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It's Monday, October 14.
Tonight: One of the most significant political dynamics in the West is the massive breach between political and media elites on the one hand and ordinary citizens on the other. Elites throughout the West increasingly express scorn and bewilderment towards the views, political concerns, and political preferences of ordinary citizens, and those citizens, in turn, harbor more and more contempt and distrust for those elites, perceiving the condescension and judgment directed at them. All of this has caused a Versailles-like climate where our modern-day aristocrats are increasingly lounging in the luxury behind guarded walls and inside elaborate palaces, while the masses struggle and suffer and seethe outside the gates, angrier and angrier at those whose indifference toward their lives could not be any clearer. This explains why populations throughout the democratic world continue to vote in ways that are maddening and confounding to many media and political elites – for Brexit, for Bolsonaro, for Trump, Marine Le Pen, and even the AfD in Germany: it's because these media elites live completely different lives than those they are judging and thus have utterly different priorities and preferences from the vast majority of people.
All of this was vividly illustrated by a somewhat contentious exchange when Trump's vice-presidential running mate, JD Vance, appeared on an ABC News program with long-time host Martha Raddatz. The two exchanged aggressively different views on the harms and dangers of unfettered immigration as well as D.C.’s prioritization of foreign wars over its own citizens' needs with regard to agencies like FEMA. These exchanges highlighted this breach that is central to American and Western political trends and so we want to examine this exchange and the broader points a bit illustrates.
Then: Two new studies associated with Brown University were released this week. One of them detailed how much money the U.S. – over the last year and then for prior decades before that – has actually given to and expended for the state of Israel and its various wars. Although the official amount is extremely high in the billions and billions of dollars, the actual cost, as the study demonstrates, is much higher. Another related study documented the actual number of Palestinian lives lost in Gaza and the West Bank since October 7. Both these studies shed significant light on the U.S.'s growing direct military involvement in that region in service of Israel. We are thus happy to speak with two of the authors of this study, William D. Hartung, who is a senior research fellow at the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft and an expert on the arms industry and U.S. military spending, and Sophia Stamatopoulou-Robbins, an award-winning anthropologist and filmmaker with extensive fieldwork in Israel, Palestine, and Greece, who holds a Ph.D. from Columbia University. The studies that they helped out there were truly very eye-opening.
For now, welcome to a new episode of System Update, starting right now.