

Parallax Views w/ J.G. Michael
J.G.
A podcast where politics, history, and culture are examined from perspectives you may not have considered before. Call it a parallax view.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Dec 9, 2022 • 1h 53min
Money-Driven Politics in an Age of Global Tumult w/ Thomas Ferguson/Railroad Workers, Corporate Power, and Congress w/ Jack Rasmus
On this edition of Parallax Views, Dr. Thomas Ferguson, Professor Emeritus of Political Science at the University of Massachusetts Boston and author of Golden Rule: The Investment Theory of Party Competition and the Logic of Money-Driven Political Systems, returns to discuss the current social/economic/political situations in the U.S. and place it within the context of growing tumult across the globe. Among the issues discussed in this conversation:
- Disruption and the world economy; energy crises, inflation, growing economic pressures on people; strikes in the U.K., the recent far-right coup attempt in Germany, and the downfall of Peru's President Pedro Castillo (who attempted to dissolve the Peruvian Congress)
- Oil and gas prices
- The Georgia runoff election that saw Democrat Raphael Warnock vs. Republican Herschel Walker
- Incremental change in the balance of political power
- Matt Taibbi, Elon Musk, and the Twitter Files
- Is the global pandemic really over? Biden, student debt, and the pandemic
- Railroad workers and sick leave pay
- Nancy Pelosi, corporate Democrats, Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez the Squad, Bernie Sanders, and progressives
- Biden, the National Labor Relations Board, and the broader state of American labor
- Crypto, the FTX scandal, Sam Bankman-Fried, dark money, the politicians who received donations from SBF, and deregulation
- How a deep recession could lead to Donald Trump's comeback; Trump's survival is dependent on the economy
- Employment and unemployment
- The problem Democrats face leading up to 2024; the Democratic Party as a "Headless Horseman" right now
- Could the railroad strike issue come back to haunt Democrats?
- The polarizations of social blocs in America
- Rural areas and U.S. elections
- The American upper middle classes and Jan 6th
- The midterms were very close; the shift was minute
- Policy errors in addressing the pandemic
- Interests rates are up and U.S. debt costs are rising
- The multipolar world and the dangers of escalation; U.S. vs. China and de-escalation; the Ukraine/Russia War
- The Golden Rule: he makes the money makes the rules
- And much, much more!
In this second segment of the show, Dr. Jack Rasmus, author of The Scourge of Neoliberalism: US Economic Policy from Reagan to Trump, returns to discuss his analysis of the bipartisan shutdown by the Biden administration and Congress of a potential railroad workers strike.
Among the topics covered in this conversation
- Previous times that Congress has intervened to break a strike: the Railway Labor Act in 1926 and the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947; government working on behalf of corporate interests; corporate power's attack on labor in the 1920s and after WWII; the history of rail strikes leading up to the 1920s
- How the labor movement has been tied down by a legal web designed to prevent strategic strikes from occurring
- Government intervention, bargaining power, the freezing of negotiations
- The issue of paid sick leave and the issue of scheduling; paid leave and the disciplining of labor; labor shortages and wage costs
- Nancy Pelosi, the 90 day "cooling off" period, unions, the AFL-CIO, and anti-labor legislation
- The corporate wing of the Democratic Party, Bernie Sanders, The Squad, and progressives; left-liberals as constantly being slapped down and outmaneuvered by the corporate wing of the Democratic Party; the Democratic Leadership Council and the takeover of the Democratic Party; thinking in class terms rather than political terms
- Pelosi's legislative trick, anti-strike legislation, and the proposed sick leave legislation that had no chance of passing through the sent
- The 24% wage increase over 5 years for rail workers and the effect of inflation over the last 3 years
- Republicans, Democrats, and the labor movement
- The media, propaganda, and the economy; oil companies, price gouging, gas prices, sanctions on Russia, and inflation; the job market, full-time jobs, and part-time jobs; the ideological apparatus of the ruling class
- Neoliberalism, grassroots resistance, and the need for a workers party

Dec 8, 2022 • 1h 33min
New Film FARHA Tells a Coming-of-Age Survival Story Set Amidst the Nakba w/ Darin J. Sallam/The Sordid History of Guantanamo Bay w/ Andy Worthington
On this edition of Parallax Views, Jordanian filmmaker Darin J. Sallam joins Parallax Views to discuss her feature-length debut film Farha. Written and directed by Sallam, Farha tells the coming-of-age story of a brave, curious young woman (played by Karam Taher in a tour-de-force acting debut) living in 1948 Palestine who dreams of going to the city, receiving an education, and becoming a teacher. Farha's life is irrevocably altered, however, when Israeli military invade her Palestinian village in a series of violent events that have become known in the Arab world as the Nakba or "The Catastrophe". Farha is a deeply moving story of survival that attempts to shed light on a story Palestinian Arabs have passed down through the generations and may well mark the first feature-length film that isn't a documentary to feature the Nakba as a key element of its story. In this conversation Darin and I discuss a number of topics including:
- Her experiences directing the film
- Working with the cast, which included such well-known actors of the Arab world as Ali Sulliman of the TV series Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan and Ashraf Barhom (The Kingdom, Paradise Now); the casting of the lead character
- The meaning of the title Farha and how it refers to not only the main character but the Arabic word for "Joy"
- The development of the movie, the difficulty getting funding, and depicting the events of the Nakba in a thoughtful manner
- The emotions that came out during the filming of the production especially amongst the Gazan refugees who served as extras in the film
- The motif of water in the movie
- The accusations of antisemitism that have been made against Farha
- Whether or not the story of Farha ends on a hopeful note
- The approach taken to depicting the Nakba in Farha; why Darin chose not to show gory violence
- Farha as a universal, humane story which can speak to many different people
- The passing down of the story of the Nakba throughout the generations and putting that story to film
- Does Darin see a bit of Farha in herself?
- The positive reactions to the film thus far
- Telling the truth
- Farha as not just a story about the Nakba but a story about love, community, loss, trauma, and memory
- Liberation and loss; the open wound of the Nakba
- Being thrust into traumatic events without a choice; surviving the trauma and living because one must do so
- Farha being submitted to the Academy Award
- And much, much more!
In the second segment of the show, journalsit Andy Worthington, author of The Guantanamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America's Illegal Prison, joins us to discuss the unsettling history of military torture and detainment at Guantanamo Bay since 2002. Guantanamo Bay has been in the news, at least within the alternative media sphere again, after former Gitmo prisoner Mansoor Adayfi claimed in an interview with Mike Prysner of The Empire Files and Eyes Left Podcast that he was tortured by U.S. 2024 Presidential hopeful Governor Ron DeSantis at the infamous military prison. This conversation is a bit interesting as when it was recorded Andy was skeptical that the timelines surrounding DeSantis' time at Guantanmo Bay lined up with Mansoor's testimony (although this is not to say that he thinks Mansoor was lying, but rather that the story needed more clarification). However, about five days after our initial conversation, Andy and I spoke again. At that point Andy had spoken with Mansoor in order to clarify the issues. This clarification appears to add more weight to Mansoor's claim and means that the DeSantis/Gitmo story merits serious investigation.
Among the topics discussed in this conversation:
- The origins of Guantanamo Bay (alternatively known as GTMO or Gitmo) and the types of torture that went on there
- A prison designed by the George W. Bush administration in the early days of the War on Terror to detainee terrorism suspects without much interference/oversight from courts with regards to what would go on there
- Human rights abuses at Guantanamo Bay
- How was the veil of secrecy around what went on Guantanamo Bay pierced?
- The "enhanced interrogation" euphemism
- Guantanamo Bay in the Obama and Trump years
- Why has Guantanamo Bay not been shut down despite the controversy around it?
- Obama's campaign promise to close the prison
- The question of torture's effectiveness in dealing with terrorism
- Former detainee Mansoor Adayfi's claims that Ron DeSantis, as a JAG officer, was involved in torture at Guantanamo Bay
- The Guantanamo Bay hunger strikes of 2005 (and 2006)
- Waterboarding
- And much, much more

Dec 6, 2022 • 58min
Is Turkey Preparing for a Ground Operation in Syria? w/ Giorgio Cafiero
On this edition of Parallax Views, Giorgio Cafiero, CEO of Gulf State Analytics, returns to discuss the rumblings about a potential Turkish ground operation in northern Syria. Is Turkey invading northeast Syria about to happen? Also how will the U.S. likely respond if it does? What should be made of U.S. response to the recent Turkish strikes in Syria and the possibility of a Turkish ground offensive there? Among the topics discussed in this conversation:
- The perspective from Ankara, the capital of Turkey, in relation to Syria
- Overview of the tumult in Syria since the 2011 uprising against the regime of Bashar al-Assad and the Ba'athist government in Damascus; the Syrian Civil War; the rise of the Islamic State;
- Why did the overthrow of Assad not happen?; how has Assad managed to hold onto power?
- The Kurds, the YGP (People's Defense Units), and the PKK (Kurdistan Workers' Party); the U.S. relationship with the YGP and operations against ISIS
- U.S. shifting focuses in regards to Syria over the years; U.S. military presence in Syria
- Turkish foreign policy concerns and interests; the ambitious nature of Turkey's foreign policy goals in regards to the Arab world; Turkey and geopolitics, Erdogan; the upcoming Turkish elections
- Russia and Iran in Syria and the effect of the Ukraine/Russia War on U.S. foreign policy concerns
- The effect of ISIS and jihadist terrorism on the region; allegations of different state actors supporting ISIS
- Iran and the protest movement there
- Risks for Turkey if a ground offensive happens
- Turkey as an ally to the U.S. and why this may keep the U.S. from taking strong action (beyond condemnatory statements from public officials) against Turkey's current posturing on Syria
- Turkey views YPG as linked with PKK and as a security threat
- No love lost between Erdogan and Assad; if there is a reconciliation it won't be rosy but rather pragmatic and interests-based
- Sunni Islamism, the Muslim Brotherhood, Egypt, Tunisia, and shifts in Turkish foreign policy
- Turkey and relationship resets in the Arab world; Turkey and the economy; Turkish business and commercial ties in the Arab world and specifically the Gulf States
- U.S. says it's opposed to a Turkish invasion, but when push comes to shove Giorgio believes the U.S. won't do much against Turkey
- U.S.-Turkey tensions before the Ukraine conflict, the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and Turkey role in the Ukraine/Russia conflict
- What are Washington's concerns when it comes to a Turkish military campaign in northern Syria?; fear that ISIS could be a beneficiary of a ground offensive; the view from Moscow as also being afraid of the consequences of a Turkish ground operation
- Kurdish separatism and fears from Iraq, Iran, and Turkey of a Kurdish state forming
- Historic tensions between Turkey and the Kurds; repression of Kurds in Turkey
- Where is the Turkey/Syria situation headed from here?
- And much, much more

Dec 4, 2022 • 1h 45min
Railroad Workers Sound Off on Their Grievances, Biden, Sick Leave, and the Rail Carriers w/ Marilee Taylor, Jeff Kurtz, and Maximilian Alvarez
On this edition of Parallax Views, Maximillian Alvarez, Editor-in-Chief of the Real News Network, joins the show alongside Marilee Taylor and Jeff Kurtz of Railroad Workers United to discuss the recent struggle between railroad workers and rail carriers over paid sick leave. President Joe Biden and Congress recently struck down a rail workers strike over the issue. In this conversation we'll hear from Marilee and Jeff about the plight of the workers and their anger over what has transpired over the last few days with President Biden and Congress. Maximillian will give context to how this situation arose as a journalist that has been covering this developing issue since January 2022.
Among the topics covered:
- Comparing the events happening under Biden to President Ronald Reagan's shutting down of the air traffic controllers strike in 1981
- A potential mass exodus of railroad workers from their profession
- Pay isn't the only issue that exists for workers; sick leave and quality-of-life are issues too
- The ruling class and the alienation and isolation of rail workers
- Will this lead to a depoliticization of rail workers that could Democrats?
- Ted Cruz, Joshua Hawley, and Marco Rubio voting with Bernie Sanders on sick leave
- The corporate media's coverage of the railroad workers vs. the rail carriers in recent days
- Striking and democratic rights
- The oligopoly
- Biden's promise to be the most "pro-union President"
- Does their need to be a workers party? The bankruptcy of the two party system and the need for a strong labor movement in the U.S.
- Peter Buttigieg and the Department of Transporation
- Nancy Pelosi and Chuck Schumer
- Is there a possibility of wildcat strikes?
- Marilee argues that this is a backstabbing betrayal against working people and that they're not going to take this lying down; Marilee decries what she calls the "total treachery of the Democratic Party"
- The personalities, inner lives, hopes, and dreams of rail workers and how we are often not given that fully human portrayal of them in media
- What do rail workers do next?
- The rail bosses, supply chains, and damage to the economy
- And much, much more

Dec 3, 2022 • 1h 29min
U.S. Foreign Policy, Saudi Arabia, & the Arms Industry w/ Annelle Sheline & William Hartung/Geopolitics & U.S. Foreign Policy w/ Doug Bandow
On this edition of Parallax Views, the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft's Dr. Annelle Sheline and William Hartung return to discuss their recent The Nation article "It’s Time to Cut Off Arms Sales to the Saudi Regime". Among the topics covered in this conversation:
- Saudi Prince Mohammad bin Salman Al-Saud granted legal immunity by the U.S. in lawsuit concerning the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi
- The argument for suspension of arms sales to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia
- OPEC+ cutting oil production
- The U.S.-Saudi relationship, oil production, and arms sales; Saudi Arabia is the largest customer of U.S. weapons; vested interests like the military-industrial complex and the U.S.-Saudi relationship
- The Yemen War; potential for Congress to pass a Yemen War Powers resolution; where the Yemen War has been since the truce struck up earlier in the year
- Statistics on arms sold to Saudi Arabia under the Obama, Trump, and Biden Presidencies
- Lobbying by companies like Raytheon
- Addressing the argument that the arms industry provides jobs to American citizens and thus the arms sales to Saudi Arabia are necessary
- The move of the world towards a multipolar order and how this effects our relationship with other countries; countries like Saudi Arabia don't feel the need to bend to U.S. demands/whims; the consequences of a multipolar world (ie: less stability); adjusting to the changing order (ie: relying more on diplomacy)
- America still has the best-funded military; how then is the U.S.'s dominance in question?
- The U.S. as overdeveloped in military force and underdeveloped in other areas vital to playing a role in a world where power is more diffuse
- What leverage does the U.S. have against the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia?
- Decoupling the arms industry from U.S. foreign policy
- How the U.S. arms industry effects the broader Middle East
- Saudia Arabia, the UAE, Israel, Iran, and the Abraham Accords
- Weakening the power of the arms industry in the U.S.; alternatives to employment; investment in areas other than weapons; green technology and green investments vs. the arms industry
- The revolving door between the arms industry and policy-making institutions
- The American people's perceptions of U.S. arms sales
- What are the biggest misconceptions people have about Yemen and, more broadly, the Middle East in general
- And much, much more!
In the second segment of the show, Doug Bandow, Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute and former special assistant to President Ronald Reagan, returns to the program to discuss current geopolitical happenings and the hubris of the foreign policy establishment aka the Blob.
Among the topics in this conversation:
- Why the Ukraine/Russia war is still the number foreign policy issue in the immediate term and how dangerous the situation is right now
- Discussing the Reagan Presidency and the Able Archer 83 NATO/military exercise that could've triggered a nuclear war; this historical incident is often underdiscussed or forgotten today and scared Reagan (for more information on the incident please check out Nate Jones's Able Archer 83: The Secret History of the NATO Exercise That Almost Triggered Nuclear War)
- Hubris and sanctimony in the Washington foreign policy establishment
- The U.S., human rights, double standards, Saudi Arabia, and Iran
- North Korea's latest ICBM test and the failure of the U.S.'s current policy on the DPRK; negotiating with North Korea on arms-related issues using sanctions release as leverage
- The crisis in Haiti, the history of U.S. interventions in Haiti, and the calls for a new U.S. intervention in Haiti; Doug's recent American Conservative article "Stop Invading Haiti"
- Rising tensions between the U.S. and China; the issue of Taiwan; the Philippines; the South China Sea; the economic front of the U.S. tensions with China, especially in terms of China's hi-tech economy; Doug's recent CATO piece ""The Wages of Washington’s Economic War on China Are Not Cheap"
- The role of the Global South's relationship with the U.S. and the Global South's perspective on issues like the Ukraine/Russia war
- The importance of diplomacy and talks even with our adversaries
- The hangover of the U.S.'s time as the post-Cold War unipower
- And more!

Dec 1, 2022 • 1h 10min
Israel, Biden, and the FBI’s Shireen Abu Akleh Investigation w/ Mitchell Plitnick
On this edition of Parallax Views, ReThinking Foreign Policy's Mitchell Plitnick returns to the program to discuss the FBI's probe into the death of Palestinian-American journalist Shireen Abu Akleh as well as his thoughts on the Biden administration's policy towards Israel, AIPAC (American Israel Public Affairs Committee) launching of a super PAC and entrance into direct campaign spending, and the recent Israeli elections that have emboldened Israel's far-right.
Among the topics discussed in this conversation
- The death of Shireen Abu Akleh while she was covering as Israeli raid of a Jenin refugee camp in the West Bank; Abu Akleh was wearing full body armor when she was fatally shot; Israel's internal army investigation of Abu Akleh's death; Abu Akleh worked for Al Jazeera and her death reverberated throughout the Arab world
- The FBI's investigation into Abu Akleh's death and the Biden White house administration's response to it; the Israeli objection to the FBI investigation
- The investigation will go nowhere without Israeli cooperation
- Comparing/contrasting the death of activist Rachel Corrie, ran over by an Israeli bulldozer in 2003, to the death of Shireen Abu Akleh
- What approach should the U.S. foreign policy approach be when it comes to Israel?
- Military aid and arms sales to Israel
- The rise of the Israeli far-right; the Israeli elections; Benjamin Netanyahu and the Likud Party; the Religious Zionism coalition; Bezaleel Smotrich and Itamar Ben-Gvir; Smotrich's homophobia and anti-LGBTQ stances; how did the rise of Israel's far-right happen?
- Human rights and foreign policy
- Noam, the far-right Orthodox Jewish political party in Israel that is part of the Religious Zionism coalition
- Smotrich and Israel's Finance Ministry; Ben-Gvir and the Ministry of National Security ; policing in Israel; the strong right-wing majority in the Knesset
- Combating antisemitism while also being critical of Israeli policies as a nation-state
- U.S. Christian Nationalist, the antisemitic right, and the Israeli far-right
- And much, much more!

Nov 29, 2022 • 1h 5min
The Iran Protests and The State of Resistance: Politics, Culture, and Identity in Modern Iran w/ Assal Rad
On this edition of Parallax Views, Dr. Assal Rad, research director for NIAC (National Iranian-American Council) returns to the program to discuss the wave of "Death to the Dictator" protests that have swept through Iran in recent months. The protest began after the death of 22 year old Mahsa Amini. Amini was arrested for wearing her hijab in a manner deemed the Guidance Patrol (or what's been called morality police) deemed improper. According to eyewitnesses Amini was beaten by the police. Protests began after Amini's death and the Islamic Republic has sought to crackdown on the dissent.
Dr. Rad discusses the nature of the protests, how they started, the involvement of women and youths in the protests, and much, much more. Additionally, we delve into the themes and ideas of Dr. Rad's new book The State of Resistance: Politics, Culture, and Identity in Modern Iran. Said book investigates the history of Iranian national identity and nationalist sentiments from the Pahlavi dynasty to the Islamic Republic and the bottom-up Iranian people's resistance to having a narrowly-defined identity imposed upon them by either Iranian authorities or outside forces.
Among the topics covered:
- The Pahlavi dynasty's focus on pre-Islamic Persian culture as a national identity and the Islamic Republic's focus on Shi'ite Islam as a national identity
- Iran, oil, and the West
- The cinema and music of Iran and what it says about Iranian national identity
- Nationalism, the problems with nationalism, and liberation struggles
- The Iranian diaspora
- Human rights abuses in Iran
- The possibility of a broader, more inclusive, even cosmopolitan national identity for Iran
- The concept of vatan, a love of the homeland
- How those of us in the U.S. and other countries miss nuances of Iranian culture and politics that we otherwise would recognize in our own culture
- The Iranian protests and BLM (Black Lives Matter)
- Understanding Iran's elections, their significance, and the dual powers in Iran (the elected officials on one hand and the Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei
- And much, much more!

Nov 25, 2022 • 1h 17min
The FTX/SBF Crypto Scandal & Elon’s Twitter Takeover w/ Mike Swanson/A Critique of Psychedelic Capitalism w/ Daniel Pinchbeck
On this edition of Parallax Views, in the first segment Wall Street Window's Mike Swanson returns to the program to discuss the FTX/Sam Bankman-Fried crypto scam scandal as well as Elon Musk's buy out of Twitter. Among the topics covered in the course of our conversation:
- Sam Bankman-Friedman, Alameda Research, Bankman-Fried's apology letter and his claim that what happened with FTX was a bank run, and whether what happened was a case of an inside job fraud or not
- The high-risks involved in the crypto exchange; how these crypto exchanges aren't banks and are not regulated in a meaningful way; the damage that the FTX scandal has done to people
- Relating past events like the Enron and WorldCom scandals and the the stock market's Dot-Com Bubble of the 1990s to the present day
- The influential American venture capitalist firm Sequioa Capital and the FTX scandal; Sequioa Capital's failure in relation to the FTX scandal is symptomatic of a bigger problem; firms not wanting to miss out on the hot new "Thing" or fads
- Reports that Sam Bankman-Fried ran FTX as his own personal fiefdom
- The political Left, the political Right, and the economy
- The divide in the Libertarian movement over crypto currency
- Karl Marx, Peter Thiel, and the possibility that the capitalist system itself is producing too much capital in ways that drive down interest rates; the issue as being more than the Fed just making mistake (ie: a problem with how the 21st century capitalist system itself operates currently); new money influxes as slowing down the bear market
- The lowering of interest rates and the creation of bubbles
- Jacob Silverman and Ben McKenzie's upcoming book Easy Money: Cryptocurrency, Casino Capitalism, and the Golden Age of Fraud; elements of the libertarian world agreeing with leftist critiques of crypto currency arguing that it's just a bubble or scam
- Gold and silver, the stock market, Robin Hood, and "meme stocks"
- Younger people becoming wary of stock trading
- Elon Musk's buying of Twitter for $44 billion; Musk wasn't able to back out of the deal; Twitter losing money
- Meta, Facebook, the Metaverse, and Mark Zuckerberg losing money; the layoffs at Twitter, Facebook, and Amazon
- Casino capitalism, carny tricks, and social media misleading people on issues like crypto
- Social manias, the madness of crowds, financial bubbles, and not falling for hype
In the second segment of the program, Daniel Pinchbeck, author of a number of books on psychedelics including most recently (w/ Sophia Rokhlin) When Plants Dream: Ayahuasca, Amazonian Shamanism and the Global Psychedelic Renaissance, joins the show to discuss his recent WhoWhatWhy article "Why Psychedelic Capitalism Sucks". Among the topics we cover in this conversation:
- The rise of psychedelic corporations/psychedelic start-ups
- The demonization of psychedelics in the 1960s and the cultural thaw that's led to a psychedelic renaissance through groups like MAPS and the Beckley Foundation; the reconsideration of psychedelics by society today and contemporaries studies on psychedelics related to alleviating depression, etc.
- Festivals like Burning Man and how resource-rich elites and entrepreneurs became interested in psychedelics
- Predatory practices and the critique of patents in regards to psychedelics and psychedelic therapy
- Compass Pathways and patent laws
- Downsides of psychedelics and psychedelic use
- The ecological crisis, today's profound social inequality, and psychedelics as a way to inspire social and structural change
- The contemporary psychedelic movement's focus on medicalization that fits psychedelics
- Psychedelics, creativity, and pattern recognition
- Psychedelics, temporary bliss states, and a possible 1984/Brave New World scenario
- Pioneering psychedelic researchers Sasha and Ann Shulgin's approach to psychedelic research vs. the approach of psychedelic corporations
- Psychedelic use and messianic delusion
- The positives of psychedelics and psychedelic usage
- The question of consciousness
- The climate change crisis and transforming how we live our lives; the importance of storytelling
- Shifting away from industrial agriculture
- And much, much more!

Nov 23, 2022 • 1h 28min
The Russia-Ukraine War w/ Patrick Cockburn/The Kyrie Irving Controversy and Black Hebrew Israelites w/ Jacob S. Dorman
On this edition of Parallax Views, long-time war reporter Patrick Cockburn, author of War in the Age of Trump, joins us in the first segment to discuss the latest in regards to the Putin's war in Ukraine as well as his thoughts on Netanyhu's political victory in the Israeli elections.
Among the topics covered in the conversation:
- Putin's war as a hubristic miscalculation and the evolution of the war; what is Russia's aim in Ukraine now?
- The problem of wars that don't end and why they escalate
- Ukraine's blowing up of the Kerch bridge and the Russian war against Ukrainian infrastructure such as electricity and water supplies
- The way modern warfare has changed in way that some don't realize; the U.S. no longer has a monopoly on precision weapons like they did in the 1990s
- Escalation and the question of nuclear weapons being used; why Patrick is skeptical that nuclear weapons will be launched
- Ukrainian victories not being decisive defeats of Russia
- U.S. Chief of Staff Mark Milley's call for diplomacy and the Biden administration's opposition to that; why Patrick doesn't see diplomacy as being acceptable right now to either Ukraine or Russia
- Parallels between the Middle East Forever Wars and the Russia-Ukraine War
- U.S. arms to Ukraine
- Ferreting out war propaganda and separating that propaganda from reality
- The economic war against Russia and the use of sanctions; sanctions, Iraq, the Kurds, and Saddam Hussein, the boomerang effect of sanctions
- Donald Trump, the foreign policy establishment, and the forever wars mess
- The natural tendency for wars to escalate and spread
- Prospect for diplomacy vs. escalation
- Putin and nuclear saber-rattling
- The problem with journalists covering wars today; coverage of war on the ground vs. war on infrastructure
- The electoral loss suffered of Bolsonaro in Brazil, Trump's civil war with the GOP, and the failed comeback of Boris Johnson in the UK
- Benjamin Netanyahu's electoral victory in Israel and the normalization of Israel's far-right
- The importance of remembering/thinking about the Afghanistan war, the Iraq War, the Saudi War in Yemen, and the death of Gaddafi in Libya
- And much, much more!
In the second segment of the show, Prof. Jacob Dorman joins us to discuss Black Israelite religions in light of the controversy over NBA basketball player Kyrie Irving tweeting about the Ronald Dalton Jr.'s documentary Hebrews 2 Negroes: Wake Up Black America. The tweet caused a backlash due to the documentary peddling not only Black Israelite beliefs in the documentary, but also antisemitic tropes and quotes from notorious antisemites like Henry Ford.
Among the topics covered in this conversation:
- The history of the Black Israelite movement including it's relationship to the 19th century Holiness movement, Freemasonry, the Anglo-Israelite movement, Rastafarianism, Judaism, and Black Nationalist/Black Power movements
- Harlem, Rabbi Wentworth Arthur Matthew, and the Second Wave of Black Israelism;
- William Sauders Crowdy and the Church of God and Saints of Christ
- Black Israelite thought as a theory of history rather than a religion
- The spread of Black Israelite thought or elements of it through the internet
- Understanding the Black Israelite movement in the context of anti-black racism historically including Jim Crow, lynchings, and anti-racism
- Dorman's take on Kyrie Irving, Kanye West as well as his take on on Hebrews to Negroes being a documentary "by and for stoned people"; Irving as being a different case from Kanye and Kanye as more truly peddling antisemitism; Irving's apology over his tweet; Kanye and mental illness; Kanye's "slavery was a choice" comments
- The concept of polyculturalism (as opposed to multiculturalism) in regards to Black Israelite religions; identity and Israeli scholar Shlomo Sand's The Invention of the Jewish People; genetics and the claim to being an Israelite
- Black Israelism as a powerful critique of anti-black racism
- Antisemitism as not being representative of all Black Israelite religions; Dorman's experiences with Black Israelites; sensationalism in reporting on Black Israelism; One West and the amplification of the most extreme elements of Black Israelism
- Black Israelites and cosmopolitanism
- Similarities between Black Israelites and Black Muslims
- Should Black Israelism be written off as historical revisionism?
- White supremacy, white Jews, black antisemitism, and James Baldwin
- A summary of Dorman's new book The Princess and the Prophet: The Secret History of Magic, Race, and Moorish Muslims in America
- And much, much more!

Nov 21, 2022 • 37min
The ADL and the FBI w/ Grant F. Smith
On this edition of Parallax Views, Grant F. Smith of the Institute for Research: Middle East Policy returns to discuss his article "ADL files FBI 'Civil Rights Threat' conflating white nationalists with pro-Palestinian charities" as well the broader history of the ADL and its relationship with the FBI. Additionally, Grant gives his thoughts on the FBI probe into the death of Palestinian-American Al Jazeera journalist Shireen Abu Akleh and briefly summarizes his October 2022 article "Virginia Rejects Israel’s Energix CdTe Solar Farm Panels".
Some of the points we touch on include:
- The ADL's infiltration of the Organization of Arab Students in the late 1960s
- THE FBI, the Jewish Defense League, and the assassination of Palestinian activist Alex Odeh in 1985
- The murder of Mary Phagan, the lynching of pencil factory superintendent Leo Frank, and the formation of the Anti-Defamation League by B'nai B'rith
- The ADL and Hollywood; Hollywood producer Arnon Milchan and arms dealing
- The ADL's relationship with the FBI in 1940s Hollywood; the FBI and the Red Scare over communist infiltration of Hollywood
- The ADL, Dr. John Lechner, and the internment of West Coast Japanese Americans in WWII
- Arms smuggling, pressure campaigns, and spying scandals
- Israel affinity groups in America; the ADL and state/national law enforcement
- The ADL's attempt to conflate the pro-Palestinian Friends of Sabeel North America and the American Muslim Alliance with the neo-nazi group Vanguard America; the FBI's dismissal of the conflation
- The FBI's COINTELPRO program and J. Edgar Hoover
- Israeli intelligence operative Rafael Eitan
- The targeting of Jewish civil rights activist and University of Minnesota professor Matthew Stark
- Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) documents obtained by IRmep
- The Friends of Sabeel's pro-BDS (Boycott, Divestment, Sanctions) stance and the anti-BDS movement
- And much, much more!


