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There is no society anymore. Instead, a transnational security elite is using taxpayer money to carve up the world. To combat this, we must not just petition, but take over. We need to build our own networks of strength and mutual value to challenge the warmongers in our country and others. They have formed an alliance to take money from the United States, NATO countries, Australia, and launder it through Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Yemen, Pakistan, and wash that money in people's blood.

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There is a transnational security elite using tax money to carve up the world. To combat them, we must not petition but take over. We need to build our own networks to challenge warmongers in the US and other countries who are allied to profit from wars in places like Yemen and Pakistan, where money and lives are at stake.

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The world's wealth is highly concentrated, with the top 1% controlling 90% of it. Estimates suggest that the world's wealth is around $255 trillion, with the US and Europe holding two-thirds of that total. On the other hand, 80% of the global population lives on less than $10 a day, while the poorest half survives on $2.50 a day. Additionally, 1.3 billion people live on just $1.25 a day. There are concerns about the control exerted by the wealthy elite, who manipulate the media, influence governments, and generate chaos to further their own agendas. The CIA's history is also mentioned, with claims of crimes against citizens and the continuation of Nazi ideals.

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There is a transnational security elite using tax money to carve up the world. To combat them, we must form our own strong networks to challenge warmongers in the US and other countries. Money is being funneled through Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Yemen, Pakistan, leading to bloodshed.

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Speaker 0 describes Zelensky as an American hero and contrasts his public image with the underlying narrative. He explains Zelensky was totally apolitical, an outsider with no government experience, a comedian, and the star of a planned TV show called Servant of the People. In the show, the main character creates a YouTube video that calls out oligarchs and corruption, becomes popular, and is drafted as a protest candidate who eventually becomes president. In real life, the TV show is supported by oligarch Kolomoisky, who owned the channel and did a large, nonstop promotional push to make it the number one show, including primetime slots, ads, and crossovers with the news. In 2018, a year before the show ended, Zelensky formed a political party named Servant of the People, the same title as the show, and secretly produced another season of the show. In April 2019, he announced his candidacy on Instagram, with no campaign, no rallies, no real platform, and he skipped presidential debates; his few early press conferences were poor. Kolomoisky’s channel provided Zelensky with endless airtime and favorable polls while attacking his enemies. Speaker 0 continues that US intelligence agencies, CIA and NSA, helped by funding democracy campaigns in Ukraine—reportedly around $5 billion—funneled through NGOs, with USAID embedding advisers in Zelensky’s organization to assist the campaign. On election day, Zelensky wins with 73% of the vote. Afterward, the war with Russia occurs, he declares martial law, and elections are ended. An election in 2024 is anticipated as the result of democracy money. He asserts Zelensky is an actor in a carefully designed television show—“a construct,” akin to Epstein—an created entity that works, and asks what Americans think about his popularity. Speaker 1 responds that Americans are disappointed by the ongoing war and deaths, noting that the war’s human cost is a major failure of promises from the Trump administration, who claimed he would resolve it in 24 hours. He adds that conscripting 60-year-old men and Americans and others going to fight are part of the situation. He states that the Ukraine narrative, and wars in general, are not organic: wars like this are driven by demands for primacy, control, and wealth, rather than being spontaneous. He reflects that Putin didn’t suddenly decide to invade; similarly, the broader pattern of power is not organic. He notes the Russian soldiers were told they would be welcomed and that they had dress uniforms, and compares to expectations in Iraq, where it was promised that Iraqis would welcome forces. He asks what the Ukraine situation is really about, and comments that human war reduces to a few centers of power like NATO, China, the Soviet bloc, and oil-producing countries, ultimately converging to two leaders in a room who must kill each other, as part of the decay of empire, with the U.S. maintaining about 760 overseas military bases.

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There is no society anymore. Instead, a transnational security elite is using taxpayer money to divide the world. To counter this, we shouldn't just petition, but rather take control. We need to create our own networks of strength and mutual value to challenge the warmongers in our country and others. They have formed an alliance to funnel money from the United States, NATO countries, Australia, and channel it through Afghanistan, Iraq, and Somalia.

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Economic hitmen create a secret global empire by giving loans to resource-rich countries. The money goes to corporations for infrastructure projects that benefit the wealthy, leaving the majority in debt without basic necessities. To repay the debt, these countries are forced to sell resources cheaply, vote in favor of certain policies, or allow military bases. If these tactics fail, military intervention is used. This predatory form of capitalism has led to an unstable and dangerous world. Terrorism stems from desperation, and addressing the root causes is crucial for global security. We must recognize that the entire planet is our homeland for effective homeland security.

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Society no longer exists. A transnational security elite is using taxpayer money to divide the world. To fight back, we must not just protest, but take control. We need to create our own networks to challenge the warmongers who profit from conflicts in countries like Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Yemen, and Pakistan, where money is washed in blood.

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The ongoing wars are fueled by peace agreements that are not meant to be upheld. The conflict in Ukraine started with a coup backed by the US, leading to violations of peace agreements. NATO's expansion and manipulation of the US dollar are used as tools for control. The overthrow of Gaddafi was to prevent a currency competition with the US dollar. Ultimately, these actions benefit corporations like BlackRock and Vanguard.

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The US military industry is crucial to the country's manufacturing sector, accounting for over 3% of total manufacturing. It plays a significant role in the US economy, with arms exports totaling $175 billion in 2020. US companies dominate the global arms market, making up 59% of sales. The defense industry's importance lies in its connection to the US's global strategy, as it provides power and profits. Arms dealers' desire for profit drives Washington to pursue wars, create tensions, and involve allies. The defense industry and Washington's ambition to dominate the world are mutually beneficial.

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There is no society anymore. Instead, a transnational security elite is using your tax money to carve up the world. To combat this, we must not petition, but rather take over. We need to build our own networks of strength and mutual value to challenge the warmongers in this country and others. They have formed an alliance to take money from the United States and its NATO allies, Australia included, and funnel it through Afghanistan, Iraq, Somalia, Yemen, and Pakistan, staining it with people's blood.

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The United States is characterized as a semi-democratic, white-dominated, hierarchical, and racist society, rooted in privilege since its formation in 1787. It has a history of slavery and the genocide of Native Americans, which continues to influence its structure today. The U.S. can maintain a democratic facade domestically while engaging in ruthless imperialism abroad. Since 1950, it has been the most violent country in the world.

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The US military industry is crucial to the country's manufacturing sector, accounting for over 3% of total manufacturing. In 2020, US arms exports reached $175.08 billion, with American companies making up 59% of global arms sales. Despite representing only 1.8% of GDP, the aerospace and defense industry significantly impacts the US economy. The government provides long-term stability to this market. The interdependence between wars, defense industry, and US strength is evident. Weakening the defense industry would undermine the economy and the country's global dominance. The desire for profits drives arms dealers to push for wars, create tensions, and involve allies. The defense industry and Washington's ambition to conquer the world have a mutually beneficial relationship.

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The speaker addressed the Security Council on the issue of whether any member state may determine Venezuela’s political future by force, coercion, or economic strangulation, stressing that the question concerns the prohibition on the threat or use of force against a state's territorial integrity or political independence under the UN Charter. The council must decide whether that prohibition is to be upheld or abandoned. Background is offered on U.S. foreign policy, described as repeatedly using force, covert action, and political manipulation to achieve regime change since 1947. The speaker cites Lindsay O’Rourke’s documentation of 70 attempted U.S. regime-change operations between 1947 and 1989, noting that such practices continued after the Cold War. Regime-change actions attributed to the United States since 1989 include Iraq 2003, Libya 2011, Syria beginning in 2011, Honduras 2009, Ukraine 2014, and Venezuela from 2002 onward, employing methods such as open warfare, covert operations, instigation of unrest, support for armed groups, manipulation of media, bribery, targeted assassinations, false flag operations, and economic warfare. These measures are described as illegal under the UN Charter and typically yielding ongoing violence and civilian suffering. Specific Venezuelan-related actions cited include: the April 2002 coup attempt known to the U.S.; funding of civil-society groups engaged in anti-government protests in the 2010s; sanctions following crackdowns; in 2015, President Obama labeling Venezuela an “unusual and extraordinary threat”; in 2017, President Trump discussing invasion options at a UN General Assembly margin dinner. Between 2017 and 2020, sweeping sanctions on PDVSA reduced oil production by 75% from 2016 to 2020 and dropped real GDP per capita by 62%. The UN General Assembly is said to have repeatedly voted against unilateral coercive measures, and the speaker asserts that under international law only the Security Council may impose such measures. On January 23, 2019, the U.S. unilaterally recognized Juan Guaidó as interim president and soon after froze about $7 billion of Venezuelan sovereign assets abroad. The actions are framed as part of a two-decade-long regime-change effort. The speaker notes U.S. bombing operations in seven countries in the past year without UN Security Council authorization or lawful self-defense, listing Iran, Iraq, Nigeria, Somalia, Syria, Yemen, and Venezuela, and cites threats by President Trump against six UN member states, including Colombia, Denmark, Iran, Mexico, Nigeria, and Venezuela. The speaker invokes realist theory and the League of Nations’ failure, arguing the UN was created to place international law above anarchy and urging that failure to uphold the Charter would threaten humanity. The proposed resolutions call for: the United States to cease all explicit and implicit threats or use of force against Venezuela, terminate the naval quarantine and related coercive measures without UN authorization, withdraw all military forces and forward-deployed assets from Venezuela’s vicinity, and require Venezuela to adhere to the UN Charter and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. The secretary-general should appoint a special envoy to engage Venezuelan and international stakeholders and report back within fourteen days with Charter-consistent recommendations; the Security Council should remain urgently seized of the matter. All states should refrain from unilateral threats, coercive measures, or armed actions outside the Security Council’s authority. The speaker closes by emphasizing that the UN Charter must remain a living instrument of international law.

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The US military industry is crucial to the country's manufacturing sector, accounting for over 3% of total manufacturing. It plays a significant role in the US economy, with arms exports totaling $175 billion in 2020. US companies dominate the global arms market, making up 59% of sales. The defense industry's importance lies in its connection to the US's global strategy, as it provides power and profits. Arms dealers' desire for profit drives Washington to pursue wars, create tensions, and involve allies. The defense industry and Washington's ambition to dominate the world are mutually beneficial.

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We create a secret global empire by targeting resource-rich countries and arranging massive loans that benefit our corporations instead of the people. These countries end up with crippling debt, and we use this leverage to gain cheap oil, political support, or military bases. If our tactics fail, we resort to overthrowing or assassinating leaders. This predatory form of capitalism has led to an unstable and dangerous world. To eliminate terrorism, we must address the root causes and understand that the entire planet is our homeland. Neoliberalism initially aimed to define humans by the market but quickly became a self-serving racket that exempted billionaires and corporations from democratic constraints.

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In 1871, corporations took over the states' republics, changing the foundation of the country. The constitution was the trust indenture, but public officials became trustees for the corporations. Wars are controlled by the 1% global elite who funded both sides of conflicts. The republics still exist, as a trust cannot fail without a trustee.

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The US military industry is crucial to the country's manufacturing sector, accounting for over 3% of total manufacturing. It plays a significant role in the US economy, with arms exports totaling $175 billion in 2020. US companies dominate the global arms market, making up 59% of sales. The defense industry's importance lies in its connection to the US's global strategy, as it provides power and profits. Arms dealers' desire for profit drives Washington to pursue wars, create tensions, and involve allies. The defense industry and Washington's ambition to conquer the world are mutually beneficial.

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The US military industry is crucial to the country's manufacturing sector, accounting for over 3% of total manufacturing. It plays a significant role in the US economy, with arms exports totaling $175.08 billion in 2020. US companies dominate the global arms market, making up 59% of sales. The defense industry's importance lies in its connection to the US's global strategy, as it provides power and profits. Arms dealers' desire for profit drives Washington to pursue wars, create tensions, and involve allies. The defense industry and Washington's ambition to dominate the world are mutually beneficial.

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The speaker argues that whenever a country defends its own people, the United States asks, “Who owns the resources?” and if the answer isn’t The US, a coup follows. The claim is that over 80 foreign governments have been overthrown or destabilized by the United States, and that most of them weren’t dictatorships, but democratically elected governments that threatened US corporate profits. The described playbook involves the CIA funding opposition groups like ISIS and Al Qaeda, planting stories in the media, bribing generals, arming rebels, or collapsing a country’s economy, with the coup replacing the leader with a pro-US dictatorship. The overarching assertion is that this is not about democracy but about power and control. Key historical examples cited include: - Iran in 1953: Mosaddegh attempted to nationalize oil; the CIA launched Operation Ajax, orchestrated protests, paid off politicians, and installed the Shah, resulting in twenty-five years of dictatorship and torture under US protection. - Guatemala in 1954: President Arbenz redistributed land from the United Fruit Company, a US corporation; the CIA branded him a communist, conducted a coup, and Guatemala descended into a civil war with over 200,000 deaths. - Chile in 1973: Allende was overthrown in a US-backed military coup, and Pinochet’s regime tortured and killed thousands after Allende’s attempts to nationalize copper. - Congo in 1961: Lumumba sought African control of African resources; the CIA helped orchestrate his assassination and installed a brutal dictator who was supported for decades. The speaker adds that there are “dozens of others” beyond these cases, including Haiti, Iraq, Libya, Nicaragua, El Salvador, the Dominican Republic, Brazil, Bolivia, and beyond, arguing that the motive is not fighting tyranny but profits and control. When a country attempts to exit the system or nationalize resources to reduce inequality, they threaten profits and the idea that another world is possible, so the CIA sabotages such efforts to prevent successful example-making, such as Libya. The conclusion is that many nations don’t trust the United States because “we’ve been the villains throughout most of our history.” The speaker invites readers to comment to receive a “forbidden reading list” of books and documentaries that “they never wanted you to find.”

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Professor Jeffrey Sachs argues that the current moment represents dramatic and dangerous upheaval, with the war against Iran in its second week and a “regime change operation” not going as planned. He says there is tremendous confusion about war aims and the ground situation, describing Washington as “fogged” and characterizing Donald Trump’s public messaging as “ravings” from a “madman.” He contends that escalation control is illusory and that the world is sliding toward a broader and more dangerous conflict. Sachs asserts that the war is not limited to Iran: Iran has claimed to strike U.S. bases in several countries while denying attacks on Saudi Arabia, Azerbaijan, and Turkey. He suggests the U.S. and Israel are pulling in proxies, including Kurdish fighters, and that Russia may be supplying Iran with intelligence while the U.S. supplies Ukraine. He contends that after decapitation strikes on Iran, Moscow faces pressure to deter NATO attacks, while Europe contemplates increasing nuclear weapons. He views the conflict as part of a wider global struggle, with fighting across the world and potential linkages to energy markets, indicating that an energy crisis is likely to be severe and poorly priced in by markets. He argues that if China and Russia support Iran, it underscores a broader strategic dynamic, given China’s oil interests and the U.S.’s efforts to cut off oil supplies to China from Venezuela, Russia, and Iran. On international law, Sachs reiterates his argument that the U.S.-Israel attack on Iran is also an attack on the United Nations. He asserts that the U.S. under Trump “despises the UN” and seeks to kill it “through a thousand cuts and through a devastating blow,” pointing to the U.S. withdrawal from UN agencies and rejection of key treaties. He emphasizes that Europe is complicit, with European leaders and ambassadors at the UN Security Council focusing critiques on Iran rather than on the U.S.-Israel strike. He invokes Article 2(4) of the UN Charter as the essence of the UN’s purpose to stop the use of force, contrasting this with the belief that the U.S. “rules the world” and uses violence to impose demands, including the call for “unconditional surrender” in Iran. Sachs describes the U.S. foreign policy machinery as dominated by the CIA and a network of “off the books militaries” that pursue regime change and hegemony. He recalls historical episodes: the 1953 coup in Iran, the Kennedy and Eisenhower era, and the long-standing pattern of U.S. interference in other countries’ leadership. He asserts that performance of checks and balances is deteriorating, with democracy weakening under threat and dissent punished, both in the U.S. and in Europe. He likens Trump’s rhetoric to a hyperbolic assertion that he would determine Iran’s next leader, calling this symptomatic of a broader U.S. imperial project. In discussing European responses, Sachs criticizes Germany for showing subservience to the U.S. stance, with European leaders at times prioritizing confrontation with Iran over engagement with Russia or seeking peace. He laments the decline of European strategic autonomy and the EU as a whole, noting the Danish ambassador’s focus on Iran while ignoring U.S.-Israeli actions. He argues that Europe’s leadership has failed to act in the spirit of postwar peace, contrasting current leadership with figures like de Gaulle, Mitterrand, Kohl, or Schroeder. Toward multipolarity, Sachs traces the idea back to Roosevelt’s vision for a United Nations-centered postwar order and contrasts it with the post-1990s U.S. unilateralism. He argues that the United States, Britain, Russia, and China would need to cooperate to avert catastrophe, and that the current trajectory—led by an obsession with global dominance—risks war, economic crisis, and widespread destabilization. He suggests that China and Russia are the most likely to push back against U.S. hegemony, with India possibly playing a role, though its alignment remains ambivalent. Sachs closes by noting that a move toward peaceful multipolar cooperation would require different leadership and a rejection of the Leviathan-style dominance mindset.

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The US has about 750 military bases in 80 countries, representing imperialism. Bases are launch pads for war, costing trillions and causing deaths. Closing bases is easy and has been done before. The US must rethink its global role and military force use for peace and security. Translation: The United States has many military bases worldwide, reflecting imperialism. These bases are used for war, costing trillions and resulting in deaths. Closing bases is feasible and has been done in the past. The US needs to reconsider its global role and military actions for peace and security.

Tucker Carlson

Mike Benz: How NGOs Have Dominated the World, Who’s Behind Them, & How They’re Now Undermining Trump
Guests: Mike Benz
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Mike Benz discusses the role of NGOs in U.S. foreign policy, likening them to a parallel government that operates alongside traditional state structures. He traces the origins of NGOs back to the establishment of the U.S. income tax in 1913 and the subsequent tax-deductible status of charitable donations, which led to a significant influx of funding into private foundations and nonprofits. Benz argues that these organizations have been used as fronts for U.S. intelligence operations, particularly during the Cold War, to influence foreign governments and control narratives. He highlights the influence of figures like George Soros and the Open Society Foundation, which he claims have become so powerful that U.S. foreign policy has had to align with their objectives. Benz describes NGOs as flexible tools that can operate in conflict zones where the government cannot, providing backchannel diplomacy and financial assistance while maintaining plausible deniability for the U.S. government. Benz introduces the concept of the "blob," a term used to describe the entrenched foreign policy establishment in Washington, which includes the State Department, Defense Department, and various NGOs. He asserts that this blob prioritizes the interests of multinational corporations over the American public, often leading to policies that do not benefit ordinary citizens. He recounts historical examples, such as the CIA's involvement in the 1948 Italian election, where NGOs were used to influence the outcome, and discusses how this model has been replicated in various countries. Benz emphasizes that the intertwining of government, NGOs, and corporate interests creates a system that is difficult to challenge democratically. Benz also critiques the U.S. Institute of Peace, suggesting it operates contrary to its stated mission and has been involved in controversial activities, including supporting the Taliban's opium trade in Afghanistan. He argues that the U.S. government has become reliant on these NGOs for intelligence and operational support, blurring the lines between state and non-state actors. He concludes by discussing the challenges of reforming this system, noting that while there have been efforts to cut funding to certain NGOs, the entrenched nature of these organizations makes significant change difficult. Benz warns that without a clear understanding of the NGO complex and its influence, efforts to restore democracy and accountability in the U.S. may be undermined.

Tucker Carlson

Megyn Kelly on Venezuela, Ben Shapiro’s Treachery, and Mark Levin’s Mental Illness
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The episode centers on a provocative framing of United States foreign policy as an explicit assertion of imperial power, sparked by recent events in Venezuela. The host argues that the U.S. has been an empire for decades, but that this week marked a candor about national self-interest that upends the postwar order built on international law and moral rhetoric. The conversation threads through questions about why the United States intervenes abroad, highlighting resource needs and strategic positioning as ongoing drivers, while raising concerns about the erosion of checks and balances as executive power expands and Congress retreats from decisive influence. Throughout, the speakers examine long-standing assumptions about legitimacy, sovereignty, and the role of international institutions, asking what a world driven by national interest rather than universal principles will look like in the near future. There is a persistent tension between acknowledging complex realpolitik and guarding domestic values in the face of escalating geopolitical risk. A recurring theme is the domestic cost of empire, including the impact on civil liberties, political norms, and national cohesion. The discussion pivots to the domestic arena, where debates about free speech, media bias, and the limit of presidential authority are cast against the backdrop of an aggressive, war-ready posture. The co-hosts challenge what they see as a tightening of acceptable opinion, the hijacking of public discourse by powerful figures, and the potential for a chilling effect on dissent. They articulate fears about the consolidation of power within the executive branch, the marginalization of Congress, and the parallel risk of deterioration in civil liberties as security concerns rise. Yet they also defend a principled stance that upholds individual rights and questions who gets to define the national interest.

Tucker Carlson

The Inevitable War With Iran, and Biden’s Attempts to Sabotage Trump
Guests: Jeffrey Sachs
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Tucker Carlson and Jeffrey Sachs discuss the recent regime change in Syria, attributing it to a long-term strategy by Israel, particularly under Netanyahu, to reshape the Middle East. Sachs references a 1996 document called "Clean Break," which outlines a plan for U.S. military involvement in several countries, including Syria, as part of a broader effort to establish a "Greater Israel." He argues that U.S. foreign policy has been heavily influenced by Israeli interests for decades, leading to wars that have destabilized the region without achieving peace. Sachs highlights that the U.S. has been involved in six out of seven planned wars, with Syria being a significant target since the Obama administration, which sought to overthrow Assad. He emphasizes that Syria was a functioning country before the conflict, and the U.S. intervention was not motivated by American security but rather by Israeli concerns over regional power dynamics. The conversation touches on the role of the mainstream media in shaping public perception, particularly regarding figures like Assad, who are portrayed as villains to justify regime change. Sachs criticizes the lack of accountability and oversight in U.S. foreign policy, suggesting that the military-industrial complex and the Israel lobby have undue influence over American actions abroad. As the discussion progresses, Sachs warns that escalating tensions with Iran could lead to catastrophic consequences, including nuclear war. He argues that the U.S. should pursue diplomatic solutions rather than military confrontation, advocating for a reevaluation of foreign policy priorities under the incoming administration. Sachs expresses hope that Trump could pivot towards peace, emphasizing the need for honest dialogue with adversaries like Iran and Russia. The dialogue concludes with a reflection on the failures of past administrations and the urgent need for a shift in U.S. foreign policy to avoid further conflict and promote stability in the Middle East and beyond.
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