Breaking Points with Krystal and Saagar - 6/1/24: John Mearsheimer UNLEASHED: Israel Genocide, Ukraine DOOMED, Biden's Folly
Episode Date: June 1, 2024Krystal and Saagar are joined by American political scientist John Mearsheimer to discuss Israel, Ukraine and Biden. To become a Breaking Points Premium Member and watch/listen to the show uncut and 1... hour early visit: https://breakingpoints.com/ Merch Store: https://shop.breakingpoints.com/ See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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We're very excited now to be joined by Professor John Mearsheimer, a personal hero of mine,
and he is the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor in the Political Science Department at the University of Chicago since 1982. Thank you
very much for joining us, sir. We appreciate it. My pleasure.
So, Professor, you're well known in many circles for being a well-known scholar on realism,
but recently, I would say, you've really come into special relevance with the collapse of the liberal international system and of how we are to deal with it, especially with the flare-ups of Israel and Ukraine.
We wanted to start, actually, on the issue of Israel.
I read your book, The Israel Lobby, many, many years ago.
It really opened my eyes as to the influence here in Washington. But what I would really like to know from you is how the U.S. policy vis-a-vis
Israel since October 7th has only further isolated the United States, both in terms of Israeli action
and in terms of Israeli policy. Well, I think there's no question that the United States,
in large part because of the Israel lobby, has been joined at the hip with Israel. And after October
7th, when the Israelis decided to go on a rampage in Gaza, the United States fully supported the
Israelis. Many Israeli generals have made it clear that they could not conduct this offensive
against the Palestinians in Gaza without the material support. And here
we're talking mainly about weaponry that the United States is providing them. And furthermore,
we're providing them with diplomatic cover. So the United States is complicit with what Israel
is doing in Gaza. And this is hardly surprising given the power of the lobby in the United States.
I wanted to get your reaction to recent events. So we've had many quite significant factors
emerge recently. We have the ICC signaling they're likely to issue arrest warrants for Netanyahu and
in addition, Defense Minister Yoav Galant. You have the ICJ just recently issuing yet another injunction, basically saying
you cannot go in to Rafah. You had Biden sort of weakly signaling this red line and pretending at
least like he was going to halt weapons shipments if there was what he described as a quote unquote
major invasion of Rafah. You have three more European countries coming out and recognizing
a Palestinian state. And yet, in spite of all of that, or
perhaps because of some of that, you still have the IDF going forward. We saw this horrific massacre
of Palestinians who were displaced in a safe zone inside of their tents, at least 45 killed.
What do you make of the Israeli calculation at this point and the moment that we're in right now?
Well, just to talk about the Israeli calculation, I think it's important to emphasize
that Netanyahu has no real interest in ending the war.
The longer the war goes on,
the better for him politically.
Because once the war ends,
he'll have to face the music
for what happened on October 7th.
And he could be pushed overboard.
So he has a vested interest
in keeping the war going for that reason.
Secondly, he's committed to defeating Hamas completely.
He's committed to winning the decisive victory.
I don't believe for one second that he can do that,
but if he's going to attempt to do it,
he has to go into Rafah.
So to defeat Hamas, in his mind, it's necessary to go into Rafah.
Now, with regard to why he did it, given all the international condemnation of Israel's behavior towards the Palestinians in Gaza in general,
and especially with regard to what's happening in Rafah, he just doesn't care.
It doesn't matter to him what world opinion says one way or the other, as long as the United States
backs him, as long as the United States has his back. And Joe Biden has his back. And he knows
full well that if Trump gets elected in November, that Trump will have his back as well.
So he's free to do whatever he wants.
And given that he has a vested interest in continuing this war and trying to defeat Hamas,
we go on and on.
Professor, how do you see, in the short term, obviously, they're going to have the back
of the U.S., the U.S. is the dominant power in the world. But the increasing isolation of both the United States and Israel,
what does that look like for Israel in the medium to long-term future? Are they going to be
an international pariah state? How do you see the evolution of the international system
with respect to Israel over time? Well, I think it's very important to emphasize that independent of what's going on in Gaza,
Israel is an apartheid state.
And here we're talking about greater Israel, which includes the West Bank and Gaza, which
are part of greater Israel for sure.
Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and B'Tselem, which is the leading human rights
organization inside of Israel, have all issued lengthy and sophisticated reports that make a
compelling case that Israel is an apartheid state. The Israelis are well aware of what happened to
South Africa. South Africa was once an apartheid state, and it's no longer an apartheid state and it's no longer an apartheid state because it's very hard to sustain an apartheid state in the modern world.
So Israel has real problems moving forward because it's an apartheid state and it has no way at the moment of getting out of that situation. When you marry that to the fact that Israel is committing genocide in Gaza,
and by the way, if you don't think Israel is committing genocide in Gaza,
you at least have to admit that they're engaged in mass murder
and that they're attempting to starve the Palestinians in Gaza.
What they're doing in Gaza is absolutely horrible.
I would call it a genocide. So what you have here is an apartheid state that's engaged in genocide.
And the question you have to ask yourself is, what is the long-term viability of a state
that fits that description? And I would argue over the long term, this presents
enormous problems for Israel. And one can argue that the survival of Israel
will be at stake if it doesn't change its ways. Could you talk a little bit about how you came
to the conclusion that this isn't just a mass slaughter, that it does in fact meet the definition of genocide and whether you see that determination as being significant?
Well, at first I didn't think it was a genocide.
I thought there was no question that the Israelis were inflicting significant punishment on the civilian population of Gaza. And it was clear in the
beginning that what they were trying to do was they were trying to ethnically cleanse Gaza.
You want to understand that if the Israelis were able to cleanse Gaza, they would solve the
apartheid problem. And that's true, of course, with regard to the West
Bank as well. If Israel could cleanse Gaza and the West Bank of Palestinians, they would solve
the apartheid problem. So I think from the beginning, what the Israelis were doing in Gaza
was they were trying to cleanse Gaza. They were trying to drive all the Palestinians out.
And the way they tried to do that was by making the place unlivable. So they were killing huge
numbers of Palestinians. They were destroying their homes. They were destroying schools. They
were destroying cemeteries, they were destroying government buildings,
they were destroying mosques. And at a certain point, it became clear, right, that this was
genocide, that they were trying to kill an enormous number of people in Gaza for the purposes of cleansing Gaza. And then you marry on top of that the fact
that they were starving the population. They were greatly, greatly limiting the amount of food and
water and fuel and medicine that could come into Gaza. And all of this was for the purpose of making the place unlivable
and killing large numbers of Palestinians.
And this is what led the International Court of Justice in January
to say that there was enough evidence to make a plausible case
that Israel was committing genocide.
And I think,
having looked very carefully at the case, that the evidence is quite clear that this is a genocide.
Professor, what standing has the U.S.-Israel relationship had, or sorry, what effect has the U.S.-Israel relationship had, especially post-October 7th, on the U.S.'s standing in
the international community and in the world? How negatively do you think it, on the U.S.'s standing in the international community and in the world.
How negatively do you think it's affected the U.S.?
And what are the long-term impacts in terms of our own policy and standing?
Well, I think it's done significant damage to our reputation.
I mean, I think that outside of the West, most people believe that this is a genocide.
And again, if you don't believe it's
a genocide, it's at least mass murder. This is certainly a crime against humanity, what the
Israelis are doing in Gaza. But I think most people outside of the West believe it is a genocide. And
I think most people believe correctly that the United States is complicit in this genocide.
And the end result is that's going to do enormous damage,
not only to Israel's reputation, but to our reputation. Then to take it a step further,
as you both know well, the United States privileges the liberal international order
or the rules-based order. We believe that international law, international rules really matter. When you
look at how the Israelis are behaving in Gaza and how they react to the ICC and the ICJ and how we
support them in their reaction, it's quite clear that we are massive hypocrites when it comes to
international law. And this too damages the United States.
The United States basically created the international liberal order.
It has a vested interest in making it work.
And what we're doing in our support of Israel is we're undermining the international liberal order.
People around the world are actually quite shocked at the extent to which the United States
is willing to excuse Israeli behavior when it's in direct violation of international law.
I'm almost afraid to ask the next question, but how do you think this ends? I mean,
do they effectively succeed in completing the genocide? Because as you point out,
Netanyahu has no interest in ending
this war. Joe Biden clearly has no interest in moving away from the unconditional support posture.
Donald Trump would be the same probably without the little bit of liberal hand-wringing that we
get from Joe Biden. So how do you see this playing out? It's very hard to say. I mean, I'm hoping that the shooting stops at some
point in the not too distant future. I'm hoping that after the assault on Rafah, the Israelis
stop the large-scale offensive military operations in Gaza, and instead they restrict their military operations to small-scale attacks
against Hamas. I mean, I'd like to see all the shootings stop, but I think that's highly unlikely,
but I'd like to see it become more limited. And I think that what will end up happening here is that the Israelis will end up occupying Gaza for the foreseeable future.
And Israel will remain an apartheid state.
And the Palestinians, of course, at some time in the future will revolt again.
I mean, you want to understand that what happened on October 7th is not the first instance of the Palestinians rebelling against the Israelis.
You had the first intifada in 1987.
You had the second intifada in 2000.
And then you had October 7th.
And there were all sorts of mini-revolts in between those three important events.
And this is what happens when you have an apartheid state.
The people who are being dominated, and that, of course, is the
Palestinian population, they are going to revolt. And therefore, I think that we can expect to see
trouble for as far as the eye can see. Professor, how do you see the risks of a regional conflict,
if that is going to increase, and then the odds that the U.S. would be dragged
along? We talked previously in some of our shows, there's been cross-border fire between the
Egyptians and the Israelis. Is there going to be a power vacuum similar to the 1960s and 70s where
the Palestinian cause brings a lot of popularity and could invite broader regional conflict? Where
do you see that going? Well, you want to remember that the United States is already
fighting the Houthis in the Red Sea as a result of what's going on in Gaza. But the really
interesting question has to do with Iran. Now, it's clear from what happened in April.
You remember on April 1st, the Israelis struck the Iranian embassy in Damascus, Syria.
And on April 14th, the Iranians attacked Israel in response.
And then on April 19th, Israel launched a very limited strike against Iran. So between April 1st and April 19th, we had this
conflict not simply involving Israel and Iran. The United States was involved as well. We were
involved in the combat that took place on April 14th when Iran attacked Israel. We shot down about half of the drones and cruise missiles and ballistic
missiles that were aimed at Israel. So we were deeply involved. Now, what does this tell you?
If you look carefully, you see that the United States and Iran had no interest in having this
conflict take place. It's the Israelis who wanted to drag the Americans into a war with Iran.
It's the Israelis who started these events on April 1st
when they attacked the Iranian embassy in Damascus.
Then, after April 1st, the United States and the Iranians
went to great lengths to make sure that the conflict did not
escalate to the point where you had a war between the United States and Iran. We don't want a wider
conflict in the region. We're not happy about the fact that we're fighting the Houthis. We certainly
don't want a war with Iran, and we don't want a war with Hezbollah either. And in that
case, we've been putting significant pressure on the Israelis not to get into a major league fight
with Hezbollah on their northern border, because again, we're afraid that we'll be pulled in.
So I think it's very important to understand that there is potential for escalation in the region
beyond what's happening in the Israel-Palestine conflict,
but that the United States has no interest in seeing itself get dragged into another forever war.
And therefore, I think it is unlikely that we will end up fighting against Iran in the foreseeable future.
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Do you see any Israeli domestic political considerations that could and pressures that could lead to some sort of a ceasefire agreement in the short term?
You had both Benny Gantz and Yoav Galant coming out, Gantz specifically issuing these series of ultimatums.
Looks like he's preparing to exit the war cabinet
on June 8th. You have massive protests. You know, there isn't a lot of disagreement about the
prosecution of the war, the treatment of Palestinian civilians per se, but there is
massive friction over the pursuit of a hostage deal. Do you think that any of those things could
bring this conflict to a close, at least the micro-conflict that's being engaged in right now? Well, as you point out, there are very powerful centrifugal forces inside of Israel
that threaten the Netanyahu government and at first glance appear to push in the direction
of some sort of ceasefire. But I would just say that if you watch Benjamin Netanyahu in action, he is something of
a magician when it comes to maintaining his position in power. There's no question that,
you know, his work cabinet is deeply unhappy with the fact that he has no plan for how to run Gaza once the shooting stops.
It's very clear that the hostage problem is causing him enormous trouble.
But again, he is something of a magician.
And I would not bet a lot of money that he's toppled anytime soon.
I would also note that if he is toppled,
it won't matter that much. The fact is that Netanyahu is not an outlier here. Many liberal
American Jews like to make the argument that the real problem here is Benjamin Netanyahu,
and if only we can get rid of Benjamin Netanyahu, we'll live happily
ever after. I think this is not the case. I think that Netanyahu has views that are, you know,
similar to Benny Gantz's views, similar to Yoav Galant's views. I mean, he's not an outlier.
And in fact, if you look at his entire cabinet, he has a number of people who are far to the right of him.
He looks like a statrist in the context of his own cabinet.
The fact is that Israel is a remarkably hawkish state.
The Israel that I knew when I was a young boy and a young man has gone away.
It's moved steadily to the right over time.
And I believe with the passage of time, it will move even further and further to the right.
This is a hawkish country that has extremist views towards the Palestinians. Yeah, that's one of the only countries where younger people are actually
more hardline, more hawkish, more right wing than older populations. I wanted to ask you about Joe
Biden to the best that you can assess. For people here who want to put pressure on him to change
policy in some way, do you see any pressure points? Is it your assessment that he's driven primarily by
his own ideology, clearly has this great sentimental attachment to that Israel of,
long gone Israel of yore? Is it about the power of the Israel lobby? We saw an email from a top
Biden donor that was outraged that he wouldn't even consider cutting off weapons ever? Or is it a political calculation
where he thinks there's more to be gained
from being very pro-Israel
than to be gained by having a more sympathetic view
towards the Palestinians
and reflecting what the overwhelming majority
of the Democratic base wants to see?
How do you assess those things?
What would your assessment be
of potential pressure points on Joe Biden himself?
I think there's no question that Biden is profoundly committed to Israel.
He is an art Zionist and he self-describes as an art Zionist.
So no question about that.
At the same time, I think he believes that the israelis have gone
too far in gaza and it's not good for israel to continue on the path that it's now on
and i think he believes you could be an art zionist you can be deeply committed to israel
and you can still think that is Israel should change its behavior in Gaza.
So I think there is a difference of opinion between Benjamin Netanyahu and Joe Biden at
this point in time on moving forward in Gaza. However, the problem he faces is the lobby.
If he does anything that puts pressure on Israel to change its behavior in Gaza, the lobby is going to land on him like a ton of bricks.
And this would be disastrous for him in terms of getting reelected in November.
He has an election coming up.
And the last thing he wants to do is antagonize the Israel lobby because he's fully aware how powerful it is. vis-a-vis Gaza, he has to go to great lengths to try to appease those people so that they don't
vote against him or stay at home in November. So what you see is that Biden is caught between a
rock and a hard place. If he tilts towards Arab-American sentiments, the lobby will punish him.
And if he continues to support Israel hook, line, and sinker,
the Arab-Americans and the progressives more generally will punish him in the fall election.
So he's in a sort of damned if you do, damned if you don't situation.
And he could very well lose the election because of this.
Certainly possible. Sir, I want to switch gears a little bit to Ukraine and to check in on where
we are now. You were possibly one of the most maligned people in the foreign policy world at
the outbreak of the conflict, even though you'd long been and writing about the fact that it was
in fact NATO expansion and U.S. policy vis-a-vis Russia, that it was a contributing factor to the Russian invasion of Ukraine. Several years now into U.S. policy and many of the
Ukrainian stalled so-called counteroffensive and ongoing Russian gains. How do you assess
the situation in Ukraine today? Oh, I think the Russians are clearly
in the driver's seat. The balance of power, I think, through most of 2022
favored the Ukrainians and the West on one side over the Russians. In late 2022, the Russians
began to mobilize in a serious way. And then in 2023, over the course of 2023, the balance shifted in significant ways towards the Russians.
And now in 2024, we're five months into 2024, the balance continues to shift more and more
in Russia's favor. And if you look at what's happening on the battlefield, the Russians are
really pounding the Ukrainians. The Ukrainians are in
deep trouble. This is a war of attrition. This is basically, you know, Muhammad Ali and Joe
Frazier standing toe to toe and beating the living daylights out of each other. Two big armies just
pounding each other. And the question is, which army is going to bleed the other army white first?
And it is, to me, manifestly clear that the Russians are bleeding the Ukrainian army white,
and the Ukrainians are not able to do much to the Russians anymore.
And the reason for this is that the balance of manpower and the balance of firepower,
these are two indicators that really matter in a war of attrition, decisively favor the Russians.
The Russians have an enormous advantage in artillery.
They have an enormous advantage in air power.
Those two things add up to say they have an enormous advantage in air power. Those two things add up to say they have an enormous advantage in
firepower, firepower being air power plus artillery put together. And then if you look at the manpower
balance, the Russians have a significant advantage there. You know, the average age of a Ukrainian soldier on the front lines is 43 years old. 43 years old.
Combat is designed for young men and now young women, right?
You want people in their 20s.
You don't even want people in their 30s.
The idea that the average age of a soldier on the Ukrainian side is 43 years old is hard
to believe.
Furthermore, you have a significant
problem with draft dodging inside of Ukraine. All sorts of young Ukrainian men fully understand
that Ukraine is doomed and they don't want to die in a lost cause. Therefore, it's very hard for the
Ukrainian military to mobilize people. Moreover, you have a huge number of Ukrainian men who are of draft age who are in the European Union and don't want to come back to Ukraine and fight.
So the Ukrainians are at a significant disadvantage in terms of the balance of soldiers on the front line.
And as I said before, they're at a significant disadvantage in terms of the
balance of firepower. And this is a war of attrition. So they are being clobbered on the
battlefield day by day. And eventually that military is going to suffer a significant
defeat. They're going to be in a position where they can no longer carry on the war.
What do you think the political calculation is in Washington at this point? Because,
you know, from an outsider vantage point, I think in the early days, back when there was potential peace negotiations on the table, there was a lot of arrogance. There was a thought,
no, we can push for total victory. Then we had the counteroffensive and all the hopes surrounding
that. That's when Ukraine is going to be able to take back significant amount of terrain. That obviously didn't happen. Now there doesn't even
seem to be a narrative about how this is going to play out, how it's going to result in anything
other than disaster. So what do you see as Washington's political calculation being at
this point? Well, in terms of a purely political calculation, I think, given that the election's coming up in early November,
the administration wants to make sure that Ukraine does not suffer an obvious defeat
before early November, before the election. They're going to go to great lengths to prevent
that from happening. I think the story that people tell themselves, which they probably don't believe
very much anymore, is that if Ukraine can hold out in 2024, by 2025, all this weaponry that we
have in the West that we're building for Ukraine will be available and we can shift it or we can send it to Ukraine in 2025.
And that will shift the balance back in favor of Ukraine.
It will look like the situation that you described, Crystal, in 2022.
That's, I think, that's the most optimistic story that people tell themselves.
But my sense is that deep down at this point in time, most people fully understand that Ukraine is doomed.
The only interesting question at this point in time is how much territory are the Russians going to capture before this turns into a frozen conflict.
But there's really no way to rescue the situation here.
The Ukrainians are simply doomed. They can't fix the manpower problem. And with regard to the
weaponry problem, we don't have the weaponry to give them. And we're not going to be able to spin
up the industrial base to provide them, even in 2025, with enough weaponry to rescue the situation.
But again, even if we give them the weaponry, they have a huge manpower problem.
And the Russians just get stronger and stronger.
Putin is on a roll.
The Russians are on a roll.
So I think that what you're going to see here is what I call an ugly Russian victory.
Professor, here in Washington,
the justification for the Ukrainian cause is,
if we don't stop Putin in Ukraine,
then Estonia, Latvia, and the other NATO countries are at risk.
You have long argued, and I have long agreed with you,
that what happens in Ukraine is not all of that much interest.
But what would you say to those who say,
that's why, Professor Mearsheimer,
we must give even more to Ukrainians to make sure that that doesn't happen?
Why does this not actually matter that much?
And what's wrong with that logic about if we don't stop him here, that he'll continue
onwards?
Well, first of all, I don't even think that Putin is interested in conquering all of Ukraine.
He's never said that he's interested in conquering all of Ukraine. And in fact, he's told the Ukrainians in recent months that the great danger to them is that Romania and Poland and countries on Ukraine's western border may someday take territory in western Ukraine that once belonged to them. It's very important to
understand that a huge chunk of Western Ukraine once belonged to Poland. And there are a number
of Poles who would like to get that territory back. I'm not arguing that Poland is operating
on the basis that it can get that territory back. But nevertheless, Putin has said that there is a danger that this will happen.
That indicates to you that he is not planning to take Western Ukraine. And indeed, he would be
crazy to take Western Ukraine because it's filled with ethnic Ukrainians who hate Russians,
and he would have a major insurgency on his hands if he tried to conquer all of Ukraine.
So he's not even going to take all of Ukraine.
He's never been interested in taking all of Ukraine.
Now, the idea that he's going to then, you know, go conquer countries in Eastern Europe,
he's never indicated any interest in that.
And by the way, during the Cold War, the Soviet Union occupied all of Eastern Europe.
It was a nightmare.
The Soviets have been there, done that, and it did not work out very well.
The last thing they want to do is start occupying countries in Eastern Europe so they can do Hungary 56 again, Czechoslovakia 68 again, East Germany 53 again. The problems that they had with the Poles were legion.
The problems they had with the Romanians and the Albanians were even worse.
I mean, the idea that they want to conquer territory and recreate the Russian Empire in Eastern Europe is just not a serious argument. standard threat inflation that we engage in here in the West, all for the purposes of getting the
public to support continued support of Ukraine. And again, this is just not a serious threat.
Professor, at the beginning of this conflict, we really threw the kitchen sink at Russia in
terms of sanctions made it maybe the most sanctioned country on the entire planet. I'm not going to say that those sanctions didn't bite at all, but the Russian economy seems
to be doing fairly well in spite of those massive coordinated Western sanctions. What is the
significance of the failure of that sanctions regime here? It's very significant. I mean,
if you go back to 2022,
when the war first started, and as we were talking about before, it looked like the Ukrainian
military was doing very well against the Russian military in 2022. It was that factor, plus the fact
that we thought that the sanctions would work, and we thought the sanctions would bring
the Russians to their knees. So it was the combination of a belief that the sanctions
would work, combined with the success of the Ukrainian military on the battlefield in 2022,
that led us to think that we could win the war against Russia.
You want to remember that there were peace negotiations that started immediately after
the war began in February. These were the famous peace negotiations between Zelensky's side
and Putin's side in Istanbul. And it looked like the two sides were going to work out an agreement.
This was in March, early April of 2022. And the war started on February 24th, 2022. So it looked
like the war was going to be brought to an end. It's now quite clear that the West, and here we're
talking mainly about the United States and the British, told the Ukrainians to walk away from the
negotiations. And why did they do that? They did it because the West thought that Ukraine could
defeat the Russians on the battlefield, number one, and number two, that the sanctions would do
grave damage to the Russian economy. Then in the fall, you remember, after the Ukrainians had been
successful on the battlefield in two big areas of eastern Ukraine, General Milley, who was then
chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said, it's time for peace negotiations. This is the high watermark for the Ukrainian military.
This is what General Milley said in the fall of 2022. He understood the Ukrainians had done quite
well on the battlefield, but now was the time to reach some sort of agreement or settlement with
the Russians. Because again, this was the high watermark for the Ukrainian military. That's
what he thought, correctly, of course. But the White House said, absolutely not, and told General
Milley to stop making these arguments in public. Why did we tell, or why did the White House tell
General Milley to cease and desist from making those kinds of arguments. It's because we thought
the sanctions would work. We thought we would bring the Russians to their knees. And we thought
the Ukrainians would continue to win on the battlefield. This was a giant miscalculation
with regard to what was happening on the battlefield. And it was a giant miscalculation regarding the sanctions.
General Milley was right.
We should have tried to cut a deal in the fall of 2022.
Indeed, going back to the negotiations in Istanbul
in March, early April of 2022,
we should have let them play themselves out,
those negotiations, and hopefully brought an end
to the conflict. But we did not do that because in good part, we thought the sanctions would work.
They haven't worked. The Ukrainians have been less successful on the battlefield,
and the end result is that the Russians are going to win an ugly victory.
Yeah. Well, very well said, sir.
Can't say enough how much we admire your work,
how I personally was inspired.
Funny story, I had the Israel lobby on my shelf in college
and a guy said, you should take that down,
that guy's an anti-Semite.
I said, have you read it?
And of course that the answer was no.
So the rightest man in international relations.
We appreciate you very much, sir, thank you.
Professor, thank you.
Thank you for having me on the show.
I appreciate it.
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DNA test proves he is not the father.
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Well, Sam, luckily it's your not the father week on the OK Storytime podcast.
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This author writes, my father-in-law is trying to steal the family fortune worth millions from my son, even though it was promised to us.
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