Pod Save the World - Trump Begs Allies to Clean Up Iran Mess
Episode Date: April 1, 2026Ben and guest cohost Alyona Minkovski, PSTW's senior producer, try to make sense of the many contradictions and threats coming from President Trump and his administration on Iran, like reports that h...e wants to make the Strait of Hormuz everyone else’s problem to solve, and claims that regime change has already happened. Then they juxtapose the incoherence with the very real consequences of the war on people's lives, from American troops being deployed to the Middle East, to the normalization of targeting civilian infrastructure. They also defend spring breakers featured in a Fox News segment, call out Pete Hegseth for personally interfering in the military promotions of women and Black soldiers, ask how the increasingly spotty internet connection in Moscow could affect support for Putin, question the US policy towards Cuba, and do a special reading from former French President Nicolas Sarkozy.At the end of the show, Ben speaks with Nika Kovač, Slovenian activist and founding director of My Voice My Choice, about private intelligence agency Blackcube’s interference in Slovenia’s election, the outlook for the government following very close results, and what she’s learned from years of opposing authoritarianism.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.Preorder Ben’s book All We Say: The Battle for American Identity: A History in 15 Speeches and subscribe to his Substack here. (edited)
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Tommy Veter is spring breaking with his family.
I hope he's having a great time.
Yeah.
No one works harder than Tommy,
so I'm happy he's on a little vacation.
Carter than Tommy. You know, it's farm workers' day. Oh, how could I forget? Those guys and women work harder. But yeah,
but we love Tommy. Okay. We love you, Tommy. We miss you. But I'm going to fill in today in his absence.
And Ben, you were remote last week for the show because you were in Mammoth with your family.
That was my swim break trip. I went to Mammoth this past weekend with my family. And so I remember
last week you were like, I just went skiing in a T-shirt. You had this glow. I saw a
I saw a woman skiing in a bikini over the weekend.
Oh, you did too?
Okay, I saw a guy no shirt, just only bib.
Yeah, it's a little weird up there.
I mean, the funny thing about mammoth for people who aren't Californians is it's kind of only accessible from like L.A. and Southern California.
Yeah.
So you kind of feel like you're in Los Angeles on a mountain, including the people wearing few clothes.
It's a very like laid back Southern California vibe.
I'll say that.
This is not like your hoity-to-oity type of ski.
There's a lot of edible skiing happening, I think, you know.
the party scene afterwards with like the DJ and everything.
I saw people in like Burning Man, you know,
Esk guitar.
It's a little Burning Man-esque, yeah.
That vibe is definitely present.
You know what?
It was fun.
It was fun.
I loved it.
All right, we do have more serious business to discuss.
We have a great show for you guys today.
We will get into all of the latest with the war in Iran, like the continued mixed messages
from the administration, the military buildup in the Middle East, the very scary normalization
of targeting civilian infrastructure.
And we'll talk about Pete Heggseth, personally.
interfering in military promotions.
The Russian government's attempts to block the messaging app telegram and basically
the internet altogether, the latest in Cuba, and a little special treat from former French
President Nicolas Sarkozy.
Ben, who did you speak to for the interview today?
I spoke to Nika Kovach, who's been on before.
She's a Slovenian-based activist who's done a lot of work.
She has done work on behalf of reproductive rights across Europe.
But most recently in Slovenia, they had an election we talked about last week where the kind of far-right authoritarian candidate, YANSA, was widely expected to win.
A week before the election, Nika was one of a small group of people who did an investigation and revealed that the Israeli intelligence firm Black Cube, which is made of a former Mossad officials, had essentially contracted with JANSA to interfere in the Slovenian election.
that kind of rocked things.
And ultimately the progressive incumbent closed very strong and eeked out of victory.
So we talked about that story.
It's a great story of just how did they reveal this black cube interference.
Why is a group of former Israeli spies intervening in Slovenian politics?
They've also done it in Hungary.
They've also spied on me.
Then we talked about kind of where things are in Slovenia with the election result,
what it might say about the election in Hungary.
with Victor Orban who's coming up.
Victor Orban is very close to Janza.
And then I think really importantly,
and I hope people listen to this,
I asked Nika, who's been involved
in a lot of campaigns
and lots of different parts of the world,
kind of what her lessons learned are
about the best way to fight authoritarianism.
And she had a very good summary,
I think, of key lessons learned
from not just Slovenia,
but a lot of work she's done.
So people should check it out.
Yeah.
And I mean, you actually have
such a great network internationally,
I feel like,
of pro-democracy activists.
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Okay.
Now let's get to Iran.
So it's truly impossible to make sense of all the various statements, the threats, the backing off,
the contradictions that are coming from the president and his administration on this.
So I'm going to do my best here to give you a play-by-play.
So I guess just hold on your seat.
So as of Tuesday, which is the day that we record this show, there are reports saying that
President Trump doesn't care about the Strait of Hormuz anymore.
We could just walk away from the war before the Strait gets reopened.
But as you and Tommy discussed last week, Trump initially gave Iran 48 hours to open the Strait of Hormuz.
Then last Monday, he extended that deadline.
by five days. The last Thursday, he said that he was pausing the period of energy plant destruction
by 10 days to Monday, April 6th. And I have to point out, too, that all along we're getting
these messages from Trump, right, that the talks are ongoing, that the talks are going very well.
At the same time, he will write on truth social threats to obliterate Iranian power plants.
He also restated his plan to take Carg Island in an interview with the Financial Times.
And I have not been in high stakes international negotiations, Ben.
I know that you have.
It seems to me like a little bit of a counterproductive strategy.
Yes.
If you're trying to negotiate with someone.
But the Iranians, meanwhile, they still don't acknowledge that any talks are even happening.
Abbas, Araigachi, Iran's foreign minister said today in an interview with Al Jazeera that he had received a direct message from Steve Whitkoff.
That's President Trump's special envoy, but he denied that the countries were negotiating at all.
And so then that's how we come back to this way.
week. Trump wrote on Truth Social on Monday that the talks with the new and the more reasonable
regime were going great. But that if for any reason a deal is not shortly reached, which it probably
will be, I'm reading verbatim here from his truth, and if the Hormuz trade is not immediately,
quote unquote, open for business, we will conclude our lovely, quote unquote, stay in Iran by
blowing up and completely obliterating all of their electric generating plants, oil wells,
and Carg Island and possibly desalinization plants,
which we have purposefully not yet touched.
And then, as we previewed at the top of this section,
by Tuesday morning, the story changed.
The Strait of Hormuz is apparently not our problem anymore.
President Trump truths, all of those countries
that can't get jet fuel because of the Strait of Hormuz,
like the United Kingdom,
which refused to get involved in the decapitation of Iran.
I have a suggestion for you.
Number one, five from the U.S.
We have plenty.
And number two, build up some delayed courage.
Go to the straight and just take it.
You'll have to start learning how to fight for yourself.
The USA won't be there to help you anymore, just like you weren't there for us.
I'm going to end that very long tie rate I just gave with a little clip from Pete Hagseth,
the Secretary of War.
He gave his first press conference in 12 days today in the middle of war.
Yeah, where he basically just followed up on what we've been hearing from the president.
I think the president was clear this morning at his truth.
that there are countries around the world who ought be prepared to step up on this critical waterway as well.
It's not just the United States Navy.
Last time I checked, there was supposed to be a big, bad Royal Navy that could be prepared to do things like that as well.
So he's pointing out, this is an international waterway that we use less than most, in fact, dramatically less than most.
So the world ought pay attention to be prepared to stand up.
President Trump's been willing to do the heavy lifting on behalf of the free world to address this threat of Iran.
It's not just our problem set going forward, even though we have done the lion's share of preparation to ensure that that straight will be open, which is an outcome the president's been very clear on.
I don't know, Ben.
If you were just to sit back and think like, my wow this dreams.
I'm going to write this fictional story.
Would you ever have considered that it would be for us to start a war, create a global economic crisis, and then just walk away and tell everyone that it's their problem?
I mean, the problem, there's so many problems with this, but is it, I have no idea what the hell they're doing, and neither do they.
And I mean, let's just kind of break this into pieces. You've got the negotiations, the straight, and the Hexethian demands made on other countries.
on these negotiations, it is quite clear that there are no really active bilateral negotiations
between the United States and Iran.
There's a lot of diplomatic activity.
Today, the Chinese and the Pakistanis met to come up with a formula of friending the war.
We know everybody from Egypt to Turkey to Saudi have been involved in diplomatic efforts,
probably back-channeling happening.
But what's very clear is that nobody can believe anything that Trump says and that most of what he posts on social media has the single-minded intention of trying to calm markets and keep oil prices from going up too high or keep the stock market from going down too much.
But every single time he says there these negotiations, Iranians come out and say that there are not negotiations happening.
Or yeah, maybe ARACi, the farm minister, might have gotten like a U-Up text from Whitkoff.
But like that there's no formula that anybody is aware of about how to end this war, in part because there's no clarity on what the U.S. objectives are, right? And that leads to the straight. Because when the war started, we were told it was because Iran's nuclear program was two weeks away from a nuclear weapon, which is complete bullshit. Now we don't even hear anything about the nuclear program. Then, you know, Marco Rubio has been out there saying that the purpose of the war is to destroy the Iranian Navy and Air Force.
Yeah, that's a new one.
That's a new one. First of all, like, I'm not, I mean, I don't like the Iranian regime, but I don't know how many Americans are like, you know what I'd really like my government to be doing, like destroying the Iranian Air Force, you know, that can't fly to the United States.
Yeah. Like, it's an, like, it has nothing to the nuclear program. It has nothing to do with, oh, I forgot the Iranian people were supposed to rise up and there was going to be a democracy and the former Shah's son was going to go, what happened to that? That's out the window. So no nuclear ambitions anymore. No, no, no nuclear ambitions anymore. No.
ambitions to change the regime to democracy. I'm not saying that would have worked, but we don't
hear about that anymore. We hear about the Navy and the Air Force of Iran. But the fundamental issue
for the United States is that things are much worse today than when the war started. The main
reason for that is that the Strait of Hormuz has been closed, and therefore 20% of the world's
fossil fuel energy is not getting out, creating a potentially
the economic catastrophe that I think people have not yet gone their minds around because it's
coming one way or another, even if the war ended tomorrow, we're going to be dealing with the
effects of this. So I, as an American citizen, have no idea what the purpose of this war is.
Importantly, the Iranians, who are supposed to be the ones that Trump is ostensibly negotiating
with, how could the Iranians have any idea what they're being asked to do when these things
keep changing. How can the Iranians trust a negotiation when they've been bombed twice in the middle
of previous negotiations? How can they trust a negotiation when Israel keeps assassinating people,
including some of the people that would be engaged in those negotiations? So it's just totally
incoherent. And now for him to say, we will walk away from this without the Strait of Hormuz being
opened up. In fact, the Strait of Hormuz is being run like a fucking toll road by the Iranian Revolutionary
Guard Corps, which was not the case.
before the war. So Iran's gotten a stronger position because of the world. We literally just made
everything worse. Yeah, we made the Iranian Revolution Guard Corps, like, hold 20% of the world's
energy hostage. If we walk away from that, and our only solution is to ask, like, the Royal Navy,
as beat ex-s said. You forgot big bad, really. The big bad British Navy, like, as if it's, you know,
the 19th century, like those countries are not going to bail Trump out because he's treated them like
shit because he's tariffed them, he's insulted them, he's humiliated them, he's threatened to invade
Greenland. Why would they come bail Trump out by opening up the strait? And by the way, even if they
decided they wanted to do that, do you know how long it would take the Europeans to put together
some naval armada to then go down to the Strait of Hormuz and escort tankers? Like months. So,
none of this makes any sense. And meanwhile, while it's happening, Trump is deploying the 80-second
airborne and all these special forces to the region. So maybe he's just saying all these things about
peace to calm markets, but we're going to have ground troops. We just don't know at this point. And that
is terrifying, given the scale of the crisis that we're in, that people that follow this as closely
as we do can make no sense of what the hell is going on. Yeah. And it's, you know, something we'll
discuss more in terms of the ground troops, in terms of the impacts for people in the region. There's
a projection from the UN development program. It said one month of this war could plunge four million more
people across the Arab world into poverty and shave off up to 6% of the region's economic
output during that time.
And that's just one month of the war.
We're in week five of this war.
And that's not including all the other global economic impacts that we've talked about
in the show, and especially last week in our interview.
Obviously something is happening, right?
Like there were 20 Pakistani oil tankers that were let through.
So somebody's talking to the Iranians.
But as you mentioned, maybe it's not bilateral talks.
I can see how it's also not, you know,
the Iranians would want to project an image of strength probably to their people and not say
that they're negotiating with the U.S. even if they were. But either way, it's just, it's so
demoralizing to see that nobody really has an idea of what's happening, who's in charge.
And so another thing that I want to bring up, though, is the notion of regime change. It used to be
focused on bringing some kind of democracy, right, to the Iranian people. First of all,
Moshabah Hamini, the former Aitola son, who's now been put in charge, she hasn't been seen or heard from.
The Russian ambassador to Iran did say that rumors that he was being treated in Russia are untrue and that he's in Iran, but obviously avoiding public appearances.
But I don't know if you've noticed, Ben, suddenly the line from the administration is that regime changes, it's already happened.
Yeah, we have a clip of that. Let's take a listen.
We're doing extremely well in that negotiation, but you never know with Iran because we negotiate with him.
and then we always have to blow them up.
But we've had regime change, if you look, already,
because the one regime was decimated, destroyed, they're all dead.
The next regime is mostly dead.
And the third regime would deal you with different people
than anybody's done with before.
It's a whole different group of people.
So I would consider that regime change,
and frankly, they've been very reasonable.
If there are new people now in charge
who have a more reasonable vision of the future,
that would be good news for us, for them,
for the entire world. But we also have to be prepared for the possibility, maybe even the
probability that that is not the case. There's a little Marco's not in the loop, apparently,
but are we on regime number three? I, you know, I was under the impression that the regime is
a system. It's not just about what individual might be at the top that you're talking to.
So, and first of all, I do want to say on the 20 tankers, like, because Trump also went out
and said that Iran made this tribute to us of letting, I think, eight, eight tankers.
before the war,
100 to 135
tankers were going
to the straight-of-formers
every day.
So this is such
Trumpian logic.
You launch an illegal
and unnecessary war,
create a giant
fucking problem,
and then when eight tankers
get through,
you treated like an achievement.
When, like,
you should have 135 tankers
getting through there
potentially in a day.
So, like,
just bear that in mind.
Look, on the regime point,
this is Trump.
He is,
He's finally created a problem that is so big that there's just no way of turn to spin his way out of it.
He's so accustomed to bullshitting his way through things and lying about things in ways that he knows will be repeated on Fox News.
But just take the regime issue.
We assassinated, or Israel assassinated, the 86-year-old Supreme Leader.
Well, the 86-year-old Supreme Leader was replaced by his younger and more hard-lined son.
The regime is not Ayatollah Ali Hamenei who's been killed.
the regime is called the Islamic Republic of Iran. It's a system of governance that has clerics,
that has the Iranian Revolutionary Guard Corps as the most extreme and hardcore version of their security
forces, that has Basij militia, that has a military, that has government officials across that
country. Just because you kill a bunch of those people does not mean that there's regime change.
I don't think Americans thought there was regime change, God forbid, when, like, JFK was assassinated.
you know, like the regime is fully in place, and the regime is in some ways weaker because they've
lost a lot of people in capabilities, but in some ways actually stronger because they are now
controlling the Strait of Hormuz and holding the entire global economy hostage.
They have now demonstrated that they can regionalize this war and impose such a cost in the
United States that the President of the United States is self-evidently trying to talk himself
out of this war, right? And so this is utter bullshit.
And there's the problem with it, Alona, is that you cannot make policy based on lies.
Like, he wants us to believe that the regime has changed.
He wants us to believe that everything has been obliterated.
He wants us to believe that Iran is paying tribute with ships that are going through the
Strait of Farmuz, which is closed.
Like, these things aren't happening.
And if you're trying to suit policy to the lies being told by the president in something
as big and complex as a war, when Iranians,
gets a vote, how and when this war ends. Israel, which we have, you know, gets a vote on how and when
this war ends. The fact that even if this war ended tomorrow, it would take years, I think,
to rehabilitate all of that energy infrastructure that's been damaged and to restart the full
supply of energy through the straight-of-form moves. These are all facts that Trump cannot contend
with. And so we're living in this crazy reality where we can all see from the price of gas in
this country to the shit that has blown up across the Middle East.
least to the tankers that aren't getting to the straight of Formuz, what is actually happening?
And you have Trump out there saying there's regime change. We're on the third regime. We're winning.
We've already won. We've obliterated everything when none of those things are true.
Yeah.
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It's interesting, you know, you bring all that up that you can't win a war or run a war based on lies.
You know, I have a lot of people who I know who are supporters of Trump or who maybe think
that this war is happening for.
the right reasons because they're afraid of Iran getting a nuclear weapon, right? And I'm always just
trying to think of like, how do I have a reasonable conversation where I'm really trying to put
myself into their shoes, see their perspective, you know, come back with what I think are like
rational arguments to express my own. And, you know, I think pre-Trump, the American people were
also got really fed up too, a feeling like they were lied to by their government when it came to wars
with Iraq or with Afghanistan. I mean, I'm sorry, but for 20 years, we kept being told
we were like winning hearts and minds and that things were working, you know, when realistically,
no, they weren't at all. But now it's just the lies seem so much more in your face.
But this is such an important point. And, you know, you're right. Like, let us try to inhabit
like someone who might support this or support a tougher policy with Iran. When the last
operation at Midnight Hammer, the last war with the Iran, the 12-day war, whatever you want to call
when we bombed Iran's nuclear program last year, I could have a sincere policy difference.
right? I could say, okay, I guess I understand, even if I totally disagree, that the best way to deal with the Iran's nuclear program is to bomb it.
But I could see that someone else might think that, you know what, like diplomacy is not working well enough.
And, you know, this is a threat. You know, we don't want Iran to get a nuclear weapon. And so I, you know, I can inhabit the perspective of somebody who thought that bombing the Iranian nuclear program was a good policy. And then we have a challenge.
difference of opinion about that. The problem with this war is I don't know what it's about.
So I actually can't even inhabit the position of a war supporter because nobody can tell me
what the purpose of the war is. Is it the nuclear program? Is it to install Reza Palavi
is the leader of Iran? Is it to destroy the Iranian Navy? Is it to change the regime? Is it?
What is it? It's all of the above, Ben, right? It's because we felt like it is essentially what it
comes down to. Or Israel felt like it. And so how can you even inhabit the position of people that are
supportive of this when you don't even know what this is? You don't even know, like, what, even in
Afghanistan or any of these other world. Actually, I knew what the Bush administration said. It was trying
to set up a new government in Iraq, you know. In Afghanistan, we were trying to keep the Taliban
out of power. Like, I don't know what we're doing in Iran. And I don't even know if the president of
the United States knows what we're doing in Iran. And that's what makes it impossible to even like try to
understand it from their perspective.
Well, I think the part that really upsets me is that, you know, it's people's lives are at stake.
A lot of people, yeah, war is not a game.
There are already 13 U.S. service members who have been killed around 300.
Last I checked, two, have been injured.
And now the New York Times reported that we have over 50,000 troops currently in the Middle East.
That's because that's 10,000 more than we usually have in the region.
That's because we've sent more there.
In addition to the 2,000 paratroopers from the 82nd Airboard Division that were sent last week,
several hundred special operations forces, that's Army Rangers and Navy SEALs, have been deployed,
and the Wall Street Journal reported that Trump is considering sending another 10,000 troops,
which would likely include infantry, armored vehicles, and logistics support.
I mean, you and Tommy have spoken about some of this already on the show.
I just want to go over some of it again, right?
Some of the potential ground operations that are on the table, which are the invasion of Karg Island,
which is where most of Iran's oil experts go through, exports.
go through. That island is only 16 miles from Iran's coast, so drones, missiles, those would be a
constant threat if we were to invade Karg Island. Then there's operations along the coastline of
the strait or on strategic islands to secure the Strait of Hormuz, but we apparently don't
care about the Strait of Hormuz anymore. And then there's an operation to seize Iran's enriched
uranium, which would be a massive multi-day undertaking involving, for the Wall Street Journal,
combat troops to secure perimeters, engineers with excavating equipment,
to search through debris and check for mines and booby traps,
special operations forces with expertise in handling nuclear material,
and unless an airfield was available,
a makeshift one would need to be set up to bring equipment in
and take the nuclear material out.
I just want to play you a clip here because I think you have some unlikely people
who normally would be war cheerleaders who have been coming out,
and we've talked about them,
but just in reference to all of this potential military action,
you have Eric Prince, right, the fact,
founder of the infamous military contractor Blackwater, formerly known as Blackwater. I forget what they
rebranded to. So this was at a panel at CPAC last week. And I kid you not the name of this panel.
It was called Breaking Stuff and Killing Bad Guys, the case for Western military dominance.
But here's what he had to say.
I counseled as loud as possible against doing this in the first place. I don't share the optimism of the administration that there's going to be a peaceful stop to this.
They will burn it down.
And my real concern is that if they try to put boots on the ground, force the Straits of Hormuz, you will see imagery of burning American warships in the next couple of weeks.
And I don't think people are really prepared for that.
I take everything Eric Prince says with a grain of salt, right?
I mean, the guy who's profited plenty off of American military endeavors.
But what does that tell you?
Yeah, I was trying to figure out how to not say I agree with Eric Prince.
But he's got a point.
But he's got a point.
And look, he tends to like to operate in places where it's kind of chaos and there's not like a military force like the Iranians.
You summed up well these potential operations.
I just make a few points to build on it.
In any event where the American military is put onto the ground in Iran, they will face fierce resistance, either from drones and missiles or from.
from some kind of direct combat.
The thing that concerns me is that Trump might want to continually be looking for some win,
some event that allows him to say, we won, we have Carg Island, or we won, we got the stuff
out of Isfahan where the nuclear material is in the center of Iran.
And it is entirely in Iran's interest to deny Trump.
the illusion or the narrative that he won, right? And so therefore, they're not just going to say,
oh, you got us, you won Carg Island, we surrender, you know, no, they're going to try to kill
as many Americans as they can in Carg Island, to take out warships, to bomb our facilities
across the region. And this is a country of 90 plus million people. This is a civilization that has
survived for 5,000 years. This is a regime in the Islamic Republic.
that went through nearly a decade of the Iran-Iraq war, losing hundreds and hundreds of thousands
of people and continued to fight. This is not a statement that the Iranian regime is a bunch of good guys.
It's a statement that they're not going to capitulate. And Trump just doesn't seem to understand that.
And what I worry about with these deployments, as we saw in the run-up to the war, or as we saw the
deployments to the Caribbean, they take on a logic and a momentum of their own. You don't send all these
people to the Middle East without doing something with them.
You know, it just feels ominously like he's going to pick from this menu of like,
Seasin Island or open the straight or try to get the nuclear material.
But that's escalation.
And if you boots touch Iranian ground, the Iranians are going to fight like hell.
And then we're going to feel like we have to hit them again because they killed some more
of our guys.
And we just stay in this escalation loop that actually over time benefits the Iranians in some ways.
because they know that they've looked at Afghanistan, they've looked at Iraq, they've looked at Libya,
they know that the United States is not going to stay invested in a multi-year ground war in Iran.
They know that there's no public support for that.
And they're just going to want to try to cause as much damage to us as they can so that we don't do it again.
And so this is the fundamental problem.
There's not like a Trump keeps wanting like the video game victory, you know, like the, you know, like this island can become the objective.
you know, when that's not how the Iranians are going to respond.
And in the meantime, Americans, I've said this to you alone offline, but we're not seeing
the full damage picture either.
The Pentagon is not being transparent.
Yeah.
Like, we've had facilities hit in Bahrain.
We've had facilities hit in Saudi.
We've had embassies hit in Riyadh and Baghdad.
We've, like, we are taking on huge damage.
We don't know how seriously these injuries are.
Like, I keep learning about injuries from, like, leaked reprimals.
reports, officials say. Let me just say, so there were 12 troops who were injured on Friday when
Iranian missiles and drones hit the Prince Sultan Air Base in Saudi Arabia, which is interesting, too,
because it's like we don't have a military base in Saudi Arabia, unlike some of the other Gulf
countries, but then clearly there's a U.S. troop presence there. And can I say one thing about that?
Yeah. They destroyed an AWACs, which is one of the most expensive planes that the United States has.
It's like a radar aircraft. And, you know, there are reports that they knew exactly where to shoot.
and that the Russian intelligence that the Iranians may be getting could be improving their capacity to hit things like very specific.
To hit an AWAC, a single airplane on a tarmac, you know, shows a level of capability and a level of targeting that is better than the Iranians were a month ago.
And the New York Times said that many of the 13 military bases in the region used by American troops are all but uninhabitable.
So, you know, yeah, this is what we've done.
And I think, like, just to your point earlier, too, that you do one thing, it's going to lead to continued escalation, continued escalation. You know, you and I were talking about this earlier before the show that it just, it just feels like mission creep, you know, becomes an inevitable thing when you think that some type of military operation is just going to be quick, one and done. It never is. And so I just want to, you know, hit one more aspect of this war that we haven't gotten to, but which is incredibly important, which is, of course, the civilian harm that's being caused. And so I just want to, you know, hit one more aspect of this war that we haven't gotten to, but which is, which is, which is, you know,
the normalization of the targeting of civilian infrastructure from both sides to, I mean, the list of
non-military targets that have been hit is very, very long. We spoke a lot about the girls
elementary school, the start of the war. Iran's Ministry of Science says that 21 universities
in the country have been damaged by strikes. And Iran has, by the way, threatened to retaliate
by hitting American-affiliated universities in the Middle East. Then, of course, we've spoken about
all of the attacks on energy infrastructure.
And we've seen hits on water desalination plants, Amazon data centers, airports, ports, steel, chemical, and aluminum factories.
I mean, this is both sides too, right?
It's not just like only one side doing it.
But we also then were able to speak with somebody who is in Tehran currently because, you know, one of the big problems is we've been hearing so little from people.
Yeah.
We see so little.
Yes.
We see so little from the people who are living through this in Iran who, understandably, I think, have very
very complex feelings about it. And so this is Marti Van Ramsdunk. She is the Iran country director
for the Norwegian Refugee Council. And here's just a little bit of what she told us life in
Tehran is like right now. My colleagues are working on the extreme difficult and dangerous
conditions to scale up our relief for families that are displaced by the war. We have over
108 workers of which many have been displaced themselves with their families, nearly every
neighborhood, buildings are destroyed with surrounding damages. Desperate families tape their windows
to prevent shattered glass after a blow. Civilians are paying the highest price for this war.
I also lie awake at night and listen to the heavy explosions in Tehran. I am worried about my colleagues
and their families. Some are living so close to locations under attack and colleagues have been
telling me that the sounds are becoming too much. Even small cities are under attack and no
seems to be safe. Yet even in this situation, people try to help each other. Conversations now start
with inquiring if the other person is okay and still safe. Despite all this doom and gloom,
Iranians are still living. We are living in a surreal balance of war and everyday life.
And the latest estimates that we've seen, by the way, do show that at least 1,500 Iranian civilians
have been killed so far. Yeah. And first of all, on the targeting piece, this is a
incredibly worrying. And part of what we've seen, and we talked about this for years with Gaza,
right, is that the Israeli defense forces had a view of fighting wars that ignores the laws of wars,
right? We saw them bomb hospitals. We saw them bomb schools. We saw them drop 2,000 pound bombs
on apartment blocks to kill one terrorist, and, you know, God knows how many other people got
killed. We saw refugee camps bombed. And basically, we saw the laws of war tossed out the window.
We saw a serial commission of war crimes by the IDF in Gaza.
And if you pointed that out, you got attacked or called names or what have you.
But that's what happened.
And what's worrying me is that the United States military, which has always held itself to tried.
I'm not saying it perfectly, but tried to abide by standards.
At first you saw a targeting error.
I would like to believe that, and I do believe, that that Iranian girl's school that got
bombed, where over 100 children were killed. That was a targeting mistake. But when Donald Trump
goes out and threatens to blow up desalination plants and threatens to blow up electricity generation,
he is threatening to commit war crimes. The same thing that if Vladimir Putin does in Ukraine,
we're all appalled and up in arms about it. The same thing that the IDF has been doing in Lebanon
and in Gaza.
And if we are now in a world in which this is what it's like when nobody plays by the,
if you want to know why there are laws of war, this is why.
Because it becomes a race to the bottom.
Because, you know, everybody starts committing war crimes.
Everybody starts targeting civilian targets.
Everybody starts targeting infrastructure that will have an economic impact and a human impact.
And so when Trump says those things, we shouldn't shrug it off.
I wish he heard more resistance, including from Republicans, that,
that if the American military starts to act like the IDF has been acting
and blowing up desalination plants and bombing.
And don't, you know, the universities really pisses me off.
Because then they'll say, like, well, there was some IRGC research going.
Under that standard, you know how many American universities do research for the Defense Department?
Are they credible military targets now?
Because that's what the Iranians are going to say.
It doesn't make the Iranians right.
It makes them wrong.
But it means that there's a reason why we follow rules because we want other people to follow rules too.
And the other thing I'd say is, whatever the objectives of this war are, we talked about the 1,000 plus killed, millions of Iranians are displaced. A fifth of Lebanon is displaced. Is anything that is trying to be accomplished right now worth that? We are shattering millions of lives, the United States and Israel. Do you know, Americans are inconvenienced because you're paying more at the pump. Imagine if you and your family were living in a fucking tent in southern Lebanon or, you know, on the outskirts.
of Tehran. That's what we're doing to families. For what purpose? So Donald Trump can get a news
cycle win? Or so Bibi Netanyahu can annex southern Lebanon? Like this is, this is, I'm sorry,
like I told you, I'm doing mindfulness. I know. I respect your fashion because it's true.
What I would like to happen is for this war to end, and it can end diplomatically. And so if people
say, well, what's your solution? My solution is probably a multilateral, probably not the U.S.
even leading the negotiations, but some agreement in which the straight of Hormuz reopens,
Israel and the U.S. stop bombing. Iran is going to have to get something, sanctions relief.
And we can all just, everybody can move on with their lives.
Because the longer this goes on, the more individuals are going to suffer, and the more global
economic task-free is going to be deeper.
Well, I also think that's just always the problem with a lot of our military exploits as a country,
right, is we just tend to be geographically, physically, in many ways, economically.
isolated and removed from it. This is my very awkward segue then into the next clip I was going to play
for you, Ben, because I didn't expect for you to go on such an impassioned brand before. No, I'm really
glad you did it because I've been thinking and feeling the same thing all the time. And it's why I think
that hearing firsthand accounts are so important, right? And it's one of the things that we talk about
this all the time with press not allowed into Gaza that we miss, right? Without a lot of more
reporters in Iran, it's the thing that you're missing, which is seeing people who are just living
absolutely normal lives a month ago.
Just like you and me.
Yeah, who right now are completely uprooted.
And I was listening to a report on BBC just this morning and they were talking about like
there's these newborns who are four or five days old and these people used to have
homes with all the toys for their kids.
And now, as you mentioned, you know, they're living in a tent and it's not the environment
you would want to bring kids into.
I want to play this clip for you, which was actually done for the Jesse Waters show on
Fox News of American.
Spring Breakers. Yeah, so let's just, I guess, for a little levity, let's check it out.
Spring break, 2026. What is the game plan?
And my mom is watching, I'm sorry, Mom, but I've been getting pretty drunk almost every day.
What issue facing America is the most important to you?
What bikini I'm going to wear next? Obesity is terrible.
Getting its hand on the beach. That's the most important thing in my life right now.
What have you heard that Donald Trump has been doing recently?
We're going to war with Iraq. That's been crazy.
What are you doing, Columbia? You got Maduro out?
The Ayatollah's dead.
What? What? What is that?
Who the fuck is Ayatollah?
I have never heard that word in my life.
Lewis, what's Ayatollah?
He was the supreme leader of Iran.
He's dead? We killed him.
You did? You killed him?
What have you heard about Venezuela?
Venezuela?
That they beat us in the world baseball classic?
Have you heard anything else?
No.
Okay, so by the way, that went on for a lot longer,
and that was just Anisha, you know, cut it down to a nice little bite-sized chunk.
Before we hear from me, I just want to say that my first, you know, instinct when I saw this
video was to like to be in defense of our youth because I'm like, you know what, they're young.
You're allowed to be dumb.
You're on spring break.
You're allowed to be getting, like, drunk and like, you know, certainly if you would have asked
me about geopolitical events when I was like a freshman in college, I probably wouldn't have
given you a very, like, salient responses to things, you know?
and then people evolve and they get wiser and they get older.
But man, when we just compare that to what we were talking about, you know,
in terms of our isolation as a nation, it's not such a good look.
Oh, God.
Did you get some of that in mammoth?
I'm not a scolding, you know, asshole.
And I went on spring break.
I, you know, went to Jamaica and, you know, had a good time or whatever.
But I would say that,
there's something, here's what I would ask people, you know, extending the grace that I don't
expect every college kid who's on spring break to be following the intricacies of, you know,
a war in Iran, but we are bombing this country. And the two things I would ask are,
what is the grace you extend to a 19-year-old Iranian or Lebanese college student, right?
Like, why is it okay that, you know, we can go around and just bring.
break countries and bomb people and kill their leaders and blow up their universities and just
think it's charming and wonderful that, you know, people are thinking about their bikini tan or how
drunk they're going to get tonight.
Like, there's something grotesque about that.
But the second thing is, how does that clip look to anyone else in the world who's not American?
Like, that's what I just think we really need to consider here because we cannot simultaneously
want to be the superpower that runs the world and that, you know, launches all these wars.
The reason we can do that is because of what we just saw.
Like, the reason we can continue to do stupid things.
And by the way, I'd be pissed if I was a 19-year-old American who just got deployed to the fucking Middle East.
Yeah.
Right?
Because it's not, so now let's defend the military.
Like, we keep asking 19-year-olds to go fight in South.
in North Africa and the Middle East.
So what?
So that these people can get drunk and Jesse Waters can have a laugh about it, you know?
So I don't know.
I don't know.
I feel I don't want to be like a dick.
No, I don't want to chide them either, but I feel like actually it's like adults.
It's a failure of all of us.
It's a failure of all of us.
Yeah.
It's actually not their fault.
Yeah.
It's their parents, their politicians, all of us.
It's actually not their fault.
We're the ones that are supposed to educate the younger generation.
So that's what I was thinking too.
I feel like these shows always love to make fun of college students.
and be like, oh, this is what, like, a liberal arts education is going to get you and this is what happens, you know, with all the universities.
But it's on everybody, you know, like the way that you parent, the way that you are raised and educated by your community, you know, all of that is everything that builds up over time.
And so if this is the way that, you know, our youth are looking at the world or rather like, you know, not looking or thinking about the world, it's on all this.
And now this is a total swerve and we can come back.
but, like, there is a longer conversation we had about the systematic dismantling of public education in this country since Ronald Reagan was president.
The systematic delegitimizing of being smart, you know, like elites or intellectuals or, you know, the starving of funds for, you know, state university systems in some cases.
If I'm cynical, I would say some of that is by design because, like, all.
autocratic right-wing parties would like to have dumber populations so that they're easier to
control. And that's not even getting into what social media has done, unregulated social media
is done. Yeah. So I truly, truly, truly, truly don't blame young people. I blame the last
40 years of post-Ragan policies that have starved public education and deregulated the kind of
technology platforms that kind of lock people into, you know,
Or even with this current administration just in terms of like the books that are being banned.
Yeah, right?
The dismantling of DEI means also taking out like rewriting, rewriting history, taking out all kinds of people.
All of that is connected.
I couldn't agree with you more.
And it's just, it's so deeply upsetting and frustrating because it's also, it's what happens
in other countries.
And the war in Iran.
When they try to just erase dirty histories so that you have an uneducated population and
then you just.
A war like this could not have happened 30 years ago.
A lot of prep work had to be done to make Americans, like, be able to tolerate this.
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All right.
Well, let's segue into, you know, the products of 40 years of post-Ragan policy and our
Secretary of War Pete Hegson when it comes to poor education.
By the way, actually, I was thinking about that while I wrote this because I was like,
ew, am I going to have to say Secretary of War?
the writing was on the wall
when they changed it
from Department of Defense
to Department of War
last September.
We all should have known
some shit was coming down.
Hexeth is better suited
to be the idiot
interviewing those kids on the beach.
You know,
like that's what he actually is...
On that, no,
I'm actually not bringing up Hegsaid to talk
about Iran, but just because you said that,
there was a CNN report today
that was talking about
how Pete Hegsafe is apparently
like was one of the biggest
cheerleaders for the war in Iran
within the Trump cabinet.
And according to one source
familiar with Hegsa's,
current mindset, told CNN, he's very trigger-happy. He believes blowing shit up is the best way for him to,
for him to keep his job. Well, you know, to your point, the warning sentence have been there,
though, because he said he wanted to gather the rules of engagement. You wanted to be warriors again.
You wanted to, you know, like, this has been building for a year.
All right. But so I want to talk to him about a different talk about him for a different reason,
though. We've spoken before in the show about how he's undergone this firing spree at the Pentagon,
He fired the Joint Chief's Chairman CQ Brown. He fired Lisa Franchetti, the first woman to be the chief of naval operations.
Now he has reportedly personally intervened to stop the promotions of four Army officers who were on track to become one-star generals.
It just so happens that they were two women and two black men.
And then NPR reported that a black colonel and a female colonel were both taken off of a promotion list as well.
You know, Pete Hague Seth, of course, former Fox News Weekend,
host knows a thing or two about being promoted to powerful positions without being qualified,
I think. But what I think is really worth bringing up here, Ben, is that, you know, not only is it
unprecedented for the Secretary of War to personally intervene. These people were on these
promotion lists because they've been selected by the people that actually work with them. You know,
like you're selected by your peers based on your performance and all of that to be promoted.
So I don't know. It's just mind-blowing to me. And
what unnamed officials keep telling the press because now I think that there's just environment of fear among the Pentagon based on just all of the unnamed anonymous sources that are talking to all the different media organizations is that, you know, they're saying it's just weeding out the people who aren't ideologically compatible.
Yeah, but what's even worse about it is they seem to think that just because you're black and a woman, you won't be ideologically compatible.
Of course.
There was no...
There was no reason to get rid of CQ Brown as chairman of the joint chief of staff of, in fact, that he was black and made it.
an eloquent video once about racism, right? And we saw him get rid of a lot of senior women,
too. So there's a pattern here of getting rid of black people and women from high positions
in the military. And just so people understand this, the promotion to a one-star general would normally,
like the Secretary of Defense, would not even be involved in any way, shape, or form of that.
You know, I mean, keep in mind, one star, two, star, three star, four stars.
Like, you're climbing a ladder there.
And maybe when you get to the four stars, you know, like the-
Well, he already cleaned house with the four-star generals, don't forget.
And so the fact that he's reaching all the way down there is clearly sending a message.
And if you look at the uprochelons of the military, they're getting more white and more male
and presumably more manga.
And you and I actually did a YouTube bet this a while ago, but there are all these warning signs.
And they are connected to what we've been talking about with Iran.
because Hexseth has come in and at Trump's direction, the military is far less transparent.
Like they've got the My Pillow guy media in the Pentagon press briefing room.
They try to kick everybody else out.
It's whiter.
It's more ideologically in line with Trump's agenda.
It's not being transparent.
I hate to say this.
I wish I could just pick on Hexseth, but usually there'd be these kind of professional briefings by uniformed military about everything.
thing that are factual. And we see much less of that, too. And, you know, something like 40%
you know, of the military is not white. And so this isn't like some crazy, you know, DEI initiative.
It's just the point that like it's something deeply fucked up about saying we're only going
to have a bunch of white men run an institution that looks like America and that should look
like America. I mean, it's just pure racism and misogyny. Like,
There's no other explanation for why Pete HECSeth is reaching down and denying people a promotion to a one-star general.
Well, not to mention it just goes against everything that we think the military is supposed to represent, too, right?
That it's meant to represent all of us and all Americans and defend.
It's one of the Americans.
It's one of the Americans.
Right.
Yeah, exactly.
It's meant to be apolitical, which, I mean, that reminds me, too.
Like, I want to bring up another bit about HECSeth, which is that there has been all this reporting that he is injecting so much of his personal
faith, Christianity, you know, into the Pentagon too. Like the Washington Post said that every month
at the Pentagon, Hegset hosts evangelical worship services that legal experts say are unprecedented.
His social media profile and public comments routinely espouse his understanding of Christianity.
He's brought clergy from his small Christian denomination to preach at the Pentagon, including
a prominent pastor who says women shouldn't have the right to vote. And then last Wednesday at
the Pentagon, Hegeseth prayed for U.S. troops to inflict, quote, overwhelming violence of action
against those who deserve no mercy. We ask these things with bold confidence in the mighty and powerful
name of Jesus Christ. And then, sorry, this is still from the Washington Post later that day.
His department announced military chaplains would no longer wear their rank on their uniform and
instead would wear religious insignia. You know, even that part, like the military is also
supposed to be highly representative of everybody who serves in it, people who come from all different
backgrounds and all different religions. And, you know, now if you have a very clear prioritization
for Christianity, you know, like you're again dividing, weeding out people. Well, I mean,
how would you feel if you were black? Like, how would you feel if you're a woman? How would you
feel if you're Muslim? How would you feel if you're Jewish member of the military? Like,
like the message being sent to what is really the majority of the military, if you add up the people
in the military that are not white Christian men, it's probably a majority of the military, how do they feel?
This will harm the cohesion in the military.
It will harm the way recruitment because do you want to sign up for that kind of military?
So this could have long-lasting impacts.
I'll also just say, you know, I'm not the Christian of the year over here.
No, you're not here just two really bad Jews.
That's what I'm like it all the time.
But last I checked, Jesus Christ wasn't like a bloodthirsty warlord.
Like I thought, you know, blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called sons of God.
Like what this is such a bastardization of Christianity.
Like Christianity is supposed to value civilian life.
What is Christian about threatening to blow up desalination plants?
What is Christian about bombing a girl school?
So this is this bullshit performative Christianity
that doesn't comport with any Christianity I'm familiar with.
Yeah.
I just want to use this moment since you brought up our old YouTube video
to tell everybody, remind everybody to subscribe to Pod Save the World on YouTube
because we do additional videos there.
Ben and I do stuff every now and then.
Ben and Tommy hop on whenever there's big.
breaking news and we do responses. So don't forget that that goes a long way for PODC of the
world. We got to get more subscribers because we're trying to fight the good fight here for progressive
media. All right. I want to do an update on Russia, naturally. But specifically, I want to talk
about the way that the Russian government is kind of waging a war on its own people and their access
to information. No, there's two major stories there. So the first is that the Russian government
has been restricting the use of the messaging app, Telegram.
They're trying to get everybody to switch over to a government created op called Max,
but no one really wants to use it because obviously there's surveillance on it.
It's literally a good right to the FSP, right?
I mean, you're the Russian in the conversation.
And I just have to point out that right, Telegram is incredibly popular within Russia.
I've seen statistics that more than 76% of the population uses it.
Also, the government uses it.
They have their, you know, like social media channels on there to put out information.
The military uses it to communicate with each other.
It's also a way for all kinds of influencers and bloggers to make money, like a lot of pro-war military bloggers.
In the same way that there's a TikTok economy here.
There's a telegram economy.
Yeah, exactly.
It's a huge economy.
And so, yeah, just think about the impacts of that if you're going to take telegram away from people.
And then the second thing that's going on is the Russian government has been increasingly just blocking the Internet altogether.
People are complaining that there's no Wi-Fi around, that there's no cell service, VPNs are getting blocked.
It's less so impacting people who work for like really big companies that have their own servers, but it's inflicting damage on just the way people go about their daily lives, right?
Like Russia's a plugged in society.
If you want to order food, you want to order a taxi, you want to pay for something with your phone, you need the internet to do all that.
And according to Kamiristan, which is a newspaper, each day of no server.
cost Russian businesses as much as one billion rubles, which is $12 million.
I also just want to point out, you know, personally, I've been impacted by this because
it's just getting harder and harder to communicate with my family than Russia.
How do you communicate with them?
We, I don't want to give all my secrets.
I mean, yeah, yeah, yeah.
It's supposed to say it's not max, I'm guessing.
It's not max, but, you know, we communicate.
We use video.
We use the internet.
And increasingly there's just, like, really bad service.
Sometimes, like, you know, we can't really see each other or hear each other.
It's just a horrible connection or the calls just don't go through at all.
And, you know, all of that obviously is upsetting and terrifying, not just for me, but I think for anybody who has, you know, family and loved ones and people that they need to communicate with in the country.
But the thing that they're doing is, you know, the Russian government is claiming this is all done under the guise of security.
They tell people it's to protect against Ukrainian drones.
I also think, though, it's interesting because there's a lot of speculation that, you know,
it's really just Putin becoming completely paranoid after reports saying that, you know, the Israelis and the Americans like hacked into the street cameras.
Yeah.
And that's how traffic cameras and that's how they monitor the Iranian leaderships moves there.
So, I don't know, first, before I go a little further, what do you think of the paranoia angle?
I think it feels right to me.
I mean, and I saw a crazy, you know, the New York Times Bureau chief in Moscow did a great report on this.
And one of her points was that increasingly the Internet averages are in Moscow.
Yes, that's a very important point that I didn't mention.
The reason is important point, as you know, that with me alone, is it, if the Internet's out in Moscow, what the hell is going on in the rest of Russia?
Because Moscow is supposed to be the connected Kazmopolitan place.
They've been dealing with this for a long time, right?
They've been firsthand feeling the impacts of the war a lot more because it's their men that are going to the front.
And so Moscow has been the America.
It's been the isolated, you know, a little island where life has pretty much gone on as normal.
and then now the last like month, I think this has really cost me.
And we should say is, you know, already the major, you know, Facebook is banned, YouTube is banned, WhatsApp is banned.
And what's interesting to me about this is that, okay, Putin has now moved in the company of like North Korea and to some extent China.
But the point is that North Korea never had Internet access.
The Chinese built this firewall.
So they kind of built the system to be controllable and accessible to mass surveillance.
And it's been there all along.
It's been there all long.
So whereas Russia had an open, internet-based society, right?
Like they were connected, you know, to all the same things we are.
And it just, I ask people to imagine all that being taken away.
And not just, again, your ability to kind of go to, you know, NMITimes.com or something.
Your ability to, like, order food online, your ability to do any e-commerce, your ability
to communicate, like you said,
I just have to wonder
whether this kind of Putin
paranoia and desire
to kind of wall off Russia entirely
and create a total police state there,
at some point,
there's a combination of that,
casualties, you know,
disabled people coming home,
like when does this start to tip against him?
A lot is going in Putin's favor right now,
including the war in Iran,
including higher world prices,
including getting sanctions relief from the U.S.
So this is more a three-year-five-year question
to me, but like, this has got to be pissing people off.
Yeah.
Well, so, I mean, I think that's a really interesting point, right?
Because at the moment, people are still too scared for any kind of mass action.
I mean, there's been reporting that people have been trying to plan protests and rallies,
but there, unless they're sanctioned, like basically allowed and approved by the government,
then people choose not to do it because then, like, it gets a little too risky.
But the Associated Press actually wrote about this.
And, you know, it's just like so classically Russian in terms of the bureaucratic approach always making no sense.
So they talked about how in one Russian city, officials blocked a rally due to a tree inspection.
And others, they blamed snow removal problems or still existing COVID-19 restrictions.
And in one location, administrators argue that the reason for the protest didn't exist.
Yeah, yeah.
So.
And then there was this incredible piece.
You know, I didn't have, well, the team cut a clip today because it's in Russian, but it was produced by Channel.
one, which is like a state, you know, run news channel there in Russia. And it was like, man on
the street interviews. And it's just talking about like the novel ways people are getting around
the internet not being available and Wi-Fi sucking. And it was like, you know, wave down a
cab the old-fashioned way. Like, always carry cash on you. Download the maps in advance. Yeah. Or it's like,
you know, go into a cafe and ask if you can use their internet, you know, to like call your mom.
It's just, it's so pathetic.
And you have to wonder how long that can go on.
But just to your point, right?
So there were a couple, there was a recent poll by Lovata, which is a polling organization
there, and Norway Gazeta, a newspaper, they found that three quarters of respondents said
that tiredness of war described the mood in the country.
And there was a survey that was done.
This was like a government-sanctioned survey, so it's interesting.
But they said the internet restrictions triggered anger in 46% of teenagers.
crying in 15% confusion or irritation in 14%.
It's probably like bad translations and I didn't read the Russian version.
But so overall, 83% of respondents reacted negatively.
And that's amongst, you know, teenagers.
They didn't ask the adults understandably because I think it's easy to be like,
oh, the teens can't live without their web.
But you have to wonder, you know, eventually this is the like one that could kind of
backfire.
I think what it reminds you of is like, you know, we talk a lot about, you know, the war in
Ukraine's been trending well for Putin in a lot of ways, right? But that doesn't mean it's trending
well for Russians, you know. And a common threat in all these autocratic societies is what may be good
for the strongman or even for like a cabal of people on top of the system is not benefiting anybody
else. One thing we all share in common these days in most countries is that we're all getting
screwed by a bunch of corrupt strong men who are hijacked power, you know. And so Putin's success
is not the Russian people's success. Absolutely not. And you would hope that at a certain point,
that leads to some change there. But it's not going to happen tomorrow. I was thinking about that
a lot yesterday. I was thinking about that a lot too because, again, I was relating it back to
like Trump and just how still so many Trump supporters kind of just believe in everything he does,
you know, and it becomes this kind of like cult celebrity worship around one figure.
And Putin has that too. And then Putin has that too. And so does like, you know, so do so many of the
autocratic leaders. But they don't have your best interest in mind. If these are people, if these are
people who would stay in power forever if they could, you know, they don't have your best interest in mind.
Putin would live forever.
they're doing exactly like if they're just focused on how to enrich themselves you know damn everyone
else they're not interested in what's best for you and like they're just all the writing is on the wall
you know like if you're trying to pick a boyfriend you're not going to choose the guy that only wants
to talk about himself and wants you to make all the compromises you know and so it's like the writing is on the
wall people yeah i hope so you should talk to my daughters that's yeah they're too young for that but
later later on i'll give them some tips a last story here i want to just do a quick update and get
take on it. So speaking of the Russian president, right? In a strange turn of events, President Trump
broke the blockade over the weekend by letting a Russian oil tanker navigate into Cuba. That ship is
called the Anatolia-Kalodkin, and it reached ports this morning. Now, we've continued to cover
this, but the blockade that was imposed back in January, it's thrown the island into a full-blown
energy and economic crisis. I think crisis can seem like a little bit of a vague term. So, yes,
and humanitarian crisis. Let me give some specific example of what's going on. Cubans are suffering
from frequent and long blackouts. Power plants aren't operating. Hospitals have limited power capacity
to treat patients. The water supply is disrupted. There's no heat or air conditioning. Students aren't
able to attend classes because there is no fuel. There's no transportation. That means that, you know,
like garbage trucks aren't running. Trash is piled up all over the street. Anything that's arrived at
the island is stuck at the ports, including humanitarian assistance. And, um, you know,
The Washington Post reported that in extreme cases, people were using donkeys to move supplies from the ports.
The list just goes on.
And I've seen different estimates here on how impactful this single oil tanker would be.
Like some people would say that some people have said that it could meet the country's demand for only nine or ten days.
Other people have said like a month or two.
Either way, it's not a very long time.
But Trump did comment on this on Air Force One on Sunday.
So let's take a lesson.
There's a report that the U.S. is going to let a Russian oil tanker go.
to Cuba? Is that true?
Well, we have a tanker out there. We don't mind having somebody get a boat loan because they need
have to survive. It would bother.
So that report is true as far as you know.
Well, I would say, I told them if a country wants to send some oil into Cuba right now,
I have no problem with it.
Do you worry that that's why it's whether it's Russia or not?
What?
Do you worry that that helps Vladimir Putin, though?
That's not how bad way.
He loses one boat load of oil. That's all it is.
It's fine.
If he wants to do that and if other countries want to do it,
It doesn't bother me, but it's not going to have an impact.
Cuba's finished.
They have a bad regime.
They have very bad and corrupt leadership.
And whether or not they get a boat of oil, it's not going to matter.
I'd prefer letting it in, whether it's Russia or anybody else, because the people need heat and cooling and all of the other things.
I'm just so curious what you think is going on because, like, we created the humanitarian crisis that's going on there.
Once again, there's an incoherence here because,
We created this humanitarian crisis in Cuba, right?
On top of the embargo that's in place,
and top of Trump's reversal of the Obama era opening
that I negotiated, they put this blockade in place.
And so the policy of the United States, under Trump,
was to do the opposite of what he just said.
The policy of the United States has been
to restrict any oil and fuel from getting to Cuba,
which is leading people to die.
I mean, you know, when hospitals shut down,
incubators, ventilators shut down, right?
I mean, this is not without human consequence.
And so now he's magnanimous because he's letting a single oil tanker through his own blockade.
And again, it's like Iran's sense of, I don't know what we're trying to achieve in Cuba.
Because the Cuban government, whatever you think of it, poses no threat to the United States.
There's not, it's not even like, you know, Iran, again, where there's a nuclear programmer.
This is a poor country.
It's a poor island nation.
And so what is he trying to achieve?
And actually, what we, there's increasing,
reports that they're trying to negotiate with the Castro family. Well, the Castro family,
I negotiate with the Castro family. I negotiate with Alhandro Castro, who was a good faith negotiator,
by the way, I'd say, like he doesn't mean I agree with them about politics, but he always did what
he said. It was the U.S. that changed the terms of the deal when Trump came in. But what's the
point of that? Like, what are we trying to achieve here? You know, he talks about regime change,
but to what and to what end? Like, we don't know why we're block-hating.
island and why we let Russian oil tankers through and not other oil tankers. And it just,
it's nonsensical. And by the way, bears saying, Alona, like, this is not what Americans
elected Trump to do. Like, they wanted lower prices here. Like, they didn't want to, like,
change the Cuban, Venezuelan-Iranian governments. Like, why, like, why he's doing this,
it flies in the face of anything that, with the exception of, like, small pockets of diaspora populations,
like hardline Cubans, Iranian monarchists,
Venezuela and diaspora.
People who clearly have the ear of the administration.
The U.S. military should not be a mercenary force
for like a small number of people in diaspora populations.
But meanwhile, don't forget that we cut all foreign aid,
you know, that was helping people who have AIDS,
tuberculosis, you know, like you name it.
Okay, well, we're not going to leave you on that depressing note.
So I'm just going to finish the show here with a reading of a book.
poem.
And I'm actually going to read the Michael, our amazing producer's exact language here, because
he always writes such funny scripts.
He says, Ben, you're a man of letters.
So I know that, I know that the French have had an outsized impact on literature, right?
Michel de Montagna invented the personal essay, the Marquis de Sade, pioneered kinky prose.
And Marcel Proust pushed the very boundaries of what fiction could do.
But now we welcome a new member of the.
Pantheon, former president Nicholas Sarkozy to that exclusive club. Okay, so Sarkozy published a
memoir in December of last year. The book is called The Journal of a Prisoner. In it, Sarkozy
writes about his long stretch behind bars from October 21st of 2025 to November 10th of
2025. Yeah, for the BBC, he was sentenced to five years for conspiring to fund his 2007
election campaign with money from the late Libyan dictator at moment.
Goddafi, but he was released a few weeks into the sentence while he awaits an appeal. And during
his 20 days in the clink, he did a lot of reading, writing, found God, because why not? So thanks to
Harper's, we have a short excerpt from the memoir to share with listeners. It's translated from French
by Laura Treisman, and it goes a little something like this. I don't know if I can read all of it
with a straight face, but I'm going to try. I'm not someone who likes to complain, who seeks pity
or commiseration. I don't know how to sulk, still, less how to pout.
Sitting down on the unmade bed on my first night in prison, I had a shock. I had never felt,
even during my military service, a harder mattress. Not a glass of water, not a coffee,
not an ounce of humanity. Never before had I used a treadmill powered solely by my own stride.
For someone used to running daily in the Bois de Boulogne.
The contrast was stark.
Never had I encountered a more inconvenient shower setup.
The meager steam shut off almost immediately as if controlled by a timer.
You constantly had to find the button and press it again.
It produced none of the usual pleasure.
From my window, I could no longer see the sky, a bird in flight, or a tree trembling in the wind.
I was struck by the complete absence of color.
And then there was the limp, damp baguette on each day at luncheon.
No, no.
I felt myself becoming vulnerable to sadness.
It was as if my heart had stopped beating.
I felt on the edge of this.
I got the idea of rereading Sartre to see if I would find there the emotions I was living through.
There was nothing to elevate the eye, the perspective, the setting.
I am a lover of painting.
I appreciate the beauty.
Prison is not made for aesthetics.
How do I pronounce that word?
Are we sure this wasn't, you know?
A satire?
So Sarkozy, I had the occasion to be in rooms with him a lot.
And my favorite thing that So Cozy was he had this interpreter who was a younger and attractive woman, if I'm allowed to say that, you know.
But it's kind of the point.
I'm French and I've got.
Yeah.
I'm French.
I have a hot translator.
Yeah.
But the funny thing about it is she would not just translate.
she would mimic his gestures.
And so Sarkozy would gesture a lot.
So he'd puff out his chest and she would too.
And he'd pound on the table and she would too.
That's amazing.
And sometimes he'd pull his lapels and she would too.
It was the most bizarre thing.
But it made it entertaining.
But he's an over-the-top kind of guy.
Clearly his prison experience.
I mean, what's amazing about that is all that he's describing is, yeah,
that's why you're in prison.
Like we don't, when you commit crimes and are convicted of crimes, the baguettes are damp.
The shower pressure is not that good.
There's not a view of the Bois de Belon to run in, right?
Like, like, what the fuck did he think was going to happen in prison?
Did he think he was going to like, you know.
He thought he was going to get like a cushy cell.
Yeah, like a hotel in the south of France or something?
The penthouse cell.
And the fact that this is, he's describing, I'd actually have some more sympathy for it if the guy did five years.
I mean, I could do that for three weeks.
I could do that for three weeks.
Do some fucking push-ups.
It's like a silent retreat, you know.
Like people pay for stuff like that to be blocked off from the world.
I don't know.
I mean, but it is enjoyable.
Oh, God.
Well, I didn't make it through all the way without literally like laughing tears.
But I hope you all enjoyed my rendition.
Next step, we're going to hear Ben's interview.
with Nika Kovach.
All right, I'm very pleased to be joined by my friend Nika Kovach, who's been on this show before.
She's an incredible activist.
She's the leader of My Voice, My Choice, which successfully, right, Nika, got over a million
signatures to force the issue of abortion rights onto the European agenda and successfully
got the European Commission to commit additional funding for that effort.
She's also the co-founder of the Eighth of March Institute, a human rights activist.
Nika, thanks so much for joining us.
Hey, I'm so happy to be here.
Okay, Nika.
So I want to start with you, obviously, are Slovenian.
You've been involved in Slovenian politics, supporting progressive candidates and causes.
There was recently a Slovenian election, which we talked about in the last episode.
But I want to begin with this crazy story of your role in coordination with some other activists and journalists in the run-up to the election in uncovering the,
the interference and involvement of Black Cube, which is a firm of former Mossad agents that I have
history with, they once were spying on me. But you uncovered that Black Cube was interfering in the
election. Can you just start by describing what you discovered, essentially, and how that came
about? Yeah, so basically, like, we had elections in Slovenia, a very intense campaign. The authoritative
candidate was so well organized.
Like they had influencers who are doing like the usual shit that they do by the playbook.
And then suddenly throughout the night, a webpage popped up, which was like revealing the
corruption in Slovenia.
And on that webpage, there were like videos of different people.
They were called Apprendix 1, Apprentics 2, Apprendings 3, which were secretly recorded
while speaking about corruption in Slovenia.
It was not like a video of actual corruption, like people getting money, just descriptions of how the state function in Slovenia.
And when this webpage popped up, for me it was clear two things.
Firstly, that it's not a whistleblower, that it's not someone who is just wanting to attack corruption.
And secondly, that it is way too well done, that it would be done by anyone in Slovenia.
So I got this very suspicious feeling that it's a foreign intervention.
and I knew that similar things were happening in 2018, 2012 in Hungary.
And I got this very bad feeling that it is going for like Israeli's work and that there are some firms with a lot of money attacking Slovenia.
I started to talk with very good friends who are journalists.
And they had a leak that Jansha met people.
And Jans is the far right populist candidate.
Yes.
He's the authoritarian best friend.
of Victor Orban.
He's in politics for 33 years, and he wanted to get the power back.
He lost elections four years ago, and he did everything to basically come to the power now.
And we got a leak that basically a group of people speaking in not Slovenian language came to him
and that they were from Israel, and they had a meeting.
And journalists had this leak and when I started to speak, hey, I think there is like a foreign
interference.
We started to connect the dots.
We got information when this meeting happened.
We bought an access to fly riders.
So we got the information when the private jet from Tel Aviv landed in Slovenia.
And then we got the names of the people who are there and we realized that it is black cube.
And then things started to connect.
And it was this, what the fuck is happening in Switzerland?
Slovenia moment. In three days, we decided that we will tell the story and that we will go out
with the story. I have friends in Israel who are investigating that kind of stuff for years,
and they told me who black cube is. And then we made the decision that we will expose private
Mossat in Slovenia. And in one weekend, we prepared a report about this, about the other cases,
about what Black Cube already done in other countries
and also information about what they were doing in Slovenia
and what I think it was really important was that we decided that we do it
in a very non-traditional way.
So it was not just journalists exposing them, not just activists,
but it was me, one journalist and another colleague from civil society
who had a press conference and we told, hey, like this is happening,
these guys are here and why they met Yancha, who is paying,
them and what the people that are paying them want from Slovenia.
And this is how the whole journey of one week of craziness started.
Yancha's first reaction was that he doesn't know who black cube is.
Then his second reaction was that they need a monument because they're exposing corruption.
The third reaction was that he will sue me because I'm saying that he's working with them.
And after Slovenia national security forces said publicly that they did an investigation
and that they were really at Yancha's party.
He finally admitted he knows them.
And this is when the story started to unfold.
And it's the biggest scandal in Slovenian history.
And it's like the biggest attempt to influence our elections,
which is actually really damp, you know.
I think Yancha would win so easily if he wouldn't do that kind of bad sheet that he was doing.
He would just need a positive agenda.
People were quite disappointed with this.
the government that we had and wanted change.
And I think what fact him us up was that he's actually an evil guy who used even more
evil guys to help him in Slovenia and he was not ready that a group of people will expose them.
So yeah, I'm going to give a little bit of background for the listeners too because of my own
history.
So for me, way back in 2018, the Guardian reported that Black Cube was digging up dirt on me and trying to spy
me. That was news to me. But I subsequently learned all these things, like they'd contacted my
wife. They had, you know, fake LinkedIn pages. They had to file on me that had all kinds of stuff
in it. But, you know, kind of stuff there was kind of more to intimidate, like pictures of, I don't
know, my apartment or front door of my apartment or things like that. What was interesting is,
and relevant to Slovenia, is I went to Hungary a year later when I was reporting my book,
and I met all these people that I didn't even know had.
been similarly spied on by BlockCube, but essentially what I learned is BlockCube had run a whole
operation inside of Hungary to help Victor Orban, where they recorded conversations with someone
who was basically just saying, hey, I'd like the European Union to put more pressure on Victor
Orban, which, by the way, any activist would say if they came on this podcast, right?
But because it was recorded secretly, it sounded like a secret plan.
And guess where the leak was, Nika?
It was in the Jerusalem Post, so it wasn't even subtle.
But then Orban took this leak, and they called it Soros leaks.
And then Steve Bannon started to juice it on Breitbart.
And Orban kind of closed his campaign with the idea that George Soros was trying to overthrow the Hungarian government.
The point is that there's a history of BlockCube intervening to help right-wing, far-right-wing, autocratic people in central and eastern Europe.
The question I want to ask you, because some people may not be familiar with the positions that the current Prime Minister of Slovenia has taken on Israel,
Why do you think Black Cube and Israeli intelligence or former intelligence was so interested in helping Jansa, this far right guy, win in Slovenia?
And is it tied to the desire to see far right politicians win in Europe?
Or is it tied to the positions that the Slovenian government's taken on Israel?
And give a little bit of background for people on what those positions are.
Yeah.
So firstly, I think that it's really important that we say that the Black Cube has always a playboy.
Like, they always are having, like, fake identities.
They record people.
They post this.
And they even, like, do not post real stuff.
They do these mixtures from videos with a clear, like, intention to basically fake the reality.
What we need to know is that they're not activists.
They're not people coming to the country and fight for, like, different political opinions.
They're a firm, which is making billions out of that kind of resources.
They were also working with Weinstein and the operation with Weinstein.
and costed like 1.3 million euros.
So firstly, someone needed to pay them that they came to Slovenia.
But what is also important is that they were definitely close with Jancha,
because the people who came to Slovenia were like the highest people in this organization.
Why is this happening?
Because as you said, our prime minister had a really clear stand on Gaza.
What he was saying is that this is a genocide.
He was very clear about this.
We were one of the first countries who basically made Nathaniahu a person
on Grata in Slovenia, and it was very, very clear, like, where we are standing as a country.
But on the other also, Hancha always is visiting, like Israel. He's always speaking nice about
Netanyahu, and he's clearly connected with these people. I don't know if this was like an
Israeli state operation, like in Slovenia, and I also don't want to claim this. But what I know
is that there was a clear interest to basically attack the current government and to basically mess with
it, but we also need to know that like this cost at like hundreds of thousands of euros.
Probably this whole operation was more expensive than all the Slovenian elections altogether.
And my question is like who was paying for this?
Is this the money which came from Hungary?
Is this the money that came from some rich people in Slovenia?
And why people had such a big interest to do this here.
Yeah, I think in what we've talked about this a lot in the podcast, but people just really need to
understand that there is this network, this nexus that extends from Russia into Hungary, right?
Orban is tighter with Putin. He's not a supporter of Ukraine. But then Netanyahu has been very
supportive of Orban, despite Orban having some pretty anti-Semitic tendencies. But Orban always sides
with Israel inside the European Union and against Palestine. And so there's this kind of weird
convergence of the American far right and Trump and Putin and Orban and guys like Jansa and
Slovenia and Netanyahu, like, these guys all help each other out. And again, we're not saying
it's an Israeli state operation, but we are saying that they were a group of former Mossad guys
who are getting paid to help Jansa. And also these people, like, who were in Slovenia,
were one of the main people who were basically the propaganda machine for the genocide. They were
the people where we can see public statements of them that, like, the Gaza needs to be, like,
basically cut down from the humanitarian aid, that they need to be cut down from like food,
that they need to starve the whole population there. So I also, like, we need to know where
they're standing ideologically and why they are such a good friend with Jansha and why they
were in Slovenia with such a big passion and wish. Well, yeah, and so there are a lot of questions
didn't be answered. I do want to ask you about the Slovenian election results. So part of what
happened here is it seemed like Yonza was going to cruise to victory, like you said.
In part because there was a vigorous campaign, in part because of this in the final week,
it turned out that the progressive incumbent won a plurality. He won the more votes in Yonza.
However, you know, everybody was under 30 percent because there are a lot of parties.
How do you feel about the election result and what I know now it's a coalition formation question,
like, do we have any sense of who's going to be the next prime minister of Slovenia?
So a couple of things.
Like, the first thing was that, like, people were disappointed by the government.
They were disappointed by the cost of living, by the housing situation, by healthcare.
And also, like, what current government did wrongly is that they had, like, Biden's model of campaigning as the role model of campaigning.
So the campaign was not hot at all, you know, and it was very hard to make people excited for the elections.
Why I think that revealing this story was so important was because it was a reminder what Yanshah is.
And it was also showing like what kind of sick methods he's using to go to the victory.
What will happen and what happened on the elections is that Golub won for like 7,000 votes.
It was very intense night.
Golub is the incumbent, the progressive incumbent.
Yes.
And also like right now we don't know who will be the next prime minister of Slovenia.
We know that Yancha lost in his big mission.
His big mission was to get a constitutional majority.
And I think this could happen without all the stuff that happened in the last week.
But I think that in Slovenia right now, what would need to happen is that all the parties would need to say we are not going with Yanja.
He betrayed the country.
He brought like Israeli private Mossad in the game.
And this is a limit.
Like if we are Democrats in a sense of like believing in democracy,
we cannot collaborate with that kind of person.
But they're not saying this.
The process for forming the government
will last at least a month more.
And I wish that the current prime minister
will stay the prime minister,
but I cannot say this with certainty.
And also another option is that
they will not be able to form a government
for a couple of rounds
and that we will have another elections,
which is something that no one needs.
is very excited about.
Makes you exhausted thinking about it.
Yeah.
Well, we'll follow it.
Two more questions that kind of widen this lens a little bit.
One is you're obviously involved in Slovenian politics, but you're also evolved in anti-authoritarian
politics across Europe and frankly around the world.
The kind of next big election that everybody's been watching is hungry.
You've taught, you know, Slovenia is often seen as a bellwether or two.
It's a small country, but it's kind of often been seen as an indicator of where things are going,
at least in that part of Europe.
It seems like Peter Maggiar, the opposition candidate in Hungary,
has the best chance to be Victor Orban of anybody since 2010
when Orban came back to power.
I know you have a lot of Hungarian friends.
What is your assessment of kind of the Hungarian election,
but also does the Slovenia election have any relevance to Hungary
in the sense of, you know, Jansa and Orban are buddies
and Janssa just underperformed?
I mean, how are you feeling about the Hungarian election?
I mean, I'm watching videos from Hungary all the time.
and it's giving me so much hope because I see people like standing up and resisting.
And also, Orban is doing a lot of mistakes.
They also have spy scandals.
They have like different things which are popping up in Hungary.
And my feeling is that he will end on his own, his own regime.
And I hope this will happen?
Another question which we always have in that kind of countries is will elections be fair
and will actually like not be stolen.
for Slovenia, particularly, like, losing Orban in Hungary means that Yancha will lose a lot of money
and a lot of funding for the system around him.
A lot of media have been bought with Hungarian money in Slovenia.
It was always, like, very connected regime.
So we are watching this with a lot of excitement.
And I also think that, like, imagine the whole picture of the Europe in three weeks,
if we have like a centrist government in Slovenia
and the centrist government in Hungary.
Like it would mean like a huge change for the Europe
and also for the vibe of the whole continent.
I don't know what will happen, as I said,
but it's the biggest amount of hope so far
and I always hold on to the hope in that kind of situations.
Well, we need to hold on to hope right now.
The last question I would ask you is,
we've talked a lot on this podcast
and, you know, you and I've talked a lot about
how network the far right is, how much they learn from each other, how they help each other.
You've already talked about the fact that, you know, there's Hungarian money, the buying up media
in Slovenia, there's Israeli, you know, ex-Massad helping, you know, both Orban and Jansa.
Like, there's this, you know, you add Marco Rubio fly to Hungary to endorse Victor Orban.
Like, there's all the synergies on the right.
What we need to do more on the progressive side is similarly network and learn from each other.
and frankly, I think a lot of those types of people listen to this podcast, when you look back on the Slovenian election that just took place, what lessons would you identify that might be relevant to progressives who are mounting campaigns, either in politics or civil society and other countries? And if I may ask kind of a leading question, it seems like being aggressive in exposing and revealing that foreign interference is probably one lesson. Like, don't just wait for the news,
paper to print it, you know, people had to go out and do it themselves.
Yeah. A couple of things. So this is my second get out and vote campaign and the second
campaign where we managed to defeat Jancha, at least by the amount of votes. And in both
campaigns, it was super important that I was spending time with people from other countries,
that I understood what happened in India, that I understood what happened in Russia, in Belarus,
in other places. On the first campaign, it was important because I needed to understand that
authoritarian have a playbook and that they always play by the same rules, that they attack the
media, that they help other friends, that they attack independent institution, that they threaten
you. In these elections, why it was important that I have all of you in my life is because I
could recognize the pattern. And I could understand that what is happening, it's not a whistleblowing
campaign, it's not a referendum about corruption, but it is like fucking foreign interference in
elections, which happened in other places, and it also happened to my friends. The second thing,
which I always learn, is that we should not be afraid of them. Like, we always think that they are so
powerful and so strong, but actually these dudes just play by the same, like, rules. And when you become
loud and when you become not afraid and when you start to exposing them, like, they get so lost
because they don't know what to do, because they count on you being afraid. The third thing is that the
secretives in big coalitions and that usually in on our side like politicians are not sexy and
hot like it's very rare that you have a candidate. Pedro Sanchez is yeah yeah or like you know
man dani and stuff like but like in general it you're very lucky if you have a candidate for who
you would like go on the street and die for but so we need to create this like hour of making
elections fun and important and joyful like on our own and this is why I really believe
that we need to form big coalitions, not just with civil society, but also with influencers,
with people who are doing different stuff, like with coffee shops, with bars who have the posters,
with people on the ground. And also one of the things is that we need to demand from politicians.
Like that when we go to the elections and when we vote, people need to have a feeling that there
will be a difference and that they are voting for something. And if we don't have this something extra,
what I think happened in US and also in Slovenia to certain extent,
like it's very hard to do a campaign because people deserve more
and politicians need to promise more.
And the fifth thing is that expose them and talk about their tactics
and their strategies because it's important that people understand.
And in our case, what was also important that like we were a group of friends.
Like if I wouldn't have such a close relationship with journalists who are
exposing this. And with part of civil society who was with us, like we would never do this
crazy and dangerous thing. But we did it because we trusted each other and we did it to
protect the country. And also the last thing is that you need to love your country, you know?
Like I love Slovenia so much and like I would do everything for it. And I think that when you
love it and when you show the people that like there is something we need to protect and care
for, they will join you. So at the end, usually things come together. I,
I don't know if it will be the case right now informing the government, but at least we didn't
allow Black Cube to fuck around a notice.
Well, look, that's one of the best summaries of the counter authoritarian playbook I've heard.
I hope everybody pays careful attention to that.
I also just want to say, Nika, I know you've been working like crazy for a long time because
you protected and extended abortion rights in Europe through my voice, my choice.
You expose this Black Cube operation.
You helped defeat Janza, at least in the vote count, for the second.
in consecutive time. So we're very proud of what you're doing and also hope you get some rest.
It's time for self-care. Let's add that to the list of things. Yeah. Or that we stop with everything
and open a bookstore. As you know, that's a plan. I may need an independent bookstore.
And maybe we can have one in Slovenia and one, you know, in New York or something. I don't know.
Yeah, that's good.
All right. It's so good to see you. Thanks for joining.
Thank you. Bye-bye.
Thank you, uh, Nicholas Sarkozy for giving us the visual of a damp, sad baguette.
Thank you, Alona, for stepping in so easily.
Thanks for hosting the show with me, Ben.
And Tommy will be back next week, everyone.
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