insights on how businesses can navigate customs, tariffs, and digital transformation in an increasingly complex world. Don't forget to like, subscribe, and share the podcast. Follo the UKs leagues business magazine Business Matters for more in-depth discussions on trade, finance, and global business trends.

The Health Ranger Report
Brighteon Broadcast News, Mar 6, 2025 – Vaccines CONFIRMED to be sterilization weapons, learn the Health Ranger's solutions to protect against vax shedders

The Health Ranger Report

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2025 177:08


- Breaking News and Special Reports (0:00) - Vaccine Depopulation Conspiracy (5:12) - Health and Nutrition Strategies (9:02) - Book Review: A Guide to Understanding Herbal Medicines (34:18) - Special Report: Energy and AI in Geopolitical Shifts (41:08) - Book Review: Our Occulted History by Jim Mars (1:01:54) - Interview with Michael Young on Global Politics (1:10:12) - Panama's Strategic Importance and Economic Challenges (1:21:33) - Military Capabilities and Global Conflicts (1:26:59) - UK's Military and Economic Vulnerabilities (1:33:17) - Europe's Military and Political Landscape (1:34:26) - Migration and Security Concerns (1:44:56) - Trump's Role and Potential Actions (1:59:56) - Globalist Agendas and Depopulation (2:18:23) - The Role of the United Nations and International Organizations (2:27:29) - The Future of Global Security and Migration (2:27:43) - The Impact of AI and Automation on Global Systems (2:28:49) - Israel and Genocide Allegations (2:30:56) - Historical Context and Bonds (2:35:05) - Geopolitical Struggles and Future Projections (2:37:13) - Jewish Communities and Future Migrations (2:40:50) - AI and Human Replacement (2:45:07) - Cultural and Technological Shifts (2:50:18) - Final Thoughts and Contact Information (2:56:03) For more updates, visit: http://www.brighteon.com/channel/hrreport NaturalNews videos would not be possible without you, as always we remain passionately dedicated to our mission of educating people all over the world on the subject of natural healing remedies and personal liberty (food freedom, medical freedom, the freedom of speech, etc.). Together, we're helping create a better world, with more honest food labeling, reduced chemical contamination, the avoidance of toxic heavy metals and vastly increased scientific transparency. ▶️ Every dollar you spend at the Health Ranger Store goes toward helping us achieve important science and content goals for humanity: https://www.healthrangerstore.com/ ▶️ Sign Up For Our Newsletter: https://www.naturalnews.com/Readerregistration.html ▶️ Brighteon: https://www.brighteon.com/channels/hrreport ▶️ Join Our Social Network: https://brighteon.social/@HealthRanger ▶️ Check In Stock Products at: https://PrepWithMike.com

Root of Conflict
Behavioral Science to Conflict Mitigation | Rebecca Wolfe

Root of Conflict

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2025 51:52


This episode features Professor Rebecca J. Wolfe, senior lecturer and Executive Director of International Policy & Development at the Harris School of Public Policy. Drawing on her extensive experience designing conflict prevention and violence reduction programs worldwide, Dr. Wolfe explores how behavioral science can be leveraged to mitigate conflict. She discusses the role of trusted authorities in shifting norms, the effectiveness of contact-based interventions in fostering peace, and the challenges of applying these strategies across different contexts. Tune in for an insightful conversation on the intersection of behavioral science and peacebuilding.  This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at www.thepearsoninstitute.org.  Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Isabella Nascimento, Clarice Tee Editing: Megha Viswanath Production: Isabella Nascimento 

Think Güd Thoughts

Are We Repeating History with Global Conflicts?Join our quick poll and share your perspective on whether today's global conflicts mirror historical patterns. Cast your vote now!

Behold Israel
MIDEAST UPDATE: GLOBAL CONFLICTS, GAZA CRISIS & BIBLICAL PROPHECY

Behold Israel

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2025 41:33


As the world watches unfolding events in Gaza, Lebanon, Syria, and beyond, this MidEast Update dives deep into the latest geopolitical shifts, military strategies, and biblical prophecies aligning with today's headlines. From the complexities of the hostage situation in Gaza to Israel's bold stance on Hamas and Hezbollah, get the most up-to-date analysis of the region. With the U.S. shifting policies under the Trump administration and escalating tensions worldwide, we explore how these developments impact Israel and the prophetic timeline. Stay informed, stay vigilant—history is unfolding before our eyes.Connect with us on social:Telegram: @beholdisraelchannelInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/amir.tsarfati/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/beholdisrael/X: https://x.com/beholdisraelYouTube: https://youtube.com/@beholdisrael

The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish
#217 Josh Wolfe: Human Advantage in the World of AI

The Knowledge Project with Shane Parrish

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2025 120:28


While Silicon Valley chases unicorns, Josh Wolfe hunts for something far more elusive: scientific breakthroughs that could change civilization. As co-founder and managing partner of Lux Capital, he's looking for the kind of science that turns impossible into inevitable. Josh doesn't just invest in the future—he sees it coming before almost anyone else.    In this conversation, we explore:  The rapid evolution of AI and potential bottlenecks slowing its growth  The geopolitical battle for technological dominance and rise of sovereign AI models  How advances in automation, robotics, and defence are shifting global power dynamics  Josh's unfiltered thoughts on Tesla and Elon Musk  AI's revolution of medical research  Parenting in a tech-dominated world  How AI is forcing us to rethink creativity, intellectual property, and human intelligence itself  Why the greatest risk isn't AI itself—but our ability to separate truth from noise    Despite the challenges ahead, Josh remains profoundly optimistic about human potential. He believes technology isn't replacing what makes us human—it's amplifying it. This episode will challenge how you think about innovation, risk, and the forces shaping our future. If you want to stay ahead of the curve, you can't afford to miss it.    Josh Wolfe co-founded Lux Capital to support scientists and entrepreneurs who pursue counter-conventional solutions to the most vexing puzzles of our time. He previously worked in investment banking at Salomon Smith Barney and in capital markets at Merrill Lynch. Josh is a columnist with Forbes and Editor for the Forbes/Wolfe Emerging Tech Report.  (00:00:00) Introduction (00:01:42) Interview with Josh Wolfe (00:02:46) Current Obsessions (00:05:11) AI and its Limitations (00:10:58) Memory Players in AI (00:13:27) Human Intelligence as a Limiting Factor (00:15:38) Disruption in Elite Professions (00:17:15) AI and Blue-Collar Jobs (00:18:29) Implications of AI in Coding (00:19:40) AI and Company Margins (00:25:48) AI in Pharma (00:26:44) AI in Entertainment (00:28:04) AI in Scientific Research (00:30:24) AI in Scientific Research (00:33:31) AI in Patent Creation (00:34:49) AI in Company Creation (00:35:33) Discussion on Tesla and Elon Musk (00:40:54) AI in Investment Decisions (00:42:20) AI in Analyzing Business Fundamentals (00:45:27) AI, Privacy, and Information Gods (00:53:04) AI and Art (00:56:43) AI and Human Connection (00:58:22) AI, Aging, and Memory (01:00:46) The Impact of Remote Work on Social Dynamics (01:03:18) The Role of Community and Belonging (01:05:44) The Pursuit of Longevity (01:11:58) The Importance of Family and Purpose (01:14:18) Information Processing and Workflow (01:23:00) AI and Personal Style (01:26:03) Investment in Military Technology (01:28:09) Global Conflict and Military Deterrence (01:31:28) Information Warfare (01:32:32) Infiltration and Weaponization of Systems (01:37:06) Infrastructure Maintenance and Growth (01:38:27) DOGE Initiative (01:40:09) Attracting Capital and Global Competitiveness (01:43:16) Attracting Talent and Immigration (01:45:42) Designing a System from Scratch (01:47:30) AI and Intellectual Property (01:51:56) The Fear of AI (01:53:57) Defining Success (01:55:38) Closing Remarks   Newsletter - The Brain Food newsletter delivers actionable insights and thoughtful ideas every Sunday. It takes 5 minutes to read, and it's completely free. Learn more and sign up at fs.blog/newsletter Upgrade — If you want to hear my thoughts and reflections at the end of the episode, join our membership: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠fs.blog/membership⁠⁠ and get your own private feed. Watch on YouTube: @tkppodcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Daybreak Africa  - Voice of America
UN: Increased military spending fueling global conflict - March 04, 2025

Daybreak Africa - Voice of America

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2025 3:26


The special representative of the U.N. secretary general on sexual violence in conflict says increases in military spending worldwide is leading to more conflicts in the world with conflicts in Sudan and the Democratic Republic of Congo some of the worst for women and children - needing billions of dollars. As Columbus Mavhunga reports, humanitarian organizations are looking for non-traditional funders such as Saudi Arabia to come in and ease the pain of those in conflict areas

The Overpopulation Podcast
Sally Armstrong | Global Conflict, Misogyny, and Resistance

The Overpopulation Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2025 55:00


Patriarchy and misogyny fuel global conflicts that further increase the oppression of women and girls. But the resistance of women and girls remains steadfast. Sally Armstrong, award-winning war correspondent, author, and human rights activist, joins us to share their stories. Highlights include:  How Sally broke the story about mass rape in the Balkan War in the 1990s that was ignored by male-dominated mainstream media; How patriarchy became established and why women's role in human history has been unrecorded and ignored;  Why cultural relativism can be an enemy of greater justice for girls and women; How misinterpretations of religious doctrine are used as justification for continued oppression of girls and women; How women and girls from Bosnia to Kenya to Afghanistan to Senegal continue to resist the injustice of patriarchy and misogyny in their daily lives. See episode website for show notes, links, and transcript:  https://www.populationbalance.org/podcast/sally-armstrong   OVERSHOOT | Shrink Toward Abundance OVERSHOOT tackles today's interlocked social and ecological crises driven by humanity's excessive population and consumption. The podcast explores needed narrative, behavioral, and system shifts for recreating human life in balance with all life on Earth. With expert guests from wide-ranging disciplines, we examine the forces underlying overshoot: from patriarchal pronatalism that is fueling overpopulation, to growth-biased economic systems that lead to consumerism and social injustice, to the dominant worldview of human supremacy that subjugates animals and nature. Our vision of shrinking toward abundance inspires us to seek pathways of transformation that go beyond technological fixes toward a new humanity that honors our interconnectedness with all beings.  Hosted by Nandita Bajaj and Alan Ware. Brought to you by Population Balance. Learn more at populationbalance.org Copyright 2025 Population Balance

360 One Firm (361Firm) - Interviews & Events
361Firm Briefing "End of Global Conflict or Start of Something Else?" - (Feb. 25, 2025)

360 One Firm (361Firm) - Interviews & Events

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2025 56:14


361Firm Briefing "End of Global Conflicts or Start of Something New?" (Feb25, 2025)SUMMARY KEYWORDSGlobal conflicts, economic uncertainty, UN resolution, Russia-Ukraine war, China-US rivalry, NATO modernization, Trump administration, defense spending, Middle East instability, South China Sea, energy independence, rare earth minerals, geopolitical instability, disruptive technologies, global governance.SPEAKERSStephen Burke, Andrew Fisch, Adam Blanco, Hamlet Yousef, Speaker 1, Mark Sanor, Maxwell Nee, Bill Deuchler, Speaker 2, Michael Hammer, Anthony GordonStephen Burke  00:00Which Putin thought went in quite quickly. It's been about 16 months since you had the attacks in Gaza on October 7 of 23 and you've had a little over a month since President Trump has returned to the and nothing's been the same since any of those days in the world yesterday, we had a good sense of that with the UN resolution, which basically said Russia didn't start the war in Ukraine. So I'm going to basically ask hamly to join to put some clarity into where the conflicts are going, and are we getting close to an end or the start of something new? Last week on our calls, unless nobody raised this question, and we had the view that this started something new Hamlet and I that we're not as close to the end as everyone would hope, certainly as close the end as President Trump was kind of indicating what's going on right now has created a highly elevated economic uncertainty, but also policy uncertainty around the world. This report is takes a look at newspaper mentions of uncertainty. It looks at shifts in government policy. And it looks at surveys of Professional Forecasters, and you can see the economic uncertainty today is higher than it was when the pandemic was going on, and significantly higher was than it was when Russia invaded Ukraine back in 2020, 2022, and what you can see here, this is a survey from an armed conflict survey, which actually looks at the human impact, and they define it by the number of fatalities due to violent events in a specific country, number of refugees originating in a select country, and the number of internally displaced people. So you can see the hardship that the conflicts around the world are extracting. But it's not just Ukraine and Gaza, it's many other places around the world, and that is actually stress and government abilities to deal with is in a spot where they're paddling 02:20free front Stephen Burke  02:22as we get here, I think this really comes down to a very simple fact that China has risen to a level that they are challenging the US for global leadership, and there's a conflict in how they resolve that shift. And I think we're also seeing the fact that United Nations, NATO and other post world war two institutions probably about live there, have outgrown what their original incentive was, and they need to be modernized to deal with a world that's very different than it was, not only post World War Two, but even 20 years ago, with China's rise and the rise of other nations as well. I think we've had a problem with bad leadership. I've talked about that in the past. It, to me, is one of the most scary issues we're facing is weak leaderships, making bad decisions that are short term oriented just about the next election cycle, and not dealing with the pain, the necessary pain that comes with making hard decisions, which has led to significant under investment in critical areas, then the last thing that led to what has us where we are today is really the Trump factor. And if you want to follow and understand what's ahead of us and what's going on right now. All you have to do is look at the 2024 Republican platform. And this is the play book that Trump follows. And whether you like him or hate him, one thing you should know about the Trump administration is he's going to try and do what he laid out in this platform, whether it's good policy or bad policy, in his mind, is good policy, and he's going to push forward with it. So even things that don't make sense, he's going to move forward with. He's also going to create a lot of conflicting statements that are going to be challenging for foreign leaders, for domestic CEOs, and for CEOs and business leaders around the world, and also for people investors trying to make strong investment decision. But understand these 20 points, because this is the play book that he is following right now. Global defense spending is on the rise, and we know that it's been carried over very heavily by the US, China and Russia, and purchasing power parity, you would see Russia and China spending over four $60 billion each last year. Europe combined spent a little less than a third of what the US has spent, and part of what the goal is is to get that increase accidentally. And ease some of the burden on the US, while a lot of people think it may be for them to redirect money to other areas, I think one of the challenges that the US has is there some modernization, rebuild, and to be able to be prepared for fighting on free front, where Russia is fighting on one right now in the Gaza, it's really Ukraine, and I'm sorry, Gaza, it's really Israel, and the US take on Iran and their proxies, and then you have what's going on in the South China Sea. The US cannot afford to fight China and three other than two other battles at once. And that's really what's weighing on the US, because number one on the US is mine, I believe is dealing with China, not dealing with Russia and the Middle East is more of a short term issue. The big longer term issue is the ascension of China, and how do we deal with that? But I think the other issue is because we're fighting in three fronts. Right now we're preparing to battle on three fronts. I think this quote from Finland foreign Prime Minister really is quite true. It's it's not reasonable right now for the US to be able to do this, whether it's not just financially, but practically, can we afford to do it? We don't have the military build up right now, and we've exhausted a lot of our military supplies being at work for most of the last 20 years. So European leaders are facing a very harsh reality right now. What you can see from this chart is defense spending as a proportion of GDP, and it shows how I balance it's been and those closes to the action either with migrants coming through or with being close supporters of Russia, or where the higher spend is, and the lower spend has been not coming through from the rest of Europe. And this is creating a big problem. As you can see, the demands for future spend are going to be much higher. They're talking about 3.7% or 5% and this is what additional spending would look like over the next decade. And this is coming at a time that most of these governments have massive demands from the domestic population that are go well beyond the defense spending that's going to help other parts of the world. But I think it was NATO had said the other day, if they don't get the 3.7% they better start learning Russia and Europe. I think that may be an extreme, but maybe not. This is a problem that chronic under investment has been going on for way too long, and the catch up is going to be the problem. And if we're doing better all along, this would be less of a burden, but it's coming at a particularly bad time, particularly moving up to the 4% level, and we don't have the benefits of free money that we had for the last 15 years. So we're in a tough spot in Europe. We're trying to figure out is, can trump force a settlement in on these people in different in different parts of the world? I'm skeptical of it. I don't think we're close to the end of a war. I mentioned that last week, but I asked Hamlet to join Hamlet, if you could just give a little bit of your background first, and then we'll jump into the Q and A, Hamlet Yousef  08:23yeah, that sounds good. Appreciate it. Looking forward to the conversation here so I could be there in person. My name is Hamlet. You said one of the managing partners at Iron Gate Capital Advisors. We're a defense tech focused venture fund. This thesis was built about six, seven years ago, when we thought that the world was going down a new direction, where the kind of the global war on terror was winding down. That's an issue that we're going to continue to have to deal with. But the near conflicts, or the issue that was going to face us, geo politically, was a re emergence of a second Cold War, or, if not, a much greater conflict. I think it was right after the Ukraine invasion. On one of the calls here with the folks at 360 I talked about how the world is going down, how the path of almost like a three act tragedy. Act one was going to be the invasion of Ukraine, and the destabilizing impact that was going to have in the region and globally. Act Two of this geo political tragedy was the emergence, or was going to be, the emergence, of a very belligerent Iran with a nuclear undertone, trying to destabilize the Middle East. And act three was the emergence that the kind of driving force behind this was a desire by xi and the Chinese Communist Party to become the only super power, not a super power, but the only super power, and supplant Western influence, job, which includes the US globally. Unfortunately, I think a lot of that has been happening just quick. Color again, on background. Prior to running Iron Gate, I had a long career in. In the federal government, in the national security, diplomacy and intelligence area. So this is an area that I've been pretty, pretty keen on and falling for a good chunk of my adult life. So I think Steven's earlier slide, or the opening slide, says very clearly I think this is the beginning of a much greater conflict. I do not think global peace is breaking out anytime in the near future. I think the three main hot wars, or the hot zones you see right now, Ukraine, the Israel, Gaza, Iran conflict, and the South China Sea and Southeast Asia. I think the tenor of those conflicts is going to change in the coming months and year. I think there is potentially, quote unquote, a a grand bargain that President Trump is going to try to strike to stabilize matters to a certain extent, but I think that's going to bring more of a kind of a calm before the eye of the storm, rather than ever lasting peace. So I'll start, I'll stop there. And then, Steve, I guess, let me know in what direction you want to take the Q, a Mark Sanor  11:06Can I ask a question. Steven, can you hear me? Yeah. Long day, Mark, did you see this veto coming and the and the the way the alignment is shifting with Trump and Putin. Hamlet Yousef  11:21Oh, the UN ve though, as far as negating the UN the resolution, yeah, no, I definitely do not see that coming. I think the one thing that is going to be probably very predictable for the next four years is unpredictability, loan or hate him. I think Trump style of governance and leadership is to completely upset the apple cart, create chaos and operate through it, whether that's through willful intent or just that's how he operates. So I'll leave that for another call. So I don't think anybody saw that coming. To be honest with Mark Sanor  11:58you, the questions from from others. Oh, Michael, you're you're on mute. Steve. Michael Hammer, sure, Michael Hammer  12:12more of a comment than a question. I mean, yesterday, I felt like I was in a bizarro world where the US voted with Russia and North Korea against allies of 80 years. This is crazy. So my comment on this is, and I've, I've been speaking with friends in Europe who are involved with government and the military, and some folks here in the States, everybody is in shock. And the sense that I get from the Europeans is we are going to see a schism between the US and Europe, and they're going to be going towards a war time economy. Most folks are denying it these days, but this is huge. And I think China is just sitting there, xi is just sitting there laughing at what's going on, because it all falls in their favor. And I'll stop with that. What do you think you said? That Speaker 1  13:24was actually a question I had. Do you think China wants any of these words to end as Trump Hamlet Yousef  13:32does? I honestly, I don't know. I don't know. I think, I think China benefits through continued destabilization. I think what China wants to do is, he wants to weaken all powers, so a prolongment of a conflict in Ukraine. Kind of help? Help helps. Help does that? It distracts the West and the US in Eastern Europe, and it continues to weaken Russia to a certain extent, which is, I think what G wants, I think Xi's ultimate goal is to expand his influence in southeast China and potentially in the Nepali step. So the weaker your adversaries become, the stronger you become. One dynamic to consider is a good chunk of the first Cold War. The West really try to keep the two communist powers apart in terms of China and Russia. What's happened over the last couple of years, obviously, is you have this formation of an access of authoritarianism between Xi Putin and the regime inside Iran. So almost the exact opposite is happening. But to me, I think this is where xi sees these nations as his quote, unquote, proxy allies in a longer term effort to destabilize the US and the West and to assert their dominance in the region. But I don't think that's going to end well for a whole host of reasons. I'm still, I think, very skeptical on how long. This, this g Putin romance remains, and I want to point to just a couple of anecdotal observations, kind of at the height of the explosion of the Ukraine war. This is going back to September 2023 Xi made a tour, I believe, throughout the the scans the former Soviet states and began courting these, these nations of which a large chunk of them are Asiatic in their in their ethnicity and makeup. I think this is an effort for him to pull those folks away from the Vlad and closer to his ring of influence, the Chinese have a very long memory, and I think they view things almost like you heard this before, in a centuries long optic, not an election cycle like we do in the West. I don't think they fully forgotten or or forgave what happened to them at the back end of the Opium Wars, and that was an effort that they blame squarely, obviously, on Europe. But in 1850 1860 when the war ended, out of Manchuria, better known as Siberia today, was annexed by the Russians away from China, and is now part of the Russian government, or Russia the entity. I don't think it's too far of a stretch to see to say that at some point, Xi doesn't want to look at the lands to his north that are grossly under populated, grossly under defended, and rich of natural resources as an area that he can eventually march into. So he hear the quote that I think McCain, Senator McCain first coined, that Russia is not nothing out of the big gas station for China. I think there's some truth and merit in there. So if this conflict continues, and I think it's going to China actually benefits, now, I do think there's a greater, an increasing probability that we have some sort of a grand bargain or an agreement between Putin in the west and potentially China, where you'll see a near term cease of the firing and the fighting in Ukraine. But that's that doesn't mean global peace is breaking out and the conflict is over. If anything, I think what you see happening is, if that does happen, Ukraine is not ready to give up that land. Russia is not going to retreat and give back Eastern Don Boston in Crimea. So I think what you have is potentially a formation of almost like an East Germany, West Germany that we had at the end of the Second World War. From there, we had a decades long Cold War where both sides are starting to destabilize the other. So if you play this out and Putin does get to hold on to the lands that he sold Eastern in eastern Ukraine, I think he then spends the next decade trying to destabilize Odessa, trying to destabilize Kyiv, trying to put his own proxy, or his own person in charge, and then continue with that Western influence that he wants, in terms of reforming, reconstructing that western border. He's doing the same thing in the caucuses. So that, I think, changes the 10 of the conflicts. It may end the near term direct conflict in Ukraine, but I don't think by any means that's going to be the beginning of the 18:17end. Andrew fish, do you want to ask your question? Andrew Fisch  18:20Yeah, Hamlet, you're involved, obviously, in military acquisition technology, the push for getting Europe to spend more, you know, still kind of a slow, slow move, but, but one of the issues is spending it on what? So I'm just going to give you, like, an analogy, and then what you answer the question. So if you take Poland, Poland has ramped up their military acquisition, and they're not worried where it comes from. They're buying Korean tanks, they're buying American weapons, they're buying anything and get their hands on, I think Jack, I think even Japanese jets, whatever. The point is, they're doing it quickly. The other nations upping their expenditure. They didn't spend any money for so long, their military industrial infrastructure. And you comment on this is not ready to ramp up and and they don't want to just buy American so how much would they have to spend to do a Poland like catch up? And is that even possible? Hamlet Yousef  19:32Yeah, great question. Look, I think, I think you're starting to see the awakening of this defense tech initiative throughout Europe. It's something that I think shock the system in 2016 to 2020 under Trump's first term. I think the explosion of the conflicts on Europe's eastern flank is sending shock waves throughout the continent. You are starting to see all the countries. Us, for the most part, wake up and start allocating more and more dollars. I think there's a bit of a variance in terms of what that percentage of GDP needs to look like, is going up and exponentially for it was 456, years ago. But this is also something that the US wasn't necessarily all that worried about when we first started our fun thes just six, seven years ago, defense tech and defense investing was this kind of back water thesis that nobody cared about. It's all the rage right now here, inside the US, there's, every time you turn around, there's another venture fund or growth equity fund or a private capital source that has Defense Innovation dual use defense tech as part of their thesis. So it is becoming a key area of focus and spend for us here in the US. Well, you seen that same thing start happening in Europe over the last several years, where more and more countries are shifting focus on on the need to drive innovation and technology and and spend in their defense sector. Now, in terms of dollars. You gotta understand the economics of warfare have changed, and this is a thing so the people have not fully grasped and understood. What I mean by that is the wars of having to march columns of tanks and airplanes and ships into a theater to win. That's that's changing, if not, fully ended. And I think the world is starting to realize what does disrupt the technologies mean, and how is that reshaping the battlefield. So examples here, if you look at what happened at the at the beginning of the Ukraine war, you had a column of of arms and in tanks and in armored vehicles that was marching on Kyiv, and this is where everyone thought the key was going to fall within 40 hours and and the war is over, you had a couple billion or billion dollars of armament those, those heading down for Kyiv, and he had a handful of Ukrainian special forces bouncing around on ATVs drones and some explosive ordinances, couple million dollars worth of overhead and cost, and that was able to nullify billions of dollars worth of armaments. Look at what happens in or what's happening right now, in, in, in the Red Sea, you have the Houthis, who have no real economic base, and they're launching hundreds of in expensive drones towards global shipping, and they're shutting down global shipping to a certain extent, in that part of the country or in that part of the world, and they're spending a couple million dollars in the US. In return is deploying a couple of billion dollars worth of ships and airplanes and rockets and knock down a couple pieces of flying lawn mowers, is what it seems like. So that's not sustainable. Look what happened in Ukraine. About six months ago, you had a handful of Ukrainians with a couple million dollars of modified jet skis with explosives put onto them in a remote control device, literally sink and nullify half of the Russian fleet in the Black Sea. So the economics of war are changing, and I think we're starting to grasp and understand what that means to control a battlefield in a conventional war. Two of the things you need to do is you need to control the skies, and ideally, you need to be able to control the seas. In order to do that, you need to field trillions of dollars, or deploy trillions of dollars to create and manage a comprehensive Air Force and a navy. But with where things are going in terms of drone warfare and the collapsing cost of drones, you're starting to get to the point now where nation states that traditionally could not field an Air Force or a Navy are able to basically replicate and recreate that same kind of effect for pennies on the dollar. So I wouldn't necessarily focus as much on on the spend in terms of percentage of GDP and how big that war chest needs to be, because you get to understand the technology and the tools and the platforms that are going to be needed to reshape and kind of win this, this concept of the 21st century is changing because the economics of war, sharing of warfare, completely changed. 24:13Bill, the other question, Bill Deuchler  24:16here we go. Yeah. I was wondering if Hamlet, in particular, if, if you saw the interview with Marco Rubio and Cathryn herring, I think it was just the other day, it was on, I saw it rep posted on The Rubin Report that That, to me, was quite interesting. It seemed almost like not even real politic, but like real economic in terms of that's those are the terms of the deal that we're trying to push through, and at the same time, get peace between Ukraine and Russia. And any thoughts on that one? Well, Speaker 2  24:57I missed that interview or the specific term. They discuss, what so the the top levels that he discussed, yeah, Bill Deuchler  25:03it was, it was fascinating because it really centers pretty much all around the rare earths opportunity and negotiations. Essentially, the way that it boiled down for me is that if, if Ukraine is willing or to to give us a piece of that pie. We will come in, you know, with the full weight of everything that we have, and sort of demand a piece. But the price of that is, is absolutely an economic interest in their rare earth production. Hamlet Yousef  25:39Yeah, like, I mean, there isn't a single piece of modern technology that functions without some some critical minerals or rare earths in China for a better part of 20 plus years, has been slowly trying to monopolize that segment, in that sector. So it would make sense for us to say, Listen, if we come in and kind of help help moderate or help bring about peace, one of the things we want to return is access to those critical materials and minerals. So to strike that kind of a bargain, to me, doesn't, doesn't, doesn't. To me, seen out of the ordinary. But just think about it though. Let's just kind of play this out. If there is a grand bargain and there is, quote, unquote peace between Ukraine and Russia. In return, we get access to we the US and the West get access to rares and critical materials and minerals that basically make our function, or make our society function, not to mention play a key part in basically every piece of modern defense like that's out there. That's a good thing from a stabilization standpoint. But again, it does not mean the conflict is over. I don't think that that Xi broke up one day and decided up to upset the apple car. I don't think Putin woke up one day and decided to mark March westward and kind of light Eastern Europe on fire. I think both of these guys, to a certain extent, have been operating off the same sheet of music, which is expanding their influence in the region and replacing, not counter balancing, but replacing western US influence. So just because there is a cessation of or ceasing in the conflict, direct conflict of shooting each other in eastern Ukraine, I think the 10 minutes that conflict do not go away. That's why I think we are kind of in the beginnings of a much greater conflict. The difference is going to be, it's going to it's going to turn from being a a war where people are shooting each other to a more cognitive warfare campaign, more than a regular warfare campaign, which is exactly what we had in the Cold War. The role that technology is going to play in this is, I think, disruptive technologies. When you're talking about artificial intelligence, unmanned systems, counter, drone technologies, drone platforms, swarms, quantum cyber security, space based platforms and communications network all this, to me, is analogous to what nuclear was in the first Cold War. The West and Russia got to a point of detent because there was this massive arms race around nuclear, and each side began to realize that this thing ever went to war, nobody wins, because the Arsenal on both ends is so debilitating that conflict was not an issue. Conflict was not a solution. And I think what's going to happen now, where we're going right now is we're going through that same kind of disruptive, technology driven arms race, where it is going to be a foundation, where detent is going to be the focal area, where, okay, the US and the West is such an incredible arsenal of autonomous and robotics and swarms, as does Russia, as us as does China, then conflict is not an issue. So if that's the case, then I think what you need, you need to understand you have the foundations for each very sound, strong economic base. Because if you have a foundation for a strong sound economic base, you have a strong foundation for political base. If you have that, then you have a nation. You don't have those two, then you think you see the potential for an erosion of a nation to be able to function. And that's kind of what happened with the Soviet Union, is, is we did not get into a physical conflict. We prolong the cognitive warfare long enough to allow the constructive powers of Western democracy and Western society to prevail, and to allow for the corrosive powers and authoritarian regime, or communism, in this case, to collapse. And I think we're gonna see that same exact thing play out over the next 20 years, Bill Deuchler  29:34if I could follow up just real quick on a point, on a whole bunch of points that you made. You think that that the economics and the political points that you've brought up are driving us and or making it easier to become much more of a multi polar world, as opposed to a unipolar world, which is pretty much what we have now. Yeah. Hamlet Yousef  30:00Good question, if, like, if I became for the day, I think the future of global society is, is almost like an expansion of the original American model, where you have a network of independent states that have agency and authority to do to whatever they want at the local level, and they're working under a set of ground rules that basically puts us in the same sheet of music. That's what the foundation the US was supposed to be. And that's, I think, where we were heading for a good part of our history. And I think over the last probably couple election cycles, we're starting to VA slate of whether we want to go to a form of governance and government that is based on strong, centralized authority, or do we want to revert back to what we were, which is a bunch of Independent States? I think if you look at what's going to happen globally, I think globally, we're facing that same kind of decision, whether it's Europe or Asia. Countries are starting to have to decide what kind of future do they want? Do they want to have a future of independent agency and autonomy, or do they want to be under a bit of a centralized state authority? And this is where I think it comes back into play, which is what the CCP wants, and is desires is they want to be the leader of a movement or an effort where you have a couple of strong centralized states or entities that help drive global governance and all kind of report back into a central authority, or, in this case, Beijing, where I think the opposite is, what, where I would hope, and I would think the West wants to go to, is we can all be a bunch of independent nation states. Nationalism is perfectly okay. We're all going to operate off the same sheet of music. There's going to be some bit of of basic ground rules and norms. We're going to intertwine our economies and our societies to to extent that there's going to be a greater bit of self, a great bit of of a reliance upon each other, where conflict is not an issue, or conflict is not an option. So, and I use that to kind of articulate what it means here in the US. 2020 to 2020 24 is all the rage. All we're getting to a set and we get we're going down a path of civil war. No, we're not. Because, I mean, if you, if you, if you Canvas this room, if you Canvas any room in the US, depending on the part of the world you're on, anywhere from 5050, 6047, 30 people are on one side of the political aisle or the aisle. We may agree and disagree with a great ton of vitriol, but our society as a country, I think, so well intertwined that we're going to find our way to sort our issues out and resolve it and not get into conflict. My hope and my desire is to see the same thing happen globally, where you don't have a central authority that's dictating governance and dictating authority and rule, you have a bunch of independent nation states highly nationalistic doing whatever they want, as long as it doesn't encro on your neighbors, as long as it doesn't come at a level of conflict to get there, I think would require for us to to a certain extent, begin to intertwine our economies, inter society and culture, where there is going to be a reliance on each other, but without authority. Hopefully, that makes sense. Yeah, 33:14no. Thank you. This Mark Sanor  33:17is fascinating. Wait, Bill, I like the art behind you. Three years ago, two days, our community gathered every single day, 7:30am because we came to Ukraine, Ukraine, I'm wondering, because we're just trying to also that was more of like help. I feel like we're adding a moment where a weekly meeting isn't good enough. This is so happening very fast. If you were to form a panel with diverse opinions, I'd like you to think about who would you invite to this next discussion? Definitely on Tuesday, we should be almost meeting twice a week. Steve is like going to prepare for No, no. I mean, we do this anyways, but I feel like we're this is happening very quick. Now you've got the 24 point playbook. We should just read that play book 20 points. But I feel like you're a great resource. I'd like to bring some others to the table in a 360 like style. And I know as a few people, they didn't want to be on record today, that's an issue, so maybe some private gatherings. But we're all here today to figure out how to we all agree on tech transformation, yeah, but geo political context, where do you do that? And but bigger picture, just like mechanically, of how our community should be? Nothing in Hamlet Yousef  35:02each other like I've been I've been tapped to speak to a couple of other groups like this, where it's a syndicate of thought leaders, business leaders and community leaders that began very US centric, but things very quickly morph into an international network of of vested capitalist Michael, better word, I think it's important for us to continue that conversation. I'll go on the record here in terms of my politics. I do not believe in a strong, centralized government. I think government is something that we elect to help kind of manage this enterprise. But I think society should be run in a bit of an open architecture, where industrialist, investors, people of influence, capitalists, are working together to create an open market of free and fair competition, and kind of let the let the winners go from there. So the more engagement, the more dialog we have with stakeholders in the US, but obviously in Europe, Africa, Latin America and Asia. I think it's critical, because I wanted to make sure that this concept of We the People, which was the foundation of the US system, is something we export to the world. It's we, the people mindset of we're going to take agency and authority and control over our future and try to create a network of intertwined business, personal and social relationships that allow us all to benefit. If there's conflict, we'll sort our shit out. But sorting that out won't happen through direct conflict of warfare. It won't happen through through engagement and dialog. 36:45We haven't touched on the Middle East. 36:49Yeah, so look the Middle Hamlet Yousef  36:52East. The Middle East is an issue China, China and Russia, to me, represent some significant strategic challenges that we need to we need to fix full bias. I was born in Iran, came here to the US, and I lived through the Iranian revolution. So my comments here are 100% bias against the Iranian regime. I abhor them, but I also view the regime inside Iran as the single most grave threat near term to political, geo political stability and peace in the world, primarily because you have a regime right now that's being run by a very narrow group of people who not only view and want to run it as a theocratic state, but their specific SEC of ideology in Shia, Islam believes in the the ascendancy of the hidden Imam, or the return of the hidden Imam that happens on the region When the region is is under complete turmoil and chaos. That's not who you want to have becoming nuclear power. And I think the failure of the West over the last 20 years is a failure to understand that it is that is who is in charge of Iran. That's not who you want in charge of Iran when the country becomes a nuclear state. On the positive side. I think the Middle East, more than ever, is on the precipice of a significant Renaissance, Geo, politically and economically. I think if you look at the the Arabs, if you look at the folks inside Iran, not represented by the government, you look at Turkey, Israel, demographics are in their favor, and I think you have the potential for massive growth in the region. The issue there, obviously, is the Iran piece, and it's going to be interesting to see what happens over the next, next couple months. I think, no doubt, Trump did not agree with the the Obama approach to Iran, which was, I want to get his assets also recall. But I think he obviously put a max pressure campaign on Iran in 2016 and 2020 I would not be surprised to see obviously a return of that. Because I do think if you look at the regime inside Iran is it is on very thin ice, and actually it's very similar to Putin and Xi. All three are authoritarian regimes that don't have a thick foundation of stability below them, but with Iran, if you do get regime change inside Iran, you're not going to get exactly what we want. You might get more of a Russia style cryptocracy or oligopoly that's going to run the country. But what you do, and what you should get, hopefully, is a removal of of the shia sect that has almost like an End Times view of the world. Now you're stuck with a regime that is not, maybe not ideal when it comes. Of human rights, but is one. It's not hell bent on light in the Middle East on fire. That's the issue I think we're facing near term here with Iran. Speaker 1  40:11And can we shift gears to the South China Sea and your thoughts on where we are there? And what does it mean, given how the US spread sales and fighting these multiple conflict phase, these things resolving themselves over in South China Sea and Taiwan, Hamlet Yousef  40:31yeah. Well, depending who you listen to, the South China Sea is going to turn into a hot war as early as 2025 2026, 2030 the list is pretty wide in terms of where the one of the speculation is going to be. The one thing that gives me a little bit of hope is, is China and generally, is not a a country that likes to fight directly. Their view, I think, is more indirect. So, yes, there's a threat of them, one day, waking up tomorrow, invading Taiwan. It's a real, real threat that we need to be obviously concerned with. But I think one of the things that they've seen, and this has been a lesson learned for Xi, and it's probably why he wanted Putin to go first in terms of a in nation state land grab, is he wanted to see what global cancel culture was going to look like on a geopolitical stage. And he saw that, but he also saw is it's not easy to conquer another country, and this is a flat terrain where you got a bunch of embeds within eastern Ukraine to help you win that war. And Russia has had a pain, and there a lot of difficulty in doing that. Taiwan has been getting ready for this for decades, and it's a it's an island. So invading an island is a lot more difficult than invading a sovereign piece of territory that's flat. So I think what China is probably going to try to do is much more of a longer term campaign in terms of what they've done with Hong Kong, which is the slow as fixation of trying to bring the Taiwanese into their fold. So do I think the South China Sea is going to go hot. God, I hope not do. I think you have a potential for hot conflicts, whether it's with the Philippines or other, other, other, other fires. And the reason, I think that's that's a real concern, the dynamic that would change that, though, is if you have a rapid decline or ascension of challenge to xi, because xi is the Communist Party, is no longer what rules China. I think what Xi has done over the last several years is very quickly consolidate power. This is no longer a country that's run by a single party. It's a country that's run by a single individual. At some point, xi is going to have to deal with some part truths driven by collapsing demographics or collapsing real estate sector, migration of jobs out of China, and real pressures on their economic foundation. At some point, 1.3 billion Chinese people are going to wake up and realize that, though they were on the path to being part of the global economy in a in a major power house, they're facing some significant issues that have been mismanaged by one person in that g1, point 3 billion people. If you look at the Communist Party and the folks that are around g keep it in power. Estimate is estimate. Estimates range anywhere from a couple million to 20 to 30 million people. 30 million people. So if things get really bad at home, that's when I think you have a risk of xi doing something stupid, which is going after the South China Sea. In terms of the conflict, I think there's probably a greater chance that Xi actually marches north and starts constituting land back in his favor in Siberia than he does heading inside into the South China Sea. Hope I'm right on that one, but we'll see. Speaker 1  43:47So we have, we have a hard stop Mark told me at nine. So going to rapid fire some questions. So short questions and a quick answer. So Adam first. Michael, up. Adam Blanco  44:05Thank you. Steven Hamlet, always a pleasure listening to you always while reading your stuff, too. Thank you. My question to you is your thoughts on the negotiations with Putin Trump has literally given away a number of negotiating chips, such as having the discussions with Putin, giving him status as as legitimate leader, inviting him to the g7 How do you explain that? Can you do you have insight on Hamlet Yousef  44:43that? I do not. I'm not going to begin to try to figure out how Trump operates. Like I said, I think if you look at his style, to a certain extent, He probably likes to operate in a world of chaos, doing the unconventional. That's That's who he is. He's not. A refined political savan who's been a political operator for decades. He is what he is. He is a shrewd, hard, charging negotiator who cut his teeth in probably the most brutal fight there is, which is New York real estate. I think he's bringing, he's bringing his style and his 10 minutes to that if I was president, is that the approach I would take? Probably not. I'd probably take a different approach. But he's the guy who's in charge right now, and this is the the style he's taken. And I think to a certain extent, it's, it's, it's, it's unconventional, to put it mildly, is it going to work? Look, obviously, he's betting it is in that kind of a style, though, if you do like to operate through chaos and uncertainty, you can't look at every action and judge it in a vacuum. You got to understand that this is one movement many. So I would think, in his mind, this is a way of getting to some sort of near term physical piece, while allowing us to work on a much greater, grander piece, which is hopefully the removal of these authoritarian misfits in xi, in Putin and in the regime that's inside Iran. And this is, I think, the beginning steps of it. What that means, going back to Stephen's earlier slide, is geopolitical instability, I think, is just beginning. It's not ending anytime soon. Yeah, 46:25I would agree with that. Maxwell Nee  46:29Max, yes. Hi everyone. Max will here from Singapore, really appreciate this earlier call. So you know, feels like Hamlet we've been in, you know, conflicts. I don't know ping pong for just forever, but I remember distinctly there was a period where this sort of stuff just wasn't happening over and over and over again. So I guess my question is like, what do you think you would take for all of this conflict, ping pong, to start to dissipate, and for the war to get back to what some of us might remember 10 years ago? You're Hamlet Yousef  47:15not going to like the answer, more conflict. And I don't more conflict in terms of more war, but I think a conflict in ideology. We're not going back to where we came from, if anything. I think within with the last couple years and the next couple of years represents is basically the end of the world war two era as we've known it. I think world is the world is about to change as we know it, between 1890 and 1950 the world changed. You had the rise and fall as you had, I'm sure. You had the fall the British Empire. You had the rise of the US, the US as a superpower. You had a complete balkanization and factoring of the Middle East and Eastern Europe. You had two world wars. You had a pandemic and you had a global market crash. The world went from the horse and buggy and oil power to lamp to the nuclear age and landing on the moon. All that happened in 60 years. Disruptive technologies were, I think, a key driver that had significant impact on geo politics and global governance. We're going through that same kind of innovation cycle and change right now, but it's not going to take 60 years for this to sort itself out. I think it's going to take probably the next 10 years, which means massive, massive, massive, massive amounts of geo political instability and uncertainty and change. I think we can come through this, but I think it's imperative for private capital and leaders within industry to be attached to hit so we can navigate this as allocators and as investors. If you do the kind of a long term buy and hold approach that had worked in in the prior 67 years, you're not going to do well if you're plugged in and if you're informed, and you're trying to develop information edge and advantage, and you can allocate in a very, very nimble, focused fashion, I think there's an opportunity for significant wealth creation in The next 10 minutes. Thank you. We're 49:22going to, we have to 49:26Anthony Oh, one part question, only one question. Anthony Gordon  49:35Oh, yeah. Well, first, there is no one question, because, as we know, it's extra inextricably linked, content, impetus wise, etc, so I'll ask it, and then just cut me off, etc. So basically, and forgive me if I didn't hear my memory short, I didn't hear talk about energy independence, us. And so I would say that there is a forward during the course of time that you. But you know you described. And so the question is, if I'm correct, does some form of us, energy independence, create a change into this forward mantra Trump as a headline is less or no war, right? And so what does that actually mean? And then how the fact that China has put down its roots into the rare earth minerals in Africa. And then how does that feed from that north up into the south? And then lastly, in that regard, Europe, which is part of the impetus for this, from whether it's Mid East or the gas prom cut off. How does that now play into it. I'm just trying to create these tangible things. Means. And then the other thing I didn't hear is that what I would say is not necessarily a 70 style resurgence, but there is clearly a lot of disruption. 50:58Alright, I love you. I will answer that. I'm Hamlet Yousef  51:04reading lip sir, I think no, but great, great, multi part question. I think it actually answered back and tie a lot of these pieces together. First of all, I think China has some significant issues. I think what China has done over the last 20 years through their Belt and Road Initiative is they put out a lot of money and influence throughout the world to basically to colonize is exactly what they've done, physically and financially. They're taking over nations and resources. That's no different than being a predatory pay day loan provider. And I think what's starting to happen in the Global South and Latin America, particularly as well as Africa, I think you have nations are starting to wake up and read the finer details of the loan docs that they signed and realize that they're royally screwed. But what's starting to happen is, I think you're starting to see and I think you will see more of these nations begin to default and basically tell China to go pound sand. That opens up the opportunity for Western capital, both European and US, to come in and start partnering with local families, local industrials in the global south who want to rebuild and reshape their country and want to bring in that Western style capital. The issue there with China is, if all these countries begin to default, that is going to significantly accelerate the pressures that xi is going to have at home, which, going back to, I said earlier, could be a trigger for Xi becoming more desperate, more violent, if he faces him in a collapse at home. In terms of energy independence in the US, I think, under the under the current administration, and hopefully going forward, energy independence is gonna be a key foundation for the US. I am pretty bearish in terms of geo political instability in the near term, the next 1015, years. I think as a society, we can come out of this, but we gotta sort our own stuff out. If I look at near shore or kind of what's happening in the Western Hemisphere, I think there's a real opportunity for the creation of a super economic base or a super power in close collaboration between Canada, the US and Mexico, and I think eventually that movement can move out throughout the Americas. I don't say I don't care about what's happening, what's happening the rest of the world, or Europe or Asia. I do, but I think there's a real opportunity for there to be almost a bit of self reliance, at least in North America, if not throughout throughout South America. On the European front, I think Europe is going to have to go through their own kind of growing pains here. I think the European model of creating the EU and the EC thing worked on paper. I think it failed in execution. I think they're going to have some some serious issues. Again, they're going to sort through, not only economic but also geo political ly and from a demographic standpoint. So I think Europe is, I think they're probably entering, entering their quote, unquote lost decade, where they're going to have to find a way to soul search and fear or figure out what their form of of self self reliance and self governance is going to be, and what scares the shit out of them is you have a belligerent bear on the Eastern Front that wants to march westward. So Germany, I think, is is deflated. And I think who comes out very strong in this process is, is, I think Poland. I think Poland now is probably positioned to become one of the de facto leaders in Europe, because they're massively spending on their own self reliance and autonomy and defense, and they view themselves as kind of the guardians or the plug that's initially going to prevent that western expansion by by Putin. I think that that address all the questions you had or points you brought up. Stephen Burke  54:47Michael, I'm sorry at the nine o'clock mark, so next week, please, and Hamlet, thanks very much. Any closing thoughts for you, Hamlet, Hamlet Yousef  54:59I'm near term. Near term bearish, long term bullish. And I think the future is in our hands as leaders in capital industry. I think we need to work together and create this, this network of inter reliance of capital. I think the future is very bright. I think the amount of innovation that's going to happen is going to reach reshape the way we live our lives. As a technology investor, I just hope that we continue to invest in technology that liberates and integrates and does not give authority and power to the central agency or central authority to control us, because that's what you have in China, but the future is in our hands at this point. Speaker 1  55:38Thank you very much. Great, great session, and we appreciate your providing the insight. Steve, thank you everyone. Speaker 2  55:47Thanks for the opportunity. We'll see bye you shortly. 56:02Simon, you on your way. Still live. 56:12Very good. You. You can subscribe to various 361 events and content at https://361firm.com/subs. For reference: Web: www.361firm.com/homeOnboard as Investor: https://361.pub/shortdiagOnboard Deals 361: www.361firm.com/onbOnboard as Banker: www.361firm.com/bankersEvents: www.361firm.com/eventsContent: www.youtube.com/361firmWeekly Digests: www.361firm.com/digest

Mornings with Carmen
God's Word going into Ukrainian public schools - Dirk Smith | Churches shining God's light on both sides of a global conflict - Joakim Lundqvist

Mornings with Carmen

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 48:56


Dirk Smith of EEM (formerly Eastern European Mission) talks about transformation as God's word going forth in places, including in public schools in Ukraine.  Pastor Joakim Lundqvist, author of "Shine Your Light," talks about what it's like for churches both in Russia and Ukraine three years into the war between the two nations and how they are seeking to love well in midst of it.  Faith Radio podcasts are made possible by your support. Give now: Click here

The Mentors Radio Show
413. Vice President Dan Quayle, Chairman of Cerberus Global Investments, on the Impact of Global Conflicts on American Daily Life, with Host Dan Hesse

The Mentors Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2025 42:47


In today's episode of THE MENTORS RADIO, Host Dan Hesse talks with former U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle, Chairman of Cerberus Global Investments and a member of the Firm's senior leadership team. Prior to joining Cerberus in 1999, he served as the 44th Vice President of the United States of America to President George H. W. Bush from 1989 through 1993. In 1976, Vice President Quayle was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives and re-elected in 1978. In 1980, he was elected to the U.S. Senate and was the youngest Senator from Indiana. He was re-elected to the U.S. Senate in 1986. Following his vice presidency, former Vice President Quayle authored three books, including Standing Firm: A Vice-Presidential Memoir, which was on The New York Times' Best Seller List for 15 weeks. He was a distinguished visiting professor at Arizona State University's Thunderbird School of Global Management for two years. He was also active for many years on the lecture circuit in the United States and internationally. He has served on numerous boards of directors for both private and public entities as well as charities. Former Vice President Quayle graduated from DePauw University and the Indiana University School of Law (Indianapolis). LISTEN TO the radio broadcast live on iHeart Radio, or to “THE MENTORS RADIO” podcast any time, anywhere, on any podcast platform – subscribe here and don't miss an episode! SHOW NOTES: VP DAN QUAYLE: BIO: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dan_Quayle BOOKS: Standing Firm: Dan Quayle, by Dan Quayle The American Family: Discovering the Values That Make Us Strong, by Dan Quayle and Diane Medved, Ph.D. Worth Fighting For, by Dan Quayle MORE: https://www.bakerinstitute.org/event/beyond-ballot-conversation-dan-quayle 

Crazy Wisdom
Episode #435: How AI, Drones, and Rare Earths Will Decide the Next Global Conflict

Crazy Wisdom

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2025 59:14


On this episode of Crazy Wisdom, host Stewart Alsop talks with Troy Johnson, founder and partner at Resource Development Group, LLC, about the deep history and modern implications of mining. From the earliest days of salt extraction to the role of rare earth metals in global geopolitics, the conversation covers how mining has shaped technology, warfare, and supply chains. They discuss the strategic importance of minerals like gallium and germanium, the rise of drone warfare, and the ongoing battle for resource dominance between China and the West. Listeners can find more about Troy's work at resourcedevgroup.com (www.resourcedevgroup.com) and connect with him on LinkedIn via the Resource Development Group page.Check out this GPT we trained on the conversation!Timestamps00:00 Introduction to the Crazy Wisdom Podcast00:17 The Origins of Mining00:28 Early Uses of Mined Materials03:29 The Evolution of Mining Techniques07:56 Mining in the Industrial Revolution09:05 Modern Mining and Strategic Metals12:25 The Role of AI in Modern Warfare24:36 Decentralization in Warfare and Governance30:51 AI's Unpredictable Moves in Go32:26 The Shift in Media Trust33:40 The Rise of Podcasts35:47 Mining Industry Innovations39:32 Geopolitical Impacts on Mining40:22 The Importance of Supply Chains44:37 Challenges in Rare Earth Processing51:26 Ensuring a Bulletproof Supply Chain57:23 Conclusion and Contact InformationKey InsightsMining is as old as civilization itself – Long before the Bronze Age, humans were mining essential materials like salt and ochre, driven by basic survival needs. Over time, mining evolved from a necessity for tools and pigments to a strategic industry powering economies and military advancements. This deep historical perspective highlights how mining has always been a fundamental pillar of technological and societal progress.The geopolitical importance of critical minerals – Modern warfare and advanced technology rely heavily on strategic metals like gallium, germanium, and antimony. These elements are essential for electronic warfare, radar systems, night vision devices, and missile guidance. The Chinese government, recognizing this decades ago, secured global mining and processing dominance, putting Western nations in a vulnerable position as they scramble to reestablish domestic supply chains.The rise of drone warfare and EMP defense systems – Military strategy is shifting toward drone swarms, where thousands of small, cheap, AI-powered drones can overwhelm traditional defense systems. This has led to the development of countermeasures like EMP-based defense systems, including the Leonidas program, which uses gallium nitride to disable enemy electronics. This new battlefield dynamic underscores the urgent need for securing critical mineral supplies to maintain technological superiority.China's long-term strategy in resource dominance – Unlike Western nations, where election cycles dictate short-term decision-making, China has played the long game in securing mineral resources. Through initiatives like the Belt and Road, they have locked down raw materials while perfecting the refining process, making them indispensable to global supply chains. Their recent export bans on gallium and germanium show how resource control can be weaponized for geopolitical leverage.Ethical mining and the future of clean extraction – Mining has long been associated with environmental destruction and poor labor conditions, but advances in technology and corporate responsibility are changing that. Major mining companies are now prioritizing ethical sourcing, reducing emissions, and improving worker safety. Blockchain-based tracking systems are also helping verify supply chain integrity, ensuring that materials come from environmentally and socially responsible sources.The vulnerability of supply chains and the need for resilience – The West's reliance on outsourced mineral processing has created significant weaknesses in national security. A disruption—whether through trade restrictions, political instability, or sabotage—can cripple industries dependent on rare materials. A key takeaway is the need for a “bulletproof supply chain,” where critical materials are sourced, processed, and manufactured within allied nations to mitigate risk.AI, decentralization, and the next era of industrial warfare – As AI becomes more embedded in military decision-making and logistics, the balance between centralization and decentralization is being redefined. AI-driven drones, automated mining, and predictive supply chain management are reshaping how nations prepare for conflict. However, this also introduces risks, as AI operates within unpredictable “black boxes,” potentially leading to unintended consequences in warfare and resource management.

The Marc Cox Morning Show
Tax Reform, Global Conflict, Fiscal Responsibility, and a Special Announcement (Hour 3)

The Marc Cox Morning Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 14, 2025 33:17


In the 3rd hour of the Marc Cox Morning Show, Six Missouri Republican senators are pushing a proposal to replace income taxes with sales taxes on services. Jim Carafano from the Heritage Foundation joins the show to discuss the latest developments in the Ukraine-Russia conflict, focusing on President Trump's approach to peace talks and his influence on European defense contributions. Carafano highlights how Trump's strategic foresight positions him as a global chess player. Later, on Capital Beat, Rep. Eric Burleson dives into the ongoing battle in Washington over government spending and fiscal responsibility, comparing Congress to addicts reliant on taxpayers' money. Burleson passionately defends the need for cuts and discusses a recent subcommittee hearing, where common-sense solutions like identity verification for welfare programs were met with fierce opposition. He sheds light on the political infighting within the Democratic Party and the importance of addressing the national debt. Burleson also discusses the issue of Social Security fraud and the role of RFK Jr. at HHS. Lastly, a very special Kim on a Whim segment follows. #MarcCoxMorningShow #TaxReform #JimCarafano #UkraineRussiaConflict #PeaceTalks #EricBurleson #CapitalBeat #GovernmentSpending #FiscalResponsibility #SocialSecurityFraud #Trump #RFKJR #KimOnAWhim #MissouriPolitics #HeritageFoundation

Root of Conflict
Paths to Reconciliation | Sergio Jaramillo Caro

Root of Conflict

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2025 52:08


This episode explores strategies for finding consensus between the government and rebel insurgencies. We spoke with Sergio Jaramillo Caro, former High Commissioner for Peace in Colombia, who led the secret negotiations between the Colombian government and the FARC guerrillas, culminating in the Final Agreement in 2016. He discusses strategies for peace negotiations, potential challenges, and how to overcome obstacles in the long term.  This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at www.thepearsoninstitute.org.  Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Isabella Nascimento, Sol Rivas Lopes, Lina Gonzalez Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Isabella Nascimento 

Doug Casey's Take
Gold and Global Tensions On The Rise

Doug Casey's Take

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2025 66:32


In this episode, Doug and Matt address questions from members of their private group. They delve into the recent surge in gold prices and discuss factors like central bank purchases and potential short squeezes. They also explore geopolitical tensions, including Trump's policies on tariffs and interactions with BRICS countries. The discussion shifts to Argentina's economic situation under Javier Milei and the potential impacts of China's technological advancements on the U.S. tech sector. Doug and Matt also share thoughts on relevant literature, cultural commentary, and the importance of political and geographical diversification.   00:00 Introduction and Member Questions 00:29 Gold Market Insights 06:51 Economic Realities and Personal Wealth 09:14 Book Recommendations and Predictions 13:21 David Lynch and TV Series Discussion 20:58 Trump's Policies and Predictions 27:55 Argentina's Economic Situation 29:53 Trump's Diplomatic Strategies 32:42 Trade and Tariffs: A Global Perspective 34:17 The Impact of AI and Technology on Global Politics 38:25 Exploring Patagonia as a Plan B Destination 40:16 China's Technological Advancements and Global Implications 46:22 The Role of the U.S. Government in Global Conflicts 47:09 The Future of U.S. Tariffs and Global Trade 01:03:52 Diversifying Investments in a Politically Unstable World 01:04:52 Plan B Uruguay Conference: A Path to Diversification 01:06:11 Conclusion and Upcoming Events

Peking Hotel with Liu He
The death of U.S.-China engagement and the political future of China — with Susan Shirk

Peking Hotel with Liu He

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2025 60:09


Click here for Lunar New Year community livestreaming signup. 6pm Pacific Time, Jan 29thI never deliberately timed this piece with the presidential inauguration of Donald Trump, yet now that we have stumbled upon this occasion, it also seems fitting. For to answer the question “what will Trump do about China?” it is necessary to revisit and review the recent history of U.S.-China relations, the dynamics of both American and Chinese domestic politics, and the macro forces shaping the political environment. Luckily, we are gifted with another piece of oral history from our honorable guest, Prof. Susan Shirk of UC San Diego.Followers of this Substack will find her a familiar figure, for we have so far published two pieces of her oral history (part one and part two). For new readers, I will introduce Prof. Shirk again: She is a research professor at the UC San Diego School of Global Policy and Strategy, director-emeritus of the 21st Century China Center, and director-emeritus of the UC Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation (IGCC). She is one of the West's foremost thinkers on Chinese elite politics and political institutions, who, having first travelled to China in the early ‘70s, has witnessed the country from the Mao to the Xi eras. Between 1997 and 2000, Susan served in the Clinton administration as the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State, overseeing U.S. relations with China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, and Mongolia.This interview took place last summer. Much has happened since then, not least the election of Trump. Some parts of this interview may be slightly outdated, but I find it holds up well. Many regard Trump as a hawkish figure on China, so it is refreshing to hear Susan raise the possibility of a U.S.-China reengagement under Trump. America has a history of anti-communist presidents exercising a policy of engagement, from Richard Nixon to Ronald Reagan; being anti-communist is almost a prerequisite in American politics to practice rapprochement, since only then are you trusted enough to speak to enemies. Maybe history will repeat itself under Trump.However, most of this interview — which was edited for brevity and clarity — is not about Trump but about China's own political future. We review missed opportunities and key turning points in the recent history of U.S.-China relations, political changes under Xi Jinping, Susan's personal relationships with key Chinese foreign policy figures Wang Yi and Fu Ying, and a contemplation of Chinese politics after Xi.Hope you enjoy.Best,LeoFor quick navigation to the specific sections:The death of U.S.-China cooperation: “China's behaviour changed. Our reaction also changed.”Discontent and dictatorial leadership under XiChina during the “garbage time of history” and beyondPeking Hotel is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.Recommended readingsSusan Shirk, 2022, Overreach, Oxford University PressSusan Shirk, 1993, The Political Logic of Economic Reform in China, University of California PressAbout usThe Peking Hotel podcast and newsletter are digital publications in which Liu He interviews China specialists about their first-hand experiences and observations from decades past. The project grew out of Liu's research at Hoover Institution collecting oral history of China experts living in the U.S. Their stories are a reminder of what China used to be and what it is capable of becoming.We also have a Chinese-language Substack. We hope to publish more conversations like this one, so stay tuned!Thanks for reading Peking Hotel! This post is public so feel free to share it. Get full access to Peking Hotel at pekinghotel.substack.com/subscribe

Root of Conflict
From Vision to Action | John Marks

Root of Conflict

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2025 37:40


How can social entrepreneurship help end violent conflict? In this episode, John Marks, founder of “Search for Common Ground”, an international NGO dedicated to resolving global conflicts, shares insights from over 40 years of experience in peacebuilding. Marks discusses key lessons from his extensive career, highlights core concepts from his latest book, “From Vision to Action”, and offers practical advice for young policymakers striving to implement effective conflict-resolution strategies.  This podcast is produced in partnership with the Pearson Institute for the Study and Resolution of Global Conflicts. For more information, please visit their website at www.thepearsoninstitute.org.  Podcast Production Credits: Interviewing: Isabella Nascimento, Sol Rivas Lopes, Mithila Iyer Editing: Nishita Karun Production: Isabella Nascimento 

The Health Ranger Report
Brighteon Broadcast News, Jan 8, 2025 – The REAL reason why Trump wants Greenland, and NVIDIA's mind-blowing new tech that will change the world forever

The Health Ranger Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2025 149:15


Register free at https://brightu.com to watch the full A.G.E.S Conference: Cleansing the Causes of Cancer stream - Nvidia's Groundbreaking Announcement and Its Implications (0:11) - Upcoming Interviews and Health Ranger Store Promotions (5:43) - Trump's Strategic Interests in Greenland and Canada (10:19) - Global Conflict and U.S. Decline (28:14) - Mark Zuckerberg's U-Turn on Censorship (29:44) - The Future of Free Speech and Decentralized Platforms (47:12) - Nvidia's New Hardware and Its Impact on AI Capabilities (47:35) - The Role of AI in Future Technological Advancements (1:07:31) - The Ethical and Moral Implications of AI (1:16:08) - The Future of Decentralized Knowledge and AI (1:16:34) - Advancements in AI and Technology (1:20:28) - AI's Role in Human Civilization (1:28:22) - Introduction of Guests and New Administration (1:29:58) - Censorship and AI Bias (1:32:03) - Decentralization and Health Transformation (1:34:30) - AI and Medicine: Centralization vs. Decentralization (1:51:23) - AI and Transhumanism: Threats and Opportunities (2:02:12) - Cancer Awareness and Alternative Treatments (2:05:37) - Conclusion and Call to Action (2:23:59) For more updates, visit: http://www.brighteon.com/channel/hrreport NaturalNews videos would not be possible without you, as always we remain passionately dedicated to our mission of educating people all over the world on the subject of natural healing remedies and personal liberty (food freedom, medical freedom, the freedom of speech, etc.). Together, we're helping create a better world, with more honest food labeling, reduced chemical contamination, the avoidance of toxic heavy metals and vastly increased scientific transparency. ▶️ Every dollar you spend at the Health Ranger Store goes toward helping us achieve important science and content goals for humanity: https://www.healthrangerstore.com/ ▶️ Sign Up For Our Newsletter: https://www.naturalnews.com/Readerregistration.html ▶️ Brighteon: https://www.brighteon.com/channels/hrreport ▶️ Join Our Social Network: https://brighteon.social/@HealthRanger ▶️ Check In Stock Products at: https://PrepWithMike.com

CNA Talks
Ukraine Today, Taiwan Tomorrow

CNA Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2025 26:08


This episode covers how Taiwan applies lessons from the Ukraine War to prepare for a potential invasion from the People's Republic of China.  Guest Biographies April A. Herlevi is a Senior Research Scientist in CNA's China Studies program. She is an expert on the People's Republic of China (PRC) foreign and security policy, economic statecraft for technology acquisition, and the increasing role of PRC commercial, economic, and military actors globally. Dr. Pollpeter is the Director of Research at the Air University's China Aerospace Studies Institute (CASI). Kevin Pollpeter is an internationally recognized expert on China's space program and has been widely published on national security issues related to China. Before joining CASI he was the Senior Research Scientist at CNA. He previously served as the deputy director of a project on innovation and technology in China for the University of California's Institute on Global Conflict and Cooperation.  Further Reading CNA Report: Taiwan Lessons Learned  from the Russia-Ukraine War CNA's Innovation Incubator

Columbia Energy Exchange
Climate as a Catalyst for Global Conflicts

Columbia Energy Exchange

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2025 34:11


Climate change isn't just an environmental threat—it's becoming a catalyst for conflict. Over the past decade, rising temperatures, water shortages, and other environmental disruptions have fueled tensions from the deserts of Iraq to the mountains of Nepal. And according to journalist Peter Schwartzstein, we're witnessing the emergence of a new, dangerous phenomenon: climate-related violence. In his new book, "The Heat and the Fury: On the Frontlines of Climate Violence," Schwartzstein takes readers on a harrowing journey, revealing how climate change is fundamentally reshaping human conflict. What happens when water becomes scarce? How do extreme weather events transform recruitment strategies for terrorist groups? And are even wealthy democracies vulnerable to this emerging form of societal stress? Peter is an award-winning journalist specializing in climate security with extensive reporting experience across the Middle East and Africa. His work has been featured in publications including National Geographic, The New York Times, and Foreign Policy. As a journalist who has been chased by kidnappers and has navigated dangerous environments to tell critical stories, Schwartzstein offers a unique, ground-level perspective on how climate change is reshaping global security.

Security Conversations
Palo Alto network edge device backdoor, Cyberhaven browser extension hack, 2024 research highlights

Security Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2024 113:11


Three Buddy Problem - Episode 26: We discuss the discovery of a Palo Alto network firewall attack and a stealthy network edge device backdoor (LITTLELAMB.WOOLTEA), the Cyberhaven hack and the shady world of browser extensions, and a look back at the top research projects that caught our attention in 2025. Cast: Juan Andres Guerrero-Saade (https://twitter.com/juanandres_gs), Costin Raiu (https://twitter.com/craiu) and Ryan Naraine (https://twitter.com/ryanaraine).

Traveling To Consciousness
Luigi Mangione, More $$ For Ukraine, Syria, Gang in America, and UFOs

Traveling To Consciousness

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2024 27:44 Transcription Available


SummaryIn this podcast, Clayton Cuteri explores various pressing topics, including the recent murder of a healthcare CEO, political distractions, humanitarian crises, and the implications of UFO sightings. He emphasizes the need for a new political party to address societal issues and advocates for unity in the face of global challenges. The conversation reflects on the spiritual journey of understanding and the importance of acting against evil.Clayton's Social MediaLinkTree | TikTok | Instagram | Twitter (X) | YouTubeTimecodes00:00 - Intro01:04 - Distractions in Current Events05:27 - Political Priorities and Humanitarian Issues10:05 - The Age of Aquarius and Societal Change14:09 - Global Conflicts and New Leadership16:01 - Venezuelan Prison Gangs and Immigration Challenges17:58 - UFO Sightings and Political Implications25:30 - Unity for a New World OrderIntro/Outro Music Producer: Don KinIG: https://www.instagram.com/donkinmusic/Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/44QKqKsd81oJEBKffwdFfPSuper grateful for this guy ^Send Clayton a text message!ClairvoyagingLauren & Frank explore esotericism, intuition, psychic growth, healing, and bad jokes.Listen on: Apple Podcasts SpotifySupport the showMaster Link: HEREFREE 999 Meditation Challenge: Sign Up Here

American Conservative University
Victor Davis Hanson. The Second World Wars. How the First Global Conflict was Fought and Won

American Conservative University

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2024 61:56


Victor Davis Hanson. The Second World Wars. How the First Global Conflict was Fought and Won

AMERICA OUT LOUD PODCAST NETWORK
Biden’s warmongering administration is leaving its dirty fingerprints on global conflicts

AMERICA OUT LOUD PODCAST NETWORK

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 26, 2024 58:00


After Dark with Hosts Rob & Andrew – Trump has promised peace in the Middle East and to settle the Russia-Ukraine conflict the moment he takes office. Unfortunately, Biden's administration has other plans and continues to escalate overseas tension in both areas. Biden is sending mixed messages on a peace offer between Hamas and Israel, and has authorized the use of US long-range missiles by Ukraine into Russia...