Pod Save the World - A Trauma Surgeon's Story From Gaza
Episode Date: May 21, 2025Tommy and Ben discuss President Trump’s policy changes on Syria and his man-crush on its president, Ahmed al-Sharaa, what lifting sanctions on Syria could (and should) look like, more details on how... Qatar’s plane bribe came together, and Tulsi Gabbard’s shocking politicization of the intelligence community. They also talk about the continuing crackdown on journalists and human rights activists by Nayib Bukele in El Salvador, the dire–and indefensible–humanitarian situation in Gaza, the lack of any meaningful progress in peace talks between Russia and Ukraine, and elections in Portugal, Romania and Poland. Then, Ben speaks with Dr. Feroze Sidhwa, a trauma surgeon who has volunteered twice in Gaza, about his experience treating patients in Khan Younis. Finally, Ben and Tommy are forced to endure some selections from this year’s Eurovision Song Contest.For a closed-captioned version of this episode, click here. For a transcript of this episode, please email transcripts@crooked.com and include the name of the podcast.
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Welcome to Pod Save the World. I'm Tommy Vitor.
I'm Ben Roads.
And I'm feeling emotional today.
There's some reports out that Bill Belichick, my former head coach, might be engaged to his much, much, much younger girlfriend.
Is this your redirection from talking about the absolute dismantling
the Celtics that the Nix did on the first front of that? You saw right through it. Yeah, yeah.
Yep, you did. Congratulations to Bill Belichick. I don't know. That, that, the age difference,
notwithstanding. Yeah, you probably shouldn't 3x or 4x your significant other. Everyone should read
about the Bill Belichick, Jordon Hudson, Saga. It's quite. I think she's younger than Jalen Brunson
just to connect this to the Nix in some way that I can. How you feeling? When's the next game?
It's tomorrow night. It's Wednesday night that this podcast air is the Nix will be winning game
one against the Pacers. Is it in New York or in Indiana? It's in New York. We are somehow hosting
the Eastern Conference Finals. And I'm reliving my teenage years when we played the Pacers
like, you know, four times in the conference finals. Should we do a go fund me to fly you out
to a game? I don't think that the collective listenership, as large as it is, could pay for
ticket to Massacre. I saw that like a bad seat for game one of the NBA Finals is over $2,000
already. It's crazy. What? Two grand. I guess there's a lot of rich people in New York.
Bill Belchek, though. He's got some money.
If he, if he's listening, congratulations, Bill.
He listens every week.
And, you know, you could pick up a ticket.
Mazel Tov, Bill, to new beginnings.
We have a great show today.
We're going to close the loop for you on Trump's corruption tour in the Middle East and his major Syria policy changes.
We're also going to fill you in on the latest background we've learned about the Qatar's 747-sized bribe of the administration.
Lots of interesting information there.
Then we will talk about the shocking politicization of intelligence.
intelligence by Tulsi Gabbard, a wave of oppression in El Salvador, the latest just
ungodly awful news out of Gaza and why parts of Europe, countries in Europe, are condemning
the Israeli government's latest actions. We'll talk about Trump seeming to give up on
brokering peace in Ukraine and some big elections in Portugal, Romania, in Poland, and then
we've promised that we'll talk about Eurovision, so we shall do that. And then, Ben, you just did
our interview today. What are folks going to hear? Yeah, I talked to Faroes Sidwa, who is a trauma
surgeon who has done two stints in Gaza. So this is like a really important conversation that
I think everybody needs to hear about what it's like to be, you know, in the middle of it in
Gaza. And we hear some really harrowing stories. We hear details that we never get to see
about what it's actually like in Gaza.
We talk about the likely undercount of the death count.
We talk about the fact that, you know, I mean, just to give you a taste of the interview,
Faro said his entire time there he maybe saw one combatant on the Hamas side.
It was mainly children that he was treating.
We hear about some children.
We get to know something about some of those children.
So I really hope people stick around for this because it was one of the hardest
but most, I don't know, necessary conversations I've had in a long time.
Yeah, I mean, I wasn't in the interview, but I spent five minutes or so talking to him
beforehand, just chatting.
And it's really valuable to hear someone's firsthand experience like that.
Like, we see it on the internet all day long.
You see the videos.
You see the read the stories.
Sometimes they're so awful that there's like a part of your brain that wants to disbelieve it.
You know what I mean?
Because the horror is so real.
but to have someone be like, I was a surgeon in a hospital,
and the following things happened to me, I don't know,
it's just it hits in a different way.
Well, yeah, I mean, one of the things we talk about
is that, you know, what he saw, what he experienced,
the people he interacted with,
the nature of the injuries he treated,
all point to why people are not allowed to see what's happening in Gaza,
why we don't have press on the ground in Gaza a year and a half into this.
So that makes sense.
it even more important to hear stories like his because it's the only first-hand testimony that,
you know, we can get absent. Yes, obviously some heroic reporting from Palestinians that we see
on social media, and that's immensely valuable, that kind of witness. This is from inside a
hospital, though. So I think it's a unique perspective. Yeah, absolutely. All right, Ben, well, we're going
to talk about that. We're also going to talk about some political developments in Gaza, but let's start
just by closing the loop on this Middle Eastern corruption bonanza from our president, Donald Trump.
So the big news that we talked about last week was Trump promising to lift the crippling sanctions on Syria that were left over from the Assad regime.
Actually, I think the first sanctions by the U.S. on Syria were from like the 1970s.
So there's decades of sanctions on this country.
Trump met with Syria's interim president, Ahmed al-Shara, in Saudi Arabia last Wednesday.
The Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman joined them, as did Turkish president, Tayyab Erdogan, via telephone.
Here's a clip of Trump on Fox News talking about his meeting with Alshara.
I said, let's give him a chance.
I met the leader.
I met the new leader.
And handsome guy, by the way, young, handsome.
And I said, you know, you have quite a past.
Got a tough pass.
But when you think about it, are you going to put a choir boy in that position?
I don't think so.
You know, it's going to be a little bit tough.
It's a tough part of the world.
So you're willing to give him a shot?
In other words, they say it's a nasty neighborhood.
It's a rough neighborhood.
And I thought he was really, yeah, I thought he was terrific.
Tough pass is one way to describe being a senior Al-Qaeda leader.
Ben, this is not the most important thing we'll discuss.
But I just would like you to imagine for a minute, Brett Bear's face, if he was interviewing
Barack Obama and Obama was like, yo, that Al-Qaeda guy, you can fucking get it.
Handsome guy.
Yeah.
Like, what are you talking?
Really good-looking guy.
What do we do?
Why is it the Gild the Lilly about like the...
It's just so weird.
It's like he's on a casting call, you know, for everything.
So after the meeting, Trump spoke to the press on our first one.
He claimed that Alshara agreed to join the Abraham Accords, but said they first have to get themselves straightened up.
We'll see.
The big question, though, for the Syrian people are all about sanctions relief.
What does it mean to practice?
When will it happen?
Secretary of Suck, Marco Rubio.
I don't know if that one works.
He met with Syria's foreign minister last week.
Afterwards, he talked about sanctions.
Here's a clip from Mr. Rubio.
The core of these sanctions are statutory under the Caesar Act.
I've had members of Congress in both parties ask us to use the waivers authorities in that law.
And that's what the president intends to do.
Those waivers have to be renewed every 180 days.
Ultimately, if we make enough progress, we'd like to see the law repealed because you're going to struggle to find people to invest in a country when in six months sanctions could come back.
We're not there yet. That's premature. I think we want to start with the initial waiver, which will allow foreign partners who wanted to flow in aid to begin to do so without running the risk of sanctions. I think as we make progress, hopefully we'll be in a position soon or one day to go to Congress and ask them to permanently remove the sanctions. The look on your face is preempting my question. So Rubio there is mentioning the Caesar Act sanctions as are passed by Congress in 2019. Chris Murphy actually mentioned this to me last week as being a hurdle. So Rubio there, he started talking about a phased, a
to lifting sanctions that will first allow foreign governments to get aid into Syria
that will probably not lead to an immediate private sector investments.
You've also heard Qatar and Saudi Arabia say that they'll pay off Syria's debt to the
World Bank, which will allow the World Bank to reengage with Syria.
So that's a good thing.
So the Syrian government also just signed an $800 million deal with an Emirati-based
logistics company to develop their port.
So hopefully that will help with some imports and exports.
But Ben, I guess my question for you is, do you think this kind of a lot of
goes far enough. Is it unrealistic to think businesses would kind of rush into Syria and start
investing anyway and therefore this makes sense? Or what do you think? First thing is, looks notwithstanding,
if you think about Ahmed al-Shara, like seven months ago or somewhere in that neighborhood, he was
like on a truck like coming south from Idlib. Think of the journey this guy's been on, you know,
to go from there. I mean, not since, I don't know, the last time a revolutionary had this level of success
in this short amount of time. So he's doing something right. But in terms of the sanctions,
so people understand how this works, when you have legislative sanctions, Congress passed sanctions,
what they often do is they require a sanction, but they give the president a waiver. So the president
can essentially say, well, this law is on the books, but I'm waiving this law for 180 days.
And that means I won't sanction anything that kind of flows in during this period of time.
I think that is sufficient to get in a lot of immediate needs.
And you've had Qatar and other countries, probably Gulf countries like Saudi, willing to kind of put in some money to pay salaries, to start to rebuild things, to just kind of get the place up and running.
I think the waiver is certainly, you know, sufficient for that to happen.
The question, though, is the kind of investment of business makes requires kind of planning out a few years, right?
Yeah, years, please.
And a business is probably not going to invest.
if there's the uncertainty that sanctions carry.
I went through this with Iran, to some extent, with Cuba.
And as long as the sanctions are still on the books,
anything that's kind of a multi-year investment is probably chilled.
And so it's a positive step.
And again, it'll allow for the kinds of things that, you know,
will make life better right away and let the Syrian state kind of get up off the ground.
I would like to see them within the next 180 days,
try to lift the sanctions, right? So why not just do the waiver and use that period to do the work
on the hill? Because I don't really know, you know, Rubio didn't like say what he's looking for.
Yeah, there's a clear list. So I just think if these guys continue to say and do the right things or
enough of the right things. And again, perfect can't be the standard here. It's not going to be
perfect. No government's perfect. Ours is certainly not perfect. But I'd like to see them just get this
off the books. Look, the Caesar Act was passed, again, because Caesar was a photographer who
captured horrific human rights violations in Syrian prisons.
Like, those prisons are closed.
Those people are out of prison.
Like, the basis where those sanctions is gone.
This is a good start, but then let's lift the sanctions.
And I hope that Democrats, not because the Republicans, you know, not the Democrats
listen to us necessarily, but more likely than Republicans, I hope Democrats choose to
vote for the right thing here in lifting these sanctions.
Yeah, I think it's clearly the right thing to do.
This is the first meeting between a U.S. president and the Syrian leader in 25 years,
just remarkable chilling.
But to your point, I mean, 90% of Syrians are currently living in poverty.
According to the UN, there's desperate immediate need.
Hopefully that will start to address some of it.
It's also worth noting that Syria is experiencing a ton of violence right now.
There was a car bomb that exploded near a police station eastern Syria over the weekend.
They killed three people.
The day before, Syrian forces raided in ISIS hideout in Aleppo, killing several.
There's been sectarian violence in a region run by the Druis minority.
there's been violence against the Allo-White's back in March.
So there's like a lot of simmering tensions in sectarian minefields that will be, that will increase, right?
That tension will increase if there's just no economic opportunity and people are starving.
If there's a smaller, you know, if there's very little resources, people are more likely to fight over those scarce resources, right?
I mean, you have to let activity start to resume.
You have to kind of normalize politics and you can't do that under sanctions.
That's right.
So, Ben, as you know, me, love and John share in office.
We have Fox News on all day long just because it's, I don't know, it's just funnier.
It's much, much meaner to Democrats.
But you also just, you can't overstate the degree to which Fox is state-owned media.
They take, like, we just were watching the Golden Dome announcement.
Yeah.
They took it live.
He said nothing.
It was completely nonsense.
Most days include some sort of like gauzy hour-long feature about a cabinet secretary.
Here's an example of a part of one from Monday.
This was Fox News host Will Kane interviewing former Fox News Weekend anchor turned Secretary of Defense, Pete Hegeseth.
This was not planned.
This is embarrassing.
No, I think it's beautiful.
It's friendship, Will, all the way to the Pentagon.
That was them talking about how crazy it was that they wore the same tie.
It's hard-sitting stuff.
But you and I both had some experience with Brett Bear over the years.
He's become kind of like the alpha of all the betas.
You know, he's like the lead propaganda.
He's like that guy in Russian media that we see.
Like, you know.
Yeah.
Like that talks your host who's always like yelling at, you know, like a panel of people.
Yeah, yeah.
And so Brett, he is so dedicated to his craft of propaganda that he even followed Trump to the UAE and to Qatar.
And he did softball interviews with the leaders there.
That, in a roundabout way, will get us to the latest on the story of Qatar gifting Trump, a 747-8.
So thanks to the New York Times and CNN, we have, they did.
some real reporting on this, they figured out that the backstory for how this plane happened
entails Steve Wittkoff specifically approaching Qatar about getting Trump a new plane,
and he did so at Trump's request. Apparently, Qatar also gifted the same kind of plane,
the 747-8 to President Erdogan of Turkey back in 2018, which bought them a bunch of goodwill.
So maybe it's like a gift bag thing. It's like Derek Cheater back in the day with his dates,
allegedly. So Ben, here is a clip of the Qatari Prime Minister talking about this plane.
plain bribe fiasco with Brett Baer and then with Bloomberg at the Qatar economic form.
But I was told that you wanted to address the gift that Qatar is giving to the U.S. government
to the Defense Department of this jet.
Well, I see that this story is making a big story in the news.
Unfortunately, I see that this story is taking a different direction and is being more politicized
while it's a normal government-to-government deal.
What was the purpose? What is the purpose of this gift?
I don't know why people, they are thinking about it, about that this is considered as a bribery or considered as something that Qatar wants to buy an influence with this administration.
Were you convinced by those rejoinders?
Well, but the other thing about that, though, if you connect the reporting, if you're Qatar and your literal sort of,
survival kind of depends on the U.S. I mean, just look at a map. Like, it's pretty vulnerable,
right? And there's a U.S. airbase there. And Steve Wickoff comes to you and it's like,
hey, nice plane you got there. Yeah, I like your plane. I think my boss, the President of the United States,
would like your plane. The same guy that, you know, blockaded you the first time around,
you'd probably be retrofitting that plane, you know? You're coughing that sucker up in a minute.
Although apparently the Qataris have been trying to sell the plane since 2020 because it's just too
big. It costs too much to operate. It's like kind of too gaudy. And I think, according to the Times
report, they initially thought that when they flew this plane to Florida for Trump to check it out,
that it was in the context of a sale. But Wickcoff apparently believed it would be a gift.
Ah, okay. The plot thickens, right? Yeah. Interesting stuff. Yeah. So it's like, oh, yeah,
what's the price of that? Well, it's X. That's funny. We had a different price in mine. It's free,
you know? It really is a vibe of like a Joe Pesci
closing the door, be like, Naz, you can't leave.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I mean, this whole thing is just, it's just so obvious.
I mean, the, the grift is so massive and so in plain sight that there's really nothing
you can say about it.
I mean, I will say, like, the Qataris are pretty savvy people.
Like, they, you know, Al Jazeera runs there.
Like, I doubt that they're shocked, shocked that this is a big story in American politics
and media, you know, like, of course it is, you know.
It's Air Force One.
I mean, it's the most iconic.
It's crazy.
call sign in the world, you know?
It's so stupid.
There's also all this reporting that what it would cost to retrofit the plane might,
would, like, ultimately cost taxpayers, like, double.
Of course it would.
Because, I mean, I, you know, I don't think it's revealing anything,
but, I mean, just being on Air Force One all those years, like,
it can do, you know, it can do evasive, you know, maneuvers, right?
If there's some attack, it can refuel in the air.
It must probably need, like, all kinds of encryption for secure communications.
There's a reason it takes Boeing like a long time to build a new Air Force One.
And so either they're not going to do that kind of retrofitting, in which case it won't
have all the security that you would want the U.S. President to have flying around, or it's
going to end up costing kind of roughly the same to the taxpayer anyway.
So this is just like a pure ego thing.
But Wickoff so perfect.
I mean, why is the Middle East peace envoy like negotiating gifts from, you know, what?
Gulf Arab governments.
Well, I think it's because he has a preexisting relationship with him.
Yeah.
They, like, bailed out one of his businesses back in the day.
So, yeah, the whole thing feels gross.
And again, we know this is, this is now an old story, but like, it's such a staggering
bit of corruption that it's, I think important to just to remember that this is still going
to happen.
Like, I think they're still going to give Trump this plane.
He's still going to take it with him to his grave.
And they'll still, you know, these countries will plow money into Trump coin and they'll
still, I mean, they'll give money to Trump kids.
Oh, you know what I saw today?
Eric Trump, apparently this week, is in Vietnam.
They're having talks about, I think, opening maybe another Trump tower somewhere in the capital.
I think there's also, there's reports that Eric may be attending like a groundbreaking ceremony for a Trump golf course while he's in Vietnam.
And by the way, this is all happening, though, as the Vietnamese government is negotiating, trying to negotiate away.
They're 46 percent.
Of course.
I mean, that's what this is.
Like, the reason Trump wants to have this dial that he can turn up and down around terror.
tariffs and all these things is that each one of these things is a massive profit opportunity, right?
So Vietnam has like a sword hanging over its head of like, what, 47% tariffs.
And it's like, well, in the next 90 days, you could, you know, plow, you know, a ton of money into some Trump golf course and have Eric there and tell them what a business genius he is that you want to have the Trump people running a golf course and a hotel in Vietnam.
Of course you're going to do that if you think you weren't really from tariffs.
So this is going to be such a massive wealth transfer to the Trump family for doing fucking nothing.
Oh, I'm sorry.
There's a the Vietnam just gave the Trump family the Greenlight a $1.5 billion golf development project.
And they're talking about building a skyscraper in Ho Chi Minh City.
So we're double dipping here.
And Eric's going to go come to town.
I wouldn't give Eric Trump 20 bucks to go across the street to get a fucking sandwich.
You know?
Yeah, no.
He's not.
If you have a 40-7 tariff hanging over your head, you give him a billion and a half dollars for a golf course.
You do what you got to do.
You give me a skyscraper.
give me 747, we move on with our lives.
Looks ridiculous.
It is bad news.
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All right, we're going to switch gears a little bit because this is another big story
that I think it's a huge deal and it's not getting covered enough.
So the context is, as we've discussed, Trump has invoked the Alien Enemy's Act
to speed up the deportation of Venezuela.
on migrants. The administration basically wants to set up this parallel immigration process with
no due process or checks and balances to just race people out of the country. And the results,
as we've all discussed, is that about 240 migrants are now rotting in hell in El Salvador. To justify
invoking the Alien enemies act, Trump had to declare that the Venezuelan government is controlling
Turned Aragua, which we'll call TDA going forward. Directing this, the Trump administration is saying
the Maduro government is telling TDA to invade the United States, basically.
Is you using them as an arm to conduct war against United States?
Because that's what the alien enemy sector is about.
Now, the problem is the intelligence community looked at alleged ties between the Maduro government and TDA
and determined that the Maduro government is probably not directing their movements or operations within the United States.
This assessment is likely to create some major legal issues for the Trump administration's lawyers as they defend this policy in court.
So you might wonder how to Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, react when her workforce
release this assessment that spoke truth to power and had a different assessment than what Trump
was stating in his talking points? Well, first, her chief of staff tried to pressure the analysts into
changing their conclusions. They've refused. So last week, Gabbard fired the head of the National
Intelligence Council and his deputy and then had the nerve to say that she did so to, quote,
end the weaponization and politicization of the intelligence community. So, Ben, the outcome from
the cherry picking of intelligence that led us into the Iraq war was obviously far worse and more
catastrophic and long-lasting than what we're talking about here. But just in terms of the naked
politicization of the intelligence community itself, I would actually argue that what Tulsi did
here is worse than Dick Cheney just like cherry-picking things he wanted. I mean, they literally
went to these guys and said, change your assessment. And when they refused to change their
intelligence assessment, they fired them. Yeah.
This is a huge story on so many levels.
Because first of all, yes, the history of presidents going shopping for the intelligence they want in the United States is not good.
That's how you get the Vietnam War.
That's how you get the Iraq War bad to do that.
The second point is, before we can get to TDA, this is going to send a message to the entire intelligence community that on whatever issue it is that you're being tasked for analysis on, if you don't provide.
the information that validates Donald Trump's worldview, like you're going to be out of the job,
right? So the message in firing these people isn't just that we want analysts to write a report
on TDA that confirms what we say. It's whatever the fucking topic is, we're not here to give impartial
facts. We're not here to understand what's happening in the world. We're not here to avoid
mistakes by the U.S. government. We are here to tell Donald Trump whatever he wants to hear.
Yeah. It's a head on a pike to warn future truth tellers not to do it.
Basically hang in front of the fucking intelligence community.
And by the way, I see that Tulsa Gabbard is pulling the production of the PDB into the DNI's office.
Yes.
Not at CIA.
But, you know, then on the TDA issue itself, this is a huge deal because they have used, we've talked about this in other contexts, but they continually use national security.
I think they studied this in the last few years and they realize that national security authorities are the most powerful shortcuts to the president having kind of emergency powers, right?
So in this case, the emergency power is we can basically deport anybody that has like a tattoo or whatever.
We can just call somebody Trendi Aragua and we can deport them even if we don't have due process, even if we don't have evidence.
But they're also using national security authorities to put tariffs on people.
Going forward, if they can draw these kinds of connections, they could use those authorities to do basically anything, you know.
Far end, extreme end, you know, we can't hold an election because it's a national emergency or we have to invade such.
country because it's there at war with us or you know like you can basically claim whatever powers
you want if you're saying we're at war with a foreign government with this you know this proxy
fighting us can i ask you a quick question how many national emergencies do you think trump
declared in the first 100 days oh that's a good pop quiz uh i'm going to guess uh 50
eight which is still i think more than any other president in this period of time in history but they
include things like a national emergency to impose sanctions on the international criminal court.
Well, but the reason I said 50 is actually, I was thinking more outputs and inputs, right?
Because the national emergency has been used to do far more than eight things, right?
That's how they're deporting all these people.
That's how they're tariffing all these countries.
And then the last thing I just want to say about this time is that the idea that the Venezuelan
government is directing TDA, like some terrorist state-sponsored terrorist organization,
is absolutely fucking insane.
There's no way that's happening.
If you know anything about Venezuela,
if you know anything about these gangs,
the most you could find
is that there are probably some corrupt dudes
somewhere in the Maduro government
who are on the take from TDA
and they do business with them,
which is nothing like, you know,
Iran directing Hizbollah or something.
Right.
And what they're trying to portray is happening
is just not happening.
And they can't find anybody to say it's happening.
But they're going to keep looking
until they find someone who will just make shit up for them.
It's completely absurd.
And as we discussed, the result is they are sending human beings to this gulag in El Salvador.
And the Cato Institute did a recent review of all these men who had been sent down.
And they found that 50 of the guys now in Sukkot in this prison in El Salvador came to the U.S.
legally and never violated any immigration law.
So this rushed, half-assed, fucked up process is just sending innocent people to rot.
This is what's so grotesque about the whole immigration approach are taking.
too is that most of these, you know,
Venezuelans had temporary protected status
in this country. Haitians had temporary
protected status in the country. That means that they were
here legally. So, like,
when you say they didn't commit crimes,
what you often are back is, well, it was a crime to come here.
Well, it wasn't, you know, because they were granted legal status.
So this is really fascist stuff.
Yeah, it really is. And before we move on, it's being to fascist stuff,
we wanted to highlight the escalating attacks
in El Salvador itself against the press and human rights organizations,
by Naya Buckele's government.
So over the weekend, the Washington Post wrote about this trio of investigative
journalist from an independent outlet called El Faro, which is Spanish for Lighthouse,
who joined four other colleagues who previously fled the country after reporting on these
alleged deals between Buckele and the country's gangs.
And then on Sunday, authorities arrested Ruth Lopez, a lawyer at the human rights organization,
Christosal, who has publicly accused the Buckele government of corruption,
Ruth's colleague Noah Bullock, who's been on the show before, sent us a voice memo,
just offering some more context about this wave of repression.
Here's a clip.
My colleague, Ruth, she's the head of our anti-corruption unit,
and so she's led a team that's investigated over 15 cases of corruption during the Buckele regime.
She's a person who's super credible in the country and really what loved.
She's one of the most visible and consistently critical.
voices. So the big takeaway from this is that the Buckele regime is no longer worried about
appearances. And a lot of that I think has to do with this being probably the worst three months
of his whole two presidential administrations. His popularity has dropped from like above 80% down to
like 50. When you have people expressing dissent and you lose control of the narrative, then
the regime begins to act.
and used the repressive power that it has.
Like just in the last week, there were about 20 different people who were detained illegally,
the clearly political motives behind it.
Three journalists who revealed or did an interview with gang members talking about their partnership with them,
had to flee the country.
One of those 20 people who were detained has already died in custody of the state
as the lack of access to medicine.
On top of that, Bukeli announced a Russian-style foreign agents law
that would put a tax on NGOs Sunday night with the capture of Ruth.
What's really surprising is that in attacking her,
they're not going after the weakest link.
She's one of the best connected, most credible voices in the country internationally.
And so they're trying to silence a powerful voice.
So that's who the U.S. government's in bed with Ben.
You know, Marco Rubio is flying down to hang out with Buckele.
Calling him like such a great friend.
Yeah, Trump's welcoming into the Oval Office.
Like, this is the government we are now closest with in the region.
Yeah, I mean, these are the people Trump likes,
is strong men around the world.
I mean, the one thing that I think is interesting,
well, more than one thing in that clip,
but the fact that Buckele's popularity is dropping,
I don't think countries like El Salvador
want to be like some subsidiary of that.
the Trump organization. I mean, the guy is so, let's just like, let's go at the world's quote
unquote, cool, it's dictator this way. This guy is such a tough guy that he's basically like a
bag man for Donald Trump. That's not strength. He doesn't look like a strong man, like sitting there
kissing Donald Trump's ass and like taking direction from Stephen Miller. I shouldn't say this
because I, you know, in case I end up, you know, but, but I'm just seriously like this is, like, this
is just a sign of like, you know, we'll get to the elections later in the thing, but like,
Trump is not exactly like a brand you want to associate with.
I mean, you can do it in the Gulf because, you know, there's no opposition there.
But I think it's going to people are going to find in other parts of the world that
hitching your wagon to this is not the best move.
Yeah, look, there's no doubt that Buckele took some really drastic unconstitutional steps
to address an acute need, which was a murder rate that was like shockingly high.
I think it went from 51 murderers per 100,000 people in 2019 to 1.9 people per 100,000.
2024, so you can't overstate like how important that, uh, increase in security and safety is
for people on the ground. But the poverty rate in El Salvador went from 26.8% in 2019 to 30% in
2023. So it's like people can't find work. They can't find food. Like that you can't just
continually arrest people. Yeah. Until poverty is solved. Like that's just not how it works.
I mean, he'll try that. But I mean, because people want security, but then they want security
be a pathway towards like a more prosperous society and like more return of freedoms, right? And
and so he's following the same pattern. All these people are like, wow, look, this right wing,
hard right wing crackdown politics is successful. Well, the first couple of years it is,
but then once it's like a like a repressive police state that is impoverished because of corruption
and everything else, like then all of a sudden people are like, well, actually, no, I want
something different. Yeah, I want different leadership. All right, man, we're going to switch.
switch gears here and talk about the situation on the ground in Gaza. So you're obviously going to hear a lot more about the humanitarian situation for ordinary people in Ben's interview. But there's some big political developments we wanted to cover too. The biggest news is that Israel's launched a massive new offensive into Gaza. On Monday, Netanyahu said that Israel is, quote, moving toward full control of Gaza. As of this recording, the New York Times says that Israel had not yet begun this long-awaited military advance, which would involve thousands of ground troops. But the idea of
has ordered the evacuation of Gaza's second largest city, Con Unis, which is in line with their plan
to displace people into a humanitarian zone and then begin this invasion. The international response
to this ground offensive has been swift and harsh. The UK, France, and Canada released a joint
statement, which reads in part, we strongly oppose the expansion of Israel's military operations in Gaza.
The level of human suffering in Gaza is intolerable. They also said, quote, Israel must halt settlements,
which are illegal. We will not hesitate to take further action, including targeted sanctions.
So really, like, you know, expanding the things are criticizing and including threats.
David Lammy, friend of the pod, UK Foreign Secretary, announced the suspension of trade talks
between the UK and Israel. Here is a bit of his speech to Parliament where he talks about all this.
The government has always backed Israel's right to defend itself. We have condemned to mass
and it's abhorrent treatment of the hostages. And we have stood with families and demanded their
loved ones being released, it's morally unjustifiable, it's wholly disproportionate, it's utterly,
utterly counterproductive, whatever Israeli ministers claim, this is not the way to bring the hostages
safely home.
Good for landing there.
I think there's been a lot of pressure from the left in the UK for the Labour Party to step
up and do and say more.
So good to hear him do that.
So, Ben, like, we just, we talked about this war for so long that you've, you've been a lot of
you kind of run out of words for how terrible things are. Like just to lay out a couple facts,
as we speak, the Israeli government has had a near total blockade of Gaza for about 11 weeks.
At top of UN official named Tom Fletcher said that 14,000 babies in Gaza could die in the next 48 hours
if aid doesn't get in. Air strikes have drastically ramped up in advance of this new ground offensive.
There are sites like DropSight News. I've done a great job of recirculating clips from Palestinian journalists
of the aftermath of these airstrikes,
and it's as bad as anything you've ever seen.
People are being displaced for the third, fourth, 15th time.
And let's just be honest, like, as Lamy said there, Ben,
Israeli hostages are far more likely to die
as a result of this operation
and the starvation of people in Gaza
than to be saved by some military campaign.
So it's just, there's no military rationale for this war.
There's no moral justification for it.
This is Netanyahu continuing the slaughter,
of human beings in Gaza for political reasons so he can appease his kind of right-wing
base and government.
And meanwhile, like, frenemy Donald Trump is working on an ethnic cleansing plan that would
send a million Palestinians to live in exile in Libya.
Yeah, I, there's no military rationale for this, right?
Hamas is not like fighting.
There's absolutely no threat that is being a,
by this military operation, right?
I mean, there are, this is a population that lives in a place that has been entirely
destroyed, right?
Like the almost every structure destroyed or damaged.
You've had, you know, we, I talk about it in the interview, but like the death toll is much
higher than, you know, they can report anymore.
It's probably like somewhere over 100,000 people.
They've not let any food into the Gaza Strip.
Now they let a dribble in, right?
They're just killing these people.
And they're mainly, almost entirely killing civilians at this point, you know.
And so I have to say, Tommy, like, I talked to Faro's and he said, everybody in Gaza expects to die, right?
That's a genocide, okay?
And people don't like to hear that term.
But I don't really know what the military rationale is to starve children and bomb.
innocent people in tents and just kind of keep moving this war around and and and keep talking about
ethnic cleansing people to other places like what I do I'm out of words to to describe what is happening
you know and I think the reason you see some of these governments saying these things is because
they know what's happening and you know they're they're creating a bit of a record you know that
they were calling this out because I just don't know what to say about this anymore you know I mean I
I didn't mean, I just don't know what else to say.
Listen, I'm with you.
I bet listeners to the show have probably not.
You've heard us talk to really smart human rights lawyers about the genocide filing in the
case by South Africa at the International Court of Justice, the elements that go into a
determination of genocide.
But like, I have not thrown around the term because I think it's the worst thing you could
ever accuse someone of.
And you want that.
You want to do so in a way that's based in fact.
and the letter of the law, and also used to be mindful of the history of the Holocaust for the Jewish people in the States.
No, no, I know, I know.
And so, but just so no folks know, but like in the, like in the present convention and human rights,
genocide means any of the following acts committed with the intent to destroy in whole or in part a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group.
That involves killing members of the group, causing bodily harm and mental illness to members of the group,
preventing births or forcibly transferring children.
but to constitute genocide, there must be proven intent on the part of the perpetrators
to physically destroy a national, ethnical, racial, or religious group.
I think what you just said is the key point.
When you start talking about starving an entire population, what else is that?
I like, I mean, honestly, at this point, because again, I'm not a human rights lawyer, right?
And so I'm not making some legal determination here.
The question I have is, what are they doing?
because they're not rescuing hostages.
These are not like hostage rescue operations, you know.
They're not, I mean, they've killed the leadership of Hamas.
Like I don't, like, there should actually be an onus on Netanyahu and these Israeli ministers
to describe what, why are you starving people?
Why is there no aid getting in?
Why are you doing ground operations for the umpteenth time in these, what is the purpose of this?
because nobody can describe a military purpose anymore.
And sure, they say it's because they have to release the hostage.
That is not what is happening here.
They're not, this is not about hostages because you would get the hostages out by doing a deal, right?
That's been well established.
Even Trump says that, right?
Right.
So I just, like, this is just me saying, like, I don't know what else is going on here.
Like, I don't, the Israeli government cannot provide, like, a military rationale for starving children.
bombing civilians and doing ground operations in Gaza a year and half after October 7th.
And when you read the words of like top Israeli officials, like cabinet ministers, like the finance
minister, Smotrich, he said that Israel's goal is, quote, destroying everything that's left
of the Gaza Strip. We are conquering, cleansing, and remaining in Gaza until Hamas is destroyed.
What is that? I mean, how does that overlap with the definition you read?
Yeah, pretty, pretty one. I mean, well, there's an entire.
other definition, which is just ethnic cleansing.
Yeah.
Well, that's actually, you know, that that's very clear, you know, that there's a version of that
happening.
It's, it's horrifying.
And again, like, Israel allowed five trucks into Gaza on Monday.
On Tuesday, I think they let in 93 trucks.
I think the human rights, at this point, people are so, they're starving so much that they
need like 500 a day.
Yeah.
And despite a couple trucks getting in or 93 plus five trucks getting in, no aid is
been distributed according to the UN.
What is going to happen to these kids?
Like babies.
Babies, children.
I mean, J.D. Vance apparently was considering visiting Gaza this week.
He decided against it.
Axios reported that was because he didn't want to be seen as endorsing this latest offensive.
If you're offending, if J.D. Vance is offended, yeah.
He claimed it was logistics.
That is bullshit.
You've nothing better to do.
You're a fucking vice president.
And that's my suspicion about these statements and the, is that people, we can't see what's
going on inside.
But some of these governments, you know, they have intelligence.
agencies that I think people are aware that what it's happening now is like next level even
from what we've seen, you know? Yeah. And that's why we're, I mean, that's why we're having
an uncomfortable conversation about it right now. Yeah, I mean, like there were obvious reasons
where like the weeks after October 7th that Israel would launch some score of military and
intelligence operation. We're a year and a half out. We're a year and a half into this thing. Like,
the leaders of Hamas are dead. More than that, actually. We're, you know, over here. Yeah. The only
way we're getting hostages home alive is through a deal. Yeah. And Netanyi just won't cut
one because it doesn't serve his political ones. Yeah. It is what it is. Also, the other major conflict,
Ben, is the war in Ukraine. Last week, we previewed these Trump endorsed talks between Ukraine and Russia
in Turkey. Those are their first direct talk since the invasion started. Trump was in the Middle East.
He was pushing for the talks to happen. He at first suggested he might join the talks himself.
And then, of course, he didn't show up. Putin didn't show up. And then Trump defended Putin for not
showing up, which is just perfect. The talks accomplished very little.
They agreed to exchange a thousand prisoners.
That was the largest prisoner swap yet.
But this Reuters headline summed it up well, quote, Istanbul peace talks, labor,
chasm between Ukraine and Russia.
Then on Monday, Trump talked with Zelensky on the phone.
Then he called Putin for two hours.
And then he had a conference call with Zelensky and leaders from Germany, France, Italy,
Finland, and the European Commission to kind of like sync up on what had been said.
In short, this call accomplished absolutely nothing.
It was like talks about starting talks.
Trump got no concessions from Putin.
And it doesn't sound like he pressured him in any way.
My takeaway, Ben, is that Trump is sick of this process.
He wants out of it and he wants to push it onto the Vatican.
Am I? Is that too cynical?
Am I missing anything?
It seems like, you know, he's sick of it.
And he realizes that his plan is going nowhere because his plan was essentially to come in and pressure Ukraine and the war.
And the Ukrainians agreed to everything Trump pressured them to do.
And then Putin just ignored Trump.
and Putin clearly doesn't feel any pressure from Trump.
I mean, that's what's amazing.
I mean, it is, you know, I'm not like putting on, like, you know,
want some tin for him?
Resistance hat here.
But, I mean, Trump, like, loses his shit.
We've got a Mueller time, dolling or somewhere if you want.
No, but the thing is, is, like, Trump loses his shit when anybody disrespects him.
Putin is totally disrespecting him.
And he won't even say a bad word about him.
You know, he won't even, like, say that it's his fault.
He won't even say the things about Putin that he says about Zelensky.
know. And if Putin doesn't feel like the cost to him doing that is some big new package of
military assistance to Ukraine or something, something that would be material or bad for Russia,
Putin has no incentive to stop what he's doing, which is really escalating the war.
We've seen like ways of drone attacks. We've seen like grinding on the front line here.
And it does feel like Trump's, rather than pivoting to pressuring, you know, Putin, he's probably
going to look to just offload this back to the Europeans. And then the,
the question is, if that happens, does he cut the Ukrainians off anyway? And that's a, we don't
know the answer. I think what Ukraine's been trying to do is go to the extra mile to appear reasonable,
right? Zelensky goes to Turkey. Putin doesn't show up. Zelenzky agrees to a 30-80 ceasefire,
Putin doesn't. And I think what Zelensky and the Europeans are hoping is that if it's so
clear that Russia is the reason why this Trump, you know, peace effort failed, that they'll continue
to provide weapons and intelligence to Ukrainians. We don't know the answer to that.
Yeah, I think there's like $3 billion worth of military assistance.
that's ready to go and Trump just won't send it.
I do think the intelligence piece is probably the biggest thing that's under-discussed.
And if Trump cuts off intelligence cooperation fully with the Ukrainians that will be devastating for them.
Ben, it also seems like Putin is floating to Witkoff and then to Trump some kind of vague opportunity for increased trade between the U.S. and Russia.
But before the Russian invasion in 2022, the full-scale Russian invasion, U.S. exports to Russia accounted for 0.3 percent of total U.S. exports were,
about 1.1% of total U.S. import. So like the big countries, we're talking a big dollar numbers,
like $36 billion in 2021. But it's not, it's like not enough to juice the U.S. economy.
Yeah. You know, right? And Putin is just clearly stringing Trump along. I mean,
Dmitri Peskov's spokesman said that there cannot be any deadlines for these kind of like
memorandums they're going to put together about restarting talks because the devil is in the details.
So they're just giving themselves like a string it out for,
plan. I'm with you. I think, I guess all I wonder is, I hope the Europeans have come to grips
with the fact that Trump is walking away from Ukraine and they are doing what they can to prepare
in the little bit of time they're getting here from this stupid process. Yeah. But like the part of the
problem here is that nobody really knows because Trump, like they don't like you've got Trump,
he's got some play he's running. You've got J.D. Vance.
who, you know, in the J.D. Vance version of history, I mean, this all happened because, you know,
NATO membership was dangled for Ukraine. Well, you know what? We've now removed that.
And Putin is still fighting the war, you know? So that turns out to not be correct, right?
And then Marco Rubio is out to lunch. Steve Whitkoff is just flattered. He gets to be in the room with Putin.
Got a painting. And we got a painting, but the point is that nobody knows.
I mean, he's just kind of guessing, like, what is Trump actually doing here?
Like, when this, if this fails, like, nobody knows what his plan B is.
Doesn't feel like there's a lot of consultation going on with the Europeans about, you know, if X happens, then Y will happen.
And that's what's so strange about this is it's like, it hasn't been like a methodical effort to develop a peace strategy.
It's basically been like, you know, chasing, like Putin is Lucy with the football.
And like Lucy pulls back the football and then Trump goes and kicks Zelensky.
in the balls, you know, like, that's all we've seen. And, and so we, it's hard to see where it's going.
If, again, if what ends up happening is we end up cutting off Ukraine without a peace deal,
then Putin is rewarded for sticking it to Trump and Zelensky is punished for agreeing to all
the terms that Trump demanded that he agreed to, I mean, he didn't agree to all of them, but he agreed
to the ceasefire ones. So. And the minerals deal is stuff too. This is not the art of the deal. I mean,
to use a... No, this is just a mess. It's a failed negotiation.
and he said he would end the war in 24 hours. Obviously that hasn't happened. He seems fed up. All his cabinet members are whining about it because they had to do their jobs for 100 days.
Because it's not as simple as it is J.D. Vance hit on the All-In Pod would make it seem. Yes, that's exactly right. And meanwhile, all of Europe is terrified. Speaking of Europe, this past weekend, Europe had three elections. We wanted to highlight. So there are elections in Romania, Poland, and Portugal. Start with Portugal. On Sunday, Portugal's center-right Democratic Alliance, which is led by Prime Minister Luis Montenegro. They were,
won a snap election. It was the third election in three years, which sounds really annoying.
Yeah. It will allow the ruling party that the government to continue as a minority government.
But the biggest and most worrying story coming out of the results was the rise of the country's far right
Chega party, which means enough in Portuguese. This party was founded only six years ago.
Chega got 22% of the vote. They might surpass the second place finishing socialist party for the number
of parliamentary seats. And again, for context, Chega went from having one lawmaker in 29.
to probably about 58 now.
The last time a far-right party
held this much sway in Portugal,
it was a nationalist dictatorship.
Not good.
A little fascism back there, yeah.
So in Poland, Rafaul Trizkovsky,
who is aligned with the Prime Minister, Donald Tusk,
narrowly won the first round of an election
where the second, third, and fourth place
were just taken by the far right.
There's going to be a runoff in Poland on June 1st,
so that's another very important election to watch.
And then in Romania, the Bucharest mayor,
Nicosia Don, took almost 54%
of the vote, which was surprising. He beat a Christian nationalist named George Simeon, who had won the
first round. It has been, as we've discussed on the show, a crazy six, seven, eight months in Romanian
politics. So, like, last year, there was this, a different far-right pro-Russian candidate named
Kaleen Georgescu. He won the first round of their election back in November of 2024.
The results were annulled because of concerns about Russian interference.
Georgescu was banned from running again by Romania's constitutional courts, which led to the second
election. So Ben, just like stepping back, there's a couple trends here that seem interesting to me.
I love to know what your thoughts are out of all of this. One, across Europe, you're just seeing like
this unsettlingly large chunk of the electorate voting for far right populist parties. It's like 20 to 40%
of the vote in a lot of places, including scary parties like the AFD in Germany, but also Jega.
Two, you're seeing incumbents just getting smoked in a lot of places. Voters are very open to new parties,
including parties that were literally created just a few years ago.
The thing that was interesting about Romania, though,
it was sort of hopeful to me that the new party doesn't have to be nationalist
and anti-institution.
Like, Don is pro-NATO, he's pro-EU.
But I don't know, what did you take away from, I don't know,
these three elections?
I mean, it's an interesting picture into the kind of fluidity of politics in Europe right now
in the sense that, okay, you have these very worrying signs about the rapid,
evolution and growth of the far right, as we see in Portugal. But on the other hand, like,
I didn't see that outcome in Romania. Like, I thought the far right guy was going to win in Romania.
And that makes you, again, question, is there some reconsideration of a full move to the far right,
kind of post-Trump election, post kind of seeing, you know, there's something sobering about
getting right up to the edge and looking over? I mean, because what we've seen in a lot of,
they're edging. Yeah, well, but what I've said,
What I've seen in Europe, we've seen, we saw it in France, right?
Like, most notably, people kind of, these fire parties grow and growing,
and they kind of get right to the edge of taking power.
And people kind of look over that cliff and they're like, well, maybe let's just dial back
a little bit, right?
Yeah, it's like, I want a protest vote for them, but I don't really want them to run stuff.
I don't really want them to run stuff, you know.
Now, Poland will be interesting because, you know, we had the center-left coalition win.
This is, and that's already the parliamentary majority.
The question is, do you ever get a president aligned with that?
So the Polish runoff will be really important to watch because if the center left can win, which will be hard, because if you add up all the numbers of the different parties, like they're not winning right now.
But then that would kind of consolidate a positive trend in pulling.
But the point is it's fluid.
It's push and pull.
The far right can't quite make it over that hump in most places.
And you've got to hope that they're receding a bit.
And the Romanian election might indicate that because people are like, yeah, you know what?
maybe this isn't the right protest vote.
To your point, I mean, like traditional social democratic parties are not doing great.
There may be an opening for like some enough parties on the left.
Like not a bad name, by the way.
Yeah, enough.
Like I'd vote for the non-far right version of enough in this country at this point, you know?
Yeah.
What's like a, how do you say fuck off in Romania?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Fuck off elites.
Yeah, you're the describing the politics as fluid, I think is spot on and kind of at times even internally incoherent.
Like, yeah.
You have a pro-NATO, pro-EU candidate winning in Romania, but there was a February
2024 survey that found that less than 20% of Romanians think they should continue providing
support for Ukraine.
So it's hardly like a globalist spring.
These are not resounding endorsements.
Either way, though, the far rate is getting traction, but they're not getting like some
resounding endorsement either.
Like people are just, they're not happy with their political choices is what's interesting.
Yeah, I mean, the big issue in Romania, it remains one of the poorest countries in the
if you look at GDP per capita.
Actually, Poland is pretty far down there, too.
I mean, the number one, the highest,
do you know what the number one rated country is
in terms of per capita GDP in the EU?
I'm quizzing you a lot today.
I'm going to say it's Lichtenstein or Luxembourg.
Luxembourg, you nailed it, and then Ireland.
I knew it was one of those little guys.
Ireland, do that?
Yeah, good for you, Ireland.
I'm sure they have all that tax revenue
from all our tech companies that are incorporated.
Yeah, it probably drives out the GDP.
Yeah.
But, like, the Romanian population,
from 1990 to 2024,
Romania's population declined by about
4 million people
because there were just no job opportunities
and the labor market stagnated.
So it was a tough life.
The last thing I saw that was interesting,
did you see that...
Have you been to Romania?
I've not been to Romania.
No, no, no.
I'd like to go.
Live show, yeah.
Pavel Dorov, remember the CEO of Telegram?
Of course.
He said that the French government
came to him and asked him
to silence conservative voices in Romania.
The French government denies that,
but I thought that was interesting
given the context of...
Did he say that from his prison cell in France?
Maybe. I bet he escaped before you.
We should check up on that guy.
Yeah.
I didn't know what happened to him.
Yeah, I don't remember either.
Did they arrest him?
Do they let him leave?
I don't know.
We'll dig it up.
Okay, well, that's, uh, we just assigned ourselves some homework for the next show.
Okay, we're going to do something a little bit different this week.
We're going to go to Ben's interview with Furose Sidwa about what it was like for him
being a trauma surgeon in the Gaza Strip.
And then after that interview, when you come back, you'll hear a very stupid segment that Ben and I
recorded about the Eurovision contest. I barely know what it is. But it was a great, if you want to
see us or hear us, we're see us, embarrassed. Yeah. Well, let's tease the sauna. Yeah.
Yeah, when I say Stu, but I mean funny because we don't know what we're talking about.
Yeah, exactly. And you'll hear us just sound like idiots. Also, if you're in D.C. on June 6th,
check out John Lovett with the Bull Works, Tim Miller and Sarah Longwell. They're hosting a big live show
and fundraiser at the Lincoln Theater in D.C.
They'll be celebrating pride by venting, pre-gaming, commiserating, laughing, venting some more,
and most importantly, raising money for the Immigrant Defenders Law Center,
which represents Andre Hernandez, Romero, and others who have been disappeared by our government
to El Salvador without any due process.
So get your tickets now at crooked.com slash events.
Also, the cricket store has got lots of new merch, including new designs for a classic friend
of the pod tea.
If you're looking for some new crooked merch, merch, go now, crooked.com.
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Okay, I'm very pleased to welcome Dr. Furose Sidwa to the podcast.
He's a trauma surgeon based in Stockton, California.
He's volunteered in Gaza twice.
Most recently this past March at the Nasser Medical Complex in Kanunis.
He's also volunteered in Ukraine, Haiti, Zimbabwe, and Burkina Faso.
Foros, thanks so much for being here.
Welcome to the podcast.
Thanks.
Nice to be here.
All right.
So I want to get to asking you to kind of compare the two times you've been in Gaza.
But let's just start at the beginning.
What took you to Gaza?
I mean, like, how does a trauma surgeon from California end up in European hospital?
Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
So the first time the, so the humanitarian sphere is like completely disjointed, totally disorganized, as you can imagine.
And so I got a, I got an email from the Society of Critical Care Medicine, which is just a professional society that I'm part of.
and letting people know that if you want to volunteer in Israel after the October 7th attacks,
this is how you can do it.
And if you want to volunteer in Gaza, this is how you can do it.
And that call for volunteers, the call for volunteers was to work with the WHO in Gaza because you can't really work with the Ministry of Health directly because you'll be considered.
Because, yeah, exactly, you'll be considered working with a terrorist organization.
So that call went out through the Palestinian American Medical Association.
So I contacted them and they sent us over.
And at that time we went to Cairo.
We could take a whole bunch of supplies with us and stuff because the Rafa gate was still open.
But now obviously not.
So obviously we want to focus on your experience there.
And I guess it is worth contrasting here.
So how would you compare the two different times you spent there?
assume that, you know, just as someone who's following this, that what was already not a
significant amount of health care infrastructure has basically been destroyed. But what did you see
differently the last time you were there from the first time? Yeah. So the first time I went,
I was at European on the eastern edge of Canunis. And at that time, European hospital, like most
of the hospitals in Gaza, was a displaced person's camp. So there were 10 to 15,000 people
sheltering on the grounds of the hospital, but then also within the hospital, like lining the
corridors of the hospital. There were families living in tents because it's better to live inside
than outside, have some electricity, something like that. So like women were cooking pita bread
in the emergency room during mass casualty events. Women, you know, there were people trying to drain out,
you know, canned vegetables in the ICU sink. Like, it was a total disaster. There was no way for a hospital
to function this way. And so that is, that is the fact that that wasn't going on,
when I went back this time.
I went from, I got, I entered Gaza this time on March 6th and I left on April 1st,
if I remember right.
And so when I went back, every hospital in Gaza has been forcibly emptied at some point.
And when it's, when people have been allowed to come back in, the administration and the
Ministry of Health have kind of decided together that we're not going to let Palestinians
camp in the hospital anymore.
Just it's not, you know, they don't have anywhere to go.
But at the same time, there's just no way for them to, um,
The hospital can't function like that.
Even though it's sheltering people, it's not being a hospital at that point.
So Nosser, I went back to Nostra Medical Complex, which is on the other side of Kahnunis.
And the thing that was better was that Kahnunis, or that Nosser was not a D.P. camp.
So the hospital could actually function.
But everything else was worse.
I arrived during the ceasefire, you know, March 6 to April, 18th was still ceasefire time.
And we were seeing trauma cases for sure, like one or two people shot every day.
sometimes it was from Israel, some Israeli forces, sometimes it was actually because there was a dispute going on between two families in, in communists and the Hamas government couldn't suppress it like they normally would.
But the other types of trauma cases we were seeing were people who were, there was no widespread bombing going on at this point.
So the other type of trauma we would see was from bombings that had happened like six months ago.
And people's homes would collapse on them when they tried to go back in.
The main thing was actually to retrieve their loved ones' bodies, but also like to try and get their possessions out.
You know, if they had cash that had been in the building when it had been destroyed, things like that.
And yeah.
So, but unfortunately, you know, the destruction of Gaza was far, far more severe.
When I was there the first time, the Battle of Con Unis was still going on.
Like Israeli troops were basically moving from north to south.
And the hospital was constantly shaking, even though European hospital is on the outskirts of Conunis.
Um, the, the hospital was just literally swaying back and forth, almost the entire time.
There were windows broken on the third floor. Um, one of the guys I went there with Mark Perlmutter,
he was thrown into a wall by an explosion, broke one of his teeth. Um, you know, so it was, it was,
it was the, it was close up. When I got back to Nasser, or when I went, when I went to Nosser from
the second to the 18th, there was no bombing at all. Um, so it was, you know, there were shooting,
but not, not bombing. So it was relatively quiet. But then after the 18th, when, you know, at 2.30 in the
warning about the, the Israelis resumed the really widespread bombing of Gaza, mostly to kill
Hamas's political leadership, they said. And it was, that was the biggest, that was the
start of the biggest mass casualty event I've ever seen in my life. Like, I was a resident during
the Boston Marathon bombing, and it doesn't even, it, that was like an order of magnitude off
of what we saw on the 18th and then not just the 18th, but going forward. And who, like,
How many people that you're treating are children or civilians?
I mean, how, take us inside of like the kind of the pace and the kind of patients you're seeing.
Yeah, yeah.
And the kind of injuries you're seeing.
Yeah.
Well, so, yeah.
So at Nossar, when I went this time, everything was after March 18th, everything was explosions.
There were, I don't know, actually, I'm trying to think maybe, or, you know, actually,
the only shootings that I saw after March 18th that I can remember off the top of my head were from a helicopter.
gunship, not like, you know, not small arms or even medium arms, but really big, big weapons.
And of course, all those people died. But the, the types of injuries that we were seeing were
mostly explosive in shrapnel injuries. Now, if a bomb just shreds someone to pieces, they're dead.
There's nothing we can really do about it. But the types of injuries, we can do something about
our injuries, basically, you know, shrapnel injuries from the neck down to the pelvis. And then the
arms and legs, obviously, but those aren't, those usually are less life-threatening just because
you can amputate someone's arm if you need to or their leg.
And yeah, in terms of children, because I'm a trauma, I'm trained in trauma surgery,
which means my job is mostly to stop people from bleeding to death.
So because of that during mass casualty events, I go to what's called the red zone,
like the red triage area where the most severe patients are coming.
And I would say most of those patients were small kids, not like 17 and a half year olds,
but like, you know, preteen children, like, you know, 12 and 12 and under.
that's not because most of the injuries are actually in children,
but most of the severe injuries seem to be in children,
if that makes any sense.
And it kind of tracks because, you know,
if you expose you or me to a bomb versus a five-year-old,
the five-year-old's going to be much more seriously injured.
So, yeah, we were dealing with a lot of injured children, unfortunately.
Well, you wrote a piece for the Times last fall
in which you talked about surveying 65 healthcare workers like yourself.
and of them 44 said they, quote, saw multiple cases of preteen children who had been shot in the head or chest.
I mean, that should be jarring to people.
How are these children being shot like this?
Yeah.
So this was all of this.
So that survey was done mostly of people who were in Gaza during the ground invasion.
in other words, when there were Israeli troops in the vicinity of the hospitals that they were working in.
And I think that's just what explains it.
I mean, there are, it's unfortunate, but every society's army has people who are sadistic or cruel and we'll do things like that, like shoot a child in the head.
But yeah, no, the large majority of us did regularly see children shot in the head or the chest on a regular basis.
Like for me, I was there, like I said, March 25th to April 8th of that year.
And every day, like on average, I saw one kid shot in the head every day.
And that's despite the fact that I'm not even the person they call for this.
Like, I'm not a neurosurgeon, right?
So that's not, I'm not.
It was just I happened to be there.
So I'm sure there were many more.
But, but yeah, you know, what explains it, I don't, it's conjecture on my part.
So I'm not, I don't know exactly what explains it.
But I think with the, you know, the October 7th attacks were a shocking atrocity to, to Israelis especially.
And there was also a lot of atrocity propaganda that happened afterwards.
You had the beheaded babies, the widespread rape and these kinds of things that there isn't any evidence for.
So when you've got an army that feels like it's fighting for its national survival against people who are constantly being.
called animals and vermin and other such things.
And furthermore, there's a humongous power disparity.
Like, it's like, you know, like the Palestinians have basically very, very, very little
means of self-defense, less than one Israeli soldier has been killed per day in Gaza since the invasion
started.
And so I think Israeli soldiers just have the opportunity to do these things if they want to,
and it's kind of clear that the Israeli army is not going to stop them from doing it.
So, yeah.
You know, well, I want to come back.
to that, but to just stay with the circumstances for the Palestinians, the death count seems
low to me and most people that have evaluated this.
I mean, what is your assessment?
I'm not asking you to give me a count, but is there, how do you even keep track of the number
of people who are being killed?
Yeah, so this is important for people to understand.
In the media, it's often said the Hamas run ministry of health says this many people
have been killed, but it doesn't distinguish between combatants and civilians.
That's all accurate.
That's all accurate.
But it's a little bit misleading.
Firstly, I don't know, I literally don't know anyone, with one exception.
I don't know anyone who has treated a combatant in Gaza.
The, everyone I treated in both the first time and the second time I was there, everyone came in with their family.
And, you know, you can say whatever you want about Hamas.
No one thinks they're dragging their wives out to the battlefield.
Yeah.
That's silly.
The, so I suspect that combatants are not even really counted in that,
in that group. But the, it's basically a hundred percent civilian casualty that we're seeing.
I'm sure there's one fighter somewhere in there that we just can't see, but that's not the common
situation. There is actual data on this question of like just sticking with violent deaths,
forget the starvation and the disease and the other things, but just sticking with violent
deaths, there were, there was a study that was just done in the Lancet, which is a major British
medical journal. And what they showed, so they got the Ministry of Health
entire database, not the aggregate numbers, but literally line by line, person by person data.
And they compared that to a survey that had been done and social media postings.
And they kind of did what Air Wars does where they needed two points to verify that somebody
had been killed, like a social media posting and a survey or a social media posting
and the Ministry of Health data, something like that.
And they found that even just sticking to violent deaths, the Ministry of Health was undercounting
publicly verifiable deaths by 40%. So there's that aspect of it. On top of that, there's the
major question of what's broadly called famine, but it's usually people think of famine as meaning
there isn't enough food, right? But famine really encompasses more than that. It encompasses displacement,
lack of water, like drinking water, lack of sanitation and hygiene infrastructure, lack of food,
obviously, and lack of health care as well. And these are all things that are under direct
in sustained attack
by,
during this assault.
So the,
so yeah,
so nobody knows what the death count is
because people aren't allowed to study it.
It's important for people to understand that with $50,000 and about three weeks,
we could answer that question.
Like,
not me,
but a public health researcher.
The U.S.
government could answer that question.
It probably could.
It probably has access to Israeli intelligence reports about what's actually going on.
but they probably could yeah at least they could give some sensible some sensible number beyond what
it is but but you know even just like a you could have an academic from Yale or Hopkins School
of Public Health or Harvard School of Public Health answer that question literally in three
weeks with 50 grand if the Israelis would just allow the study to be done but they won't let
these people in so that that's it's just it's one of those things about our own society that
That's how little we care about how many people we're killing.
Yeah, their humanity.
I mean, so we're talking about death count that, you know, could somewhere be in the
neighborhood of 100,000.
But I want to talk about wounded people.
I mean, you're a trauma care person.
You save somebody's life.
You stop them from bleeding to death.
Look, if I was shot or got shrapnel in me, you know, not that that's going to happen here,
I imagine I'd recover for a long time in a hospital, and then I'd have some kind of
home care. And I'm trying to imagine people that kind of come through the hospital and out,
and they're people with horrific wounds. They've lost limbs. They've lost blood. They're risk of
infection. And they're just turned back out into tents where they're dropping more bombs.
I mean, what is your, look, when we hear about famine and lack of aid, what do you think about
the patients you treat about how and where they're recovering? Yeah. Well, yeah. So we, there's a,
there, how are they recovering? Honestly, a lot of them are not. We see, we very regularly find wounds
with maggots in them, like not from not in the hospital, but people coming in from outside,
although at European, we did find them in the hospital as well, just because it was so overcrowded.
Um, but if you, uh, if you walk around, uh, in God, like I, like I walked between, uh,
there, there's a, um, I was at Nossar Medical Complex and Amal is the Palestine Red Crescent
Society's headquarters in Con Unis. So I walked between the two. It's maybe like a mile or a mile and a half.
And when you're walking around, you see tons and tons of people with amputations, but they still have, like, cotton dressings on them. And they're just soaked. I mean, like, it's just like they're obviously infected. There's no, no two ways about it. But they're, they're just trying to power through and deal with it, you know. And yeah, I mean, obviously, there's no rehabilitation. There's no, like, you know, one of the things actually that's kind of remarkable. I saw a report from, it might have been saved the children. I can't remember. But. But.
It's actually, it's very difficult to assist disabled children, but also disabled adults,
simply because there are very few flat spaces left in Gaza, like places where you don't have to,
well, where you can lie down, but also where the one part of the floor isn't like this and another
is bent and crooked and like just because everything has been bombed and run over by military
vehicles.
And it's just the, and a lot, you got also like a lot of these people are living in bombed out,
homes, like the two walls are missing or the floor is unstable or whatever. So if you have to like climb up a
destroyed and slanted roof to get into your second floor apartment because the stairs have been destroyed
and then you're, there's rubble everywhere. Like it's just like yeah, it keeps the rain off of you.
But like a lot, again, you actually see this when you're walking around. People actually like
picking someone up, putting them on their back and then trying to ascend up like a mountain of rubble to get
into their apartment. It's wild. Yeah. But.
Yeah, there's the ability for people to recover from these injuries.
Because like you were kind of saying,
stopping someone from bleeding to death is the baseline of medical care.
That's not real medical care, right?
I mean, you didn't die.
Great.
But like you're not going to recover.
You're not going to thrive just because you didn't bleed the death if your arms are broken
and you're, you know, blah, blah, blah, while you have a head injury or whatever it might be.
The recovery and the rehabilitation and the reconstructive operations are super, super important.
And none of that can be done in Gonser right now, literally none of it.
Well, and you're not a mental health person. You're a trauma surgeon, but what is the mental state, the scale of trauma of the kind of families you're seeing?
Yeah. It's terrible. I'll tell you that almost every hell, I mostly talked to health care workers in English, right? Because I don't speak Arabic, unfortunately. So I mostly talked to physicians and nurses while I was there. I will tell you that with very few exceptions,
All of them expect to die.
They all expect their families to die.
They all expect their children to die.
And it's it's kind of a weird thing to be to be sitting there taught.
Like, like everyone kind of taught.
Like I'll tell you the story.
When I was, I was talking to an anesthesiologist named Azar, really, really sweet man.
Goofy, kind of chubby-faced guy, you know, he's a nice guy.
And his family lives east of European.
hospital. So now they must have been evacuated from their village permanently. But his, he has five,
five or six. I can't remember. Anyway, five boys. And I was just having coffee with him. It was
Ramadan. So people stay up late having coffee and stuff like that. So I was having coffee with him.
And, you know, everyone just banters back and forth. It's just casual conversation. And at some point,
he starts telling me he's kind of making fun of his wife. He's, oh, my, you know, my wife, she just can't do anything for
herself. She can't go to the market by herself. She can't discipline the boys by herself.
Blah, blah, blah, blah. And then he goes, when I'm martyred, I don't know what she's going to do.
And I can still remember, like, you know, we're kind of sitting across the table. He had his little
cup of coffee, like, you know, a little Arabic coffee cup. And he's got his big belly and he's
sitting there with his hands like this. And then, you know, sometimes you say something that you
don't expect is going to kind of trigger an emotional response in you. And he kind of looked down
at the table and his voice started to quiver. And he just said, you know, like, you know,
Like, what is this?
What kind of life is this now?
And that kind of resignation to a fate that's just awful is extremely widespread.
You see it.
Actually, I forget if it saved the children or somebody else, but maybe it was UNICEF.
Well, one of these children's groups found that about 50% of children, small children, not, again, not 17.
and a half-year-old boys with small children in Gaza are actively suicidal. That's extremely
unusual. I actually remember at European Hospital. It was shocking to me how many kids regularly said,
and again, this is all three transitors because I can't understand it, but how many kids regularly
said, why couldn't I have died with Sarah when she, my sister when she died? Why couldn't I have died
with mom? Why do I have to be the only one that's alive? Why do I have to feel my leg hurting so bad?
Like, this was very common. And it is extremely unusual.
Like, have you ever met a suicidal five-year-old?
It's outside of extreme psychiatric disease.
That is not common at all.
Even in other war zones, you know what I mean?
Like, it's not, it is not, that is not a well-described response for children.
But, you know, you can, I'll tell you another story just about their mental state.
There was a, I met a cardiologist that, I can't remember his name now, but he has four small children, or four children, excuse me, one small girl who's a four or five years old.
They live in Rafa.
And this was during ceasefire time.
They live in Rafa.
And there are Israeli sniper towers now in the Philadelphia corridor, the border between Gaza and Egypt.
And one of those towers was firing into Rafa.
And some of the bullets came into their home or their apartment.
So the whole family hit the deck.
But the four or five-year-old girl who, like, you know, if you think about her only conscious memories are from this war, right?
Like that's all she can remember.
she was just dancing around in a circle, like singing to herself.
And they were like, you know, I don't remember her name, but you know, Sarah, what are you doing?
What are you doing?
Come here, come here.
And just, no, no, don't worry, Mommy.
The bullets are all the way up there.
Like, because they were hitting above the, so they, you know, these parents had to like,
barricrawl over to her child and tackler to try and keep her safe.
You know, it's kind of like a kid walking out into traffic, you know, but, but your,
but the traffic is bullets.
But the, so, yeah, what, what this kind of.
prolonged and really dramatic extensive experience with death and misery and starvation and hunger
and lack of cleanliness and displacement and fear like seeing your parents afraid all the time
what that is going to do what what that's going to do to the half of Gaza that his children
is not clear but but it's it's already having a dramatic and very noticeable effect
Well, I mean, I want to ask you one kind of political question.
I mean, I'm going to ask it this way.
I mean, you're American, as you said.
And so you represent America in your own way.
Like you're in Gaza as an American providing this assistance.
And you know that the bombs that are being dropped on the people you care are American bombs.
What is it like to be an American in this place treating people whose wounds are almost entirely?
with American-made weapons.
Yeah, it's weird.
I'll tell you two stories about that.
So, like, the first one was on March 18th, that's when the widespread bombing resumed.
2.30 in the morning, the bombs go off.
The door to our living quarters was blown open and smashed into the cabinet behind it,
that kind of woke us all up.
Like, holy crap.
So we ran down to the, to the ER and started working.
The first two kids that I saw were dead, so they were on their way to dying.
But the first one that we could say, if you turned out to be,
a five-year-old girl named Sham.
And
Sham had a,
she had injuries to her left chest
in her belly.
It turned out that her spleen
was bleeding and her left lung
was torn.
But she also had a wound
to her,
the left side of her face
that had traveled
through the left side of her.
It was a piece of shrapnel
that had traveled
through the left side of her brain.
But it stayed on that side.
So it's a recoverable injury.
Actually, she did quite well
from that standpoint.
She didn't talk for,
after she left the hospital,
I think, two or three weeks later,
but she didn't,
after like six or seven days,
she started talking again
and using the right side of her body again.
But anyway, I still remember, like, I, because, you know, we're looking, it's just a room
full of kids lying on the, and there are adults too, but mostly full of kids, lying on the ground,
and you're just trying to pick out, like, which one should I start with?
You know, these are triage decisions as a way of doing them, but it's still pretty overwhelming
at the time.
But so I find this little girl, and I look at her and she's not breathing properly.
So I do a jaw thrust, like if you've ever done like a CPR class, they teach you, you know,
just pulled the draw forward that lets somebody's, because they're kind of obstructing their own
airway by doing that.
And all these kids are lying on the ground and kids have big heads.
You know, they're just getting pushed down like that.
But anyway, so I draw a thruster and she starts breathing again.
So, oh, good, okay, this is one we might actually be able to save.
So I tell the nurse is like, get ready to let's intubate this girl.
It's just stuff we have to do.
So I just have to stand there holding her jaw up for, you know, three, four or five minutes, something like that while they're getting set up to do the stuff we need to do and trying to make space and things like that.
And I still remember while I was looking at her and I'm just looking at her.
And I'm just looking at her.
since it's not bleeding badly, but I'm just looking at it.
And I remember thinking, like, did I pay for this shrapnel or did my neighbor or did their neighbor?
Like, it's weird.
Like, it's kind of wild, you know?
I mean, it's not, like, nobody wants shrapnel to be in this little girl's brain.
Like, literally no one yet we're doing.
It's is very odd, you know.
So that was one thing.
But the other was that on, so the last operation I did on March 18th was in a kid named Ibrahim Barhum.
He was a 16-year-old boy.
And on March 23rd, he was ready to go home.
He had injuries to his colon and his rectum from shrapnel.
So we repaired them and we gave him a colostomy where the colon's coming out to the skin.
And he's 16.
Most 16-year-olds would be pretty pissed off about this, but he was pretty chill about it, actually.
He was a nice kid.
And on the 23rd, it was the evening.
And he had done pretty well that day.
Now he was eating.
He was walking around.
His gut was starting to function.
In other words.
So I was like, okay, he can go home the next day.
Great.
So at like, I don't know, probably 8.30 or 9 at night, I went, we used to live on the fourth
floor of the hospital and the surgical ward, the men's surgical ward was on the second
floor.
So I left our little living quarters after Iftar, the evening meal in Ramadan, and went to, so
I'm walking to the stairs.
And I walked past the ICU on the fourth floor.
And there was a doctor, I think her name was Heneb.
She grabbed me and she was like, froze there's a, a kid.
kid named Muhammad that was transferred over here from another hospital. He's bleeding to death. He needs to go to
the operating room. So I took a look at him. That took about 10 minutes. And he was bleeding. So I just told
them, look, you guys get the operating room going. I'm going to go change Ibrahim's bandages, talk to his
family about how to take care of this colostomy. Because he's going to go home the next morning.
And then I'm going to come back up here and we'll take care of this kid's case. And like literally,
as I walked out of the ICU, Ibrahim's room exploded. The Israelis fired a missile.
at, is probably a drone fired missile, but who knows, at the room, uh, killing, uh,
Ismail Barhum, who they said was the prime minister of him of Gaza. And, uh, and Ibrahim,
because they were their distant cousins and they had the same last name. So the nurses had put
them in this into the same room just to make family visits and stuff easier. And, um, so
Ibrahim was killed as well. And, you know, I, uh, so the whole, the whole hospital went
unlocked. Actually, the, when it, I actually didn't even realize that the bomb had hit the
hospital. It just felt like all the other ones. But the, you know, I, uh, so the
Palestinian somehow knew right away. So they like grabbed us and like put us in like the foreigners and put us in the,
the safer corner of the hospital, they thought. But the, after about an hour, the administration lifted the
lockdown to the hospital. Because, you know, they don't know if like, are we going to get invaded?
Is there going to be another bombing? Who knows? They lifted it after about an hour. So I ran down to the ER to
see if there was anybody that needed to come up for an operation because this kid, Mohammed, still needed to go to the OR.
And when I was down there, three or four guys ran down with a body in a sheet because, you know, you couldn't
evaluate people in the in this in the in the in the blown up ward it was just a disaster so they ran down
the the um the stairs with the body and so i said no go go to the trauma base so i followed them in
and when i pulled the sheet off i recognized ibrahim's abdomen his he had been eviscerated
his sutures were torn open his bowel was outside his colostomy was torn but he was i recognized him
from his abdomen as shit you know like this this like 16 year old boy who i should have just sent him
home that day you know instead of waiting but the um so yeah so you know that that kind of
of thing. It weighs on you a little bit, but it's, it's more just like the, like, you, you know how
senseless all of this is. You know it's not making anyone safer. You know, it's not doing anything
to help anyone. Yet we're all just sleepwalking into doing it. And it's frustrating. There's a book,
last question I'm asked, there's a book called Dispatches by a great Vietnam War correspondent.
And he describes, I think it's Michael Hur, coming back to New York and he's just been in,
in Vietnam for like a year.
And he's at like a bar or something.
And he wants to stand up on the table and shout at everybody.
Like, what the fuck are you doing?
Yeah.
Do you know what's going on there?
I mean, do you must, do you feel that way?
Like you're back in California.
It's sunny outside and people are walking around.
And meanwhile, we're paying for this.
Yeah.
Like, do I wish people would pay attention more?
Yeah.
I mean, I guess you're doing that.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, you're right.
Yeah.
Yeah.
But at the same time, I have, I have never talked to a,
My chairman at where I work is a fairly right-wing guy, Trump voter, evangelical Christian guy.
He's a very decent human being in his day-to-day life.
But he and my politics would not line up at all.
But very good.
He's actually, he's our chairman.
He's a great guy to work for.
But when I went to Gaza the first time, he was like, oh, just be careful.
You know, he's kind of implying that like these Muslims are crazy.
You got to watch out, you know.
When I came back, though,
He came to a presentation that I did at the hospital just for like our little local research day about Gaza.
And when I, you know, I just showed the people I treated and what I saw.
And afterwards, he was like, froze.
I had no idea this stuff.
This is awful.
Like, this is crazy.
You know, yeah.
And he was like, I always thought, you know, we were the good guys and the Israelis were the good guys.
It's the radical Islamic blah, blah, blah, well, you know, all of, you know, not that al-Qaeda's good.
Or even like not that Hamas is a much of great nice people.
But the, but you know, he, as soon as he saw what was actually going on, it was totally untenable for him to continue to support. He just couldn't. And, and the vast majority, I think with like maybe one exception of normal human beings that I've talked to, in other people, not people who have some partisan interest, but just normal people are just appalled by this. They just can't understand it. You know, what the hell? Why on earth are we doing this? And so, but that's the reason that.
that so much of this is hidden.
You know what I mean?
Like,
that's the reason.
There's no press in there.
Well,
there's,
yeah,
that's,
exactly.
Exactly.
No one,
no one who is a truly objective observer is allowed to go.
And like the only people who are allowed to go are, you know, they're embedded with the Israeli military.
A lot of them are just kind of weird, you know, like kind of neol conservative, odd, strange people.
The, the, in the few reporters that do go in with the Israeli military and are serious actually
actually still come out with shocking stories.
Like,
I don't know if you remember, there was a CNN reporter who went in and saw the Israelis destroying a cemetery.
And so he asked him, why are you, that's, how could that have any military?
Oh, well, there's a tunnel right underneath.
You said, oh, can you show?
No, no, it's too dangerous.
Please show it to me.
So they did.
And just by simple aerial footage and geolocation, it's pretty easy to see that they were not under the cemetery at all.
They were just destroying the cemetery to destroy a cemetery, to humiliate people, to, you know, obliterate their cultural heritage, to, you know, make people.
really feel like we don't belong here.
You know, it's not, we have to leave.
In other words, there's nothing left to stay for.
And, you know, so it's just, so I think people want to, I, I've, I've never lost my faith
that people at their core are, are decent, you know.
Yes, we have, maybe, maybe somebody has this or that view of abortion or so, you know,
we can talk about stuff all day long, no problem.
But, but at their core, nobody is in favor of blowing up children.
At their core, no one is in favor of making an entire society homeless.
Nobody is in favor of obliterating, obliterating hospitals, of killing a 16-year-old boy in his hospital bed.
No one's in favor of this stuff.
So that's why, yes, do I want to scream at everybody?
Yeah, for sure.
But I also recognize that the reason they're not screaming themselves is because they don't know what's going on.
And if they did, they'd be appalled by it.
And so that's why I try to get out there.
Well, look, thanks so much for joining us to let people know what you saw.
And thanks for the work you did over there.
How can people follow what you're doing?
Oh, I'm on Twitter, just Feroz Sidwa or at Feroz Sidwa.
And then on Instagram is F.Sidwa.
Okay, we'll put that in the notes too.
All right, Feroz, thanks so much for doing this.
Thank you.
Appreciate it.
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Final topic here, Ben.
So our producer, Michael, excellent producer,
he's the world's biggest Eurovision fan.
The guy just will not stop talking about Eurovision.
He will not stop singing the songs.
And we promised him that we would cover it.
So what comes next will be as new to us as it is to you, the listener.
So Michael, this is your canvas.
This is your paint.
Let rip.
Okay, open up Slack.
Oh shit.
I'm reading the script for the first time.
All right, Ben, let's have a little fun.
The Eurovision finals were over the weekend.
I'm assuming you were glued to Peacock watching.
Me too.
I actually have no clue what happened,
and our team has taken full of advantage of that.
We're going to play a little game here we're calling
Ursula von der Leyen's Spotify Raps.
The team has pulled a few clips from some particularly notable entries,
and we're going to guess which country these crimes against humanity.
I mean, ditties came from.
heads up. We're watching videos, so you can check out what we're reacting to if you hop on
YouTube. And also, thank you everyone who's been subscribing to Pod Save the World on YouTube.
As I said, a million times, we're getting our asses handed to us by the right wing when it comes
to YouTube. People are searching for political news or foreign policy news, and they're getting
horrible takes by some fucking in-cell over at TPUSA. And when you subscribe to Pod Save the World
and Podsave America, it really helps us serve as good information in the algorithm. So thank you
for watching this. But the audio of these Eurovision clips is a lot of fun too. So we'll play it for you here.
All right, let's roll clip number one.
Please
Please make me
I think we get this stuff
Yeah, I think we got enough
Okay, we did, yeah
Okay, wait, why
Are these the best people from the countries?
Like I thought these were supposed to be like the cream the
crop here. Well, what country do you think it was from?
I should know the language.
I mean, I saw some Italian in there, but I just think
as you're saying macchiato or something so I don't know.
It was Estonia.
Estonia? Okay, okay. I'm going to put some
facts. I don't speak Estonian nor Italian.
There's some facts in the slack for you, Tommy.
Here are some facts, Ben. So the song title was
espresso macchiato. Two facts worth noting. The singer is named
Tommy Cash. That's cool.
An Italian lawmaker wanted to ban this
song because of its Italian stereotypes and because it, quote, conveys a message of a population
tied to organized crime.
Does it?
Yeah.
I don't know.
I mean, my Estonian is not good, so I don't know.
Yeah, I didn't get any organized crime vibes from that.
I just got some strange vibes.
I just got some bad singing.
All right, next clip.
This is more what I expect from your...
Yeah, this is what I expected.
This woman's singing in a giant set of lips.
Yeah.
She's serving something.
Okay.
That wouldn't bet.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That was sure.
It's fine.
Where is she from?
Oh, shit.
I wasn't prepared for this game.
Lithuania.
We're going to stay in the Baltics here?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Malta.
Malta.
All right.
This one was very controversial, and Tommy, I'm going to make you read why.
Okay.
I'm going to tell you why this controversial.
So the song title was serving.
This one was controversial.
It was originally called Con.
which means singing in Maltese
and the lyrics originally went
Serving Kant
obviously this sounds
similar to a word
the Brits throw around a lot
The Guardian describes this is a queer
or drag slang phrase
roughly meaning to express boldness
was deemed a little too risque
by the competition by the European Broadcasting Commission
so the song was retitled
Serving and the lyrics reworked to serving
more like serving
serving
I mean
I kind of liked it
yeah that was fine
that was good
Malta is pretty
conservative society
though it's uh
yeah
have you been to Malta
I've never been to Malta
no I've never been to Malta
yeah we should make a list
of places to go
are we clearly have no ear
for languages
I apologize in advance to everybody
I yeah I can't learn language
to save my life
okay that was great
alright
let's hear another
another beauty
Are these people fucking with us
that is that like a liar
what do you call those guitars
I know it's kind of
Cool, though.
I mean, again, it's pretty good.
Yeah, it was like Abba meets a Renaissance fair.
It's called a Saz, which is a long-necked loot, native to the region we're talking about.
I'm going to put that in, let's go with, let's go with Romania.
I'm going to go with.
Or like somewhere in the Balkans.
I don't know.
I'm going to go with Bosnia.
Okay.
Adribijan.
Okay.
There we go.
I mean, we clearly know nothing.
We nailed that one too.
Host of COP 29, so.
Yeah, right.
So they solve climate change.
That song is called Run With You.
It is, it does go hard from kind of a boy band vibe, although the harmony kind of, it falls off a bit there.
Am I the only one who heard it's like, I want to fuck with you?
Yes.
I heard Run.
Yeah, I thought I heard Rock with you, and I thought it was just a rip off of, like a.
I liked it.
It was good.
Yeah, I can fuck with that.
The Saz is a long-necked loot native to the region.
Okay, very good.
All right, only two more.
The torture will be done soon, I promise.
Azerbaijan.
Let's hear the next clip.
Wow.
We went from kind of an in-sync motif to like a drowning opera.
Like a drowning, yeah.
Huh.
Okay.
Are we guessing where that one was?
I don't know.
I'm going to, there's water.
I'm going to put it in like Scandinavia.
I'm going to put it on a, I don't know, like a Swedish or, I don't know, somewhere it feels like
Northern European Scandinavian.
Okay.
Sweden?
Yeah, I'll stick a second.
Sure.
You can say a scandal.
Okay, I'm going to say Austria.
Very good, Tommy.
Oh, I got it?
Yeah, you got it.
Wow.
Yeah, I think the heavy ocean imagery in the video is trying to throw you off because Austria is landlocked.
Yeah.
Didn't Austria win?
Yes.
You ruin the game
I mean
No, it's fine
I'm not that out of it
No, they did
They did win
That person won
That person won
He's a countertenor named JJ
We didn't have time to play it
But the song takes a really hard turn
Into EDM at the end
So yeah
There's a
It was good
It's a real fun one
J.J. Brady's not bad
All right last one
Almost over guys
Are these guys in a sauna?
Is that like a sauna?
It does have a sauna
by the big fire.
Are they wearing towels?
Sona.
That one was like men at work meets Borat.
Yes.
Meet something happening.
An event in Poland.
Me and a sauna.
Yeah.
Meets something.
Huh.
I'm going to say Poland.
I mean, I'm just like literally just picking European countries at this point.
Like Poland's a good guess.
I mean, who has like a sauna culture?
I mean, once again, I keep going back to Northern Europe.
Go for it.
I'm to say.
I'm going to stick with Sweden.
Eventually I'll be right.
Nailed it, Ben.
Oh, I got it.
Nice, dude.
They love a sauna in Sweden.
They do love a son.
The song is called Barabata Bastu.
The group that sings it is from the Swedish-speaking minority in Finland, but as a celebration of the sauna, the song transcends borders.
This is the first song from Sweden, actually in Swedish since 1998.
The other entries have all been in English.
That is interesting.
All right, that's it.
Austria 1.
Israel came in second.
It's close, too.
It was close.
They won the popular vote, but not the professional music jury vote.
Is the popular vote like people are voting online or something?
Or is it like?
Is there an electoral college?
Yeah, I think you text or something.
And you're not allowed to vote for your own country.
Wasn't there once again a big controversy over Israel?
Were people trying to ban them?
Yeah, always.
Clearly not.
I mean, if they won the popular vote, the clearly wasn't that widespread of a.
I mean, there was a protest, I know, but they won the, you know,
people clearly didn't hold it against these people.
That's true. That's true.
I don't hold it against these people either.
I have to say, like, you know.
It's a complicated question whether we should be banning, like, Russian athletes.
Yeah, I kind of have a problem with, because, like, I don't know, would you like to be held accountable for everything that our fucking crazy government does?
No.
I mean, I wouldn't.
I prefer not, no.
Okay.
Well, listen, that was a fantastic Eurovision segment.
Please send all your questions, concerns, comments.
to Michael. He's in the Slack.
He'll answer all of your questions.
Discorders come to Michael. I'm sorry, I didn't mean Slack.
I meant Discord. Yeah, at me in the Discord.
And I'll see you there.
Thanks again to Froz Sidwa for joining the show and for all the amazing
brave work he's done in Gaza and elsewhere.
And thank you all for listening.
The Pod Save the World is a Crooked Media production.
Our senior producer is Alona Mikovsky.
Our associate producer is Michael Goldsmith.
Our executive producers are me, Tommy Vitor, and Ben Rhodes.
Say hi, Ben.
Hi.
The show is mixing.
edited by Andrew Chadwick, Jordan Canter is our audio engineer, audio support by Kyle Segglin
and Charlotte Landis. Thanks to our digital team, Ben Heffcote, Mia Kelman, William Jones, David Tolls,
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