The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - No Mercy / No Malice: Magnanimity
Episode Date: May 30, 2026As read by George Hahn. https://profgmedia.substack.com/p/magnanimity Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...
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I'm Scott Galloway and this is no mercy, no malice.
Most nations measure their strength and economic output and military might.
The U.S. excels in both.
Cuba is facing a humanitarian crisis and the communist regime appears vulnerable.
By tapping into our empathy and generosity, we can win over our former adversaries.
Magnanimity, as read by George Hahn.
Hemingway famously said bankruptcy happens slowly, then suddenly.
The collapse of his former home, Cuba, appears to be in the suddenly phase.
Tourism, which generated 8% of Cuba's $30 billion GDP in better times and brought in hard currency,
has fallen 48% year over year. Inflation is 15%.
Two weeks ago, Cuba's Minister of Energy and Mines said the country had run out of fuel because of the U.S. oil embargo,
adding that Havana is frequently without power for up to 22 hours a day.
The last oil shipment arrived in April,
and a Russian tanker that had been headed for Cuba carrying 300,000 barrels,
enough for three days, abruptly changed course.
On social media, there are reports of sporadic protests breaking out in and around the capital,
save drinking water is in short supply.
food has been scarce for months.
The country's health care system is breaking down.
In some, the U.S. is asphyxating the Cuban people.
As Cuban-American historian Ada Ferrer told CNN's Christian Ammanpoor,
survival is an open question.
But to paraphrase Cuban interventionist President John F. Kennedy,
we shouldn't be asking what additional pressure we can apply to Cuba.
but what help we can provide its people?
In a rare direct message to the Cuban people,
U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio offered a lifeline with strings attached.
The only thing standing in the way of a better future are those who control your country,
Rubio said, predicating $100 million in aid on regime change.
His message was timed to coincide
with the announcement that the aircraft carrier Nimitz is heading toward the island,
as well as the Justice Department's decision to indict Raul Castro,
the country's 94-year-old former president and de facto leader.
The endgame script is similar to the one the U.S. deployed against Venezuelan strongman
Nicholas Maduro.
But just in case there's any ambiguity about the goal,
President Trump has been saying the quiet part out loud since March.
I built this great military. I said you'll never have to use it, but sometimes you have to use it, and Cuba is next, by the way.
We've seen this movie before, and it doesn't end well.
In his famous 16th century treatise, The Prince, Niccolo Machiavelli asked whether it's better for a leader to be loved or feared.
One should wish to be both, he wrote.
but because it is difficult to unite them in one person,
it is much safer to be feared than loved.
Today, Machiavellian is used to describe a ruthless style of politics
where fear is the most valuable currency.
But as Jeffrey Sondonfeld, the Senior Associate Dean for Leadership Studies
at Yale's School of Management observed,
many of today's leaders miss the operative part of the diplomat's famous quote.
What Machiavelli actually advised was that it is best to be both loved and feared,
Sondon felt wrote.
Only when that ideal is not possible,
did Machiavelli suggest fear is a more reliable way to inspire discipline than bonds of love.
One of the many failings of the Trump administration is the false belief that America is incapable of inspiring fear and love simultaneously.
Trump's press.
preference for instilling fear in other nations and his disdain for inspiring their love,
misses what makes America so great.
In 1990, just after the end of the Cold War, political scientist Joseph Nye
popularized the term soft power to describe how state actors achieve their goals without using
force, making threats, or paying bribes.
According to Nye, a nation's soft power resides in its culture and political values,
plus its foreign policy to the extent that its peers see it as legitimate and having moral authority.
A country may obtain the outcomes it wants in world politics because other countries,
admiring its values, emulating its example, aspiring to its level of prosperity and openness,
want to follow it, Nye wrote.
This soft power, getting others to want the outcomes that you want,
co-ops people rather than coerces them.
Nye's concept explains the pincer move the U.S. successfully deployed
against the Soviets during the Cold War.
Our hard power included a nuclear arsenal
with a rapid response capability measured in minutes,
a military that peaked at 3.5 million people in uniform,
and the willingness to engage in bloody proxy wars
in Asia, Latin America, and the Middle East.
Our soft power included foreign aid, Hollywood movies,
rock and roll, Levi's jeans, and middle-class prosperity.
See Nixon's kitchen debate with Soviet Premier,
Nikita Khrushchev. As Nye said in 2019, the Berlin Wall collapsed not under an artillery barrage,
but from hammers and bulldozers wielded by people whose minds had been affected by ideas that had
penetrated the iron curtain over the preceding decades. Our willingness and capacity to deliver
violence against our enemies anywhere in the world is a significant asset. But a
American magnanimity is what makes the country unique among history's greatest powers.
During World War II, the U.S. sustained 400,000 dead and another 670,000 wounded.
In the immediate aftermath of the war, the country provided emergency aid to its former enemies in Austria, Germany, and Japan.
Then, in 1948, Congress passed legislation to fund the Marshall Plan, a $13.3 billion aid package,
$180 billion adjusted for inflation, to rebuild 17 European nations, including West Germany.
Separate from the Marshall Plan, the U.S. spent an estimated $2 billion, $25 billion, adjusted for inflation,
between 1946 and 1951 to rebuild Japan.
We offered similar support to the Soviet Union and Eastern Bloc, but were rebuffed.
Regardless, America wrote checks when other victors would have demanded reparations.
In hindsight, it's easy to discount U.S. magnanimity as Cold War pragmatism,
but that misses the contribution of the American spirit and our capacity to.
forgive. Had American voters been consumed by hatred and xenophobia, understandable sentiments after years
of war and sacrifice, the isolationism of the pre-war years might have returned. Instead, seven
months after signing the Marshall Plan into law, Truman won re-election, suggesting that a significant
number of American voters found space in their hearts and wallets for people who had been
their enemies just three years prior. That selflessness helped install a global operating system
financed by American capital, secured by the U.S. military, and held together by American generosity
and kindness. Eight decades later, one of our most underrated assets remains our talent for
turning enemies into allies. Similar to many relationships and brand equity, the current
administration has taken a blowtorch of performative masculinity and stupidity to these assets.
Despite six decades of hostility, the infrastructure of American empathy and generosity to Cuba
already exists. After the Obama administration loosened travel restrictions in 2016,
1.2 million Americans visited Cuba over two years outstripping tourists from every
other country. Of the three million Cubans in the U.S., 57% are immigrants with firsthand ties to their
homeland. Cuban Americans are believed to send between $2 billion and $4 billion per year to the
relatives back home, though exact numbers are difficult to come by because of U.S. restrictions
on commerce with the island. Writing in Mother Jones about how her mom regularly sends
care packages and money to relatives in Cuba, Laura Morel observed that exiled Cubans are
keeping the nation alive. Formal channels also exist. The U.S. resumed aid to Cuba in 1990 after a 30-year
Cold War hiatus, though the Trump administration effectively turned off the flow of economic
support last year. The stockpile of U.S. bombs and threats is running low, but they're
aren't needed for the island nation 90 miles off the coast of Florida, we've already established
the lifeline. What we need to do is summon our soft power, the empathy and generosity that makes
America uniquely American. I don't believe the U.S. will invade Cuba. One quagmire at a time
is enough. In addition, Trump doesn't see himself as a liberator, but as a deal
dealmaker. That's fine, but the best deals are win-win, not zero-sum. Trump and Rubio have made their
intentions clear. The deal they seek has to include regime change. Less clear is what regime change
looks like in practice. As Brian Finucane, a senior advisor with the International Crisis Group and a
former State Department lawyer told PBS, Venezuela isn't a good template for Cuba, as there isn't
an obvious successor to make a deal with. Strangling Cuba until it collapses into chaos or
launching a cinematic special ops mission to rendition a 94-year-old autocrat isn't a strategy. It's a
weapon of mass distraction from Epstein, ICE, inflation, Iran, the J6 terrorist immunization fund.
The real move is magnanimity.
America's greatest returns on investment haven't come from the barrel of a gun, but from the
extension of an open hand.
Imagine what $100 million in unconditional aid to the Cuban country.
people could buy. Not regime change. Something better. Goodwill. Gratitude. And eventually,
a generation of Cubans who love America and associate it with their own prosperity rather
than an embargo. Empathy isn't a sign of weakness. It's the most ruthlessly effective weapon
in the American arsenal. Life is so rich.
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