Hello listeners.
Speaker:Welcome to the Geopolitical Cousins podcast emergency
Speaker:episode, the US Bombed Iran.
Speaker:You don't need to hear anything else from me.
Speaker:Email me at jacob@jacobshaer.com if you want to send in any thoughts, comments.
Speaker:I forward them to Marco and I promise in the next week or two, we will have
Speaker:an email address for the podcast itself.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:Take care of each other.
Speaker:All right?
Speaker:How should we start?
Speaker:Um, you know what?
Speaker:We love God, don't we?
Speaker:Marco?
Speaker:Do you love God?
Speaker:Do we love I love God.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:We love God.
Speaker:He's vengeful.
Speaker:Uh, he, he makes us work on, on the weekends.
Speaker:I wanna first say, uh, I'm not here if not for, uh, the dedication of
Speaker:both my wife and my mother-in-law to get childcare here on a Sunday.
Speaker:So thank you to both of them.
Speaker:And here I am, uh, Marco, I know you're also fighting your children
Speaker:for internet bandwidth, and we'll see if we get through this.
Speaker:Um, we had grand plans to do a much more insightful podcast on the trade value
Speaker:of global leaders around the world.
Speaker:And we have to delay that too because obviously we have to talk about what's
Speaker:going on with the US and Iran, unless you are living, um, in a bunker, some
Speaker:30 miles below Fordo or in Naans.
Speaker:You probably know by now that the United States launched airstrikes on
Speaker:three different nuclear sites in Iran.
Speaker:Um, detail not exactly clear on how much is damaged.
Speaker:Everything from completely wiped out to meh.
Speaker:Like maybe it's not gonna set them back so much.
Speaker:Uh, I think there's a lot of reporting still yet to come on that.
Speaker:Um, some of the more interesting fallouts, at least that I've seen, um, is that
Speaker:Iran's parliament seems to have passed.
Speaker:I don't know what, it's a motion, a decision to block the straight of
Speaker:war moves, but it's not up to them.
Speaker:It's up to the National Security Council of Iran and they will probably not do it.
Speaker:I'm sure we'll get into that.
Speaker:I'm sure you saw the foreign minister of Iran is supposed to
Speaker:talk to Vladimir Putin tomorrow.
Speaker:Not sure what he's gonna get from all of that.
Speaker:Um, I wouldn't say that President Trump and his, his cronies, his
Speaker:lackies, um, have taken further retaliation off the table.
Speaker:It seems pretty clear that they want, you know, an end to an, they want some
Speaker:kind of nuclear deal going forward.
Speaker:And they've said if there are retaliations that you know, they, that
Speaker:there's much worse that could be done.
Speaker:Um, but where do you want to pick it up?
Speaker:Uh, Marco.
Speaker:Well, I wanna pick it up at the fact that we're both, uh,
Speaker:totally in the summer vibes here.
Speaker:Uh, game seven NBA game seven is about to be played.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And, uh, too, so the end NBA season is over.
Speaker:So you're, you're already in Atlanta Braves, uh, I wearing the, the
Speaker:Padres, uh, famous, uh, Clemente who died tragically in an air crash.
Speaker:So we're both, uh, in a baseball theme, which is interesting.
Speaker:And I would, yes, to be
Speaker:clear though, I've, I've been in a baseball theme ever since Zion pulled his
Speaker:hamstring for the first time this season.
Speaker:I, I got to summer mode pretty quickly, but yes.
Speaker:Well, and I, and I wanna open up with, uh, the Tupac Jaki quote.
Speaker:I've been, uh, quoting for quite some time now.
Speaker:You know, uh, it's one of my favorite lines, uh, from Tupac's changes.
Speaker:I still see no changes.
Speaker:Can't the brother get a little piece?
Speaker:There's war in the streets, in the war in the Middle East.
Speaker:Instead of war on poverty, they got a war on drugs.
Speaker:So the police can bother me.
Speaker:And I start off with that.
Speaker:Uh, Jacob, my favorite Tupac quote, because I mean, changes is what?
Speaker:1997? Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Lemme see.
Speaker:Actually, I don't know.
Speaker:I'm gonna guess it's 1997.
Speaker:Um, uh, that does sound a little bit late, but, oh my bad.
Speaker:92. Um, 92, but it was remixed later in 98.
Speaker:Um, so I mean, it can't be 97 'cause the man died in 96.
Speaker:Oh, fail Marco fail.
Speaker:I
Speaker:mean, you, you think he's dead.
Speaker:I mean, OO obviously this incontrovertible proof here.
Speaker:Anyway,
Speaker:look, the point is the man recorded, uh, those lines in 19 92, 1 of the
Speaker:smoothest bars that Tupac ever spit.
Speaker:I still see no changes.
Speaker:There's war in the streets and the war in the Middle East.
Speaker:I mean, here we are.
Speaker:It's June 22nd, 2025.
Speaker:I'm sitting in Los Angeles.
Speaker:There's still, well, the media and President Trump would love it to be a war.
Speaker:It's not really, but there's still protests in the streets and yes,
Speaker:there is still war in the Middle East.
Speaker:So the reason that it's relevant to start this way is because I've
Speaker:gotten so many texts, Jacob, from so many people who are like children
Speaker:who have walked into an adult conversation, and that's perfectly fine.
Speaker:That's why you're listening to this pod.
Speaker:This pod.
Speaker:The intention is to, you know, like give you some ammunition when you're
Speaker:arguing with your uncle or when you are on a text thread with your family.
Speaker:The fact of the matter is that this is not the first time that
Speaker:the United States and Iran.
Speaker:At each other's throats.
Speaker:This is not the first time that we have a crisis in the Middle East for god's sakes.
Speaker:We've had 25 years of almost unrelenting warfare in the place.
Speaker:Um, 1980s.
Speaker:Were a a far more turbulent time for the Middle East, and as a result for the
Speaker:rest of the world, 1970s, of course, we had a lot of things happening then too.
Speaker:You and I went through this whole history when we talked about
Speaker:Israel a couple of months ago.
Speaker:I believe one of our first podcasts was actually war with Iran.
Speaker:I think it was number two.
Speaker:So,
Speaker:uh,
Speaker:everybody and
Speaker:I, I actually remember thinking at the time, I didn't wanna be talking
Speaker:about it 'cause I didn't wanna be just another Shapiro out here
Speaker:talking about Israel and Iran again.
Speaker:But it was the right thing to talk about, apparently.
Speaker:There it was.
Speaker:And so I think that's the first thing I would say.
Speaker:This is, this is par for the course in that region.
Speaker:But I will say that I have, this is a little bit different obviously,
Speaker:because the US has been circling around the idea of bombing these facilities
Speaker:for the past, you know, 20 years.
Speaker:It hasn't chosen that until today.
Speaker:Uh, it's clear that Israel.
Speaker:Basically prompted this, uh, I, you know, you and I have already talked about this.
Speaker:Just as a recap for our listeners.
Speaker:I don't believe that Israel warned the United States about their intentions.
Speaker:I think that President Trump has to front, he has to defend this narrative
Speaker:that he knew that he was involved.
Speaker:I think Israel told the US like two days before, that's why they pulled those,
Speaker:uh, people from the embassies and so on.
Speaker:But the reality is that Israel, uh, is the dog and the US is the tail.
Speaker:And President Trump, in a way I sympathize because you don't
Speaker:wanna be the tail of a dog.
Speaker:You don't want to be wagged.
Speaker:And so in a way, he had to do this to ensure that American adversaries,
Speaker:whether they're Russia or China, know that, you know, the us Sure it can be
Speaker:wagged, but it can still wag pretty forcefully and it can drop a lot of
Speaker:bombs that nobody else in the world can.
Speaker:Uh, by flying, uh, B two bombers out of Missouri.
Speaker:Around the world and destroying something that's 80 meters,
Speaker:a hundred meters underground.
Speaker:So, uh, that's kind of the setup where we are.
Speaker:And now of course, the number one question is how does Iran retaliate?
Speaker:And the question for that really starts off with this theme that
Speaker:I think we should hit head on.
Speaker:We did it a little bit at the last podcast, but I still think it's worth it.
Speaker:Regime change.
Speaker:Like the argument goes, the argument, and I'm sure you've had many texts from
Speaker:many people, from many walks of life.
Speaker:Like my buddies on the fantasy ba uh, basketball, uh, league that I'm in, go
Speaker:JBL, he's been running for over 30 years.
Speaker:These guys are like really serious about their fantasy basketball.
Speaker:And I, I lose all the time because they're really serious about it.
Speaker:Um, but, uh, you know, the question is like, look, regime change, right?
Speaker:A lot of people are saying like, well, clearly regime change is an option.
Speaker:Uh, and this is a really important question.
Speaker:It it's not just that some lay observer of geopolitics.
Speaker:Thinks that it's an option and therefore we gotta talk about it.
Speaker:The reason it's relevant is that yes, if the Iranian regime feels
Speaker:that they're back against the wall, who knows what they will do?
Speaker:That's the thesis.
Speaker:You've got an 86-year-old, a religious zealot sitting there, right?
Speaker:He's, he's gonna live for what, not a six months Yolo.
Speaker:Let's go, let's meet DMA baby.
Speaker:Let's do it quickly.
Speaker:So, you know, this is, this is where we are.
Speaker:Um, and so it's a very coaching question we have to, uh, uh, tack on head on.
Speaker:What I would say is what I've been saying for like a week now, for two weeks, you
Speaker:cannot have regime chain from the air.
Speaker:It's very difficult.
Speaker:Most countries don't fall apart as they're circling the wagons, you
Speaker:know, just circling the wagons.
Speaker:If anyone inside that circle says, Hey, you know what we should do?
Speaker:We should let the Indians come into the circle.
Speaker:How about that?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:That person gets shot.
Speaker:To use the Western analogy, like as you're circling the wagons.
Speaker:This analogy, yes, comes from Oregon Trail era.
Speaker:You circle the wagons, you're being attacked, you're shooting at
Speaker:the people outside of the circle.
Speaker:Anybody inside that circle starts contemplating maybe, maybe this is the
Speaker:land of the Native Americans, you know, maybe we should go back to like Arkansas.
Speaker:Like, no, that person, boom, dead.
Speaker:Especially in the regime as brutal as Iran.
Speaker:So if our listeners want an example of regime chain that came about from the
Speaker:air, it's my homeland of Serbia in 1999, NATO bombed it in 1999, NATO bomb Serbia.
Speaker:18 months later there was regime change, but there's a huge
Speaker:difference between Serbia and Iran.
Speaker:Enormous difference.
Speaker:SLOs regime in Serbia never shot protestors in the streets.
Speaker:They really didn't.
Speaker:They beat him up.
Speaker:They offed him up.
Speaker:They imprisoned them, but they did not, I mean, there was like even
Speaker:independent media in the country during the nineties when the guy was
Speaker:like called a dictator in the west.
Speaker:The truth is he really wasn't, SRBs actually elected the dude.
Speaker:You know, if you wanna blame Serbia for anything, there you go.
Speaker:Blame it for electing an idiot, right?
Speaker:But the truth is, yeah, he stole a little bit here and there he was.
Speaker:He was mean, don't get me wrong.
Speaker:But there, there was nowhere near the brutality of what goes on in Iran.
Speaker:So you got two things going against regime change.
Speaker:And why I don't think the regime is threatened as much as people think.
Speaker:There's two things going against it.
Speaker:Number one is that they have no hesitation to shoot people in the streets on a
Speaker:random Tuesday, let alone when they're being attacked by the little Satan.
Speaker:Okay?
Speaker:That's the number one and the great Satan up.
Speaker:The second issue is that in the context of defending themselves against Israel,
Speaker:of course that is gonna be very easy for them to basically tell everyone in the
Speaker:society, like, look, it's every man up.
Speaker:Everybody's gotta defend the country.
Speaker:This is the moment of truth.
Speaker:This comes also, you know, you hear a lot of people say like, well, but
Speaker:if there's regime change, there'll be a government that will be more
Speaker:conducive to being pro-Israeli.
Speaker:The Shah of Iran, who was deposed, of course in 1979, the Shah did
Speaker:recognize Israel and was relatively like, all right, but if you wanna see
Speaker:his thoughts on Israel, go on YouTube.
Speaker:Watch a 19 74, 60 minute episode where he's actually interviewed in Tehran.
Speaker:The antisemitism that comes out of this guy is like, is next level.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:So like this idea that there's some alternative in Iran, they will embrace in
Speaker:a brotherly embrace, their long lost, you know, cousins, the Jews is just wrong.
Speaker:That's just not gonna happen.
Speaker:Like if there is regime change in Iran.
Speaker:It wouldn't be pro-Israel, especially not after what just happened that would,
Speaker:you would lose immediately legitimacy.
Speaker:There's like civilians dying in Iran right now because Israel
Speaker:is bombing them, you know?
Speaker:And that's just, you know, obviously war.
Speaker:I'm not saying anything about it.
Speaker:But the point is, the point here is that I don't think this regime feels
Speaker:that it's back is against the wall.
Speaker:They do look vulnerable, they look weak.
Speaker:This is not a good news.
Speaker:They need to continue to strike Iran, uh, Israel with ballistic missiles.
Speaker:But I think the first question we have to ask is how willing
Speaker:are they to, um, go suicidal?
Speaker:And the reason that's important is because I believe that the number one
Speaker:thing that, uh, people are listening to this podcast right now for is
Speaker:our thoughts on how Iran retaliates, well, that will be determined by how
Speaker:suicidal they feel in Tehran right now.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So there is a hierarchy of retaliation.
Speaker:I would say the number one hierarchy, the number one, uh,
Speaker:this is a hundred percent certain.
Speaker:This will happen over the next 24 or 48 hours.
Speaker:They're going to attack with missiles, some American basis in Iraq.
Speaker:That's far for the course.
Speaker:They did this after General Soleimani was assassinated by the US in January of 2020.
Speaker:Many of our listeners forgot that because it's a long time ago.
Speaker:You can, I mean, not just that, but it was not just a long time ago.
Speaker:It was also, um, right before COVID, general Soleimani was one of the
Speaker:most popular, if not the popular, most popular human being in Iran.
Speaker:Everybody loved this guy.
Speaker:He was awesome.
Speaker:As far as Iranians are concerned, obviously from the Israeli perspective,
Speaker:American perspective, kind of a terrorist.
Speaker:But you know, I'm not here to judge whatever.
Speaker:Uh, the point is he was assassinated while on a diplomatic mission.
Speaker:Very, very dramatic increased intentions by the US Iran retaliated by bombing
Speaker:some American facilities in Iraq, and President Trump said, I totally get that.
Speaker:I understand it.
Speaker:Let's move on.
Speaker:That's the first thing that I think is going to happen.
Speaker:And I think it's gonna happen, and I think President Trump will react
Speaker:exactly the same as he did in 2020.
Speaker:The second kind of retaliation is more serious is it would involve attacking
Speaker:American assets outside of Iraq.
Speaker:So things like Bahrain, Qatar, uh, the basis there, I think the US will
Speaker:have to ret retaliate against that.
Speaker:So that prolongs this crisis.
Speaker:And then the third retaliation, of course, is straight of MOUs for those
Speaker:of you who are listening to this and wondering, why are we focusing on this?
Speaker:Why not on terrorism, this, that, or the other?
Speaker:Because straight of MOUs would be a way where this war would finally impact
Speaker:you at home because thus far you have not been impacted at all that a single
Speaker:barrel of oil has been lost since 2023.
Speaker:I mean, it's fascinating since that terrorist attack by Hamas
Speaker:that a single barrel of oil has been lost from the region.
Speaker:Fascinating amount of self-control by everyone involved.
Speaker:And the reality is that if Iran were to interdict trade for
Speaker:moose, it would interrupt the fallough of 20% of world's oil.
Speaker:So yes, gasoline prices would rise.
Speaker:So I'm gonna stop here and then we can like see what you think.
Speaker:And then we can disentangle a lot of these things.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I wanna unpack some things.
Speaker:So the first, there's a couple things I probably should have added to the
Speaker:intro, which is one of the things that is happening that I don't think
Speaker:has, or is sort of being covered up by, by all the, and it's hard to
Speaker:cover everything right now fairly.
Speaker:So I'm not, I'm not shitty on the media for that.
Speaker:I have plenty of other things that shit on the media for, but
Speaker:Israel's been getting hit harder.
Speaker:In the last couple of days, they ban public gatherings.
Speaker:Um, what looked like Iranian competence now looks at least has a semblance
Speaker:of a strategy that their overwhelming missile defense with lower quality
Speaker:rockets and things like that.
Speaker:And then once the missile defense is confused, um, they're coming in
Speaker:with, you know, three or four or five really high quality missiles and
Speaker:causing a significant amount of damage.
Speaker:So that wasn't true the last time that we were on the podcast.
Speaker:It was just Israel spanking the Iranians into the previous century.
Speaker:Like I'm not saying that it's even e uh, equal right now in terms of
Speaker:the damage, but they are starting to punch back and they are imposing
Speaker:real costs, uh, inside of Israel.
Speaker:So I think there's that.
Speaker:I think what you said about the supreme leader is really important because to
Speaker:my mind, one of the most important.
Speaker:Uh, reports that came out was the New York Times had this one that
Speaker:the Supreme leader has put forward three names for his successor.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:If he should be taken out by assassination.
Speaker:And there's, there's two things to note there.
Speaker:Number one, his son is reportedly not one of them.
Speaker:And he, the supreme leader got in trouble.
Speaker:Was that 12 months ago?
Speaker:Or, I can't remember exactly when, because he was trying to put his son in
Speaker:the line for who was gonna replace him.
Speaker:And that was the whole point of the Iranian revolution to get rid of
Speaker:the hereditary monarchy and, and sort of sclerotic monarchy that
Speaker:had, you know, uh, come about that.
Speaker:So he is taken his son off the board and he is gotten three
Speaker:successors, which goes to your point about he's ready for martyrdom.
Speaker:He's ready to meet the mahi and he's, he's ready to sort of have
Speaker:somebody else take the reign.
Speaker:So he's not ready for the regime to commit suicide, but he obviously
Speaker:himself has moved in that direction.
Speaker:So I think that's an important thing.
Speaker:Um, I want to SI want to really underscore what you said about Mohammed, uh, Raiha.
Speaker:Pavi and his views.
Speaker:Um, the Iranian nuclear program did not begin after the revolution with the IRGC.
Speaker:It began with the Shah and the Shah who gave the middle finger to Kissinger
Speaker:and Nixon and the United States saying, nah, I sort of want a civilian
Speaker:nuclear program with the language that the Saudis are using right now.
Speaker:It was only when the regime changed that suddenly the United States
Speaker:got into a big huff about that.
Speaker:And that's why, you know, the song that you listen to in the intro, you
Speaker:go back and read reports from the 1980s, like, we have literally been
Speaker:talking about this for over 50 years.
Speaker:Like, this is not something new.
Speaker:It's the eternal return of the same.
Speaker:I think there's also a really important question about Iran's
Speaker:capacity res to respond versus their need to, one of my scenarios was.
Speaker:Maybe nuclear breakout if their backs were really against the wall.
Speaker:I feel like I've seen enough to say they don't have a nuke and
Speaker:that they weren't close enough to try and put anything on the board.
Speaker:Straight of horror moves, like you said, that's suicidal.
Speaker:If the best that they've got is some pot shots at Iraq or Qatar or Bahrain,
Speaker:like we're talking about a regime that doesn't really have many options.
Speaker:Um, so then like, you know, what is the big deal in the long run?
Speaker:And I actually think I, I want to go back to, to, to maybe reframe a little
Speaker:bit and then we can back into some of the scenarios and, and the succession
Speaker:challenges and the regime change thing, which is two different people.
Speaker:One of whom was my wife and another whom, another whom was a friend
Speaker:who was vacationing in France, which I was vacationing in France.
Speaker:Um, and their questions were actually much simpler.
Speaker:They weren't, is there gonna be regime change?
Speaker:Was their questions were, am I gonna be okay?
Speaker:Like, is anything gonna hit me at home with this?
Speaker:Do I need to be worried about this?
Speaker:So maybe Marco.
Speaker:So let's do that.
Speaker:Yeah, let's do that first, because I think you and I are nerdy and we wanna
Speaker:unpack it, but I think, well just for the listener who has suddenly woken up
Speaker:and is like, oh, we're bombing Iran.
Speaker:Like, are we gonna be okay?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like, is is everything fine?
Speaker:And then maybe we can back into some of the nerdy questions.
Speaker:So let's talk about that.
Speaker:Think we can do a service
Speaker:there.
Speaker:Talk about, yeah, let, let's do that.
Speaker:Uh, I was gonna tackle straight to ose, but that's because I work
Speaker:in finance, I work for investors.
Speaker:Well, and, and let's get there.
Speaker:'cause I think that's we'll actual, tangible.
Speaker:We'll get there.
Speaker:But, but, but I do think people are afraid enough.
Speaker:They're like, oh my God, we're dropping the bombs and it's God
Speaker:bless America, divine providence.
Speaker:And like, am I okay?
Speaker:Should I be keeping my kids from like, what's going on here?
Speaker:You know, so,
Speaker:so here's what I would say.
Speaker:I mean, like, uh, everyone who's listening to this for the oil
Speaker:price can wait until the end.
Speaker:You know what I mean?
Speaker:Uh, so yes.
Speaker:Let's, let's deal with that.
Speaker:So how does this become World War iii?
Speaker:It becomes World War II because China and Russia decides to
Speaker:defend their ally and new America.
Speaker:And the chances of that are negative.
Speaker:They're negative percentages and yes, yes, my dear friends who
Speaker:know math, no, that's impossible.
Speaker:I'm fucking, I'm staking a claim right here and creating new mathematics
Speaker:where there's a negative probability.
Speaker:You know, nobody's going to help Iran.
Speaker:I mean, Vladimir Putin, you posted a, a tweet where he's saying
Speaker:like, well, you gotta take into consideration that there's like.
Speaker:Over a million Russian speaking Jews in Israel.
Speaker:Like, I'm not gonna take sides.
Speaker:That, that, that, okay.
Speaker:Let, let's just, yeah, I, I wanna quote him directly.
Speaker:Somebody asked Putin why he wasn't assisting Iran.
Speaker:His response was, I'm quoting him now.
Speaker:Israel today is almost a Russian speaking country.
Speaker:2 million people from the Soviet Union and Russia live there.
Speaker:We take that into account.
Speaker:This is from the president of the country that was behind the
Speaker:protocols of the elders of Zion and was probably more antisemitic.
Speaker:Then Nazi Germany and any of the others, the reason the 2 million
Speaker:Russian Jews are there is because you couldn't kill them quickly enough
Speaker:in Russia and in the Soviet Union.
Speaker:And he's saying that they're gonna hold off on bombing Israel?
Speaker:No, because of Slavic like, uh, love connection.
Speaker:I like literally, I don't know what to do with, by the way, you can tell there is
Speaker:a Slavic Jewish love connection.
Speaker:It's called the Geopolitical Cousins.
Speaker:We're showing that we can work together in peace, in harmony.
Speaker:But that's, you know, but that's because my SLS were trained by the
Speaker:Ottomans and there was nobody more pro is, uh, proje than the Ottomans.
Speaker:So, you know,
Speaker:yeah.
Speaker:They, they were up there.
Speaker:They, they were, they were up there.
Speaker:They were they nice.
Speaker:They were, they were the ones who sold the Jews Palestine.
Speaker:If you got problems with, uh, Israel today, it's really the Ottomans
Speaker:that you should be worried about.
Speaker:Not so much, you know, the guys who bought it.
Speaker:Uh, but, but going back to this issue, uh, so just to tell everyone who's
Speaker:worried about World War iii, it's not gonna start, and it's not gonna start
Speaker:because Iran finds itself in an oddly comfortable and familiar place alone.
Speaker:So this is not something that they have, you know, not experienced before.
Speaker:All the talk of China, Russia, Iran Axis.
Speaker:That's American propaganda guys.
Speaker:And I, and I wanna turn on the TikTok camera.
Speaker:Um, turn on Sponsored.
Speaker:We got it sponsored by the ccp by Coinbase and ccp.
Speaker:Coinbase and ccp.
Speaker:Um, look, this notion that there is some access of evil out there,
Speaker:that's American propaganda and it, it exists so that you, dear American
Speaker:can give your taxpayer dollars to a trillion dollar defense budget.
Speaker:But the fact of the matter is that, and I hit Saudi like Stephen Bannon
Speaker:and like Dr. Carlson, but like there is no clear strategic alliance
Speaker:between Russia, China, and Iran.
Speaker:If there was Russia would not have to buy North Korean artillery shells,
Speaker:they would've been able to buy Chinese.
Speaker:Artillery shells, which are like better and not 70 years old.
Speaker:So China has been very reticent to help Russia and its war against Ukraine.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:They're buying their oil, but so is American Ally, India, and on
Speaker:Iran, the S 300 surface to air system that Russia gave them Sure.
Speaker:Did not work well.
Speaker:And Russia, uh, there was a report in the media right at, when the
Speaker:war started, Iran asked Russia for help, and Russia was like, sorry,
Speaker:we, we just, we have our hands full.
Speaker:So the fact of the matter here is that when Putin says that it's his
Speaker:love for the Russian speaking Jews in Israel, that he can't choose sides.
Speaker:There's a, there's a little bit of the reality that he just materially can't
Speaker:because he's involved in a war that has stretched his own country, but also that
Speaker:Russia hasn't really supported Iran.
Speaker:Over the last 20 years.
Speaker:Russia voted for the UN sanctions against Iran, the sanctions that brought
Speaker:Iran to heal, and that gave us that nuclear deal that Obama negotiated.
Speaker:Those sanctions were imposed with Russian support because Russia does
Speaker:not want Iran to have a nuclear weapon.
Speaker:Russia dragged its feet for years to deliver the S 300 surface
Speaker:to air missile that has now proven to be completely useless.
Speaker:But even that, they dragged their feet.
Speaker:So Tehran finds itself very alone.
Speaker:And that's a familiar place because from 1980 to 1988, when Saddam Hussein
Speaker:proceeded to kill hundreds of thousands of civilians in Iran in a brutal
Speaker:eight year war, which we need to keep reminding everyone who listens to
Speaker:this, please, if you wanna know what's going on right now, go Wikipedia.
Speaker:Just read Iran, Iraq War.
Speaker:You think that what's happening now is a big deal?
Speaker:This is a joke.
Speaker:This is a bee sting.
Speaker:Israel is a bee sting compared to the grizzly attack that Iran
Speaker:had to survive from 1980 to 1988.
Speaker:The regime was brand new.
Speaker:It was far more on the edge of survival.
Speaker:Mere months after the 1979 overthrow of the Shah, you had religious
Speaker:zealous running the country.
Speaker:They just took over.
Speaker:And the United States and the Soviet Union together locked in arms supported
Speaker:Saddam Hussein's war machine against Iran.
Speaker:Lemme say that again.
Speaker:There weren't many things that the United States of America and the
Speaker:Soviet Union were on the same side for.
Speaker:They were on the same side here.
Speaker:And every other western or advanced country in the world on the planet
Speaker:supported Saddam Hussein, except ironically, somewhat Israelis in alanine
Speaker:way, way actually supported Iran.
Speaker:Uh, so the point here is that for the eight years of that war backed up against
Speaker:the actual wall, not some proverbial wall that CNN is telling you about.
Speaker:No, no, no.
Speaker:Actually, their, their backs were against the wall.
Speaker:Iran did not lose, its cool, it fought Saddam, uh, to a standstill actually,
Speaker:you know, didn't really win the war.
Speaker:The war ended in a, in a, in, in relatively a tie.
Speaker:They did not lose an inch of their territory in that conflict, including the
Speaker:southwestern region where the Arabs lived.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Uh, they, they, they helped.
Speaker:And so my point about this is that this is not news to Tehran.
Speaker:And if you listen to their foreign minister, who's walk, who's running
Speaker:around, their deputy foreign minister was on Christiana Maur,
Speaker:actually on CNNA couple of days ago.
Speaker:They referred to this war in all of their conversation.
Speaker:It was actually kind of funny because Amanpour, who's in my view, just terrible
Speaker:journalist and honestly, I can't even believe that she's still fucking, like,
Speaker:has a platform, but fine, whatever.
Speaker:Good for her.
Speaker:Uh, well done.
Speaker:Go.
Speaker:I mean,
Speaker:it it, it's funny that that's the one that calls you.
Speaker:They, they trotted out John Bolton today on CNN this morning and I was like,
Speaker:oh my God, this walrus like, again,
Speaker:but bolt, no, no.
Speaker:Time out.
Speaker:Time out.
Speaker:I respect Bolton.
Speaker:I respect consistency.
Speaker:Oh.
Speaker:Oh no.
Speaker:Look, I respect Bolton the way I, uh, respect like Swaggy Pete.
Speaker:Like he is consistent to who he is.
Speaker:AUR tries to pretend she plays a, a journalist on tv, but she's not.
Speaker:But anyways, it doesn't matter.
Speaker:Look, she keeps telling the guy as if she knows, she keeps telling the guy,
Speaker:the deputy foreign minister of Iran, sorry, I forgot the name, but she keeps
Speaker:saying, but this time is different.
Speaker:What Israel is doing is much worse than what Saddam was doing.
Speaker:Oh my God.
Speaker:Oh, what?
Speaker:Half a million people died from 1980 to 1988.
Speaker:The regime was barely, they had barely the time to replace Shah's pictures
Speaker:of the walls with that of the Aya.
Speaker:You are telling me that that eight year confrontation with the
Speaker:murderous psychopath that Sadad Hussein was not a bigger risk than
Speaker:what Israel's doing right now.
Speaker:You lack perspective, my friends.
Speaker:If that is, if you are on that line of, if you are the side of that
Speaker:questioning that you don't know what's going on in the Middle East, and
Speaker:that's why that Tupac quote is for you.
Speaker:The reason I begin this with, there's war in the streets and the war in Middle East,
Speaker:it's in a song called Changes and what Tupac is trying to say, I see no changes.
Speaker:Everything is the same.
Speaker:My people are suffering in America.
Speaker:That's the whole point of the song.
Speaker:And he refers to war in the Middle East there as a line.
Speaker:Because if you just woke up in June of 2025 and think what's happening in Iran
Speaker:today is somehow news to the Iranians, then you know you need to read history.
Speaker:So this is a 46-year-old regime
Speaker:and in those 46 years they've seen nothing but the world gang up on them.
Speaker:And I mean, look, I'm not, I'm not standing on the side of the ALS in Iran.
Speaker:In many ways, there's a reason the Soviet Union in America
Speaker:ganged up against you guys because you're kind of radical, you know?
Speaker:And talk about Maori coming back.
Speaker:So yeah, everyone's gonna be against you.
Speaker:But my point is that in those 46 years, we can actually use that time
Speaker:period as source of empirical data.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:So how does the regime run by a bunch of theocrats and Aya react
Speaker:when they're attacked by adversaries, supported by the rest of the world?
Speaker:Saddam Hussein today, Benjamin Netanyahu.
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:Benjamin Netanyahu Today.
Speaker:Saddam Hussein in 1980s.
Speaker:What is their reaction function to this?
Speaker:Number one, the regime does not collapse.
Speaker:The regime strengthens it survives.
Speaker:It perseveres because it uses these threats to create solidarity.
Speaker:Domestically, you know, I mean, if you are opposing the suppression
Speaker:of women in Iran in 2022, it's difficult to shoot you in the streets.
Speaker:But we will.
Speaker:That's what Iran says.
Speaker:But in 2025, if you oppose the regime while Israel is bombing
Speaker:the country, you are a traitor and therefore will be obviously executed.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:So like that's, if, if these people are willing to shoot people who
Speaker:protest against the hijab, lemme tell you, they, they will definitely not
Speaker:hesitate killing someone protesting while they're being attacked.
Speaker:So that's the first thing.
Speaker:The regime is safe, at least for not, and as long as there are actual
Speaker:Israeli planes in the airspace of Iran, I would bet anything that
Speaker:the regime will survive that.
Speaker:The second thing is that while, because they are safe, they
Speaker:don't panic in these situations.
Speaker:And your point about the 86-year-old ayatollah pointing successors and
Speaker:thus willing to meet his maker.
Speaker:I actually see it differently.
Speaker:The fact that there is now three successors means that the regime
Speaker:is thinking long term, means that there's enough corrupt, rich, AYA
Speaker:running around hoping that they see a 2027 model of the Porsche Cayenne.
Speaker:And the reason I say that is that I once overheard an intelligence officer
Speaker:tell me that Tehran has the highest per capita cayenne ownership in the world.
Speaker:What?
Speaker:What's the point of this?
Speaker:What's the point?
Speaker:The point is that these guys are not actually religious zealots anymore.
Speaker:They were in the 1980s when Sadan attacked them.
Speaker:Why didn't they close the street Tous then?
Speaker:Why did they not even attempt it?
Speaker:Why did they not?
Speaker:I don't know, like just invade Saudi Arabia and why would they
Speaker:do it today if they didn't?
Speaker:Then today they got a lot of less lead left in their pencil, a lot less.
Speaker:They really like that fine hand stitched green leather inside a cayenne.
Speaker:You are telling me that this time they're going to be more zealous
Speaker:than they were in the eighties.
Speaker:I struggle to see that, and this is why we come to the big question,
Speaker:like if they actually cross some red line or maybe a pink line.
Speaker:It's tough to see if it's really red, but I think they know where the line is and
Speaker:the line is, if you mess with that 20% of energy that transits through the strait
Speaker:of MOUs, if you look at the map, dear listeners, Persian Gulf empties into the
Speaker:Indian Ocean through the Strait of MOUs.
Speaker:Very, very narrow choke point.
Speaker:Many say, well, they don't have the capacity.
Speaker:If they can't defend themselves against Israeli fighter jets, how would they,
Speaker:how would they close the straits?
Speaker:Well, there's a problem of a symmetry here, and the problem of a symmetry is
Speaker:that they can't defend themselves against.
Speaker:Israeli fighter jets, but closing the Straits of MOUs is relatively easy.
Speaker:You can do it with drones, you can do it with little zodiac boats and
Speaker:dinghies like the Somali pirates did.
Speaker:You're attacking commercial defenseless vessels through the straits.
Speaker:And so yes, they, they have the capacity to do that.
Speaker:It's actually really difficult for the US Navy to protect the straight,
Speaker:how do you protect it against tiny drones and tiny zodiacs filled
Speaker:with like two suicide bombers, like in that famous scene in Syriana.
Speaker:You know, how do you do that?
Speaker:Like how do you actually do it?
Speaker:The US would have no real game plan against this, and therefore
Speaker:the US instead of trying to open the street, would shift towards,
Speaker:let's turn Iran into a parking lot.
Speaker:Something that people don't understand.
Speaker:Israel is a wasp at best.
Speaker:America is a grizzly bear.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:There, there's, there's a couple things.
Speaker:I, I, go ahead.
Speaker:We'll, we'll, it'll take us, sorry, I went on rant.
Speaker:I know.
Speaker:No, no, no.
Speaker:That's what we're here to rant to each other.
Speaker:This is like therapy for both of us.
Speaker:Um, your point about the Supreme leader.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I, I, I think you're right.
Speaker:I think it is a sign of strengthening, strengthening the regime.
Speaker:But I also think it tells you something about the supreme leader himself.
Speaker:I think it tells, tells you that he might be willing to do something
Speaker:radical and take the fall for it.
Speaker:Mm. And then good point.
Speaker:His successor fair, like, okay, the, the regime is, is in good hands.
Speaker:But, you know, he's 86.
Speaker:He's been sick anyway.
Speaker:He's been on his way out.
Speaker:Like, go down in a flame of glory, man.
Speaker:What?
Speaker:Supreme leader doesn't wanna die?
Speaker:A martyr like this is the perfect death for that kind of person.
Speaker:If he could do something.
Speaker:The Straits of War moves has never seemed a convincing.
Speaker:Um, strategy for me.
Speaker:And if they don't have nuclear breakout, I dunno.
Speaker:The, the scenario that disturbs me is, I mean, think about what Hezbollah
Speaker:did in Argentina in the nineties.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Like, there, there is probably some nuclear material that you
Speaker:could put into some kind of dirty bomb or series of dirty bombs.
Speaker:And maybe you can activate cells, different parts of the west and have
Speaker:plausible deniability say that it's the spirit of the revolution that is
Speaker:causing groups around the world to resist the great and little Satans in
Speaker:their, you know, hearts of commerce and decadence and things like that.
Speaker:Like that.
Speaker:That's the scenario.
Speaker:That kinda, well, can we stop there the most?
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Can we stop
Speaker:there and then we'll go back?
Speaker:Lets react to that because again, I, I, we promise to tackle the big
Speaker:picture issues like nuclear war, world War iii, Russia and China
Speaker:are not gonna stay with, uh, Iran.
Speaker:China's deathly afraid of losing oil and energy.
Speaker:Your point about terrorism, a lot of people ask me that.
Speaker:Um, I would answer, you should a hundred percent expect terrorist activity.
Speaker:And I don't wanna be callous about that, but I will be.
Speaker:It is like saying like, there's a storm coming.
Speaker:I might be hit by, uh, Thunderbolt.
Speaker:You might be probabilistically.
Speaker:You're not gonna die from a terrorist attack.
Speaker:And second of all, it's par for the course.
Speaker:This is a regime that supported terrorism for the last 46
Speaker:years as a tool of retaliation.
Speaker:So yes, absolutely there will be, and they will use plausible deniability,
Speaker:as you say, it wasn't us, you know, it was the zeal of the revolution.
Speaker:Somebody somewhere, some cell caught a Holy Spirit.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And they blew themselves up.
Speaker:Um, absolutely.
Speaker:That's that, that, that is gonna happen.
Speaker:Now to, to listeners, they might say like, oh my God.
Speaker:Well, what hap what do you mean?
Speaker:Like, well, I think we've seen a lot of terrorism after nine 11.
Speaker:Most of it is lone wolf attacks.
Speaker:Most of it is, you know, what terrorists basically realized is
Speaker:they're pulling off a complex operation.
Speaker:It's complicated and there's many, now that the Americans in the West are no
Speaker:longer letting random people take flying lessons in Arizona, like now that we've
Speaker:become, you know, focused on that, it's just through revolutionary, uh, process.
Speaker:It's just much easier being somebody that executes a less
Speaker:complicated terrorist attack.
Speaker:And so what I would say, yeah.
Speaker:Go
Speaker:ahead.
Speaker:Sorry.
Speaker:The devil's advocate there is look at what Ukraine just did to Russia, or
Speaker:look at what Israel just did to Iran.
Speaker:Like the technology has changed somewhat.
Speaker:Now.
Speaker:I, I think the problem for Iran is it doesn't seem like their
Speaker:intelligence services are very good.
Speaker:Like they've shown themselves to be relatively poor in terms
Speaker:of their trade craft here, especially in how the war has gone.
Speaker:But if they have any good trade craft whatsoever, like there are new
Speaker:technologies out there that might allow them to sort of make a bigger
Speaker:yes, for sure indentation there.
Speaker:But that's what I keep going back to.
Speaker:Like everything I see from, I think you're right, the regime probably survives.
Speaker:Like all, all that feels right to me.
Speaker:But the other part of this is like, and, and Tucker Carlson got to this
Speaker:in his conversation with Ted Cruz.
Speaker:Can't believe I'm on Team Tucker here, but he is like, you know,
Speaker:'cause he's asking Ted Cruz why he's, why he wants to attack these guys.
Speaker:And Ted Cruz is saying out of both sides of his mouth, oh, they're this huge
Speaker:threat and also they're incompetent.
Speaker:And Tucker's like, no, no, no.
Speaker:It can't be both.
Speaker:Like, are they the big threat or are they completely incompetent and we
Speaker:shouldn't be wasting, um, this ordinance on them because they can't do anything.
Speaker:And my, like, I keep on looking in Iran and I'm like, you
Speaker:guys don't have any moves.
Speaker:Like the only move you have is a straight of who moves and that's a suicide move.
Speaker:So, okay.
Speaker:Like, you're gonna, so we should go.
Speaker:There's the basis you're gonna fire out.
Speaker:Like it's, it looks bad.
Speaker:So we should go there.
Speaker:So that's where we should go.
Speaker:Um,
Speaker:and I, I also, I, I, well, I want to implant two questions in your head while
Speaker:we're talking about this 'cause For sure.
Speaker:Um.
Speaker:The first is, 'cause when you talked about China, Russia, no.
Speaker:World War ii, I also agree with that, but I think the, the, the person who
Speaker:listens to us and wants to disagree with us will say, but Jacob, Marco, I thought
Speaker:the cousins were on Team Multipolar.
Speaker:And the world you just described sounds very unipolar that the United
Speaker:States can fly their bombers from Missouri and like just, you know, do
Speaker:a, do a song and dance afterwards.
Speaker:And we did it.
Speaker:We're the greatest.
Speaker:Nobody else can hit us.
Speaker:We are so good and nobody's gonna stop us and nobody is stopping us.
Speaker:Like that doesn't sound like a very multipolar world.
Speaker:And then the second question I wanna put in your head is, Iran is not the
Speaker:only country that has tried to do this.
Speaker:Uh, North Korea.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Got nuclear weapons.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Pakistan.
Speaker:Pakistan, yeah.
Speaker:Got nuclear weapons.
Speaker:Israel got nuclear weapons.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Why is it, why is it that we're bombing these guys?
Speaker:Why didn't we bomb North Korea before they got, 'cause they do it
Speaker:quietly.
Speaker:Because the North, the North Koreans
Speaker:were pretty loud.
Speaker:No, no, not really.
Speaker:I mean, they, they, they rushed to it much faster and much
Speaker:more quietly than Iran did.
Speaker:And because Iran's been trying to do it since the seventies, there's
Speaker:been way too many eyeballs on them.
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:And I think that, uh, that's, that's really the problem.
Speaker:The other problem is that North Korea had help.
Speaker:Pakistan had helped, um,
Speaker:Israel had help.
Speaker:Israel had a ton of help, you know, thanks.
Speaker:Appetite.
Speaker:South Africa,
Speaker:was it South?
Speaker:I thought it was France.
Speaker:It was kind of both, but yeah, France.
Speaker:France and then South Africa provided the uranium and supposedly the testing ground.
Speaker:Oh, okay.
Speaker:Good.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Great.
Speaker:So, so thanks.
Speaker:You know, like, whereas, again, the one thing about Iran is, and you gotta
Speaker:admire this, by the way, as just a nihilist observer of geopolitics,
Speaker:like they're on their own, like.
Speaker:They haven't really had any help.
Speaker:Russia helped them with the bush of hair, nuclear power plant,
Speaker:which by the way has not been hit either by Israelis and Americans.
Speaker:Probably.
Speaker:'cause they don't want to cause Iran to retaliate against demon,
Speaker:which is the Israeli nuclear power plant in the negative.
Speaker:But the point is, um, you know, Russians help set up the power plant.
Speaker:The issue is that they also voted at the UN to impose sanctions, as I said earlier.
Speaker:So Iran is, I think that's what's holding this back, that nobody really
Speaker:wants Iran to have a nuclear weapon.
Speaker:Not Russia, not China.
Speaker:I mean, look, China's kind of funny in all of this.
Speaker:China just wants oil to transit the strait of ous.
Speaker:So they're actually, they don't
Speaker:care.
Speaker:No, but they're, they're actually a factor of stability in the world.
Speaker:And nobody even gives China credit here.
Speaker:They're not encouraging Iran.
Speaker:They're not encouraging Israel.
Speaker:They're like, Hey guys, can't we just all get along?
Speaker:You know, they're like Tupac Shakur like, yo guys, this war in the
Speaker:streets and war in the Middle East.
Speaker:Can't a brother get some like discounted oil?
Speaker:Come on.
Speaker:So China is not going to go on the side of I Iran.
Speaker:And the reason it's not is because then Saudi Arabia would
Speaker:obviously have a problem with that.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:And, and China needs oil from both Saudi Arabia and Iran.
Speaker:To your point about Multipolarity, uh, we had a great discussion about Multipolarity
Speaker:couple of months ago, and what I said is that it's very important, especially for
Speaker:Americans to understand what Multipolarity means and what I said almost verbatim
Speaker:on this, on our show, it doesn't mean that every country has equal power.
Speaker:The United States of America is quantit quantitatively and qual,
Speaker:qualitatively still the most powerful country in the world.
Speaker:It's just that that power doesn't go as far as it did during a unipolar world.
Speaker:So yes, you can still fly B twos outta Missouri and drop, uh, a very
Speaker:heavy ordinance anywhere in the world.
Speaker:The problem is that that's the only way that you can compel behavior.
Speaker:Not the only, but pretty much the only.
Speaker:In other words, it doesn't work in a unipolar world.
Speaker:You don't have to drop any bombs.
Speaker:You pick up a phone and you are like, yo do X or else not just to your
Speaker:enemies, but also to your allies.
Speaker:So yes, you don't want to be an enemy of the most powerful country in the
Speaker:world, but the problem for the US is that the rest of the world is drifting
Speaker:away from just doing whatever they want.
Speaker:So I'm, this is consistent with a multipolar world.
Speaker:In a multipolar world, in the 19th century, in the 19th century, the United
Speaker:Kingdom could still show up with a gunboat in your port and say, what's up?
Speaker:And they did that.
Speaker:That was come, like that happened all the time in the 19th century.
Speaker:So did France.
Speaker:So this, this and that, like us.
Speaker:Maybe the only country that can drop this particular bomb on Iran.
Speaker:But actually the reason the world is multipolar, and the reason that
Speaker:this is showing that we are right, that it is multipolar is number one,
Speaker:Israel couldn't care less what the US was doing in those negotiations.
Speaker:They bombed Iran anyways.
Speaker:And it shows that even a country like Israel has the capacity
Speaker:to do something like this.
Speaker:And by the way, you know who else in the region could have done this Turkey?
Speaker:Hmm.
Speaker:So there's many, many countries, not, sorry, not bomb fardo
Speaker:with a stealth bomber.
Speaker:No, but when you think about like Air War, yes, there's many other countries that
Speaker:can take matters into their own heads.
Speaker:That's what it means.
Speaker:It just means multiple veto.
Speaker:But going back to your point about terrorism, so World
Speaker:War II is not gonna happen.
Speaker:Sorry, Steven Bannon.
Speaker:I know that's your big shtick now.
Speaker:You know, like I get it.
Speaker:World War II started the streets of Los Angeles.
Speaker:I loved it.
Speaker:By the way, I don't know if you listen to this one, where he said like West LA
Speaker:is the like ground zero for World War ii.
Speaker:I, I didn't see that.
Speaker:Although I went at, I went at him and Ben Shapiro on Twitter yesterday.
Speaker:'cause I was bored and I
Speaker:was just, well, he was safe.
Speaker:He was firing away at them was, you know, Bannon's Point was like, look,
Speaker:Steven Miller, Ben Shapiro, these guys know la they know West la You
Speaker:know, Steven Miller went to like the middle school my son goes to and
Speaker:the high school my daughter goes to.
Speaker:So like, and they're like, west LA is the epicenter of World War ii.
Speaker:And I'm taking a stroll through Sunny Santa Monica.
Speaker:Like, you know, like people jogging, walking their dog.
Speaker:And I'm like, fuck,
Speaker:it's all around us.
Speaker:This World War ii, you know, like, oh my God, there's a cloud.
Speaker:The sun is gone.
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:Oh my God.
Speaker:Please, Steve, Steve, man, come on our show.
Speaker:Come to West LA bro.
Speaker:Let's go, let's, let's check out the mean streets of Santa Monica.
Speaker:Marino, Delray, Culver City, up to no good.
Speaker:Let's do
Speaker:it.
Speaker:Live.
Speaker:Live and in person.
Speaker:Yes, live and in person.
Speaker:Like, come on man.
Speaker:Like, geez.
Speaker:Anyways, look.
Speaker:There is no World War III threat.
Speaker:Everyone can calm down.
Speaker:There is a terrorism threat.
Speaker:We should expect a spike of terrorism.
Speaker:And in a way it's like par for the course man.
Speaker:Like you, you know, you, you poke the hornet's nest.
Speaker:Some hornets are gonna come out and sting you.
Speaker:Like if there is a terrorist attack by Iran, I think, or like Iran linked sells.
Speaker:I do think that a lot of people in the West are gonna be like, you
Speaker:know, like, well, what'd you expect?
Speaker:You expected them not to do terrorist attacks.
Speaker:So really this boils down.
Speaker:I mean, we've been talking for 42 minutes.
Speaker:This boils down to the one thing that actually is dramatic, and it
Speaker:does take this to the next level, which is if you around closes the
Speaker:straits, the strait over most,
Speaker:which, which is underwhelming too, because as we've both said, like even
Speaker:if they take it to the next level, so then, then they get bombed into the
Speaker:15th century and then it's 15th century.
Speaker:It's like a two week, week thing.
Speaker:But you and I know this Jacob.
Speaker:Oh, we think we know this.
Speaker:We've also known many things before.
Speaker:Jacob, you, yeah,
Speaker:I, I knew that Israel couldn't do this to Hezbollah and to Iran.
Speaker:So Yes.
Speaker:About, we've
Speaker:known many things.
Speaker:This is why our logo is two puppets.
Speaker:So just because we know it well, no,
Speaker:it's, it's, it's, it's why we are both like, you know, uh, you know,
Speaker:the, it was Socrates who says at the beginning of knowledge is the
Speaker:admission that you know, nothing.
Speaker:Like, so let's, let's, we're willing to start over from scratch and say,
Speaker:eh, like, we should take that over rather than No, no, no, no, no.
Speaker:The coming war with Japan is still coming.
Speaker:No, no, no.
Speaker:I was predicting the collapse of China in oh nine.
Speaker:It's coming.
Speaker:It's coming right now.
Speaker:Let, I hope that the listeners know who I'm throwing shade at.
Speaker:Right?
Speaker:But listen, listen, listen.
Speaker:I wanna, I just wanna say the difference between us and some
Speaker:random uncle or some random dude in your basketball league, you know?
Speaker:No, no offense, Ben.
Speaker:I love you buddy.
Speaker:The difference between us is we do this for a living, so our view is backed
Speaker:by some empirical evidence, and we need to give that empirical evidence.
Speaker:It doesn't mean that somebody random, like, I got a buddy, uh, from college,
Speaker:Rafer loved this guy to death.
Speaker:I would like throw myself in front of a bus for him.
Speaker:He works in, uh, industrial scaffolding.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:Just like baller, you know, and this guy trades the VIX better
Speaker:than any hedge fund out there.
Speaker:Like, if you are running a hedge fund right now, like you've been
Speaker:humbled by Ray for, I'm telling you, the guy knows how to buy and sell
Speaker:the Vix like better than anyone.
Speaker:He's an industrial scaffolder.
Speaker:He goes upside down, builds scaffolds inside like crazy
Speaker:industrial wasteland, toxics.
Speaker:I mean, he can build a scaffold inside Fordo after it got bombed.
Speaker:And anyways, my buddy Rafer, you know, he, he gets, he has a really
Speaker:good gut instinct for when the world is a little too complacent.
Speaker:I'm not saying that someone like Rafer or my buddy Ben from
Speaker:the fantasy League has no like.
Speaker:Business In this conversation, I'm just saying that when you and I give a view,
Speaker:it's at least backed by like some data.
Speaker:So what is the data in this case?
Speaker:The data is that in 46 years that Iran, the regime has existed, it's never
Speaker:truly tried to close the strait of ous.
Speaker:And we just have to ask the question like, but why?
Speaker:If this is such a huge thing that they have on the rest of the
Speaker:world, why haven't they done this?
Speaker:You know, why, why not?
Speaker:And so, uh, the immediate answer that's like an amateur would say is like, well,
Speaker:it's never been threatened like this.
Speaker:We just unpacked why it has been threatened like this
Speaker:by Saddam in the eighties.
Speaker:Um, why you can't really have regime change with an F
Speaker:16, that's not gonna happen.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:So, so why?
Speaker:And the, and, and the simple answer is, well, their own
Speaker:oil goes through the strait.
Speaker:I disagree that that's an issue.
Speaker:They could just attack Saudi facilities across the Persian Gulf.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:You know, why not do that?
Speaker:And the answer for this is that yes, the retaliation against them would
Speaker:be so total and they have no ability.
Speaker:Like the rest of the world is not gonna be concerned about pushing vessels
Speaker:through the strait, as they said.
Speaker:That's gonna be tough to do.
Speaker:And precisely because it's difficult to interdict little tiny dinghy zodiac boats.
Speaker:Precisely because that is not really in the arsenal of the west.
Speaker:The west Saudi Arabia, Israel, everybody would just turn Iran into a parking lot.
Speaker:In a way it's a nuclear option for the regime.
Speaker:It's, it, it is their nuclear option.
Speaker:And, and except they only have one nuke, they can deploy it in the strait.
Speaker:They close that thing and then they get turned into a parking lot and there's
Speaker:nothing they can do if they can't stop.
Speaker:Israeli F sixteens, which have very little ordinance.
Speaker:Now, this is a fighter jet.
Speaker:This isn't a bomber for a reason.
Speaker:If they can't prevent F sixteens from bombing, they cannot prevent the
Speaker:strategic might of the United States of America, which is not like America's
Speaker:not gonna use B two bombers, guys.
Speaker:It will throw everything at them 1950s, 1960s bobbers.
Speaker:The US will absolutely turn and, and it will be punitive.
Speaker:Just like the Air War against Serbia was punitive.
Speaker:It wasn't tactical.
Speaker:It wasn't even strategic.
Speaker:Once the US realized that SLO Demi SVI was not going to withdraw the
Speaker:troops out of Kosovo and that he wasn't playing by the rules of war,
Speaker:he wasn't turning on his air defense systems, the US proceeded to degrade
Speaker:Serbia's industrial economic capacity.
Speaker:This is what would happen to Iran as well.
Speaker:And so this is why we have the view that we have for those of you listening,
Speaker:because we are seeped in the knowledge of the region and history and the behavior
Speaker:of Tehran over the last 46 years.
Speaker:Now, I completely concede that my buddy fer could still crush us, right?
Speaker:Because hey, sometimes a fresh pair of eyes is better.
Speaker:They see something from a different perspective and say, yeah, but
Speaker:this time I think is different.
Speaker:And ultimately, if you are an investor right now, you like the risk as
Speaker:symmetry is skewed towards higher Vix at, at the very least, and over
Speaker:the next couple of days, perhaps even higher oil prices from here.
Speaker:I mean, obviously we're all waiting for Iran's retaliation.
Speaker:It's gonna come oil prices spike.
Speaker:But I do think that at some point there's going to be an epic opportunity
Speaker:to fade all of that because I think that there is a gravitational
Speaker:pool almost by like a giant star.
Speaker:You can't see here is like a black hole that you cannot see.
Speaker:That's pulling Iran's retaliation and behavior towards a set of standardized
Speaker:moves that it's done over 46 years.
Speaker:And that gravitational pull that you don't see, that black hole that, that
Speaker:most people can't identify is that like, bro, if they do this, they're
Speaker:going to face the might of the us.
Speaker:And before I stop my rant, I just wanna say one more thing.
Speaker:I know I've said it many, many times in this show, but for those of you who are
Speaker:listening to this for the first time, go on Wikipedia and read about, no, no.
Speaker:Wikipedia is a great source.
Speaker:Like if you're just like an an amateur geopolitical, you're just
Speaker:interested, like what are you gonna do?
Speaker:You know, you can't read books and stuff, you don't have time.
Speaker:You have a busy life.
Speaker:You're on the show to try to figure out what to read on Wikipedia.
Speaker:Well, here's one operation, praying mantis critical.
Speaker:So when I said that Iran has never attempted to close the straits,
Speaker:that's not necessarily correct.
Speaker:They did try very, very gingerly to dip their toes into this.
Speaker:Idea.
Speaker:They mined the strait a little bit.
Speaker:One of those mines hit an American vessel.
Speaker:The United States of America in the next 72 hours sunk their Navy and
Speaker:attacked their energy facilities on Kag Island to the point where
Speaker:the International Court of Justice actually sided with Iran many years
Speaker:later saying that the US was punitive and unproportional in their reaction.
Speaker:And America was like, fuck yes, we were.
Speaker:And do it again.
Speaker:And you'll see what we'll do next up.
Speaker:I'm, I'm glad you brought that up.
Speaker:'cause this is, this is one of the things that's bothering me, like in, in the
Speaker:category of things that I don't know, um, how is it that Israel and the United
Speaker:States can, A, do what they've already done to Iran and b to your point, if
Speaker:they close the straight, like, you know, bomb them into the medieval period back
Speaker:to when, you know, the Iranians were sipping Shiraz and writing poetry and
Speaker:inventing algebra and things like that.
Speaker:Like how can they do that?
Speaker:And yet they can't stop the Houthis.
Speaker:Like, you know, yeah, I An answer just six weeks, weeks ago.
Speaker:No, no.
Speaker:We were talking about like, no.
Speaker:Easy.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Go, go, go.
Speaker:Easy, easy, easy answer to that question.
Speaker:My friend and I, I believe I already said it on this podcast a couple of weeks ago.
Speaker:The Houthis are perfectly comfortable living on tattoo.
Speaker:Yemen is tattoo.
Speaker:For those of you who are not fans of Star Wars, uh, I'm not
Speaker:going to clarify that statement.
Speaker:You should fucking watch Star Wars.
Speaker:Another thing to Wikipedia,
Speaker:you know what I mean?
Speaker:The Houthis are fa perfectly comfortable with being in tattooing.
Speaker:The Iranians are not.
Speaker:Yeah, but it's, it's not even like I, I I hear you on that, but it's not even that.
Speaker:It's, it's, it almost seems like the Houthis got more shots on goal
Speaker:against us Air assets that were pummeling them than the Iranians did.
Speaker:I mean, if, if you listen to Hegseth and, and not just Heg, I mean,
Speaker:hegseth was like way over the top.
Speaker:It was, it was gross, the level of propaganda.
Speaker:But the four star who stood next to him, who spoke after him, who was like
Speaker:your typical American military officer, like straight lace, like very honest,
Speaker:empirical data to back everything.
Speaker:He was basically like, yeah, they didn't even see us coming.
Speaker:Like, they didn't get a shot off, like, wait a minute, decoy stuff.
Speaker:And we knocked out some defenses and like, they didn't get what,
Speaker:like they had no clue we were there.
Speaker:I think, whereas the Houthis, like the Wall Street Journal was reporting
Speaker:that, like the Houthis were like close to taking down drones and like getting
Speaker:shots off on, but, but US assets.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:But, but drones versus stealth bombers is different.
Speaker:Stealth bombers fly very, very high.
Speaker:The drones can be seen like with your open eyes and you can shoot them
Speaker:with the, you know, like, I mean it's obviously I'm making it simple, but.
Speaker:I just don't think it's different.
Speaker:It's the same.
Speaker:It's not the same thing.
Speaker:And the US did not commit as many assets, nor did it like drop.
Speaker:Why would you drop this ordinance?
Speaker:Why would you drop the Busters and the Houthis?
Speaker:The Houthis are very difficult to impose paint on.
Speaker:You know, the Houthis are like the homeless guy in the alley with a knife.
Speaker:No offense to the Houthis, by the way.
Speaker:Don't come after me.
Speaker:I love you guys.
Speaker:You know, go Sam.
Speaker:People like of tattoo.
Speaker:You guys are fucking awesome.
Speaker:And you know, I think George Lucas himself like rebuild the story of
Speaker:the Sam people in the subsequent, uh, star Wars series because they
Speaker:also have feelings and families.
Speaker:And we should think about that too, by the way.
Speaker:People have no idea what I'm talking about.
Speaker:They didn't watch Star Wars.
Speaker:And honestly, I don't want you as a listener, if you didn't watch Star Wars.
Speaker:God, anyways.
Speaker:Look or do.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Wait, here's the difference.
Speaker:You face a homeless guy in the alley with a knife.
Speaker:Why are you afraid of him?
Speaker:Because he's got nothing to lose.
Speaker:He's a homeless guy in the alley with a knife.
Speaker:So that's why it's difficult Jacob to like, when you say that America is
Speaker:going to push Iran into the medieval age, Yemen is kind of already there and
Speaker:that's why the Houthis just don't care.
Speaker:Their pain tolerance is infinite.
Speaker:That's the point.
Speaker:Iran and the people in Iran, and particularly the regime that has
Speaker:enriched itself through corruption and the sanctions and everything else,
Speaker:the fact that their Porsche, cayenne per capita ownership is the highest
Speaker:in the world, tells you something.
Speaker:This is a regime that does have a lot to lose.
Speaker:They don't want to live on tattooing.
Speaker:And so that's the difference.
Speaker:I think it's very difficult for the United States of America to conduct
Speaker:punitive airstrikes against Yemen.
Speaker:Saudi Arabia found that out during their war with Yemen.
Speaker:The Houthis are like just whatever, like, oh, you're gonna bomb us.
Speaker:Cool.
Speaker:I'm gonna go back to the cave.
Speaker:No, I don't mean the cave where like I go.
Speaker:When you bought me, I mean my home.
Speaker:I'm perfectly comfortable with this existence.
Speaker:I'm perfectly comfortable with its existence.
Speaker:Like, like this is what Yemen is like.
Speaker:I'm, this is it.
Speaker:It's tattooing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Whereas, yeah, and then maybe they're, they're all chewing Kat too, so maybe
Speaker:they're just all like, yeah, that's,
Speaker:you know, maybe we should be doing some of these podcasts on Kat too.
Speaker:Maybe that will make us like less like, but look, my point is that
Speaker:Iran doesn't have that option and uh, that's what the difference is.
Speaker:Their pain tolerance is surprisingly a lot higher, one could say, but that's because
Speaker:Iran is a sophisticated, educated, modern, technologically advanced country that
Speaker:doesn't want to become tattoo overnight.
Speaker:Whereas Yemen is tattooing.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Okay.
Speaker:Well, here, here, let's, let's, uh, let's round out on some long-term thoughts here.
Speaker:'cause I've been, I've been playing around with this notion that, um,
Speaker:maybe Donald Trump would've been the perfect unipolar president, but he's
Speaker:actually the wrong multipolar president.
Speaker:And that somebody like Bill Clinton or Barack Obama, they were bad unipolar
Speaker:presidents, but they would've been really good multipolar presidents.
Speaker:And I say this because it seems to me that.
Speaker:This is the, the US strikes on Iran are part of the general pattern
Speaker:of Trump foreign policy, which is short-term wins for long-term losses
Speaker:because I, I don't think there are actually going to be huge implications.
Speaker:Like I, I don't think they're gonna close the straight, if they
Speaker:do, it won't last for a long time.
Speaker:It seems pretty clear they don't have a nuke.
Speaker:If they did, they would've beared their teeth by now.
Speaker:So maybe that doesn't happen.
Speaker:Well least they would've exploded
Speaker:it to show
Speaker:they have Yeah, like something like for, you know, you've, you've got bros on
Speaker:Twitter, like, you know, reading Seism McGrath in Iran being like, is this it?
Speaker:It's like, no.
Speaker:If it was, it like, you know, they, they did their movie thing about this
Speaker:is gonna be remembered for centuries and it was a couple of missiles.
Speaker:Like, nice, okay, great.
Speaker:Like there's, there's some cool missiles, but they're not there.
Speaker:But the point being, um, you know, the Trump administration
Speaker:is taking short-term wins.
Speaker:So yes, it get, it's probably gonna get short-term wins and
Speaker:trade deals with European countries and China and things like that.
Speaker:But in the long run, you've basically just ensured that Europe doesn't want to
Speaker:be dependent on you anymore and becomes probably a competitor down the road.
Speaker:Do you think that there is something to the, to the notion that, you know,
Speaker:your China, your Russias, even your Europes is looking at US behavior here.
Speaker:And even as some of these countries are clapping and saying, thanks for taking out
Speaker:the trash, they're also saying, man, this is the us Like they could do this to me.
Speaker:Like, they could do this to anyone.
Speaker:They're gonna say two weeks and then they're gonna turn on a bombing.
Speaker:Like, we don't trust the us.
Speaker:Or do you think that that's too weeny, you know, liberal of a
Speaker:position and it's like, no, no, no.
Speaker:Like, like nobody's gonna think that.
Speaker:It's just gonna be like, Hey, this is, this is the world that
Speaker:we're in right now in the United States is doing what it's gonna do.
Speaker:And like, there's mad respect there and everybody else is
Speaker:gonna go do their own thing.
Speaker:Like, where do you, where do you fall on
Speaker:that?
Speaker:The multipolar world is the world where everyone's gonna do what they're gonna do.
Speaker:You know, that's why it's dangerous world.
Speaker:But it's also a world where, uh, because normative and
Speaker:ideological issues don't matter.
Speaker:Morality doesn't matter.
Speaker:That makes it safer.
Speaker:I have to say, and this, this obviously shows that I'm a
Speaker:realist, a brutal realist.
Speaker:Uh, and many will disagree with me, but I would say that Donald Trump is including
Speaker:President Trump and including and including the Supreme leader because
Speaker:this is a very religious, like, ideological conflict on both sides.
Speaker:At least.
Speaker:At least in the way they're talking about it.
Speaker:Not really like let go.
Speaker:No, I would disagree, Jacob, because if it was President Trump wouldn't
Speaker:say things like, look, we bombed Ford.
Speaker:Oh, and now it's over.
Speaker:It's time for peace.
Speaker:So I actually think that Donald Trump is the perfect president for a multipolar
Speaker:world, and I would applaud him in many ways on the way he has pivoted the
Speaker:US towards a much more Machiavellian way of thinking about foreign policy.
Speaker:Now, before I get accused of being callous and stuff, lemme just break it down.
Speaker:The reason that I don't think Bill Clinton would've been good in this situation, and
Speaker:definitely Joe Biden would not have been.
Speaker:Because every time a moralistic liberal interventionist president who's in charge,
Speaker:they don't know when to land the plane.
Speaker:Once you paint a regime as immoral, you need to take it all the way with them.
Speaker:You cannot sit down and negotiate.
Speaker:You need an immoral, immoral, immoral foreign policy.
Speaker:In a multipolar world, that's what's a requirement.
Speaker:You cannot choose what country is good, what country is evil, because if you
Speaker:do, then how do you stop having an antagonistic relationship with them?
Speaker:How do you stop, sit down and say, okay, cool.
Speaker:Look, we bombed Florida.
Speaker:You know, you know what we can do.
Speaker:Now we understand that, uh, you know, we don't want regime change.
Speaker:Look what President Trump said after bombing, uh, the u uh, Iran, and
Speaker:then he said, repeated it today, that they don't want regime change.
Speaker:That is something that liberal interventionists cannot do.
Speaker:If you have a moralistic compass, how do you stop yourself?
Speaker:How do you say, this is enough?
Speaker:We've done enough.
Speaker:You can't do that.
Speaker:You have to say, how many times have we invoked Hitler?
Speaker:How many times have American presidents invoked Hitler as an analogy for some
Speaker:leader, they don't like, whether it's neocons or liberal interventionism.
Speaker:And that's where neocons, neoconservatives and liberal interventionists are the same.
Speaker:They couch everything in the terms of morality of good and evil.
Speaker:And so if some country is, you know, is going against American interests,
Speaker:you cannot couch it in the, in the words of real politic of realism.
Speaker:You couch it in terms of morality.
Speaker:But once you do that, once you step into that world, how do you slow yourself down?
Speaker:How do you stop bombing a rod?
Speaker:How do you decide that this was enough and now it's time for negotiations and peace?
Speaker:So I would say that Donald Trump is a product of his environment.
Speaker:I would say that Barack Obama tried to do this, but he was not consistent.
Speaker:I would, as I've said before, I think Obama and Trump are similar
Speaker:in that both of them recognized that the world is multipolar.
Speaker:I just think he was tougher for Obama because he surrounded himself with
Speaker:liberal interventionists who are very liberal, very moralistic, very normative,
Speaker:and they would always kind of say like, that's what happened in Libya.
Speaker:Look, Gaddafi is a bad guy, but he gave up his chemical and biological weapon
Speaker:program for guarantees of stability.
Speaker:Was bombing him the right message to make?
Speaker:Well, first of all, obviously not as the Italians warned, the west collapse
Speaker:of Libya would lead to a migration crisis in Europe, and they were right.
Speaker:So Italy was opposed to this.
Speaker:Barack Obama understood these risks, but he let France in the United
Speaker:Kingdom take the lead in 2011.
Speaker:So he wasn't, I think, brutal enough.
Speaker:He wasn't realist enough, although he tried to.
Speaker:Present himself as a realist because his enemy on foreign policy was neocons.
Speaker:President Trump's enemy on foreign policy is both neocons
Speaker:and liberal interventionists.
Speaker:And so I would say that he's a perfect president actually for a multipolar era.
Speaker:Now, we will see, right, is he able to conduct a limited strike against Iran?
Speaker:It will require him to take the retaliation straight in the
Speaker:face like a man and then not do anything in, in re taliation.
Speaker:In other words, he cannot get sucked in by idiot journalists and
Speaker:tackle trade talk and Twitterati saying that weak for not responding
Speaker:to something Iran is about to do.
Speaker:And to his credit, he showed that consistency in January of 2020.
Speaker:He, he, he, he orders the assassination, which was illegal by International Law
Speaker:of General Soleimani, Iran freaks out bombs, some American basis in Iraq.
Speaker:At that point, a Bill Clinton, a George Bush, a Joe Biden, a Hillary Clinton.
Speaker:And yes, even Barack Obama does a lot more in retaliation because they have to,
Speaker:because they feel compelled by morality.
Speaker:Our troops were endangered, and President Trump said, of course,
Speaker:our troops were endangered.
Speaker:That's par for the course.
Speaker:I understand why Iran had to retaliate.
Speaker:I consider this matter over, that's almost verbatim, the tweet
Speaker:he sent after Iran retaliated.
Speaker:That is a multipolar president.
Speaker:You know, that is somebody who can have, and this is why most commentators right
Speaker:now, Jacob, and I know you also disagree as I do, but most commentators see this as
Speaker:a slippery slope towards a confrontation because you're almost counting on this
Speaker:reflexive need for America to couch their enemies in morality normative
Speaker:like, so the reason this is a slippery slope is now we're gonna build a case
Speaker:that Iran is evil and blah, blah, blah.
Speaker:Immoral, immoral President does not have to couch the Iran
Speaker:as, as that kind of an enemy.
Speaker:He can say things like, I respect Iranians.
Speaker:They're hard negotiators.
Speaker:They should have taken my deal.
Speaker:They didn't.
Speaker:I had to punch 'em in the mouth.
Speaker:I understand why they're retaliating.
Speaker:I'm ready to talk when they are.
Speaker:And if they cross our red lines, we turn them into a parking lot.
Speaker:Well, yeah, and this is why, like, it's not a slippery slope
Speaker:because they can't respond.
Speaker:There's no way.
Speaker:Like if they had, if, if they nuked New York City, but the problems Jacob or if
Speaker:they like blocked the straight for moose and they could keep it closed for a month,
Speaker:like Yeah, but I don't think they've got, I don't think they have any cards.
Speaker:But see, Jacob, you're looking at this as like a objective
Speaker:analyst and God bless you.
Speaker:I want to kiss your receding hairline because of it.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:Yes, thank you.
Speaker:I, I love you for it.
Speaker:But the, the issue is a normative president, whether of a NeoCon ilk
Speaker:or a liberal interventionist ilk.
Speaker:Would've taken any Iranian retaliation as a sign that they're evil war mongers
Speaker:led by Adolf Hitler in clerical robes.
Speaker:And thus, it is a reason for regime change.
Speaker:And thus, it is a reason to smite this evil that has come under the
Speaker:very heart of the hell and pursue a holy Jihad on behalf of human rights.
Speaker:And that's the difference in a multipolar, in a unipolar world.
Speaker:The reason that Joe Biden, in many ways is a very nice guy, great legislator,
Speaker:you know, but the reason he was the wrong president for Multipolarity is because
Speaker:I don't think that Joe Biden and his like Cory of experts around him would
Speaker:have been able to deftly and nimbly just ignore what's coming out of Iran because
Speaker:Jacob, you and I both know there is some retaliation coming, some American service.
Speaker:Men and women might be in danger, might be even killed in this retaliation.
Speaker:Joe Biden can't allow that to happen because he believes
Speaker:there's right and there's wrong.
Speaker:And the truth is that in today's world of Multipolarity, I mean there is still
Speaker:right and wrong, don't get me wrong, but unfortunately, you don't have
Speaker:the ability to respond to every rock.
Speaker:That is the point because there's multiple threats.
Speaker:It's a multiple world and you, United States of America may be the most powerful
Speaker:country in the world, but your power is stretched thin around the world like
Speaker:too little butter on too much toast.
Speaker:To quote Jr. Token.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Uh, it's hard being a ring bearer.
Speaker:I, I think, um, that's why, uh, I, I think you're right about Obama.
Speaker:Like, uh, Obama got so much flack for the red line in Syria, but that was actually
Speaker:the, like, one of the most impressive things he did in the foreign policy of
Speaker:his, of both of his terms, which is he made the stupid mistake about setting
Speaker:a red line about yes, the Assad regime use of chemical weapons and then like,
Speaker:they used chemical weapons and then like, the drumbeat started, like, I remember,
Speaker:I think I was still at Strat war at the time, like, uh, like John Kerry
Speaker:was, was going on CNN and thundering away about how like the red line had
Speaker:to be honored and things like that.
Speaker:And Obama said, eh, like, we're not, like, no.
Speaker:Well, I'm, I'm not doing that.
Speaker:Jacob, like, I'm pulling back.
Speaker:It's, it's interesting.
Speaker:I would, I would have to say that setting a red line is
Speaker:stupid in a multipolar world.
Speaker:He made a mistake.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:But he didn't double down on the mistake, but he didn't double down on it.
Speaker:And that was correct.
Speaker:Like he, he, you know, took it in the face.
Speaker:He took the punch.
Speaker:But that's exactly the point.
Speaker:In a multipolar world, you can't be, you can't be preachy.
Speaker:You can't be going around the world saying like, Iran is evil.
Speaker:Like, well, that's your opinion, man, to quote another great movie.
Speaker:But,
Speaker:but this is sort of where your argument is on a little bit of a,
Speaker:is on like, doesn't like, because Trump has gotten preachy about this.
Speaker:His red line is no nuclear weapons for this regime, and it's gone from
Speaker:I want a nuclear deal, blah, blah, blah, to no, no nuclear weapons.
Speaker:Like that's his new line.
Speaker:Well, okay.
Speaker:That's, that's, that's a different issue though.
Speaker:Uh, first of all, it's very clear.
Speaker:It's like objective, it's physical, it's materialistic.
Speaker:It's not like we need Iran to change its behavior towards its own people.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:He's never said that.
Speaker:No, of course not.
Speaker:You know, but that's, but that's, that's the issue because it is a
Speaker:actionable, it is a limited and it is a clear delineation of what American
Speaker:interests are, and then that's it.
Speaker:But so was Obama.
Speaker:It's like, I'm just saying it, it is a red line, like where three weeks
Speaker:ago he, he was nothing like, there is now a red line for the United States
Speaker:and maybe he won't, like, listen, maybe he won't follow through on it.
Speaker:Well, okay, fine.
Speaker:To be consistent.
Speaker:To be consistent.
Speaker:Then what I would say is that I do think that Barack Obama also made
Speaker:a mistake for not attacking Syria.
Speaker:Oh, for not, not following through.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Not following through.
Speaker:Because look, they use chemical weapons.
Speaker:You can just bomb the shit out of Syria and move on.
Speaker:This is my point, this is my point right now.
Speaker:Too many people are extrapolating this into regime change, boots on the ground.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:For God's sakes, maybe it's 'cause I'm Serbian.
Speaker:Maybe because it's, I watch my hometown burn on CNN Live maybe because of that.
Speaker:I remember the one example where the US did something limited and the
Speaker:rest of you just forgot about it.
Speaker:'cause nobody cares about Serbia except when we're, you know,
Speaker:kicking your ass in sports.
Speaker:Um, but, okay.
Speaker:Okay, look, time out.
Speaker:In 1999, bill Clinton showed up and said, look, uh, you need to
Speaker:remove your military from Kosovo.
Speaker:Serbs.
Speaker:Were like, Yolo, you know, you know, show us what you got, nato.
Speaker:Great idea.
Speaker:Thanks.
Speaker:Slow it on.
Speaker:And then, you know, three months of like taking it in the face, the servers were
Speaker:finally like, okay, fine, fine, fine.
Speaker:They cried.
Speaker:Uncle, the point is that at no time was the United States of America planning an
Speaker:invasion of Serbia because they would've had to face a bunch of yoki and Djokovics
Speaker:like, fuck, you don't wanna do that.
Speaker:So like, they were like, look, we're just gonna bomb the shit out of
Speaker:you until you change your behavior.
Speaker:And this is why I would say to everyone who right now is just
Speaker:saying like, oh, it's another Iraq.
Speaker:It doesn't have to be, there are ways to use effectively what we call a
Speaker:political science gunboat diplomacy.
Speaker:You steam a gunboat into the port, you show the caliber of your big
Speaker:guns, and then, you know, you change behavior of a country.
Speaker:It doesn't have to be a slippery slope into invasions, into regime
Speaker:changes, into, you know, American servicemen d dying in some random place.
Speaker:The point is, it's in a limited attack.
Speaker:I think Barack Obama should have done that in Syria.
Speaker:I don't see why he didn't.
Speaker:It's because, of course, the demons in his skeleton were left over by the
Speaker:previous administration and he, he felt politically that he couldn't do that.
Speaker:I think President Trump has correctly, in a way, I mean, obviously
Speaker:what was incorrect was letting Israel wag him at like a tail.
Speaker:But let's leave that aside.
Speaker:Let's leave that aside for a second.
Speaker:Now that it's happened, he did it.
Speaker:And then what did he flag to Iran?
Speaker:This is very important.
Speaker:He said to Iran, it's not regime change, and this is it.
Speaker:We're done.
Speaker:We are done.
Speaker:You guys can now decide where you take this, but we don't think we, we
Speaker:don't care that you're an evil regime.
Speaker:God bless you for it.
Speaker:Go ahead being evil, just be very careful how you retaliate against this.
Speaker:That is limited.
Speaker:Im not immoral, immoral way to conduct foreign policy based
Speaker:on hardened material interests.
Speaker:And I think it's a new, it, it is a, it's almost a conscious acceptance by
Speaker:America that it's a multipolar world and you cannot be running around the world
Speaker:trying to turn countries into fucking Wisconsin with your foreign policy.
Speaker:'cause it doesn't work.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:I, I think you're slightly mischaracterizing what trump's I, I
Speaker:think you're like 85% of the way there.
Speaker:But the other part that you've left unsaid, it's not like,
Speaker:okay, fine, you could be evil.
Speaker:He doesn't care about that.
Speaker:But he is also clearly said, and you're not going to have nuclear weapons.
Speaker:That's, and I've made it clear since my first term, but that's
Speaker:American interest, that you're not gonna have nuclear weapons.
Speaker:Now, I don't think this is gonna happen, but let me throw you a scenario at you.
Speaker:Like, for, for devil's advocacy's sake, please.
Speaker:Like, let's say the Iranians, uh, have a successful test of a nuclear weapon
Speaker:tomorrow, after this bombing, after everything that's happened, like.
Speaker:Trump can't abide that can, of course not.
Speaker:He's gonna have to figure out how to do more.
Speaker:Yes, that's fine.
Speaker:So like, there, there, there is a line here now, which is, it's
Speaker:not just go do your own thing.
Speaker:This matter is closed, it's now you will not have nukes.
Speaker:And I've committed the US military to making sure you will never have nukes.
Speaker:Have a nice day.
Speaker:I don't listen, listen, here's what I would say.
Speaker:The, the difference is not that there is no way for this
Speaker:to become a slippery slope.
Speaker:The difference is that that way is not moralistic or normative.
Speaker:Yes, yes.
Speaker:And that's, but, but, but the reason that's important, Jacob.
Speaker:The reason that liberal approach to foreign policy is dangerous in a
Speaker:multipolar world is because it sucks you into a never ending conflict.
Speaker:Once you identify some somebody as Adolf Hitler, once you identify
Speaker:somebody as a Nazi regime, you must intervene and you must spend all
Speaker:your resources on that intervention.
Speaker:That's important.
Speaker:You can set.
Speaker:You can order a country to change their flag.
Speaker:Don't use green, use red.
Speaker:You can order them to not have a nuclear weapon.
Speaker:You can order them to stop wearing hats for Atlanta Braves
Speaker:and embrace the revolution.
Speaker:That's the La Dodgers.
Speaker:God bless them, please.
Speaker:And I can't wait for that revolution to spread to the LA Lakers.
Speaker:You will all be wearing blue and purple and gold, goddammit.
Speaker:But listen,
Speaker:you're, you're welcome for Freddie Freeman, by the way,
Speaker:you, of course.
Speaker:Thank you so much.
Speaker:And also for the Toronto maple leaf, uh, not maple leaf, my bad.
Speaker:The Blue Jays, you know, for the Oscar.
Speaker:And of course, let's not forget the Boston Red Sox for Freddie.
Speaker:If
Speaker:you're listening, I cannot believe you left us for them.
Speaker:I cannot believe whatcha talking about
Speaker:Mki Te Oscar, Freddy Japan.
Speaker:He could have gone down.
Speaker:He could have gone down as one of the greatest figures in storied Atlanta.
Speaker:Brave's history.
Speaker:No.
Speaker:You wanted to go home.
Speaker:Wanted to, to Southern California.
Speaker:I'm, oh, I'm sorry, Jacob.
Speaker:I'm sorry.
Speaker:Apparently you could still live in
Speaker:Southern California.
Speaker:Come, apparently
Speaker:the epicenter of World War III is a nice place to live, and apparently
Speaker:that helps teams here attract talent.
Speaker:Well, listen, listen, listen, listen.
Speaker:My point is that this is the key differentiator in a multipolar.
Speaker:You can set all sorts of red lines.
Speaker:They can be stupid still, you can still make mistakes, but those red lines are
Speaker:not whether or not somebody is evil.
Speaker:And my point, my point to you and to everyone listening to
Speaker:this, I'm not an evil person.
Speaker:I don't cheerlead for 21st century like Hitlers out there.
Speaker:The reality is that in a multipolar world, the power of the United States or any
Speaker:other great power is, is, is, is limited.
Speaker:There are limits to that.
Speaker:It's not preponderance of power.
Speaker:You cannot just parachute into some country and turn it into Wisconsin and.
Speaker:Make it less evil.
Speaker:And so the foreign policy has to adjust for that.
Speaker:And that's where President Trump, I would say, is a perfect
Speaker:president for a multipolar world.
Speaker:What I fear, what I fear is the Democratic Party, because it does have
Speaker:the Trump derangement syndrome, is going to throw the baby with the bathwater.
Speaker:And listen, lemme tell you like Trump is a baby, he's got some stinky bath water.
Speaker:Alright?
Speaker:There's, there's a lot of stuff that needs to be thrown out as far
Speaker:as the bath water is concerned.
Speaker:But the one very, very good thing is that I, I think that his
Speaker:approach to foreign policy is going to withstand the test of time.
Speaker:But I do fear that it could be ideologically resisted by the next
Speaker:Democratic president in 2028 or beyond.
Speaker:Merely because it was Trump's foreign policy.
Speaker:It's not Trump's foreign policy.
Speaker:It's matter Nic, foreign policy.
Speaker:It's Kissinger's foreign policy.
Speaker:It is a foreign policy of anybody who's existed in the past, which
Speaker:is you cannot just identify your adversaries as morally inferior.
Speaker:Because once you do that, you don't know when to stop the war and actually
Speaker:sit down with them and negotiate.
Speaker:It becomes impossible to do that.
Speaker:And therefore every freaking war then becomes a war of existential proportions
Speaker:where yes, you do push countries to the brink of existential survivor.
Speaker:Survivor, survivor, wait, survival.
Speaker:And then they do all sorts of things in retaliation because you put them to that.
Speaker:That's why this kind of a conflict, this kind of a, a military action
Speaker:that just happened is unique.
Speaker:And I think everybody listening to this should go and read like President
Speaker:Trump's like tweet hack sets.
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Um, like, um.
Speaker:Press conference.
Speaker:Why?
Speaker:Because America is telling its adversary.
Speaker:We're not seeking regime change.
Speaker:You wanna go and like do whatever you want to Your people go right ahead.
Speaker:We think that's stupid.
Speaker:We think you are bad actors.
Speaker:We think you're repressing women, but it's not our place to change that.
Speaker:Good luck to you with that.
Speaker:You know, we think your time is up anyways because you are
Speaker:an amoral country, whatever.
Speaker:But we're not gonna punish you for that.
Speaker:We're gonna punish you for this thing here, which is your nuclear program,
Speaker:and then we're open for negotiations.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Alright, last words.
Speaker:Um, 'cause I'm, I'm on the clock.
Speaker:Uh, my last thing is just like, and this is not the thing that's gonna like, you
Speaker:know, people wanna talk about and things like that, but for me, what's salient
Speaker:when you step back from all of this is that, um, like you said, probably
Speaker:not World War iii, probably not even that big of a deal in the short run.
Speaker:Like probably this goes the way of India, Pakistan, Russia, Ukraine, maybe a slow
Speaker:burning crisis that continues, that we all get acculturated to and normalized to.
Speaker:And like that, that's sort of where I think it's heading.
Speaker:But I do think when you take a step back and look at the world now, the
Speaker:Eurasian landmass is in trouble.
Speaker:Like there are problems everywhere and brush fires everywhere.
Speaker:And the places where there are not brush fires or places like South America,
Speaker:and I know that Southeast Asia is still technically part of the ian land mess,
Speaker:but Southeast Asia looks pretty good too.
Speaker:And Australia, Oceania like looks pretty good.
Speaker:I wouldn't throw Sub-Saharan Africa in there 'cause they've got lots of problems.
Speaker:But I think if you're just looking around the world for relative stability, like
Speaker:there are pockets of relative instability.
Speaker:It's just not in Eurasia.
Speaker:And there's something happening like across the Eurasian land mass, which as,
Speaker:as somebody who's trying to step back and not try, 'cause you know, you can
Speaker:fade geopolitics and think about trading, but if you're thinking about frameworks
Speaker:like beyond the short term and thinking about 5, 10, 15 years from now, um, I
Speaker:think we're actually having a very stark relief where the places of stability in
Speaker:the world are and where the places of instability in the world are going to be.
Speaker:And for me, that's the big lesson here because we've had all of
Speaker:these conflicts in, in, in short success, in in short succession.
Speaker:And like we, we are also seeing where there isn't conflict.
Speaker:And for me, like that's the lesson.
Speaker:Uh, like, and that's how I'm trying to think about reorienting things.
Speaker:What about you?
Speaker:So, first of all, uh, I'm not gonna disagree with you on Latin
Speaker:America and Southeast Asia.
Speaker:I love those two places.
Speaker:I think they're gonna do great.
Speaker:However, I do wanna disagree with you.
Speaker:Good.
Speaker:I, I think there is a concept of a garrison state, and I think that too
Speaker:many investors and too many commentators just look in the region and they say
Speaker:like, oh my, I don't wanna be there.
Speaker:Not a single barrel of oil has been lost since October 7th, 2023.
Speaker:And I'm like, the only analyst out there that points that out repeatedly.
Speaker:Not a single barrel of oil has not made it to the global market.
Speaker:In other words, Iran and Israel could nuke each other.
Speaker:The rest of the world can move on.
Speaker:Mm-hmm.
Speaker:And that's because oftentimes it's in the regions of instability that you find, the
Speaker:gems, that's where things start moving.
Speaker:That's where countries realize we gotta get better because we're not safe.
Speaker:You know?
Speaker:So I look at what's happening in Saudi Arabia.
Speaker:I look at what's happening in Dubai Abu Dhabi.
Speaker:I. These are countries literally in the middle of all these
Speaker:rockets go flying back and forth.
Speaker:And I'm not sure that I would not wanna like, visit those countries
Speaker:or invest or, or, or, or have a condo like, or go for fun.
Speaker:Like I absolutely would.
Speaker:And I absolutely have been over the last two years going in and out seeing
Speaker:the changes that are happening there.
Speaker:Similarly with countries in Europe, like Europe is taking the challenge from Russia
Speaker:and is actually doing the right things.
Speaker:Poland, you know, I mean the economists jinx Poland by putting
Speaker:them on the cover of their magazine.
Speaker:But the point, the, the one thing I think where we, we agree, I think Latin
Speaker:America is gonna do very well Southeast Asia too, but I think that there's
Speaker:pockets of stability on this brush fire, uh, affected Eurasian, uh, landmass.
Speaker:And I think that's where innovation, and that's where entrepreneurship,
Speaker:and that's where vigor and that's where, uh, you know, actual.
Speaker:Productivity will be shown up because necessity is the mother of all invention.
Speaker:So I like the concept of Garrison states and I want to invest in those.
Speaker:Gotcha.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:Uh, before we go breaking news, you ready?
Speaker:Yes.
Speaker:Uh, the Phoenix Suns have agreed to trade Kevin Durant to the Houston
Speaker:Rockets for Jalen Green, Dylan Brooks, the number 10 pick in this
Speaker:year's draft and five second round picks what a poo poo platter this is.
Speaker:Uh, so you can react to that or you can make your picks for Game
Speaker:seven tonight before we say goodbye.
Speaker:Well, I'm definitely, uh, I think game seven, man.
Speaker:I mean, you know, it's United States versus Iran, right?
Speaker:Ooh, spicy.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:OKC man, the heartland, the MAGA heartland.
Speaker:They just got like stealth bombers and the Canadian assassin, you know, they're
Speaker:just like, yeah, so much more powerful.
Speaker:But man,
Speaker:the Pacers have the Caliban.
Speaker:And my heart wants the Pacers to win.
Speaker:But you know, I, I do think OKC is going to prove to be
Speaker:just overwhelmingly powerful.
Speaker:You think OKC looked scared to me?
Speaker:I know they're young.
Speaker:I, I listen man.
Speaker:I know, but would you put money on the Pacers though?
Speaker:That's such a, like, it's a, it's a crazy bet.
Speaker:You know, it's, it's gonna be the, it's Oklahoma.
Speaker:There's, their fans are not gonna sit down and they're just so good.
Speaker:Like SGA is like so good.
Speaker:I agree with you though, that the Pacers play with no weight on their shoulders.
Speaker:Uh, whereas the thunder do, and look, I'll tell you this, Jacob
Speaker:Shapiro, if there is a God.
Speaker:He'll let the Pacers win.
Speaker:I wouldn't have put money on, I wouldn't have even thought, I, I
Speaker:thought the Pacers didn't have a chance until game six and now, yeah, I
Speaker:think I might throw some money because like the kcs seem seemed scared.
Speaker:Like they seem like they didn't know what to do and like they really
Speaker:like, it's SGA and like if SGA is not cooking, like who else is there
Speaker:around him, who's gonna go forward.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:And I think the coaching aspect here really matters.
Speaker:Yes, totally.
Speaker:Like I, I think Carlisle's been here before and he's got
Speaker:the, he's got the Porsche.
Speaker:No, he's awesome.
Speaker:Like, you know, he doesn't going in all directions a
Speaker:hundred percent.
Speaker:And listen, the reason I say there's a God, like that team
Speaker:should have stayed in Seattle.
Speaker:You know, they've been cursed ever since.
Speaker:There's clearly like something, but you know, they are, I mean they won
Speaker:like how many games have they won now?
Speaker:94 or something.
Speaker:Like, it's just, it's hard, it's hard for me to see them, but I would love for
Speaker:the Pacers to win just for the, you know, for the, the Cinderella story of it.
Speaker:Be, by the way, this will be the greatest upset mathematically in
Speaker:NBA finals history if it happens.
Speaker:I, I,
Speaker:well, and I
Speaker:check, oh, maybe 2004.
Speaker:The Detroit is still bigger.
Speaker:I'm not sure.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:It, it also would be a huge victory for the United States over Canada.
Speaker:'cause I mean, you know, we've been talking about multipolar
Speaker:basketball here for a long time.
Speaker:And SJ if you're gonna blow this shit to, you know, uh, Tyrese,
Speaker:Halliburton from Oshkosh, Wisconsin, uh, like not you're, you're Canadian.
Speaker:Uh, basketball geopolitics not looking so good if you fumble this,
Speaker:but, but you're probably right.
Speaker:Alright.
Speaker:Unfortunately.
Speaker:Yeah.
Speaker:Alright, well this was great.
Speaker:Thank you.
Speaker:And by the way, for all you, uh, waiting for our long anticipated trade value,
Speaker:we are going to replicate what Bill Simmons does on the basketball side.
Speaker:We're going to do a trade value podcast at some point when Israel Iran calms down.
Speaker:Uh, we're going to both present our top 30 leaders and basically the way it works.
Speaker:The politician, that's number one.
Speaker:You would not trade him or her For anybody, the politician becomes 30th.
Speaker:It means that you would trade that person if you were in the country
Speaker:that I run for anyone above.
Speaker:So we're gonna do that soon.
Speaker:I can't wait.
Speaker:It's just that I can't
Speaker:wait.
Speaker:So, Iran, Israel, please stop this nonsense so that we can get to the
Speaker:content that people really need.
Speaker:And that's truly important to the future of the, I mean,
Speaker:Benjamin Netanyahu should just stop bombing Iran 'cause he wants
Speaker:to find out where we put him on our top 30 liter in the world.
Speaker:If he makes the cut,
Speaker:does he make your cut?
Speaker:I don't know.
Speaker:We, we'll have to wait until that episode.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:All right.
Speaker:I won't spoil anything.
Speaker:Cheers, dude.