Another landmark for you Dwarkesh…. An interview with a politician who held the highest position in the government of a nation that is one of the six major economies and a permanent member of United Nations Security Council
@mikezooper6 ай бұрын
TB is an all time low
@reluctantrealist68616 ай бұрын
he's a garbage human being
@alphasword55416 ай бұрын
And a complete and utter ghoul.
@kennethtaylor31476 ай бұрын
@@alphasword5541idk I'd bang
@aaradhyarawat75896 ай бұрын
Chill, He's retired. In western democratic states, readers are not that valuable to the party or the nation once they're out of power because the new trends and popular narrative of different leadership keeps arriving.
@DwarkeshPatel6 ай бұрын
Enjoy :)
@ashternawaz40336 ай бұрын
Thank you ❤
@reluctantrealist68616 ай бұрын
why are you interviewing a war criminal?
@ohedd6 ай бұрын
You're mad to land this one
@aklb436 ай бұрын
the heck bro
@advocate15636 ай бұрын
Disgusting. A war criminal. Iraq war - 000s dead.
@prodrectifies6 ай бұрын
Wow, did not expect this lol
@effa29853 ай бұрын
Surprisingly good to watch. Blair still has a lot of wisdom to dispense
@Dynastyflock6 ай бұрын
The best looking podcaster in the game
@squamish42446 ай бұрын
It shouldn't be allowed. You can't be that handsome and also have all his other attributes. He probably has a dark secret or some sh*t. (One can hope.)
@AntiGravityC96 ай бұрын
@@squamish4244 (One can cope.)
@aaradhyarawat75896 ай бұрын
Yeah, Indians got nice beard game. But how he would look clean shaved? 😂
@aryaman056 ай бұрын
@@squamish4244 The last time I read similar comment was on Sendhil Ramamurthy !
@sumanthmurthy16426 ай бұрын
LKY WAS a startup founder. He essentially built Singapore ruling like a technocrat
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
TB also operates as a technocrat. He puts spanners in cogs of the gov bureaucratic machine so it's stuck, and then he brings in commercial/financial operators to actually get the job done.
@bhavnabuvariya55316 ай бұрын
I wish you interview India P.M.🎉
@turlstreet10 күн бұрын
Tony Blair actually understands what made LKY a truly great post-independence leader: he did not squander the colonial legacy he was left with, but built on it and made it accessible to all Singaporeans. His greatness was not in making Singapore rich, as many believe. Singapore in 1950 already had the highest GDP per capita in Asia (prior to independence); indeed, Singapore had already had the second-highest GDP per capita in Asia since 1880, and then overtook Japan after WWII. What LKY really did was to enable Singaporeans to gain a stake in that wealth through programmes like CPF and HDB, and to continue growing the economy sustainably through foreign talent acquisition and strategic, long-term planning. He maintained the famously incorruptible British judicial and civil service systems and made them more meritocratic. And he eradicated the low-level corruption which the British had likewise abhorred but often tolerated amongst the Chinese trading communities. For that, he did sacrifice the free press and abolished jury trials, but in lieu of those colonial freedoms, he brought greater prosperity for the average citizen.
@lucianopavarotti28436 ай бұрын
For all this McKinsey management speak, the real source of inertia in Blair's government was the dysfunctional relationship he had with his Chancellor Gordon Brown, resulting in two power centres who were not always on the same page on very major issues over a period of ten years. Blair didn't resolve that, and the TB-GB struggles were far more decisive a factor than any supposed bureaucratic resistance.
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
🎯
@williamphelps85506 ай бұрын
Hmmm.. As far as I’ve read and heard, this came much later on in his 10 years.
@lucianopavarotti28436 ай бұрын
@@williamphelps8550 It was always a present factor even in first term. The problem with a vague deal under which Blair would at some point hand over to Brown was the tension between Blair's legacy-shaping efforts and Brown's views about what he wanted his inheritance to be by the time he took over. By 2001 at the latest it was a full blown contest. Instances of dysfunction included the way in which Brown unilaterally vetoed -- via leaks to the press -- Blair's hopes for moving towards joining the Euro, and Blair going on TV without consultation to announce a massive hike in heath spending.
@lkyuvsad6 ай бұрын
@@lucianopavarotti2843 I'm not sure Brown was wrong about not joining the Euro? As much as being in the EU is better on balance than being out, a common currency without a union as closely integrated as the US still seems like one of the worse aspects of it? Happy to be wrong, curious to hear other ideas. I am also, personally, not sure the "ever closer union" thing is a good idea in the case of Europe. Although a very close union is still clearly beneficial for both EU countries and the stability of the world.
@lucianopavarotti28436 ай бұрын
@@lkyuvsad I wasn't making a point about policies as such just the dysfunctional way in which they came about. I agree that Euro membership was probably undesirable given the UK's different economic structure and business cycle, and I too think Eu membership was a good deal for the UK.
@rjiylm6 ай бұрын
One of the best interviews of Tony Blair. (And I’ve watched many over the last 27 years!)
@squamish42446 ай бұрын
I've never heard of AI framed as a July 1914 moment before, but it's a striking comparison. Everything happened very quickly and every single important decision-maker dropped the ball. If AI has a sharp takeoff, this is exactly the scenario we need to be worried about. The good news about such a comparison is that only one of those decision-makers needed to have a moment of sanity and the war would have been much smaller and far less destructive, or even averted entirely.
@Tuathadana6 ай бұрын
Don't worry A.I is the just the 4th such takeoff in past 35 years.
@squamish42446 ай бұрын
@@Tuathadana Nothing comparable has ever happened before. Not even splitting the atom is comparable to AI.
@Tuathadana6 ай бұрын
@squamish4244 just adapt bro. It'll be okay
@squamish42446 ай бұрын
@@Tuathadana Hey, why do you think I'm here? Funny thing is how many people have no idea this is coming on so fast. But neither did I, until the last three or four years I knew it was coming but I still thought something like today was still like 20 years out. It is not.
@kanmi_daniels6 ай бұрын
As a Nigerian critically believing for the best for my country I enjoyed every bit of this podcast as LEADERSHIP is the key to a prosperous Nation!!! Long live Lee Kwan Yu
@kanmi_daniels6 ай бұрын
Thanks for being PM Tony Blair to speak on governance too… I wish world leading democracy could factor knowledge of governance as a critical for elected office!!!
@joythought6 ай бұрын
💯. If Nigeria can get good governance and less corruption then it will rise up to be a new superpower.
@anchored5555 ай бұрын
It’s Lee Kuan Yew.
@Bboy2355 ай бұрын
Lee Kuan Yew is dead
@TrueCriminsomniaZzzz2 ай бұрын
@@kanmi_daniels Blair is a War criminal trust me I'm from the UK his public reputation is lower than a cockroach! His agenda for Africa is in utilising your beautiful lands! industrialization based on greed! You all need to realise and save your freedoms 😢😢
@paulbo90335 ай бұрын
Brit here who voted for Blair in '97 on a wave of enthusiasm. This man ignored the democratic will of the British people and illegally invaded Iraq, killing 500,000 civilians, destroying the country, and giving rise to groups like ISIS. In the end the British people had enough and his Chancellor was able to force him from office. DO NOT listen to this man. He was demonstrably an awful PM and a terrible decision maker.
@Tree_a_Boar5 ай бұрын
not to mention he was in power when the grooming gang scandal started to come to light and actively told police constabularies to hide the problem.
@chosk805 ай бұрын
It was the US..... Britain just played the Robin Role.
@judithcressey16824 ай бұрын
Fundamentally destroyed the UK....the long march through the institutions .
@teresabenson60874 ай бұрын
Tony was the best Prime Minister ever.
@paulbo90334 ай бұрын
@@teresabenson6087 😂 you're like a beaten house wife who's defensive over her boyfriend because he only hits you sometimes instead of every day like your previous boyfriend.
@user-es5gx2di7h6 ай бұрын
Shallow, poorly thought through questions. "What advice would you have given Lee Kuan Yew?". The interviewer is an intellectual lightweight unaware of this and high on his own supply.
@ivantan56904 ай бұрын
Strongly agree... At least do a little homework on the people you are going to ask about.... So shabby
@dreamer22604 ай бұрын
Quite. Unfortunate. Blair fair-minded as ever of course.
@Swiplys3 ай бұрын
@@dreamer2260 Blair is a fool. No one trusts a thing he says. Take the last 6 years as example of how out of touch he is with all sides of the political groups in the UK
@bhmdhn3 ай бұрын
Any questions on the most important event of the 2000's so far? No. Not a single thing about Iraq and his reasoning for joining in on that absolute travesty of an undertaking that only served to empower the Islamic Republic, horribly destabilize half the planet, directly influenced the Syrian civil war and ultimately led to the forming of the Islamic State, the gift that still keeps on giving.
@ghita5207Ай бұрын
Asking Tony blair about his view on the so called "Deep state" is truly insane. This is not some republicans dancing monkey. Way out of his depth
@VitaSineLibertatenih6 ай бұрын
I am not British, but afaik, this man was at the root of all the shit with immigration that is blowing up in UK today
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
And he made the criminal justice system favour the criminals And he sold lots of national assets And he made us pay 10-20x as much for privately run publicly funded hospitals, schools and other services, all if which have increased in cost and decreased in quality
@brucestening79646 ай бұрын
Whatever his flaws, Blair is a highly intelligent, articulate and thoughtful person. Not surprising he was PM of the UK for almost ten years. He had both the political skills and the executive skills. Where is the person in the UK who can handle today’s challenges? Neither Sunak nor Starmer.
@johnroche3126 ай бұрын
Nigel Farage
@haztec.6 ай бұрын
@@johnroche312 Considering he's tried about 7 times to be an MP, it seems unlikely that he could ever be PM if he can't even be an MP
@mirr19846 ай бұрын
@@johnroche312 Farage is an idiot, and the only reason he's banging the anti-Ukraine drum like Trump is because they can make a lot of money from withdrawing aid and support.
@johnroche3126 ай бұрын
@@haztec. Mate his party is beating the Tories as the opposition this election, while youre right about his past shortcomings I wouldn't be surprised if there is a great opening for reform and Nigel's future success.
@haztec.6 ай бұрын
@@johnroche312 we'll see on July 4th I guess
@BirbarianHomeGuard6 ай бұрын
The Good Friday Agreement is Blair’s best achievement.
@JackWilliamson-qv4no6 ай бұрын
Yep and the Ksovo conflict was a good intervention too. Prevented the genocide getting worse, saved many lives and prevented further expulsions from Kosovo. People still focus on the Iraq war
@joestojanovic66136 ай бұрын
@@JackWilliamson-qv4no were you there? Tell us more. How was it?
@emailofjamesw6 ай бұрын
@@joestojanovic6613 found the serb
@Gehri_soch2.06 ай бұрын
@@JackWilliamson-qv4nocause it was a seismic event and overshadows everything Blair had done in the past
@dan-8603 ай бұрын
It won’t survive mid century
@DanielleNewnham6 ай бұрын
Can't wait to listen - congrats Dwarkesh on an excellent podcast!
@asdasdsfasfasfasfasfasf6 ай бұрын
Dwarkesh your interview skills are more important in foreign policy/politics/world affairs, than in AI. Keep doing more of this.
@SanjayPatel-md3bh6 ай бұрын
So true
@chadwick35936 ай бұрын
Strong disagree. It's good to see politicians' perspectives occasionally, but we need to know what's going on with AI so we can anticipate the massive changes that are coming. Dwarkesh is currently the best interviewer for shining a light on the industry.
@squamish42446 ай бұрын
@@chadwick3593 What about Lex Fridman? Lex is naive about people but he knows his sh*t about AI.
@chadwick35936 ай бұрын
@@squamish4244 Lex's interviews are a lot less AI-oriented now, and his interview style does a lot less to explain the industry. Lex is more focused on shining a light on individuals. Dwarkesh also seems to think faster on his feet, which lets his guests get into much more candid discussions than Lex. I feel like Lex sacrificed AI communication in exchange for more political discussions. As someone that thinks AI is the single most important thing going on in the world today, I feel like his podcast is far less useful as a result.
@pianoforte6116 ай бұрын
I don't mind a few political interviews, but AI is probably going to change the world more than day to day politics.
@TestAutomationTV27 күн бұрын
I'm not surprised that Mr. Blair didn't mention the role of post-colonial agents when speaking about reasons why nations fail or succeed.
@iamthe1337est6 ай бұрын
Insane pull. Nice work.
@thestephenglynnshow18146 ай бұрын
crazy to think he is out of power nearly 20 years and miles ahead of most US politicians in cognitive ability
@randomuser52376 ай бұрын
Oh please, Henry Kissinger is 99 year old and he's still miles ahead of Blair.
@baltasarnoreno59736 ай бұрын
@@randomuser5237 Operative word being 'most', not 'all'. And Kissinger died six months ago. I suspect his cognitive abilities aren't so hot now.
@flvflv47123 ай бұрын
the man who lied about the iraqi war?
@DLL-y4p6 ай бұрын
Ironically it's what Lee Kuan Yew didn't do that made Singapore rich - leaving the British established institutions, finanical and legal systems unchanged. This is contrast to how the Chinese government is progressingly messing up Hong Kong.
@thinkingaloud53796 ай бұрын
HK is now much more prosperous than HK was under British rule.Further,HK always ranks among the highest in freedom of speech and judicial independence in international surveys.Go worry about your own country, dude!
@DLL-y4p6 ай бұрын
@@thinkingaloud5379 mainland chinese wumao
@thinkingaloud53796 ай бұрын
@@DLL-y4p CIA bot
@endi46545 ай бұрын
@@thinkingaloud5379 Please cite your evidence. Curious. What i see is that it keeps falling year by year 🥴
@thinkingaloud53795 ай бұрын
@@endi4654 Just google.The data is all there.
@jayhu60756 ай бұрын
Why did you interview this man? Did they pay you? Why the political turn instead of a technical interview? I don't understand.
@surajrshetty6 ай бұрын
I think he advices political leaders worldwide and probably is using this podcast for soft marketing. (Checkout @8:30)
@jddd6655 ай бұрын
Dwarkesh should check who brought this guy to him. So close, yet he didn't use handcuffs...
@stiffmeistercharlie17584 ай бұрын
This host knows exactly what he’s doing. He’s getting paid to be the vessel for this propaganda and is fine with it
@hmmm8886 ай бұрын
Good to see how awesome your guests are getting!
@__Hmmmmmmmm__6 ай бұрын
How?! Yooooooo good stuff my dude😂. Mad respect(I caught onto your channel from the Sarah Paine interview). Keep em coming.
@fluffycolt56086 ай бұрын
31:56 tony puts a lot on good leadership - he would, its his budiness. But bad ideas can often be taken up by teriffic leaders with terrible results. If some of those Singapore decisions had been frankly poor - then no amount of great "leadership" would have achieved the results singspore has had. Many of the ptoblems the uk has in public services and planning, lack of housing and wildly uncontrolled immigration - are frankly not going to be solved by "generative AI"
@Epamynondas6 ай бұрын
It's implied that part of good leadership is making correct decisions, no?
@Free126096 ай бұрын
He did well during his first term bcz he was ambitious and innocent! Then he messed up in his second term bcz he started to align his policy and ambition with US so he lost his track and he will always be remembered for his wars debacle so asking him for advice is pretty much like asking an arsonist to come and put out fire but Im learning ftom him :)
@aavlokit4 ай бұрын
This channel needs to get on top , this is called a real podcast. Thanks D.P.
@dawsongooch41946 ай бұрын
Really excellent interview, I think one of your best! Loved how big picture and broad ranging the topics were, then how you and Blair tried to drill to the crux on each of them.
@ciaranpatrickomeara38965 ай бұрын
This a very poor interview, unfortunately. You seem to pander to your guests and I have never seen you ask a difficult question. If I wanted to hear the answers to the type of questions you asked Mr Blair I might aswell read one of his multiple autobiographies. I understand that pressing an interviewee when you are new on the interview scene may hinder your ability to attract more politicians to the show, but I would argue that this attitude risks your show becoming a PR think piece for people like Blair rather than a good quality interview.
@mayan56004 ай бұрын
He is not here to interrogate him.
@ciaranpatrickomeara38964 ай бұрын
@@mayan5600 There is a difference between interrogation and effective journalism. This was a great opportunity to ask open-ended, probing questions regarding the things Blair is actually remembered for, such as Iraq, Afghanistan, and his social policy in the UK. Instead this feels less of an interview and more of a PR piece identical to Blair's "Institute for Global Change" content regarding leadership and ethics that is pushed out online. This was unfortunately really poor from Patel, who showed his inexperience and appeared to just fawn over Blair coming onto his channel for the entire video.
@stiffmeistercharlie17584 ай бұрын
This is why he was able to land Blair. You’re insane if you even think he’s trying to be an effective journalist. It’s propaganda paid for by billionaires, and he’s willing to be the vessel
@DeathsOnTheYAxis3 ай бұрын
@@ciaranpatrickomeara3896 Asking "tough questions" is tabloid crap. People come to this channel to learn.
@ciaranpatrickomeara38962 ай бұрын
@@DeathsOnTheYAxis To learn? From this channel? Are you educated in the slightest, because the questions in this interview have been asked a hundred times to Blair, and answered a hundred times by Blair. He sacrifices the quality of his actual interview in the return he receives big names coming on his show thinking they'll get an excellent think piece on themselves. Little does he know that it actually makes his channel and interview skills devoid of any quality. The best interviewers are and always will remain those who pose challenging questions to those in power.
@augggie5 ай бұрын
The government is broken, and I HELPED! 😢
@DHAiRYA28016 ай бұрын
This is top notch journalism! Great work
@postcollapse11706 ай бұрын
You can see how giddy, even arroused he is being so close to real, ruthless, british power.
@postcollapse11706 ай бұрын
"they are a race of suckups mr president"
@xsuploader6 ай бұрын
wrong. dwarkesh likes leaders who understand econ. him being british or ruthless means nothing.
@postcollapse11706 ай бұрын
@@xsuploader You wanna yell "wrong" but can't even understand the point. You confirm my argument either way.
@nowithinkyouknowyourewrong86756 ай бұрын
he is so giddy, they probably gave him some Marmalade beforehand
@Swiplys3 ай бұрын
Exactly, Tony Blair only cared for power and control. He may have said words and given platitudes and virtue signalling about how he cares for people, YET overall he killed more than a million people.
@telluwide55536 ай бұрын
You are such a great interviewer. I normally don't watch interviews with politicians, but fair enough. I really enjoyed your interview with Sarah Paine, you really should get Peter Zeihan and Stephen Kotkin on next.
@nl58286 ай бұрын
the only interview that tony bliar should be doing is with a lawyer present at the international criminal court! #WarCriminal #wmdLies
@A--_--M6 ай бұрын
I love the diversity of portfolios your interviewees hold. You're not only focused on tech/AI, but also politics and management. You're my favourite podcaster!
@jddd6655 ай бұрын
yeah... that's ok for bots, not for real humans. The guy is a hand puppet with someone's hand up his a*s. Doesn't need his brains anymore, he has YT to pay for his mouth opening. Unsubscribe is my vote
@desparc6 ай бұрын
You’re a blessing to many silent people Dwarkesh - really appreciate your work; thank you.
@praline2x5 ай бұрын
What an insightful interview. Really good questions. Thank you for sharing this.
@colemanmcc6 ай бұрын
Concern about "saying" and not "doing" is a great way to summarize what's wrong with politics right now
@Skargar6 ай бұрын
Come on! Dwarkesh must be actually just be chatting with an AI simulation of Tony :D
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
Easily done because TB spouts the same garbage everywhere
@milesabbott97216 ай бұрын
How are you getting these guests!
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
Dwarka must have some deepstate connections, or be selected by them, for him to be getting these sorts of guests
@functhefucc57985 ай бұрын
money
@oscarscribner77026 ай бұрын
This man loves the word fundamentally
@troubledpickle59866 ай бұрын
how many WMDs
@baltasarnoreno59736 ай бұрын
Such an original comment. (Sarcasm in mode ).
@BrianMosleyUK6 ай бұрын
I get such a sense of transactional thinking from Tony - I guess politics is currently very much zero sum, competition of ideas and negotiation for personal success. All very ego based. The business of government. I've just watched a very recent interview with Dario Amodei who gave me much more hope for leadership with good core values, humility and vision.
@nabilfreeman6 ай бұрын
How on Earth did you land this 😵💫
@Jacob-cg3zz6 ай бұрын
Wow! this is awesome, Dwarkesh. Thank you, keep it up man
@ShotsMerkzAll6 ай бұрын
I despise Blair and believe he was the start to the end. I did think this interview was particularly interesting especially the moments regarding Lee Kuan Yew. Thanks for the content
@joythought6 ай бұрын
If you thought the problems started with Blair then you must not be very old and have no memory or personal experience of who came before him. The 1960s, the 1970s. Absolutely woeful.
@ShotsMerkzAll6 ай бұрын
@@joythought Blair started the uncontrolled mass immigration
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
@@ShotsMerkzAlland stopped the police tackling crime
@JeremyParsons6 ай бұрын
"For the developing world, the lockdowns did more harm than good". - Tony Blair. Definitely true in Thailand and The Philippines, but I don't see anything good from lockdowns in rich countries when their huge debts from lockdown and furlough now need to be paid back with interest. Only Sweden was run by a scientist.
@Blackcomanche3 ай бұрын
Aren't you forgetting Angela Merkel of Germany?
@JeremyParsons3 ай бұрын
@@Blackcomanche Yes, but she shut down Germany's nuclear power and behaved in many ways like a nice old lady not the psychopath general or scientist needed to fight a war or pandemic. Do not let a nice bedside manner physician discuss fighting pandemics.
@Baainzey6 ай бұрын
You got selected bro
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
🎯
@Paul-d6j7h5 ай бұрын
All the problems the UK is facing right now is mainly because of Tony Bliar
@MaryChew-z3j3 ай бұрын
At least u can say what u hv said.In North Korea u'll either be dead or sent to a slave labour camp after saying that.
@MaryChew-z3j3 ай бұрын
If u dislike TB so much,then try being a North Korean citizen.
@Guest6553216 ай бұрын
Wish you had more concrete examples to ask on covid e.g. if you wanted to rollout the pfizer vaccine in May 2020, was that possible? What would it have taken?
@obinator90655 ай бұрын
They had the vaccine by then but the problem was producing them and that you still had to go through the formal 3 stage trials. They did this concurrently to speed up the process. We could've had it out quicker if it had been taken more serious a month prior. The WHO took forever to declare it a pandemic.
@andrewblain34056 ай бұрын
Yes the guy is thought of as a war criminal by many - and he does not spend much time here - but given the quality of his successors, well it's all been downhill from him being a bit shifty to flat out lies cronyism and corruption. The bit from 44m in is a tl:dr of how to run a country. The one sentence "figure out the right policy and then shape the politics to fit that" is exactly what the current uk govt has not done arguably since 2010.
@MissingLinkz-w7u5 ай бұрын
Tony is a supporter of digital id, digital health. My concern is ai will be used to look for patterns in people's data then the models used to nudge society more effectively. When you add food shopping and online activity hopefully you can see my concern.
@jamesholt44494 ай бұрын
I still don't see the promblem with digital id. Reduces costs in collecting in taxes, cracks down on gangs and major criminals and allows for a better efficient of nhs using more data
@MissingLinkz-w7u4 ай бұрын
@@jamesholt4449 ok thank you for not addressing my points and making your own.
@martycrow6 ай бұрын
The most inspiring and thoughtful British PM since the Second World War, who redefined the challenges for Britain and the West in ways that will remain part of our discourse for many years to come. Sadly sidelined and criticized by detractors in Britain, essentially over one foreign policy failure, he is increasingly being sought after in Britain. He was better respected overseas, including much of the Middle East already. Tony Blair of 1997 is not the same today. He has actually grasped, evolved, and grown into the towering intellectual figure we have today. Much like Lee Kwan Yew whose greatness continues to shine a light on the path ahead for peaceful progress. Well done on persuading Tony Blair to participate!
@mikezooper6 ай бұрын
Wow, definitely not. He lied about WMD. How can you forgive that!?
@martycrow6 ай бұрын
@@mikezooper only about 30% of the intelligence is in the public domain. But with time things change. As Assange well knows.
@aanakrukavi5 ай бұрын
I still remember as a kid from India his famous statement before Iraq War - We still don't know what he has 😂
@pellestianomasai12205 ай бұрын
I really enjoyed this podcast, what an interesting interview....
@chosk805 ай бұрын
Advising Lee Kuan Yew... 😂
@rahjay8483 ай бұрын
If you are born and bred in Singapore from LKY times then you will be able to talk or otherwise you need to control your mouth about saying anything about LYK
@kenswanstongarrett98666 ай бұрын
Lots of focus on the cult of personality of political leaders. In Switzerland we have no number 1 political leader , it is spread over a body of 7 people , who hand over the mantle of "president" every 12 months ...
@JackWilliamson-qv4no6 ай бұрын
The Good Friday Agreement and stopping the genocide in Kosovo were notable achievements of Tony Blair's government. People are quick to forget that he bought peace in Northern Ireland and to the people of Kosovo
@solitarianihilista14546 ай бұрын
Also introduced a minimum wage in the teeth of resistance from employers, tax credits to reduce the tax burden on the lowest paid, set up devolved systems of government in Scotland and Wales and was instrumental in the removal of one of the most brutal dictatorships in the history of the Middle East. Remind me again: what has Sunak done?
@TheThundertaker6 ай бұрын
I really don't think his role in toppling Saddam Hussein is something that stands in his favour, given subsequent events. @@solitarianihilista1454
@benspicer41976 ай бұрын
Don't forget intervention sierra Leone helped end the civil war
@TheThundertaker6 ай бұрын
@@benspicer4197 the long term consequences of that were disastrous. That small victory over a dipsh1t gang of drug addicts and thugs convinced Blair that him and the US could do the same in Iraq and Afghanistan.
@darkbrotherhood36076 ай бұрын
Woah Dwarkesh summoned the Blair creature
@---Oracle---6 ай бұрын
Your attire of choice is commendable and I am sure that the interviewee appreciated it.
@akhil0905796 ай бұрын
You are becoming one of the best interviewers around mainly cos you don't dumb it down! makes it far more interesting...
@josephyeo69665 ай бұрын
Mr. Blair is totally right in identifying the three key elements of Singapore's success with LKY. There is a fourth element which is more important and it ensured Singapore's continuity in maintaining their success. That is, LKY's doctrine of meritocracy, and a nation built on justice and equality regardless of race, language or religion. Once you mix religion with government or a government based on religion (theocracy), then you will have trouble with success. Once you mix race, language and religion under the guise of multiculturism and diversity, you will have disunity.
@jamesrussell19795 ай бұрын
Very interesting 👌 👍 🤔
@DaboooogA6 ай бұрын
From Dominic Cummings to Tony Blair - Dwarkesh doing this thing! Can't wait to listen to this one.
@akashpandya67186 ай бұрын
How you got him for the pod
@williamphelps85506 ай бұрын
Really great interview. Blair is a hell of a get, too. Congrats.
@OSNLebuna6 ай бұрын
Great video. More political, or should I say policy talk, please
@illyriandescendant79636 ай бұрын
Great interview! Well done for getting this intellectual giant on your podcast!
@davidwong72836 ай бұрын
Blair didnt mention , we need to respect our Huge neighbours , our heritage , our malays . Till Today Malay is our national language and our anthem is in malay also . our military commands are in malay . English is our Working language & 1st language to unify the people . Malay language is like our figurehead also . Imagine if Ukraine did what singapore did , you think Russia would still attack ??
@TheoneandonlyRAH6 ай бұрын
Why is tony Blair going on about ai teachers and doctors when people are starving? No one can learn or get healthy until they can eat and reliably know they can eat every day. End poverty and sort housing first, and the we can talk
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
He implements those systems into governments across the world, for a fee. He's like the KPMG management consultancy, but for States.
@Low_commotion6 ай бұрын
Incredible, Dwarkesh pulling bigger guests than Tyler _or_ Joe
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
Tyler who? Joe who?
@Low_commotion6 ай бұрын
@@OrwellsHousecat An economist-foodie widely considered the best podcaster in the biz, and the largest podcaster in the world.
@treesandgeeking6 ай бұрын
Congrats Dwarkesh, quite the scoop! 👏👏👏👏
@Carroty_Peg6 ай бұрын
by their fruits you shall know them.....What are Bliar's fruits, pray tell?
@Badlighter6 ай бұрын
The rare gift of any leader is knowing when to leave the arena of leadership. It’s not a waste of accumulated experience and a trusted network, but a courage to leave it to the next generation.
@judithcressey16824 ай бұрын
You mean money.
@jodyburrows12532 ай бұрын
Convicted of war crimes in Malaysia
@MissingLinkz-w7u5 ай бұрын
Did i miss the bit where he laid out the benefits fo people's quality of life.
@DrRimantas6 ай бұрын
War criminal.. how he's still free? And Assange was sitting in prison?
@illyriandescendant79636 ай бұрын
Because one committed a crime, the other didn't. Assange did by the way. Give it a rest, it's gone now.
@DrRimantas6 ай бұрын
Assange did what tell the lies about weapons of mass destraction? 🤔 and Blair actually exposed war crimes?
@triton626746 ай бұрын
Give it a rest lmao try spending years of life in an embassy and then give your next go at putting it behind you@@illyriandescendant7963
@JimmyTimmy-wh8dz6 ай бұрын
Doubt Assange was sitting in prison
@fivedaysfitter52256 ай бұрын
Great interview and a great guest.
@SoranPryde4 ай бұрын
Why Lee Kuan Yew picked English as the official language for all the races/ethnic group was he saw the effects of the majority Sinhalese imposing their language on the minority Tamils in Sri Lanka in 1956. It marginalized the Tamils and turned them into a discontented group of people who are forever in conflict with the Sinhalese (Hence the Tami Tigers). Yes the Tamil Tigers have been defeated and disbanded, but the conditions for another Tamil rebel army to take its place are still there, even more than even since now Sri Lanka is in the economic crap-house
@af.tatchell6 ай бұрын
Dwarkesh, what the f*ck kind of network do you have??? It's amazing and I love that you're sharing it with us ❤
@tomenglish93406 ай бұрын
Dwarkesh may well get an offer from a major news network.
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
This platform is a lot bigger than most major news networks
@benjamino766 ай бұрын
God knows I love Tony Blair. But when he says "what we do with our leaders..." the "our" is not accidental.
@danielo14186 ай бұрын
Dwarkesh speedrunning podcasting
@typon16 ай бұрын
Bro upgraded to interviewing war criminals
@Retotion6 ай бұрын
L+ Not a war criminal + Blair is the greatest modern British prime minister
@johnnybegood90055 ай бұрын
@@Retotion The guys is a walking Khmer Rouge
@mwinsatt6 ай бұрын
I’ve never really had time to look into Tony Blair, but holy crap he is such a bright individual so articulate and well thought out. Absolutely amazing conversation! Really, really so inspired and awestruck
@dangin88116 ай бұрын
Tony Blair is a clever and intensely evil man.
@Rakibrown1116 ай бұрын
He’s scum
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
People said that about epstein
@perer0056 ай бұрын
Do Blinken next!
@Sun-mc8ph6 ай бұрын
This was brilliant
@siewhockhuang25635 ай бұрын
You cannot beat QUALITY
@mellowmike62636 ай бұрын
Bro went fishing and came back with a shark
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
🔥🔥🔥
@ianmaclean16555 ай бұрын
5 eyes 👀 1 eye has gone to the shop
@asimchillify6 ай бұрын
Good job. Try and get the exiled crown prince of iran.
@chrisshak52165 ай бұрын
I have to respect him for still going and being so active yet he was controlled in government by far more powerful forces.
@Gehri_soch2.06 ай бұрын
9:12 Blair quoting lee kuan yew
@trapset15396 ай бұрын
The Dark Lord
@ProfessorCWPL6 ай бұрын
Very interesting Dwarkesh - Blair has consistently shown leadership with AI and pushed for UK investment and R&D. His thoughts on Singapore were interesting. Now if only Europe could implement those policies.
@thinkingcitizen6 ай бұрын
his daddy is Dick Cheney and granddaddy is Bush Sr
@sanfordsanford2956 ай бұрын
Britain is a study in train-wreck today. Old people voting can be disastrous
@judithcressey16824 ай бұрын
Pre-teens more so. The train wreck of today is the result of this man.
@OrwellsHousecat6 ай бұрын
Yes, Minister
@eugeniocg30796 ай бұрын
Beast!
@_bhargav2296 ай бұрын
I'm sorry how?
@AdamSmith1212-nw9eu6 ай бұрын
Fair play to the interviewer, but why is Tony doing this?? Is he mates with his son?
@xsuploader6 ай бұрын
probably because he has seen a dwarkesh interview or two.
@illyriandescendant79636 ай бұрын
Quite likely he must have been impressed by his interviewing skills from past podcasts. Never heard of this guy before, but he seems an outstanding, articulate and well informed person.
@judithcressey16824 ай бұрын
Probably he pulls Starmer's strings and is looking to increase his slimy profile to a new voting generation. More money to be made, more influence to be had.