We dive into the refutations by Saint Hilarion of socialism
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We dive into the refutations by Saint Hilarion of socialism
Podcast: Play in new window | Download
Alright, you caught me red handed!
I missed last week’s email.
I did, however, spend a solid hour, hour and a half, writing an article about how the film The Prince of Egypt framed 90s kids’ first impressions of Israel.
But I very quickly realized the topic was too complex for a 500 word email article. And constraints on my time just won’t allow for that kind of a deep dive.
Suffice to say, as an all-American, Jesus-loving, Sunday school attending 90s kid, I loved The Prince of Egypt. I was and always have been fascinated with ancient Egypt.
But the film firmly formed my childhood belief that modern Jews are the ancient Israelites (the Palestinians probably are) and that Jews are a particularly oppressed people–just because they’re Jewish, and for no other reason.
Now, that’s just the effect the film had on me. Was that the intended effect? I don’t know.
Upon its release, an Egyptian columnist, Adel Hammouda, called the film “the latest example” of “Israeli misery.”
An Egyptian film director, Hani Lashin, called the film “poisoned honey.” He further said “[the film] contains intentional distortion and works for the benefit of Jews, who claim they built the pyramids. If this is true, why didn’t they build a pyramid after their exodus from Egypt?”
The film’s creators (three American Jews, Steven Spielberg, Jeffrey Katzenberg, and David Geffen) say that they consulted over “300 biblical scholars, theologians, archeologists, Egyptologists, clergy, and religious leaders,” including Muslim leaders, about the project to make sure they’d gotten it right.
And that’s about as far as I got in my research. That’s where it became apparent that to dance any further around the film’s intent vs. its actual effect, I’d have to do a bunch of research.
I simply don’t have the time.
So, I wanted to scrap the entire article.
But revisiting it, a particular lesson jumped out at me—one that could have been included in my eBook Slay Propaganda Like a Lawyer.
Propaganda functions just as much from what we are told vs. what is withheld.
So, I figured I needed to finish this piece in one way shape or form. By not telling it, I was changing my narrative.
Was the film your first introduction to the Israel/Palestine debate? How did it frame your conception of the Middle East as a whole?
Let me know in the comments.
If you enjoyed this piece, please forward it to another 90s kid you know!
This article first appeared as an email to Patrick MacFarlane’s email newsletter.
If you haven’t gotten a copy of “Slay Propaganda” yet, Free Subscribers can download it here, just make sure you’re logged in.
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The headlines move fast, but the stakes underneath them move faster. When political leaders say the Strait of Hormuz is “open” and diplomacy is “wrapping up,” we slow the tape and ask the only question that matters: who actually has leverage right now, and what price is being paid off-camera?
We’re joined by Col. Lawrence Wilkerson to unpack Iran’s position in the Strait of Hormuz, why transit fees and control of passage can matter more than press statements, and how “victory” framing can blur the reality of a stalemate. We also dig into a major geopolitical accelerant: China’s growing role and the claim that Iran is receiving high-end satellite intelligence, a shift that could change deterrence, targeting, and escalation risk across the Middle East.
From there, we follow the trail into US military posture and the fear that negotiations can become cover for war preparation, including the movement of major naval assets. Wilkerson raises deeper concerns about presidential decision making capacity, the limits of the 25th Amendment, and what happens when there are no effective guardrails in a national security crisis. We also examine Israel’s influence over US policy, the credibility of competing narratives around Lebanon, and the worst-case scenario if wider targeting disrupts global commerce and pushes the world toward recession, depression, or even nuclear brinkmanship.
Finally, we turn inward to civil-military relations, including the controversy around Pentagon prayer meetings, coercion concerns, and how culture inside the armed forces can shape compliance in a constitutional crisis. If you care about US foreign policy, the Iran Israel conflict, Middle East security, and the real mechanics of power, listen through to the end, then subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review so more people can find the conversation.
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War is content, at least for those who are far from the explosions, acrid smoke and mourning parents. To those closer to the destruction and loss, it’s very real and inescapable. For most of us, the privileged, we peer into it whenever we dare, or should it come across our feeds. It’s a digital reflection of an unknown world. A place on our planet that may as well be across the universe, yet, in some small part we are complicit. Participants. Whether through endorsement, a cheerleader for gore, an active enabler of the regimes and governments which inflict violence as mechanism of policy, or as helpless witnesses. Unable or unwilling to oppose it.
The United States and Israel grapple with the defiance of Iran as it resists their repeated attacks and lies. A pariah regime through deed and geopolitical status, it’s now become a symbol of opposition for much of the world, including some in US allied nations. Those bullied, the occupied and the intervened in. It’s a bias view, one that is not entirely honest but a perception is, for now the theocratic tyranny of Iran, the oligarchical Russian Federation, one party state China and the prison regime of North Korea, all seem less intolerable to work with for the world than the self anointed ‘leader of the free world’ and it’s apartheid partner Israel.
Supposed Western values are no longer touted as reasons to wage war and kill strangers far away. Free speech, surveillance, prohibitions, heavy taxation and welfare dependencies are the prices to pay when it comes to democratically elected governments and their corporate partners. Kill the small business and entrepreneurial spirit through government policies and a destroyed currency so that only big corporations and the government itself may thrive. War is another aspect of this symbiosis, technocorporations do not need a user interface with millions of consumers, even those with little choice. Instead it can now lean into government contracts, support the security and war state, to make it efficient for rule and oppression. Call it convenient and any one opposing must surely be in favour of terrorists, criminals and child predators, otherwise why else would one be concerned with privacy and human rights?
In a generation the concept of liberal values has been taught out of the minds of those who learned diversity is merely an avatar, not alternative lifestyles, incomes and ways of thinking are permitted. It is merely a fashionable term used to homogenise critical thinking and diversity of character and being, the gentrification of thought itself. Anything different to a particular way is dangerous, radical and extremist. The superiority of the ‘correct’ way is never allowed to prove itself through example or better speech, instead it’s superior because it’s approved, and mandated. While alternatives are bit by bit, deterred and lost.
This was once a fascist or ideological monster used as a depiction to justify fighting age males to be sent abroad to kill for, and to die to protect the nation. To defend the values of individual liberty, one invasion at a time. In a recent Australian ANZAC day ceremony, members of the gathered booed when the ‘welcome to the nation’ ceremony was performed. Vice Admiral Justin Jones, chief of the Joint Operations Command, defended the right of individuals to ‘boo’ during ceremonies. He said this was why the defence force existed, to defend such individual rights. A clear disconnect between a man who would kill and die for a government which thinks and expresses otherwise. While members of the defence forces may believe they are fighting for ‘freedom’, however this is defined.
The police forces do not.
They exist to retain stability and order in accordance to sustainability and survival of the government, whether State or Federal. Protecting the individual or businesses is a distant second to keeping the government protected and in power. This includes enforcing laws that would otherwise go against the very spirit the Vice Admiral believes in, or past generations Australians did die for and held true. Now, free speech and the right to privacy are radical beliefs being sold out to a welfare dependent and government subsidised living standard for some, while others must struggle and experience constraints to their lives, under the perfumed lies of security and safety. Liberal Fascism’s, twin banners for rule. Security. Safety.
The question now stands, what are these Western values by which wars were once waged? Those used to justify imperialism in it’s many guises. If now, such values are banished to the history books, even considered radical or ignored from within liberal societies that once pretended to celebrate rugged individualism, voluntary interactions, charity and a community of human beings with different beliefs. Only now to be compressed into a crystal palace of a Panopticon, where the words of Orwell and Huxley are no longer dire dystopian warnings, instead playbooks or manifestos despite their authors concerns. War is waged beneath the brutal honesty of imperial Geo-politics and hegemonic self-interest.
Technology that was once a promissory enhancer of life and individual freedom has now revealed itself as another means of control, surveillance and to relegate the human being into a collective herd. A means of extraction, data and otherwise. Violence is both decried in political and media language, yet it is the means by which all is possible. To coerce, force and blackmail. Manipulate, deceive and deny. There is no choice if the outcome is much the same. Peace is war. War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Slavery is freedom. Soma is a lifestyle, dependency, limited comforts. Big Brother is all of us, yet no one in particular.
War however remains the same. Bloody and horrible. Miserable. Beyond the caviar fingers and bad breathe of those in expensive suits as they shake hands, nod heads and say what needs to be said, when to be said, their contempt for the innocent remains. The world exists for them. They are gods who view millions of human beings as subjects. Some may believe at best that others should be steered and lives planned. The direction somewhere in Utopia. In reality, it’s in their self-interests, not the rest of us.
When a clumsy assassin stumbles before the elites and their president, it becomes content. Media puppets the masters words, There is no place for violence in society. Even if such a society is built on violence, retained through it. Even as school girls bodies remain buried after being burned and crushed to death from the professional killers of such a society. They repeat it. What they mean is, only they may murder and commit the violence. It’s their monopoly.
The would be assassins manifesto reads with greater depth and humour than any head of states Truth Social post. Yet, we know that an assassin is deranged. Wrong. Evil. He who would dare to take life with his own hands. The head of state, they make decisions on behalf of millions, impacting millions. Enabling and conducting genocide, bombing schools, starving children, destroying hospitals. Such killings are things done out of apparent necessity, pragmatic or, as an act of policy. It’s understood that a polite society should kill in such a manner. The Western values or individual liberty once called for it, to spread such virtues required “broken eggs”. Now, it’s done for…?
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We can witness young males ripped from the streets, forced into military service and pushed to the front lines with less than the bare minimum of training. To be fodder, defenders of a government in it’s defence against another government which sends prisoners into battle, alongside mercenaries and the military who wage a war with ancient violence mashed with twenty-first century techno-horror. Drones rip life from groups and solitary soldiers with horrible precision. We see the pre-deaths in all their individual ways, life ended, not just uniforms of government but the human inside of them.
We see the conscripts whimper. Cold and hungry. Far from home. The dancing influencers distant from them. Men who are other wise dim witted, like McNamara’s Morons they are sent to fill uniforms and hopefully kill, but mostly die. To be killed from artillery, killer robots, bayonets, or bullets. Bad luck always.
We see snipers line the ruins of a city. Rubble and stone, powder over corpses. The snipers bullets take life with precise discrimination. In one clip, a young girl and her younger brother, braving the open ground to find water. The professional soldier of government far away, pulls the trigger. Killing her. Leaving the young sibling to watch her die, dead. Bleed. A man handcuffed stands as a prisoner, shot in cold blood. We saw such a thing in Saigon, the cover of Time magazine or on the television, it did not win the war, or end it then. Seeing it now, it’s not as impacting. The viewer is indifferent. Murder is merely content. Not a subject matter to ruminate over, let alone digest. To scroll past, if seen at all.
Somalia is bombed again and again. Millions face hunger. The Sudan bleeds and starves before hoards of foreign backed killers, different governments interested in perpetuating a forgotten genocide that has little media coverage. They, them over there. They die. They suffer. They starve. Children with bloated bellies and dry tears, painfully expire. The polite societies gorged by obesity watch on, enabling the killers, ensuring the constrictions to those regions continue. Colonialism has left Africa mostly in name, the debt and imperial interests continue for much of it. Whether it’s through the extraction of rare Earth used to satiate the ‘green’ technologies or so that a toaster may connect to the internet in a Westerners suburban home, children and the impoverished labour for it. Or, coffee, cotton, chocolate. Despite Iranian attacks, the opulent Gulf regimes, so loved by Westerners rely and were built on variations of slavery. Many of which were deceived and forced into building towers and attractions for Westerners with wanderlust to take a selfie in or satisfy the passport privilege they take for granted.
In the past it was the White Man’s Burden, the need to civilise and bring reason to the savages, to enlighten, teach and liberate the darkness from them. It turned into the spreading of the aforementioned Western or liberal values. Now, whether through laziness or truth itself, those bullshit benevolences are no longer cited. It’s just self-interest, profit and hegemony and still the masters are loved and trusted. They don’t even need to lie, and still the public endorses.
The wars will continue. Even if they mostly go unnoticed. They exist on the feeds, somewhere. Whether you see them or not, care or not. It matters very little. The lie that was once believed, was that if only enough people saw and knew, then it could not, would not happen. That’s not true. Most don’t really care. They also profit from the extraction and wars. It may be an uncomfortable truth but, hedonistic conveniences have a way of placating such concerns and thoughts. Many Congolese lost their limbs and lives so that Europe may enjoy cheap rubber. Little has, or will change. That’s the real values as known by much of the world. The liberty, peace and individual rights. Lies, lies told by us, to ourselves. Or, maybe some of us did and still do believe. Surely values lurk beyond whatever the feed feeds us, or what is allowed or what buys us? Values can lay beyond comfort and the delusion of safety and security? And whatever values do exist, must the innocent be killed to afford them?
A ceasefire can be the start of peace, or it can be the quiet moment when both sides reload. That’s the question driving my return conversation with Professor Glenn Diesen as we dissect the US-Iran negotiations, the sudden focus on a short extension, and the strategic shockwave created when Iran seizes leverage around the Strait of Hormuz.
We dig into why force movements matter more than press releases, from carrier deployments to the logic of “locked and loaded” threats against dual-use infrastructure. Glenn explains why a temporary truce may simply create the breathing room needed to regroup, rearm, and restart the war under better conditions, and why regime change goals make durable agreements unlikely. We also talk Lebanon and Hezbollah, and why ceasefire announcements can unravel fast when strikes continue and outside powers push internal political pressure campaigns.
Then we widen the lens: a US blockade of Iranian ports doesn’t just hit Tehran, it collides with China’s oil supply routes and raises serious legal and operational questions about boarding ships “regardless of nationality.” From there, we connect the Middle East war to NATO and the Russia-Ukraine war, including Europe’s strained relationship with Trump, Ukraine’s manpower crisis, talk of refugee returns, and how oil prices and weapon stockpiles are reshaping the battlefield.
If you want clear geopolitical analysis on the US-Iran ceasefire, Strait of Hormuz strategy, Israel’s influence, the Iran blockade, and the knock-on effects for Ukraine and NATO, listen now. Subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, then tell me: do you think ceasefires still mean peace?
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U.S. troops are training for chemical and nuclear fallout while fresh forces and warships surge toward the Middle East, and I can’t shake the feeling that those “routine drills” are happening for a reason. We walk through what the 11th Marine Expeditionary Unit’s radiation preparedness could mean in the context of reports that the U.S. is weighing major escalation options against Iran, including strikes on critical infrastructure and the far more dangerous scenario: a special operation aimed at securing Iran’s 60% enriched uranium stockpile. If that material has been moved, buried, or sits inside damaged tunnel networks, the operational risks get ugly fast.
From there, we connect the dots between diplomacy headlines and the on-the-ground reality of military buildup. I lay out why previous negotiation windows seemed to buy time for positioning assets, not building trust, and how Trump’s own public statements reveal confusion rather than a coherent strategy. We also dig into the Strait of Hormuz chatter and the China dimension, including why threatening Beijing while the U.S. burns through interceptors and depends on Chinese-controlled supply chains like rare earth minerals and gallium is a strategic gamble with real consequences.
We then shift to Israel’s posture, Netanyahu’s messaging about influence in Washington, and the demand to remove enriched uranium as a public red line that could drag the U.S. deeper in. Finally, we break down why the Lebanon “talks” look like optics while pressure builds toward confrontation with Hezbollah, and why “grand bargain” negotiation tactics keep failing in real geopolitics. If you want a clear, unsentimental breakdown of U.S.-Iran tensions, Israel’s war aims, and the risks around nuclear escalation and regional shipping chokepoints, hit play, subscribe, share the show, and leave a review with your take on what happens next.
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It was 250 years ago that Adam Smith published The Wealth of Nations. In it, he looked back on the contact that various distant peoples had had with Europeans, following the discoveries of Christopher Colombus and Vasco de Gama. The results, by Smith’s time in 1776, had been tragic.
Smith writes:
“To the natives…all the commercial benefits which can have resulted from those events have been sunk and lost in the dreadful misfortunes which they have occasioned.”
Contact can and should, Smith says, be mutually advantageous:
“By uniting, in some measure, the most distant parts of the world, by enabling them to relieve one another’s wants, to increase one another’s enjoyments, and to encourage one another’s industry, their general tendency would seem to be beneficial.”
Why was contact with Europeans, in fact, tragic?
Smith explains that Europeans had far superior tools of force. As a result, unwholesome Europeans were able to abuse many of the peoples of the world. Smith writes:
“At the particular time when these discoveries were made, the superiority of force happened to be so great on the side of the Europeans, that they were enabled to commit with impunity every sort of injustice in those remote countries.”
Smith condemns European imperialism with a broad brush. About the first forays to the Americas, Smith says that “the principles which presided over and directed” them were “folly and injustice”:
“[T]he folly of hunting after gold and silver mines, and the injustice of coveting the possession of a country whose harmless natives, far from having ever injured the people of Europe, had received the first adventurers with every mark of kindness and hospitality.”
Smith may have felt some hope that European elites would become more wholesome. He helped people to become more wholesome by learning, teaching, and writing.
But also, Smith anticipated another development, which might mitigate the tragedy perceived as of 1776. Smith anticipated the equalization of “courage and force.”
“Hereafter, perhaps,” Smith writes, “the natives of those countries may grow stronger, or those of Europe may grow weaker, and the inhabitants of all the different quarters of the world may arrive at that equality of courage and force which, by inspiring mutual fear, can alone overawe the injustice of independent nations into some sort of respect for the rights of one another.”
Smith teaches that, until elites grow more wholesome, nations must develop their “courage and force” to protect themselves from injustice. And Smith foresaw that the weaker countries would, in time, learn to do just that.
Smith explains a delayed effect of contact:
“Nothing seems more likely to establish this equality of force than that mutual communication of knowledge and of all sorts of improvements which an extensive commerce from all countries to all countries naturally, or rather necessarily, carries along with it.”
Contact with Europeans brought misery, but, in time, it would bring the means of mitigating that misery.
The natives of distant lands have not been the only victims of unwholesome European elites. Europeans, too, are victims.
And other individuals, such as Adam Smith, from Europe and all around the world, offer a better way forward for the Earthly human whole.
A blockade of the Strait of Hormuz sounds like a clean, decisive move until you run it through the real world: geography, international law, ship insurance, and the uncomfortable question of what happens when the other side shoots back. We sit down with Lt Col Karen Kwiatkowski to parse Trump’s threat to interdict ships tied to Iranian oil and why “the greatest navy in the world” is not the same thing as a navy that can safely enforce a blockade in a narrow, heavily contested chokepoint.
We dig into the operational side of maritime power, from US shipbuilding constraints to costly programs that never matched a realistic strategy. Karen explains why uncertainty is the real market killer: mines do not even have to be confirmed to spike insurance rates, freeze tanker traffic, and disrupt the global supply chain. We also ask what it means to stop third country vessels in international waters, and why targeting tankers linked to China, India, Pakistan, Japan, or South Korea could blow up relationships the US has spent decades trying to build across Asia.
Then we widen the lens to diplomacy and messaging. We question why nuclear negotiations would be handled without deep technical expertise, how Israel’s priorities shape US posture toward Iran, and why an EMP scare claim on cable news collapses under basic scrutiny of incentives, treaty history, and inspection records. We close with a blunt conversation about propaganda, legitimacy, and the strange politics of personality cult symbols, including Trump’s AI “Jesus” image and what it signals about power at home and credibility abroad. If this conversation helps you think clearer, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review so more people can find it.
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