The following is an abridged transcript from System Update’s most recent episode. You can watch the full episode on Rumble or listen to it in podcast form on Apple, Spotify, or any other major podcast provider.
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There is a highly unusual and consequential purge of some of the highest national security officials taking place. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, in particular, has had his long-time and most trusted confidants, whom he chose just two months ago for the most influential policy-making positions reporting directly to him, now fired.
While this sort of bureaucratic intrigue is often opaque in Washington – and Hegseth, the ultimate team player for Trump, is insisting that there is nothing out of the ordinary taking place – one cannot help but notice that several of his fallen advisors are among the most vocal skeptics, if not outright opponents, of a U.S. military conflict with Iran, beginning with his long-time friend and former marine Dan Caldwell.
We'll examine what is clear in all of these events, and whether the war drums beating more and more loudly every day in Washington against Tehran can't really be stopped.
Then, the independent investigative journalist, Lee Fang, has written today on his Substack about the new NIH regulations. He'll be with us tonight to discuss them, but also the broader implications of the censorship campaigns that they represent.
One of the things that you realize for the first time if you live outside of the United States is just how aberrational it is for a country to constantly spend its time talking about which country it ought to go to war with next.
It's usually unheard of for most countries to even consider the possibility of a war with another country or bombing other countries or attacking other countries, let alone to actually do so. In the United States, we have an endless array, a really, literally endless array of military conflicts, bombing campaigns, wars, invasions, and all kinds of covert actions in other countries as well.
Poll after poll constantly demonstrate that people are eager for an end to endless wars, that these wars are not in the interest of American citizens or American interests. Candidates who run on a platform of being anti-war, of avoiding war, as Barack Obama did, as Donald Trump did, tend to do extremely well because they are telling the American people what they already want and believe, which is that these wars are being fought in a way that not only doesn't benefit their lives, but in so many ways undermines and subverts and prejudices it.
The war in Iraq is something that should have put an end to this forever. It was the supreme expression of a war begun and sold based on falsehoods and lies, not just about the cause of the war, but also how the war would end up being prosecuted. We were told it'd be over in a few weeks. “We're so much more powerful than Iraq. We're just gonna remove the Saddam Hussein regime. We're gonna be welcomed as liberators. It's gonna be quick in and quick out. And then we're gonna have freedom and democracy spreading throughout the Middle East.” Absolutely none of that happened.