The Prof G Pod with Scott Galloway - Trump, Putin, and the End of American Power — with Dr. Fiona Hill
Episode Date: September 25, 2025Scott speaks with Dr. Fiona Hill, senior fellow at Brookings and former U.S. National Security Council official, about Putin’s endgame and what it means for the West. They discuss Trump’s impact o...n the war in Ukraine, Europe’s test of unity, and how countries like India and Saudi Arabia are reshaping global power. Fiona also shares why America is losing influence abroad and what it will take to restore it. Algebra of happiness: being extremely online. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Episode 366, Route 36 ran off Route 66 in New Mexico.
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Welcome to the 366 episode of the Prop G-Pod.
Yeah, I'm going to head jokes, feeling a little bit down.
But I'm happy on vulgar and crude.
When I'm not, I get sort of, I don't know, less happy and, or less crude and less vulgar.
Why am I not happy?
I don't know about you.
I've been a little freaked out about, I don't know, society recently.
It feels as if we're having us false debate over who's responsible for the murder of Charlie Kirk.
And it upsets me that we don't appear to want to be focused on the real problems.
And that is we're now down to interpreting fonts on shell casings to try and blame the other side.
And the issue is, okay, what if you manage to convince the public that it is the other side's fault?
Isn't that just going to result in more violence? Like, where does that get us? And our leaders are supposed to prevent a tragedy of the commons and be real leaders and get to the bottom of an issue and address the actual issue. And I see it. The culprits here is really hiding in plain sight. One, we have 40% of the S&P by market cap is essentially trafficking in rage. And they figured out that it isn't sex it sells, it's rage. And if you can elevate it.
really incendiary, ugly content after determining someone's political persuasion and starting
to serve them content that makes the other side look bad and enrages you, that you keep them glued
to their phone for longer and longer and longer. And we've essentially built the largest rage machine
in history that unfortunately creates the greatest level of shareholder value in history. So we have
attached economic value and prosperity to rage. We have young men who are just more prone to this
type of violence. Ninety-eight percent of mass shooters, and as far as I could tell, I did some
research. All perpetrators of political violence are, wait for it, men. They're usually young
men. And we have, unfortunately, a society that is just producing too many men with a lack of
emotional or connection to others, connection to work, school, connection to their parents.
And what do these, all these men have in common? They're extremely online.
Extremely online. The majority of them are less politically engaged than your average citizen. Most of them don't even vote. But we see this engagement in violence entrepreneurship where politicians see an opportunity to demonize the other side or advance their own agendas by exploiting violence. So what do we have? We have a rage machine. We have men who have a lack of economic and romantic opportunities. And then finally, and it's an exhausting debate. But in the next six hours, more
people are going to die from gun deaths in the United States than die in the entire year
in the United Kingdom. So we don't have a monopoly on the rage machine, which is gone global.
We don't have a monopoly on young men with a lack of opportunity who have access to this
rage machine going extremely online. But we do have a monopoly on the rage machine infecting
vulnerable young men who then have access to guns everywhere. But instead of talking about
the real problems we want to spend time blaming each other. It's all just incredibly disappointing.
Moving on, in today's episode, we speak with Dr. Fiona Hill, a senior fellow at Brookings,
chancellor of Durham University and a former U.S. National Security Council official specializing
in Russian and European affairs. This is the right guess for the right moment. We discuss with
Fiona the war in Ukraine, the state of American foreign policy, and the shifting global order.
Fiona is an inspiration, incredibly smart, measured, qualified, and again, the right person for the right moment.
So with that, here's our conversation with Dr. Fiona Hill.
Dr. Hill. Dr. Hill, let's press right into it. Since we had you on back in March, we've seen summits, meetings, and a total of
Wait for it. Zero deals agreements made.
Putin seems dug in for total victory.
Catch us up.
What do you think is the state of play right now?
I think you summed it up, sadly Scott, very clearly.
Putin is dug in.
From his perspective right now, things are going in the direction that he anticipated.
He didn't think that President Trump would really do anything.
He's already sized him up a long time ago.
He knows that Trump's desire to have a lot of.
a good relationship with Putin personally tends to be paramount and that Trump doesn't really want
to do any heavy lifting that could create blowback for himself or for the United States in
terms of confronting Russian would rather like to do things directly. And in fact, now we see
President Trump putting pressure on his European allies to go first in terms of taking action
against Russia. And of course, what Putin is also hoping is that those European allies,
the UK included, will all fall apart. And we've seen in the last week all kinds of drone incursions,
an uptick in aircraft from Russia violating for quite lengthy periods of time adjacent airspace
in the Baltic states and the countries adjacent to Russia. And Putin is just applying the pressure.
He really feels that this is his time to finish Ukraine off.
My sense is the war is not going well for him. And is,
When you say finish the war off, is this like the battle of the bulge where it's like,
okay, this is our shot.
This is our shot to kind of try and end the war.
We're going to throw everything we had it.
Because if I go on TikTok, I can't figure out, all right, are the Russians with a wartime
economy and what I would call their core competence and ability to endure incredible
suffering and sacrifice?
And I say that I generally think it's a core competence.
Wartime economy, willingness to lose, keep going.
or I hear that 17% of the oil infrastructure has been taken out, and it's a meat grinder.
Give us your sense of the balance of power here and where we are in the war.
Look, all of these things can be true.
And you say it's a core competence, but when it comes with Russian people,
they're not actually given much of a choice in the matter.
I mean, most states are supposed to be functioning for the benefits of their populations.
It's been quite a while since Putin moved away from putting the population and their prosperity
and well-being first.
there was actually a period, to be really fair here, in the 2000s, where Russians were living
their best lives, where the Russian state was not putting all kinds of onerous burdens on
them as it had traditionally, but, you know, he's right back out that again.
I mean, although there's not full-on mobilization, and there are a lot of induceance for people
to go to the front in terms of getting, you know, really high payments for the sacrifice,
literal sacrifice on the front lines.
Putin is still pretty confident that he can keep that meat grinder going and that, frankly,
he can fight till the last Ukrainian because he's got more Russian manpower to be able to push forward.
Look, you've seen President Trump and heard President Trump just recently opining on this,
talking about the number of people that Putin is sacrificing and is seeing dying every single
day and how much higher that is in terms of a factor, you know, four to one of Russians against
Ukrainians, for example, which is not to say that Ukraine is having an easy time at all. I mean,
in fact, that's what Putin is banking on. He's banking on Ukraine collapsing first. He wants
to finish Ukraine off first. So right now, Ukraine is in a rather precarious situation economically.
And Russia is too. I mean, you're absolutely right about this. This is a wartime economy.
It's a kind of a variation of the wartime Russian disease, like the Dutch disease, when everything went into their oil economy.
In this case, in Russia, everything is going into the war economy, and it's affecting other sectors of the economy.
But Ukraine is literally running out of money.
It's dependent on the IMF.
It's dependent on the support of other allies and partners.
It's been very much dependent on the support of the United States, not just for military support, but also financial support to keep things going.
We've got this big debate about using Russian assets, frozen Russian assets to help support Ukraine's defense.
And that's now in something of a more acute form because Ukraine's economy literally is running out of steam.
And that's what Putin is depending on.
He knows that he's got problems at home.
And in fact, you're starting to see even some defections.
We recently heard that Dimitri Kozak, who is one of the people who's been most close to Putin,
going back to the 70s and 1980s,
somebody who was actually born in Ukraine
when it was part of the Soviet Union and Soviet Republic
and one of the people who was opposed to the war
has kept telling Putin the truth about it.
Well, he's just resigned from the government
after a long period.
And that itself is quite consequential
and telling of where we are now.
But Putin's gambling and betting,
and it's a fairly good bet for him
that Ukraine is going to be the first country that collapses.
So you're, I mean, you're handicapping that this, at the end of the day, that Russia has the advantage right now.
Is that accurate?
Well, I actually don't think it has to have the advantage.
Look, this is a game of chicken, right?
I mean, it's a, and one, because it's a game of chicken Kiev, because Putin's basically banking on the fact that it's Ukrainians are going to blink or just literally collapse or they're going to turn back or everybody else is going to turn back.
But the point of saying all of this is to say that we don't have.
have to do this. There are, as I said, serious deliberations right now about doing something with
the Russian frozen asset finding a formula that enables them to be put to use of helping Ukraine
defend itself. I think Europeans are getting more serious about taking action that's required
in terms of building their own defense, but helping to make sure that Ukraine can defend those
lines and not let Russia go any further forward. So this is the critical juncture, which a signal has to be
sent to Putin saying, no, we're not going to let you do this. We're going to actually make sure
with the Ukraine can keep on defending itself and pushing you back, and we're not going to actually
put up with these incursions of drones or aircraft or all the other things that you're going to
throw at us here. There is actually some solidarity in Europe. It may not be all European countries,
and, you know, we can see Hungary and Slovakia and a host of other countries, clearly making it
obvious that they're not going to do what it takes, and that's what gives Putin the confidence
that he can push forward. But if the other major European players, the UK, France, Germany,
all the Scandinavian countries, Poland, the Baltic states, you know, etc., push back,
that's going to be a different matter. And we'll have to see now whether these drone attacks,
we've had, you know, all kinds of evidence now that Putin's doing this to test everyone's resolve.
If they respond with resolve, then we might see something different. You've just got to show
Putin that he can't go any further. But, you know, again, this is the moment. This is the testing time.
From an American vantage point, sort of man on the street, if you will,
I'm disappointed that the Americans aren't offering a more full-throated defense or support of Ukraine.
But I'm sort of flummoxed as to why Europe, who at the end of the day,
is the region being invaded here?
And I recognize they've given more money than the U.S.,
but it just seems, for lack of a better term, the EU is just very soft.
And that Putin recognizes that.
The money, obviously, they would need more money,
they need more money, more weapons.
The idea of ever putting a Spanish or French foot on,
you know, boot on the ground is just unthinkable,
despite the fact that Europe is being invaded.
Do you think Europe is mustering the requisite will?
Assuming that the U.S. will be sort of a,
I don't want to call it a passive partner,
but we'll continue to support,
but will not take the leadership position,
I think most people have come to expect on these types of issues. Do you think that the EU
demonstrates the will to provide the requisite pushback? Well, look, I think part of the
problem that we have is we've got all of these different entities in Europe. You're talking about
the EU, the European Union. Well, that's not a military organization. It has military and security
components, of course, and it also has a lot of financial clout. And if you think in aggregate of
you know, 550 million Europeans, and you think about the financial firepower that they have
if they pull all their resources.
There's something pretty significant there.
And then, of course, the other organisation, the critical one is NATO, the North Atlantic Treaty
organisation, and as you said, the US is pretty passive about, you know, this at the moment.
We've had the various summits in which it's been made crystal clear by the US Secretary of Defence
and many others that the United States is not just going to be offering protection,
for Europeans, unless they're going first, as Trump has also been saying, and they're doing
everything for themselves. And, of course, Canada's part of that, but Canada's been seen as
feckless by the United States, you know, etc. But there are other forms of organization for military
and defense beneath all of that within Europe. And I think that's where the secret lies.
You know, we're always talking about coalitions of the willing, you know, in different contexts.
And there are other structures. So you've actually seen a number of the European countries
signed bilateral relationship, bilateral agreements with Ukraine solidifying those
relationships into something that's more than just political, but something that is also
geared up towards helping Ukraine defend itself. I was part of the UK Strategic Defense Review
that went on, you know, for a whole year up until June, and it was very clear that the UK
was seriously committed to try to help Ukraine and was one of the first moves in terms of
of finding one of these defense agreements. But the UK also has a leadership role in another
entity called the Jeff, the joint expeditionary force, which for a long time was neither
joint nor expedition or even a force. It was just some guy's name by the sound of it. But there's
actually been some effort to really put some teeth into that. That is an organization, a military
organization that was set up really to bring Sweden and Finland into closer coordination
militarily with some of the other NATO countries before they joined NATO. And again, it was the UK,
it was Norway, the Baltic states. And that's something to become something.
real now that Ukraine is a partner with all of these individual countries and now that Sweden and
Finland have also joined NATO because the hope is that the Jeff could become a military organizational
platform for doing something more serious because all of those countries are both committed and
capable as well as now interoperable about working together and working with Ukraine.
And when you mentioned boots on the ground, there are Ukrainian boots on the ground.
When we look beyond all of this, if Ukraine has managed to prevail, let's just say,
even if it hasn't had a victory in the way that people were envisaging it might early on,
but it's managed to prevail, persist and resist Russia taking over the rest of its territory,
Ukraine and Ukrainian army is going to be probably the most significant in Europe,
which is why Russia wants to have Ukraine demilitarized and have it basically neutralized
because it sees the writing on the wall.
Ukraine's going to be a formidable force.
Ukrainian boots are on the ground.
Ukrainian boots are going to continue to be on the ground,
but what Ukraine needs is more of this technical assistant.
It certainly needs more defensive capability.
I think all of Europe now is seeing that they need some kind of integrated air
and missile defense system too,
particularly one in the first instance,
the defense against drones.
Those drones that recently went into Poland seem to be more dummies,
you know, set up to test and to see how Europe was going to.
respond. You can't respond by sending up, you know, multi-million dollar aircraft, you know,
to deal with off-the-shelf drones that are partly styrofoam and duct tape. So we're going to have
to be really thinking creatively here, and the Ukrainians have also shown the way. So what you're seeing
now is a group of European countries, either through these bilateral agreements or through
larger organizational arrangements, figuring out how they're going to work with Ukraine as well
to start taking different technical approaches and boosting their industry.
doing more innovation in drones, thinking about how to counteract drones and really working with
Ukraine to build up its defence sector as well as their own. So I think we're going to see more of
this. I think, you know, the question is really the pace. And that's, you know, one of the things
that you're getting at here. And then you also see that the US has learned some lessons, but at least
the US defence sector and Pentagon has. And you're seeing a lot of US defence majors wanting to get in
on the act there. There's a bit of a fear of missing out aspect. Because the more that the US is
pushing Europe to do its own thing, and the more it's evident that Europeans have money,
and they're now starting at some will, but they've just got to have the ways and means for this,
the more there's also kind of a concern in the United States and the defence sector that
they might not be able to participate in this because, you know, there's a lot of potential there.
But I think Europeans are going to have to look more at this, you know, smaller scale,
innovation, cheaper responses to things, and they are going to have to look at the high-end,
you know, exquisite lethal equipment that usually is.
takes, you know, decades to produce and to conceive of.
So both Poland and Estonia invoked Article 4, which, by the way, has only been used
eight times since 1949.
Right.
After Russian jet fighters and drones were intercepted deep into the respective airspace.
Can you, just as someone who likes to think they're a critical thinker and understand strategy,
I would have thought the last thing he'd want to do is provoke additional risk.
resources and spending, put us into the mind to the best of your ability of Putin and why he
made the decision to encroach on Estonian and Polish airspace with attack aircraft.
What is he, quite frankly, what is he thinking?
Well, Putin always looked for vulnerabilities, right? And Poland and Estonia are pretty vulnerable.
Poland's just starting to build up its defense capacity for itself. I mean, Poland is actually
very close. It's 5%, the magical 5% of GDP. But it's got, you know, low base to move from.
And the polls are also still pretty desperate and hopeful for a stronger bilateral agreement
between Poland and the United States. They still see the United States is underpinning their
security, which is why the Polish presidential, you know, candidate was recently in the Oval
Office, you know, for example. In Estonia, of course, is a very small country with some
disputed territory with Russia right there on the border with one of the Russia's largest
military districts. And it's always been seen as the point where the Russians would likely
make some kind of land incursion, certainly into the Baltic states. And Putin is just putting up
the pressure and trying to see how everyone is going to react. I think what he anticipated was that
everybody would falling out against each other and try to appease him, which has been, you know,
some of the past patents. But there's another aspect to all of this is that I'm not really sure
about the quality of information intelligence Putin gets himself. As an intelligence operative,
he's somebody who likes to think that he knows everything. But look, he's now existing in a bubble.
There's all kinds of evidence that he's not always in the Kremlin. In fact, that he's often in
other places. He's got all these cloned officers that are in his dachers, either outside of Moscow
or down on the Black Sea, for example. And I mentioned before,
that people like Dmitia Kozak, people would say,
hey, you know, Vladimir Vladimir,
I don't think this is a good idea.
You know, people like that have either left or other have been sidelined.
So he's not getting people pushing back.
He's surrounded by yes men or very frightened men, you know, for the most part,
and a smaller and smaller group around him who can provide material to him.
And information, in fact, he's mostly surrounded by his bodyguards all the time.
And, you know, it's not very clear that they're all up on the latest information.
So you've got to ask yourself,
what is it that Vladimir Putin's being told and what does he?
think. And what does he decide for himself? Is he operating on old assumptions based on how he
thinks that Poland or Estonia or Finland or the UK or anybody else for that matter is going to react?
And if you think about what he did in February 2022, he made a huge mistake. He thought that he
literally was going to do a special military operation in Ukraine. He was going to move in.
They were going to capitulate. He was going to run off or get killed. The government would
be overthrown and he would put in his own puppet government some stooges there.
in Kiev and then, you know, all of that would be over with, and we in the West wouldn't react.
Well, basically, people are reacting.
Perhaps in some ways in the way they might expect, we've been following all these old Cold War
procedures for interceptions of planes, etc.
But we're also learning lessons.
And if Putin thinks he can learn a lesson, so can everyone else as well.
And now we know there are lots of debates, you know, elsewhere in Europe.
Now, Putin still thinks he's got his tentacles or his hands into all kinds of European politics
and he can pit people against each other.
The Poles and the Germans are notorious for always infighting.
Nobody, you know, kind of, he thinks will really want to help and protect Estonia.
And he's just, you know, fairly confident now that all these rifts within Europe, politically
internally and their domestic politics or between Europe and the United States
will prevent any kind of unified response.
But let's see.
I mean, I think that there are, again, a constellation of European countries,
even if it's not all of them, who are now actually getting their actions.
together, and they will find ways of pushing back against Putin.
We'll be right back after a quick break.
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So I'll put forward a thesis and you respond to it.
There's just enough support from the EU in the U.S.
to ensure that Ukraine or decrease the likelihood that Ukraine collapses.
Russia is paying a huge cost.
They're comfortable paying a huge cost.
They have a lot on the line.
It feels as if Russia were to collapse or have just a very obvious defeat that there's a decent chance that Putin might find a window.
It just feels like it all adds up to the following, Dr. Hill, that we've got more war for the foreseeable future.
Thoughts?
Yeah, look, I think that's sadly the best assessment.
you know, barring some major changes.
If we look back at other similar wars of attrition or the meat grinders,
there was always, you know, something either external that happened,
some external shock, or in the case of one of the protagonists,
an internal shock.
If you look back to World War I, of course, it was the German monarchy that collapsed,
the German state, the first German state.
In the second, it was the defeat of Germany in the battlefield
field after being pulled out over extended lines for too long and, you know, basically not
fighting on their home turf. And of course, Russia is not fighting on its home turf either,
even if it tends to present it as being home turf and the sense that Ukraine is historically
part of Russia, as Putin's always telling us. The other, you know, case as well is of some change
in the international system. Now, you know, if we look back a few months ago when Trump came
into power, Putin thought that was great, because Trump was going to shift the whole thing.
thing. In fact, we were all worried about that as well, that Trump was going to shift the whole
course of the conflict in Putin's favor. And frankly, he has in many respects. But now, you know,
there's a shift again. So I think absent some major change, some major shock to the system,
either externally or internally, we're going to go on with this for some time. But there could
be, of course, a recalculation inside of Russia if all the kind of difficulties mount. If you're
getting, you know, fewer people are willing to sacrifice themselves on the front.
If there's a shock to the economy, you know, for example, that constrains Putin's
abilities to keep moving forward. I mean, he can't see much sign of that just yet.
But over the next, you know, year or so, it may also be that if he does get enough
grip of the battlefield, which pleaded is what we're looking at right now that he's trying
to take over the whole of the Donbass region, that he might be prepared to settle in some
temporary fashion for the lines, frozen as they are, he's always hinting that there might be
some deal to be made over Zaporizia and Herson, which are these two other provinces, in the south
of Ukraine, that Russia partially controls, is laid claim to and annexed them as well, at least
in terms of a de facto sense of declaring them part of Russia. But Ukraine is still in control
of large portions of Zapparisia and Herson. And Putin may then, you know,
actually say, okay, I'm willing now to stop the fighting. And then he might just try to
use political and economic pressure on Ukraine instead to find other means of moving forward.
But I don't think it's really shaken in any way his ultimate objectives, which is to get as
much of Ukraine and as much control over Ukraine as he possibly can. But I think he can make
a lot of mischief politically in Ukraine as well, in large part because neither Putin nor Trump
are particularly big funds of Volodymyr Zelensky.
And the OS itself has also been talking about the need for Ukraine to have a new leader
and certainly have another election if we get to the point of a ceasefire and peace negotiation.
So there's all kinds of other ways in which absent the increase or the persistence of the conflict
on the front lines of the battlefield that Putin can try to get a grip on everything.
And he can continue to keep pressing lots of buttons inside of European politics and the US as well.
I mean, you've seen all kinds of things.
that the Russians have done lately to try to whip up, you know, sentiment and acrimony
and, you know, basically division within the United States and Europe.
You're a former U.S. National Security Council official, and just as an observer,
between, and I use this word loosely, the summit in Alaska, where I felt we were just embarrassed,
in between Donald Trump, I would argue, thrusting now what is going to be the largest consumer
economy in the world, India, into Russia's hands. I thought the most chilling photo 2025 was the
picture of Modi, Xi, and Putin. It strikes me that what we have done has done nothing but emboldened
and build the confidence of Putin. Your thoughts? Yeah, I think that's exactly the point.
which is why we need to do something different.
If you're in a hole and you keep on digging,
we're just going to end up right at the bottom of where you've laid out here.
And Modi was doing his own signaling very clearly.
This was at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization meeting
that happened to be in China ahead of President Xi,
presiding of a huge military parade in Beijing to mark the end of World War II in Asia.
And essentially, you know, to kind of pretend,
that it was China and the Soviet Union and Russia that brought an end to that war when we actually
know, of course, that the United States played a major role in ending World War II in Asia as
well, but was, you know, very pointedly excluded. And Modi was basically capitalizing on that
ability to signal back to the United States that he didn't take kindly to these imposition
of tariffs. And, you know, that gets back to what I said about Trump not wanting to do anything
directly, to counter Russia, but wanting to do things indirectly.
And he saw India as a weak link and thought he had a lot of leverage over India
because of India's desire to have access to the massive U.S. markets.
I said U.K. there by a slip of the tongue, but actually that leads to really my next point
that I want to make is that India and other countries do have vested interests in other places,
not just in the United States.
It's of course true that the United States is the world's biggest consumer market
in the sense of the market that everybody wants to gain access to.
And, I mean, China, of course, is right there too.
But, you know, traditionally people have wanted to get into the U.S. market to push forward in innovation.
And, you know, they see this as a kind of a testing ground, you know, for their own prosperity.
There's so many reasons to be in the United States.
But those reasons are not so whole for Europe.
China, India, Japan, South Korea, you know, Russia less so now, because of everything that's been happening,
have vested interest in the success of Europe.
As one of my colleagues here at Brookings is writing a book about,
the future of the world economy, and especially pointing out that China cannot pick up the slack.
If the United States takes itself off the scene, China is not going to keep the whole world economy
going. But, you know, Europe is obviously a significant place for investment, as well as a significant
source of foreign direct investment itself. India has these strong, historic, difficult ties,
obviously, with the United Kingdom. But there's a great deal of interest in Europe's success.
So this is an opportunity again for Europe to actually do something differently there
and to engage with India, Japan, South Korea, many other countries and also China, to basically say,
look, if this is the direction of travel here, you know, we need to do something different.
But you, in the case of China and other countries are supporting Russia in a war that is ruining
the future prospects for Europe.
And if you want to be part of our success as well, including on our own,
all of the different things for this would go for India rather than China that we're doing in the
military industrial space, then you need to do something about bringing that war to an end and
stop messing about in it. Because, you know, we're not just a playground here in between the United
States and all of you. I mean, that might be difficult, but, you know, it's one other thing
where I see that there could be a way of putting this in a different direction. But, you know,
when we constantly see things as a competition between the U.S. on the one side and, you know, everybody
else on the other, we then often feel to see where there are other opportunities.
I had read that Ukraine had damaged 17% of Russia's oil infrastructure, and obviously that has
different interpretations by what is meant by infrastructure. Isn't that potentially the key
or the solution here that if the Americans and the Europeans were to get serious and give the Ukrainian
what they need to take that number from 17 to 18 to 19,
just to slow march towards debilitating
or kind of definestrating the oil infrastructure,
at which point the economy does collapse.
I mean, this is, I think it's 50% of their GDP
is related to fossil fuels.
And I realize you're geopolitics,
but you also, it's impossible to do what you do
without being cognizant of military strategy.
Isn't that arguably the key here?
Well, look, the key certainly is reducing all of the revenue to the Russian state.
And as you've pointed out, oil and gas is pretty critical there in terms of its exports
and also the revenues directly to state coffers.
There's already been a reduction in the amount of gas that Russia is selling to Europe.
But oil remains the key, because in fact, oil is the biggest source of revenues over gas
for the Russian state directly.
And oil basically reaches the market
from Russia in various different means
directly, and look, there were still pipelines for oil.
When the pipeline that was blown up
in the North Sea, Nord Stream pipeline,
that was for gas.
Russian oil pipelines,
including the famous pipeline,
Dhrushba friendship,
you know, still go from Russia
directly into Eastern Europe,
into East Germany, for example,
and into Hungary and, you know, other places.
And we've heard the Hungarian said,
they have no desire whatsoever to stop buying, you know, Russian oil and, you know, gas sipping
and have it as well. But we're also getting countries like India. That's why Trump basically
imposed those tariffs on India because, I mean, it's recognizing that there are many different ways
in which Russian oil meets the market. It's not just the shadow fleet, you know, bringing
Russian oil. But it's also other countries buying and refining the Russian oil and creating, you know,
refined product. And that's another area, you know, that we really do have to tackle. And look,
European countries like France and many others, you know, continue to buy Russian oil one way or another.
I mean, you can't put some kind of little stamp on the, you know, hydrocarbon molecules.
But we can see, you know, exactly, you know, how integrated Russian oil still is into global
markets. But of course, that's going to have not going to affect. You know, at a time when, you know,
we are worried about, you know, the long-term economic health of, you know, the UK, of European
countries, Germany, and also the United States. Now, it's easy enough for the United States
to say some of these things as well, because the United States remains a major producer of oil
and gas. But some of the other actions would have to require the Saudis being on board,
you know, the whole OPEC countries to agree to all of this as well. So you'd have to engage in
some complex diplomacy. And it's not particularly clear to me right now.
So it gets back to some of the problems that we keep identifying here,
that are the major countries that are oil purchasers, you know,
want to engage in those kinds of negotiations and discussions.
Although if the United States wants to do that directly with Saudi Arabia
or other major oil producers of, you know, the consortiums to try to keep all prices down
while they put the squeeze on Russia.
And the Russians, you know, see this coming.
And, of course, they're heavily involved in their own Middle East diplomacy
in dealing with the Emirates and the Saudis themselves.
We'll be right back.
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We're back with more from Dr. Fiona Hill.
So speaking of diplomacy, Churchill said that the only thing worse fighting than fighting with your allies is fighting without them.
It feels as if in one fell swoop or just in five or six months.
I think of it just as a soccer mom in Madison, Wisconsin, could likely swing the election.
You know, the swing voter, right?
the small number of people that matter somewhere that can tip things have disproportionate power.
It struck me that the new swing votes globally are the kingdom of Saudi Arabia and India.
Big economies, militaries, sort of straddling the fence.
They purposely position themselves as the swing votes.
And just strategically, you really want to be nice to the swing voters.
And it strikes me that in short order, we have taken India, who as an academic, I just am so upset that we have trashed this amazing connective tissue we've had between, I know, you know, you're, you run a university or you're the, I believe you're the chancellor. Is that correct?
That's right. I have done a university in the UK, yeah.
I mean, it's just impossible to go through any world-class university and not find just incredibly talented people from India.
and we had this great connective tissue with India,
English speakers, more PhDs than anywhere else in the world,
a democracy, and then the kingdom,
we've had military bases, really strong relationships,
and it seems as if we have purposely thrust India into Russia's arms
and somewhat alienated or put a chill on relationships with the kingdom.
I just can't imagine, just to be blunt,
I just can't imagine anything more stupid geopolitically to alienate the forces that have a disproportionate
amount of power because of their economic strength, where they sit regionally, and the fact that
they were, quite frankly, kind of up for grabs, if you will. And I don't mean to put words in your
mouth. So your thoughts on that, on those statements? Well, look, I think that's exactly
the right way to be framing all of this. Because we're in a period of incredible flux, the
international system has collapsed. That's just, you know, admitted, even though we've got the UN General
Assembly, you know, still going on, and there are a lot of countries out there that actually
see some value still in the UN system as a way of, you know, being able to mediate, modulate,
and, you know, actually agree on, you know, some collective things. The United States is,
you know, basically declared the system that it built itself dead and is just basically like
everybody else jostling for power and they've got a free-for-all that has replaced it. And in
that instance, you know, as you're pointing out here, if the United States is just one of many
countries, the more you early in it, the more difficult, you make things for yourself. And those
swing countries, you've absolutely accurately pointed out to India and Saudi Arabia being pretty key
there, and I would say all the Gulf, you know, so it's the Emirates collectively pretty important.
You've also got Brazil, which President Trump, you know, has taken to task for basically prosecuting
former President Bolsonaro, who was a personal supporter of Trump's, you know, for basically staging a coup in
Brazil. He's alienated the Brazilians pretty effectively there, too, was a large power in the
Western Hemisphere, and the Brazilians are not very happy at all by the state of affairs, and they have
international clout too. South Africa, another, you know, major player regionally. And Trump has
absolutely ruined that relationship, you know, as well for a whole variety of different reasons.
And, you know, we could go on like this with basically treating everybody with a very heavy hand
and forgetting that one of the biggest reasons for US success was soft power. And soft power
manifested itself in many different ways, but also in diplomacy. And in the extension of humanitarian aid,
has all been abruptly ended to countries around the world. So yes, absolutely, if you look to the
future to a system that is already taking on more of regional structures, the United States is
the one that's pushing itself into isolation because you've ruptured the relationships with
Europe. There's a new report come out from the European Council and Foreign Relations,
seeing that the United States is doing more to export culture wars to Europe right now and
interfering in European domestic politics than it is to being a defender of, you know, the traditional
fundamental bases of European democracies and also of their economies, let alone what we've all
just talked about, the United States, moving away from being engaged in collective defense in
Europe. So in that regard, I mean, the future looks pretty grim from a US perspective.
I think people are going to slowly realize over time that they've done a awful lot to undermine
the bases of the United States power
at large globally
and the United States may well be heading towards
being a middle power of its own
of its own devising
because Russia has already declined
in a major way in terms of its power
from the superpower status of the Soviet Union.
Russia's never really replaced that
and we've talked about all the problems
that Russia's facing.
I would say that this war in Ukraine is going to be
even if it's a victory for Russia
a very ferric victory, you know, very similar to what happened to the United Kingdom,
great Britain after World War I and World War II, supposedly the pinnacle of achievement
and actually the death knell, not just for the British Empire, but for, you know, Britain is a really
robust policy and economy. And I think that's where the United States is heading itself.
It really struck me what you just said, that America's biggest export or major export has
become culture wars. It's just, that's such an...
interesting way to summarize that, okay, we should be selling NVIDIA, GPU, hopper chips,
and escalades. And to a certain extent, I think of my industry as being a tremendous export,
you know, we get foreigners to come over and spend half a million dollars at 90 points of margins
such that they can hang out in Soho at NYU or at Stanford. And then now all we're doing
is exporting kind of havoc and chaos and making things harder for the leaders. It feels
is if one of the frustrations of being a progressive here in the United States is I feel like
there's this enormous vacuum and opportunity in white space for leadership. And a lot of Democrats
are really frustrated that no one appears to be stepping into the void. I'm sure you're cognizant of
you know, Governor Newsom got a lot of credit for sort of hitting back, even if sort of a funny
mocking way. But there doesn't appear to be a lot of like leadership pushing back on quote
unquote Trump. Do you see anyone stepping into the void in Europe to show the kind of leadership
they need to push back on Putin? I have trouble identifying. It just strikes me as an
enormous opportunity for somebody to step up and be seen as the leader of Europe right now,
at least from a rhetorical standpoint, pushing back on Putin. Yeah, look, I think it's the same
problem in both places. I do think that leadership can come from unexpected quarters in the United
States as well, more from the periphery than it's necessarily going to come from the centre. And that
doesn't mean California and the governors, you know, for example. It can be Spencer Cox, you know,
just recently has been, I think, modelling great leadership in the work of, you know, a massive
national tragedy and upheaval in the United States. And we've seen other, you know, kind of
moral leaders coming forward, governors of, you know, states that people don't mostly think about
Utah's, you know, part of that as well. You're seeing or more people in the United States wanting
to run as independent for office and coming from unexpected quarters as well. And I think that's,
when you look at Europe, is maybe where we're headed as well. It's going to be the leaders of
countries that we've thought of as more peripheral than, you know, the big three of the United Kingdom,
Germany and France.
Although you've got a new president in Germany, Friedrich Mertz, who's trying to find his
position, he's not really being seen right now as a kind of a major force in Germany in
the way that maybe Chancellor Merkel was before, though, her reputation and legacy have
become somewhat tarnished as well as people have looked back, all in the way previous
German leaders really tended to dominate.
And in the UK as well, of course, Prime Minister Starrer was under all kinds of political
difficulties and still trying to find his fee to year on. And President Macron, you know,
his snap election didn't really help. He's just going through prime ministers in the same way that
the UK went through prime ministers, you know, in the previous conservative government. And
it's really, I think, going to be up to a constellation of leaders from some of the countries
like Norway, Sweden, Finland, you know, for example, it was very interesting when you looked
at who came to see Trump in the Oval Office immediately after.
Alaska. I think you've got a kind of a sense there that you might have a Europe by a kind of a leadership
committee. I mean, yes, Mertz and Macron and Stama were there. But you also had Ursula von der Leyen
from the European Commission. You had Mark Ruta from Norway, from NATO, a former president of
Prime Minister of the Netherlands, but now in his NATO, Secretary General, and previously you'd
had the Norwegian Secretary General for NATO, who was in the Norwegian government. But you also
had their Alexander Stubb from Finland. And there's an interesting choice as a new member
of NATO, but Alexander Stubb is extraordinarily competent. Again, all kinds of previous
positions in the Finnish government before becoming president. But he actually is deeply steeped
in the United States. He studied in South Carolina, he's an amazing golf player, and he's managed
to make a connection with Trump.
You also had Georgia Miloni from Italy,
who has been an unexpected success story
in her ability to manage the relationship with Trump
and has been surprisingly, given her background,
outspoken and supportive of doing more for Ukraine.
So if you start to kind of look at this,
I think you can see that there could be a constellation,
a group of European leaders who could work together.
But it's not going to be the big three
making those decisions. It's not going to be like, you know, when Kirsten-Jus asked a question,
who do you call in Europe, or people used to think, well, you'd call Chancellor Merkel,
or you might have called, you know, way back in the Colvoid, probably have called Margaret Thatcher.
It's not going to be like that, you know, anymore. I think it's going to be groupings of European
leaders really working together, and they clearly coordinated and worked together, you know,
very carefully before, you know, they went out to the Oval Office. So I think you're going to see
more of a kind of a tag team development in Europe, but they're really going to have to take it
up a notch. And frankly, if we go back to the United States, that might be the kind of thing you
see here, groupings of governors. You know, you're already seeing on vaccine mandates, for example,
I live in Maryland. I work in Washington, D.C., and I've, you know, just paid attention to the whole
of the sort of the northeast of the United States has got together to, you know, present alternatives
for vaccine mandates. Same is happening out in California in the West Coast. And you start on those
kinds of issues that, you know, obviously have a great deal of importance for public health, and you
move on from there. We may see this taking root on all kinds of other issues. Just as I said,
there might be more of these coalitions in Europe, starting to do the same thing outside of
the military arena, but also in diplomacy. It's encouraging that you believe there's greater
coordination across the EU, because from an outsider standpoint, I just see it as sclerotic
and everyone has veto power, but no one actually has the power to get anything done. It's
just a lot. It feels like, and it's encouraging for you to say, no, they're more, I'm
misreading that. Well, I think once you break out of, you know, the confines of the European
Union itself and of NATO, where, you know, again, also the US has a major veto of the things.
You start to see countries using other arrangements. It's kind of creative, right?
Because you've got all these agreements I mentioned before between countries in Ukraine,
but you've also got agreements among themselves. The UK and Germany and Germany and France
and the UK and France have all had major bilateral agreements recently.
that go beyond just military affairs.
The UK and Norway have as well.
Those two countries are totally entwined together.
70% of UK gas comes from just Norway.
And a lot of the wind power generation in the UK
comes from Norway as well.
You know, it's sort of these ironies of history.
You know, you think about the Viking invasions.
And now the Norwegians bring wind and gas to the United Kingdom.
But it means that they actually have to look out for each other
and their critical national infrastructure is one in the same.
him. So that's encouraging, and I think that, you know, the whole can be greater than some of
its parts, but I can't think of a conflict like this where there weren't central figures
who demonstrated just outstanding leadership. And right now I would argue the most, I don't know,
consequential leaders, well, I mean, you always have to list the U.S. president, but I would argue
right now, that's not the kind of leadership that's going to help us right now. I would argue
that Putin, Zelensky, and she are the most respected and feared leaders, and also the most
consistent. I guess what I'm asking for from you is someone who straddles between a deep
understanding of European politics and U.S. politics and who's observed leaders. Who do you see
anybody up and coming, either across Europe or in the U.S.? Or you think if someone had to,
if someone told me that in five or ten years, there was a,
someone had emerged as a dramatic leader, either as it relates to the war in Ukraine or running for president the next time.
Do any, like, who are you most impressed by?
You know, what, it's often people who are right now outside of the elected leadership.
You know, I'd mentioned that I'd actually been very deeply impressed by Governor Cox and the way that he handled, you know, the recent events in Utah.
You know, but, I mean, it's not usual for someone from Utah to rise to the national prominence.
and, you know, could quite easily fizzle unless he gets, you know, kind of the backing of other
governors and other elected officials who want to reach out across these parties and divides
that are really pulling us, you know, down and down in a spiral at the moment.
But I do see that there's all kinds of people now coming forward who want to run as independent
candidates and, you know, kind of expressing their voices.
You know, we may find that the elected, you know, leadership of both the Republican
what's left of the Republican Party
and the Democratic Party
we said what's left of that too
start to kind of get challenged
by people coming from the outside.
You get, you know, look,
there's an enormous influence from podcasts.
You yourself have a very successful
influential podcast,
but we look at all the millions of people
who are listening to these
and listening to people speak there
and who might get ideas, you know,
from themselves,
hopefully good ones,
in terms of going out there
and trying to do something more positive
to help people,
of going out there and trying to make change
in local communities,
He's out in regions and in states.
I was recently out in Nebraska for a family wedding.
And one person who's come to my attention
who's running as an independent for Senate race
out Nebraska is a guy called Dan Osborne,
who I'd come into contact with a few years ago
when he was leading the union at Kellogg's,
you know, the cereal plant out in Nebraska in a strike.
And he just had a lot of really sensible things to say.
It's just like an ordinary guy from the shop floor, former veterans served in the Navy.
You know, has come up with some just, you know, pretty sensible perspectives on things.
And you see a whole host of people like this have decided, look, this system is not working for me.
So maybe I'll just try, you know, to go out there.
And even if I don't, you know, succeed in getting elected to public offices, he's trying this twice now.
At least I might get a movement going of people who want to change things.
And maybe we start by changing things in our local areas and our community.
communities and in our regions at the kind of state level, you know, and that kind of over time
starts to force a change at the center. Look, the federal government's being dismantled.
The states are pretty much on their own right now as well. And, you know, I think the sinking
realization is coming in for a lot of people, you know, that this isn't quite what they expected
that they were voting for. They didn't think that all of the safety nets, the insurance policies
were going to be removed. And it's the same in Europe. You know, Europeans absolutely made a huge
fundamental error for decades, just relying on the United States and basically outsourcing their
security. It was always a mistake. And now they've realized it. And they're going to have to do something
different. And they might not be able to do it at the centre with the institutions that they've got.
They might have to do it by coming together in other formats and with unexpected groups of people.
As I said, you know, I think someone like Alexander Stubb in Finland has been, you know, quite the
leader. His predecessor, Salininista, was also a renowned for his leadership. You have a whole
host of other prime ministers and figures that come from the Nordic and the Baltic countries.
Kaya Kalas, for example, who's the high representative for foreign policy in the European Union
as a former president of Estonia who have great moral leadership. And I think that's, you know,
where we're really going to see change come. The question is, can it come soon enough?
quick enough, given the dire nature of the situation that we face right now, I'm not that
confident. But I am somewhat optimistic that people are starting to rise the occasion, frankly
because they've got no choice, because we all go down together under these kinds of circumstances.
So just in our remaining time here, you've been very generous with us. I want to switch tact a little
bit or switch gears. A doctor, do you have children? I do. I have one daughter. So something we think a lot,
about here is the struggles of young men. And I did a, actually, Secretary of Homeland Security,
Secretary of Majorcas reached out to me and said, I want to have a discussion. And we spent
the whole time talking about the security risks posed by young men who are searching deeply
online and could potentially be weaponized or radicalized by bad actors. And he was very thoughtful
about what does that mean for our ports, our infrastructure, our military,
I'm curious in the context of foreign policy and military policy. Have you given any thought to the plight? And this isn't something unique to the U.S. We see this across Europe that young men for a variety of reasons, biological, economic, sociological, biological, are just not doing as well as they once were and also relative to their female counterparts. And I always like to add, we should celebrate and do nothing around the
the progress of our young women.
But this is a real big issue, I think, in the U.S.
Anyways, I'm going to stop there.
Have you given any thought?
I think it's an issue globally, and I have thought about it a lot.
You know, one of my colleagues here at Brookings is Richard Reeves, you know,
who's set up the whole institute now for boys and men.
Yeah, exactly, you know, and he's extremely good.
I've spent a lot of time talking to him, of course, my husband is a man.
So there's also that we spend a lot of time talking about this.
You know, we also, you know, worry that, you know, my daughter, you know, is 18, just gone out to college, just didn't have the same, you know, sets of male friends that I did. I mean, many of my best friends growing up were men. I'm still on list serves with them all. And, you know, I, you know, we talk about this all of the time and, you know, wonder, you know, where is this going to go in the future? And in the course of the strategic defense review for the UK, we looked at recruitment for the military. We're worried about all of these issues. And we're worried a lot about. And we're worried a lot about.
the educational opportunities for young men as well as young women and how, you know, if we look back
over the course of time, those opportunities have shrunk. The biggest divide, and I think you
and I discussed this the last time in our societies is on education, between the 60% of people
who haven't had access to a two or four-year college or even, you know, vocational training
and the 40% that have. And of course, all of this is changing very rapidly as we get into a
World War AI is going to substitute for people, including young men in many of those jobs that
people have been diverted to in the past. And, you know, I think we have to really start thinking
about this across the board as how the whole of society tackles it. It's not going to be just
one easy fix. It's not just going to be through the educational system. That is certainly for sure.
But it's going to be having to be, although the K-12 system does need to be changed and adapted
to the needs of young men, as I think Richard and Reeves and many others have pointed out.
I have another colleague, Rebecca Winthrop here at Brookings,
who's just done a fabulous new book on the disengaged team,
looking at how we really fail kids in middle school,
where they all check out, and that's often when young men get into the very problems
that you're talking about in middle school,
where they go off into video games and off onto the internet,
because they're just not engaged at all in school.
and she and others have, you know, really been featuring different ways in which you engage people.
You've got to have more efforts out in society for more community engagement.
You know, that's what the tragedy of what's happening now in the United States is we're cutting back on all of these federal programs, like AmeriCorps, volunteering, all kinds of other arenas where we were really trying to help mentor young men.
So, look, this is, I think, absolutely one of the most serious issues.
that we need to tackle.
And it does have massive security implications.
I mean, look, a lot of the hacking and the cyber hacking that's been happening has been
as much from teenage guys as it has been from adversaries like China, North Korea, and Russia,
though they've obviously been tapping into that dissatisfaction and grievance.
You know, we see that in the acts of mass gun violence,
and it's not just in the United States, but in other places where people have.
have access to going or stabbings or all kinds of violence, you know, in the UK on that football
fields, soccer stadiums, you know, for example. So I think you're absolutely right in highlighting
this. And I think as societies, we have to have more of a national conversation about what we can
do. But it doesn't mean that we cut away all of those resources. And again, I think that's where
you get into the communities and the local governments. I'm actually just about to go
tomorrow up to Portland, Maine,
well, there's an amazing set of community efforts
to bring young people in,
often featuring a special outreach to boys through sports.
And one instance, there's a great organisation
called Portland Community Squash,
so the game of squash, as opposed to the vegetable,
which can cause a bit of confusion
it certainly did for me when I first heard about it.
I thought, what? This is about, you know, vegetable growing.
But anyway, it's the game of squash.
And you could do this, obviously, tennis, soccer, football, you know, basketball, you name it.
And they create a whole community centre around this where they bring in the kids and their families.
And they start in middle school and they mentor them all the way through.
And the state of Maine provides some support for this.
The city of Portland does.
And there's a lot of private donors.
And they're trying to take this as an idea across the country as a new version of the YMCA,
which was, of course, the Young Men's Christian Association was also intended to get young men off the street into sports
into more healthy and spiritually guided activities.
So, look, I think there are all kinds of examples out there,
but we've got to lean into it and not just, you know,
take it for granted that someone's going to deal with it.
Dr. Fiona Hill is a senior fellow at Brookings,
chancellor of Durham University and a former U.S. National Security Council official
specializing in Russian and European affairs.
Fiona is also the best-selling author of,
There is Nothing for You Here, Finding Opportunity in the 21st Century
and a leading expert on.
on geopolitics.
Dr. Hill,
I loved when you said
that podcasts
were beginning to
punch above the way
class and have more
of an influence.
And I think the reason
we're able to do that
is we bring out
outstanding,
thoughtful, fearless guests,
and you're one of them.
This is your second time
on the show.
Your first one was
one of the most
downloaded shows
we have ever
registered in 400 shows.
So your work is resonating
and we very much
appreciate your time.
Oh, thanks so much,
Scott.
It's really great to be with you.
Thanks so much.
Algebra of Happiness.
Being extremely online, we think of being extremely online is a
diagnosis for some young man who is playing video games and online 16 hours a day and then
harms himself, harms someone else, or is radicalized, or just spends all of his time online doing
unproductive things and just has a terrible view of the world. And there's no doubt there's a
correlation between feeling bad about the world and how much time you spend on social media,
which, see above it said at the top of the show has created a rage machine that is the most
profitable machine and history. But ask yourself if you are extremely online. After the assassination
of Charlie Kirk, I just went down a rabbit hole online, spending a ton of time on social media
and reading stuff, commenting on stuff, producing content. And last weekend, literally, I noticed
I was spending no time with my family or my dogs, which are very, you know, huge sources of
mental well-being for me. I'm getting more cynical, more depressed, more angry, and disconnecting
from the real world. And here's the thing. The real world, generally speaking, off your screen
is sloppy, difficult, challenging, and very rewarding in a way that no online environment platform
algorithm can replace. And when I go extremely online and spend too much time online, I find I get
very cynical, very angry. And quite frankly, start just, my mental health takes a hit. And it happens
slowly and you don't even recognize it. And the algorithms will recognize where you are politically
or what you feel strongly about. It'll pick up on that. And as a means of keeping you glued to your
screen, start reinforcing those beliefs by making the other side look like evil, monstrous people
and getting you more and more cemented in your own beliefs and raging such that you believe
that it's the enemy within, that it's your neighbor that's the problem, that it's the other
political party that's your problem. And in fact, and I'm not suggesting I don't mean to diminish the
problems the U.S. is facing right now, but we look away from what are bigger problems. Do you have a good
relationship with your partner? Do your kids feel like you're present? Are you taking care of your
health? Do you have a good relationship with your parents? Are you making friends? I mean, that's the
shit that's really important. The thing that ultimately drives the happiness or the lack thereof in your
life is your relationships and being online a lot i have found uh creates a certain division or
sequesters me from the most important things in my life and the things that keep me sane
and that is relationships and getting outside and getting in the sunlight and um exercising so
yeah maybe you don't have to be radicalized you don't have to be playing video game 16 hours a day
But as Darth Vader said, search your feelings, you know this to be true, are you spending too much time online and is it getting in the way? Have you decided that the problems ailing us are so severe? And have you been kind of fooled by the algorithms into believing that these problems and your views on these problems should diminish the amount of time and effort you put into offline? Your relationships, exercise.
being outdoors.
Or simply put, maybe have been radicalized,
but maybe it's lowercase radicalized,
and you just need to stop it
and do what Governor Cox suggested,
and that is get outside and touch grass.
This episode was produced by Jennifer Sanchez.
Our assistant producer is Laura Jenaire.
Drew Burroughs is our technical director.
Thank you for listening to the Propgeepot from Propgeen Media.
Thank you.