How is Peter's audio worse at home than on the trail 💀
@franciscobermejo17793 ай бұрын
Cause the trail is his home!
@emma.muhleman3 ай бұрын
It happens to the best of us. These headsets can get finicky and for folks like Peter and I who jump onto these things last minute, end up hobbling together a bunch of junk with unprofessional setups. You’d be appalled by some of mine 😂
@ChristopherYost3 ай бұрын
U.S. trees have fantastic reception.
@DinaricWolf3 ай бұрын
I mean, he probably earns more than enough to be able to afford a high-end microphone...
@yapk3 ай бұрын
video call vs recording?
@frankiecal31863 ай бұрын
Peter got that Temu head set.
@moggadah3 ай бұрын
Makes you talk like a billionaire
@VinePest3 ай бұрын
@@moggadah beautiful.
@canchero7243 ай бұрын
Doing his bit to keep China afloat
@nephilimninjaofnibiru29073 ай бұрын
Talkin like a billionaire yeah😂....
@tocreatee57363 ай бұрын
$2
@LMarkWeeks3 ай бұрын
It’s interesting how the Japanese have been so much more aware of the precariousness of their situation than the Europeans. Perhaps it’s because they’re located near both Russia and China and have engaged in wars with both.
@kate2create7383 ай бұрын
Chances are that being an island nation makes you prioritize to not rely too much on allies, the US as the exception thanks to the history they both have in that the US occupied Japan for a period till they could get back on their feet. And the Asians have more of a mentality to think collectively as a unit, for better or for worse. In some ways this can hinder them, they gave a harder time taking criticism as they earnestly want to please others, it has resulted in not being very efficient despite having some of the longest working hours in the 1st world, and I hear that generally the Japanese are not easy to train in the military as the society has little care for the military and there is not a healthy mindset for these soldiers to push themselves to be better, just shy of hitting the margin. However, their collective culture makes them be fantastic team players, while a lot of their tech is not something they innovated directly, I swear they are masters at finding ways to make a product better. They also have a mentality to look after each other without any form of entitlement that sadly a lot of European countries have exposed this is one of their biggest flaws that has greatly contributed to their mess they are in. Though, China and North Korea throwing nukes every now and then also kept them in their toes.
@bla51023 ай бұрын
@@kate2create738their collective culture makes them xenophobic, not team players.
@effexon3 ай бұрын
Im putting same question with UK how careless their both domestic and foreign policy is. it is mini USA during 90s and 2000s at US heyday being "tiny state"(middle sized country among giant players) in modern world.
@effexon3 ай бұрын
@@kate2create738 I tried to learn more of japanese miracle in 80s and they had excellent world class manufacturing but office work was same crap as everywhere.... essentially bureaucracy, be it corporate or public side.... as we see now in west everywhere. Collective or not, I dont see how this makes difference... office game can be rigged either way. Granted nowadays there are tons more tools than in 80s for this but humans tend to be humans.
@effexon3 ай бұрын
@@bla5102 what context? they are team players in that nationalistic ethnic context. this is value proposition, not objective thing. Also these are somewhat conflicting things, xenophobia helps collective society and diversified society practically makes that impossible and very individualistic as a whole (smaller groups and minorities can be collectivistic though).. this is result from studies in west.
@texasjack3 ай бұрын
Pete - I note you now have 811,000 subscribers. Take some of that ad revenue and for Pete's sake - invest in a decent audio system!
@carlruppert73243 ай бұрын
I see what you did there.....😏
@TheVeritas21003 ай бұрын
its not like he is multi-millionair from KZbin ( pls/minus $15K a month ... nothing to sneeze at 🙂 )
@sulner99973 ай бұрын
@@TheVeritas2100with patreon he might be
@Ef554rgcc3 ай бұрын
Convenience trumps
@rangerista39333 ай бұрын
And a decent world map too, maybe one that actually shows New Zealand.
@studuerson25483 ай бұрын
I need some wind in the background to be able to understand Peter.
@Greg_Andrews3 ай бұрын
😁😁😁
@daniell14833 ай бұрын
I'm not an isolationist American, but I can understand that thought and feeling on the surface. the US has a good incentive to turn inward, so it takes something big to keep our minds on Europe and our other allies. The way most Europeans didn't recognize the Russian threat for at least the entirety of Putin's time in office always made me think, "If you are so disinterested in your own protection, why should we care about it?" The Russian invasion of Ukraine has finally gotten Europe to re-examine security policy, and I hope we support those efforts.
@yoyoma173 ай бұрын
Why should we support those efforts? We have sh*tloads of our own internal issues NOT even being addressed. And no, I'm not falling for another "domino theory" that allowing Russia to invade a country that they warned they would do if NATO kept encroaching. If Germany and Italy and the Uk refuse to step up, so be it. Russia won't mess with the homeland and Europe is not my problem just as Indonesia or Venezuela is not my problem. Taking care of our own issues will make us strong and cohesive, much more necessary than supporting the most corrupt country in Europe...
@Nylon_riot3 ай бұрын
They did whatever they wanted while Americans did the heavy lifting and benefitted from the industry exportation. Then had a lot of haught opinions or outright discrimination towards Americans. Still don't care their security.
@haveaday18123 ай бұрын
A good incentive? How out of touch are you? The U.s. is in massive state of decline. Major drug and homelessness problems in most most major cities. Covid wrecked businesses everywhere. Travel around the country and see how bad our infrastructure is in most places. Healthcare is a joke. And yes, our border really is physically wide open in a lot of areas. Not to mention crime is on the rise, birth rates are down and our debt is completely unsustainable. All these years of being world police has wrecked us. This bought and paid for government has thrown taxpayers under the bus. Our two greatest exports are war and banking. And people around this country have had enough of this BS.
@chuckles97023 ай бұрын
Our "help" is Poland buying every weapon system it can from us, and when we couldn't meet their thirst, they bought stuff from South Korea. That's honestly the way to dissuade Russia right now. make Europe look like an angry porcupine.
@2639theboss3 ай бұрын
@@yoyoma17 "All these other countries arent my problem so why should I care" they type on their phone made in China, with software from Europe, and clothes from SE Asia. I don't know why its so difficult for people to wrap their head around the premise that every facet of the global economy is connected now, and massive destabilization elsewhere means fewer jobs here. And btw....our total help for Ukraine is about 1% of the annual military budget in the US. It has zero impact on whether or not issues at home can be resolved: the funding isnt coming from social security or medicaid.
@kwpctek91903 ай бұрын
Zeihan's mic was constantly being cutout... time to examine equipment and compressor settings before things go south.
@willywonka43403 ай бұрын
before things go global south 😂
@c1ph3rpunk3 ай бұрын
True, I’m sure he has 30 minutes on how Mexico will dominate headset manufacturing.
@SECRETPURPOSE3 ай бұрын
It's not his fault They cut the Pacific Ocean underwater cables on his headset
@DericO-rz3be2 ай бұрын
He was being hacked with a DDOS just like Elon and Trumpy on the X bro talk.. LoL
@alivonal74423 ай бұрын
It’s changing, it’s not withdrawing. No power is going to leave all that influence on the table.
@botatobias25393 ай бұрын
Romanian here. My country is currently building the largest American base in Europe, will be 10K strong. So over here, on our end, the future alongside America seems quite assured.
@Mantaray9113 ай бұрын
That's unfortunate for you and Romania.
@chrise-ih4ix3 ай бұрын
Took em away from Germany.
@Lifes-little-moments3 ай бұрын
@@Mantaray911not sure if you are a demoralized American or perhaps a Russian bot or something - even tho, now that I think about it, that might be a redundant statement considering they are almost indistinguishable - however, it’s time to get your head out of your ass. Many countries around the world are not only happy but thankful that America is there. America may not be the perfect partner for an alliance but we are still the best one.
@misterwhipple28703 ай бұрын
Now all you have to do is keep the damned Gypsies off that base!!!!!!!!!
@conchfritters013 ай бұрын
American here - few know the horrors of Russia than the Romanian people. Why did the Warsaw Pact countries literally run to NATO as soon as the Cold War was over? Look at the history. Proud to stand with Romania, and the rest of our Eastern European brothers and sisters.
@3ZN3573 ай бұрын
Idk why yall are hating on the Xbox 360 mic - I think it’s unique and emphasizes the importance of active listening🤣
@andrewstewartjacobs96783 ай бұрын
'YALL' and IDK. Followed by a copy and paste lifted from a review. We're f**ed!
@mcs11133 ай бұрын
ha! And it emphasizes the importance of auto-translate. I gave trying to lip read and interpolate what the hell he probably said that got cut out after the 2nd one.
@pawzir3 ай бұрын
Sweden gave up on energy security and neutrality in the seventies. It had a military string enough to stop a Soviet invasion, but it has shrunk every year. All nuclear and hydro power is from back then, when Sweden still future proofed infrastructure. Sweden even had its own nuclear program (in order to not use American or Soviet tech). But the now six out of twelve reactors are closed early and replaced with oil in the winter.
@fehlerhafteinfofehlerhafteinfo3 ай бұрын
bla bla
@jimbodimbo9813 ай бұрын
Interesting.
@KitagumaIgen3 ай бұрын
It was post 1989 we gave up on the energy security and defence.
@trojanthedog3 ай бұрын
Another country with green termites.
@kalleschonberg92962 ай бұрын
Oil is not used for energy production in Sweden in any significant scale.
@prestongalle91583 ай бұрын
Leadup to ~5:20 = mind blowing. Thank you Peter!
@theblahofblah16813 ай бұрын
Notice how New Zealand is not on Zeihan's map behind him 😆
@alst48173 ай бұрын
Neither is Sri Lanka, Cuba, the rest of the Caribbean. Korea and Japan look very weird…so does Australia. Yeah, I don’t think they were going for realism!😂
@tiaelago-oretukaumunika70173 ай бұрын
r/MapsWithoutNewZealand
@TomTomicMic3 ай бұрын
It's added to China!?!
@Chr1s-fm6bi3 ай бұрын
Notice the difference between an art piece and a map?! 😂 apparently not
@linoliebmann3 ай бұрын
🤣
@alexsie30123 ай бұрын
Forget about New Zealand. We left Middle Earth during covid and aren’t coming back. 😊
@hectorcardenas21713 ай бұрын
Right? Nothing is ever heard from that place.
@MrWadeant3 ай бұрын
See my other comment on this vid, but your comments here some what emphasis what I was saying. (New Zealander here)
@vicm55173 ай бұрын
What mountain range is this?
@gagamba91983 ай бұрын
Oficina Cordillera
@TomTomicMic3 ай бұрын
El Crapo Au-dayo, the unique mountain range without an echo in every 10 words, ably demonstrated by Peter, and it's in NAFTA!?!
@linoliebmann3 ай бұрын
🤣👍
@RamzyTheDad3 ай бұрын
Hajaha
@MrGeneralissimus3 ай бұрын
Drywall.
@jeffreysmith93693 ай бұрын
Need some technical audio expertise here. Detracts from Peter's excellent content.
@Nylon_riot3 ай бұрын
What podcast is this? This guy asks great questions.
@EmazingGuitar3 ай бұрын
Good morning everyone, enjoy your 3-4 day weekend. 🇺🇸
@evolvedape33413 ай бұрын
Morning meetings, but then I’m hoping to sneak out a little early! I hope you have a nice weekend too.
@phettywappharmaceuticalsll88423 ай бұрын
@@evolvedape3341nah your boss gonna come in right when you’re about to leave with an “emergency” lol
@evolvedape33413 ай бұрын
@@phettywappharmaceuticalsll8842 I hope not! We’ll see. No one is going to be six feet under because I leave at 1 🤞🏻
@LRRPFco523 ай бұрын
@@phettywappharmaceuticalsll8842"You see, we've been putting these cover sheets on our TPS reports and it would be great if you could do that."
@DigitalNeb3 ай бұрын
Everybody hates having the US around until we get sick of the side eye and go home. Then suddenly it's like, "YOU CAN'T JUST LEAVE US OUT HERE!" ...yes ...yes we can.
@NoNonsenseForex3 ай бұрын
Countries forgot just how real things can get. They got waaay too comfortable.
@thomasbest85993 ай бұрын
Other than Afghanistan and Iran what countries did we just leave ? Cuba ? Vietnam? The Banana Republics?
@ivancho58543 ай бұрын
Yes, you absolutely can leave, however I suspect that you will to an extent be back because isolationism leads to a lack of control and America really, really likes being in control. Abba Eban March 1967 in Japan, “Men and nations behave wisely when they have exhausted all other resources.” Erroneously credited to Winston Churchill. All the best. 🇺🇦🇬🇧
@AustrianPainter143 ай бұрын
Especially democrats
@TheVeritas21003 ай бұрын
@@NoNonsenseForex LOL! - that sounds like the Millenials and Gen Z .... spoiled and entitled "little sh#ts" ... 🙂 - these two American Generations are WAY TOO SPOILED and TOO CONFORTABLE ( and when the crap will "hit the fan" in term of Global Economy - they will be whining like a 'girls' ... when their iPhone will be too expensive for their pockets 😞
@davidangeron33653 ай бұрын
First Lesson in Economis!!!! "There is no such thing as a Free Lunch"!!! A Corollary "What is in it for me"!!!
@Greg_Andrews3 ай бұрын
Another lesson is, "Without customers to buy stuff, no one can sell stuff", and the world population of young workers (ppl with money to buy stuff) is declining, therefore "world economy" is by natural default ABOUT to shrink.
@benjaminshelton9782 ай бұрын
Unless you're a big bank that crashed the world economy then you get TARP bailouts
@acetylslicylsyra3 ай бұрын
Rather than Sweden I think we can build a Baltic cooperation. Scandinavian and polish integration with the Baltics has the potential to institute something different. There are many differences to put aside but also a big common denominator: Russia. Besides there is a reason why at the end of the viking age there were so much mixing of ruling families between scandinavia, poland and kievan rus (ukraine).
@arsic0942 ай бұрын
I'm pretty sure there was more mixing with Novgorod than Kiev.
@BjornGevert3 ай бұрын
Wait…. What…. Sweden a powerhouse in Europe alongside France and Germany? How can that be, we are only 10.5 million, and many of our young are immigrants, and a large proportion of them are uneducated, unemployed, or women prohibited from working because of religion. So very curious, how are we going to evolve as you predict, would love if you could do a 5 minute daily video on The ”Sweden-France-Germany Axis” some day soon! Stay cool, Peter! 🤙🏽
@antonfriberg8813 ай бұрын
Depends on who has the power in Sweden. If the right stays in power, we will turn things around and become a power in Europe. If the left takes over power in 2026, things will turn really bad. We are on the right path right now
@MarkusMöttus-x7j3 ай бұрын
This! And also that VERY many ethnic Swedes want to leave this sinking shitship we're on😂 So I think that's nothing but wishful thinking unless he somehow knows something that the Swedish public does not?🤔
@pavolhorvath78503 ай бұрын
He just looks at data about birth rates and draws conclusions, which are very shallow. Sweden is lost, because of inmmigration. There is no hope for them.
@markozivanic5633 ай бұрын
Yeah, I used to enjoy Peter videos a lot as he had provoking ideas, but lately it seems like he is just giving some big statements and looking at the world in black and white.I mean US has over 180k thousand personnel deployed outside of US, how the hell are they not involved.
@NLJeffEU3 ай бұрын
@@markozivanic563yeah his base seems to be that globalism is over. I don't agree with it at all, definitely not when you see the numbers behind it.
@vNCAwizard3 ай бұрын
It is interesting to me how many countries are in general ignored in Zeihan's presentations. The old time powers are still the central issue of global politics.
@delphy24783 ай бұрын
for a very long time the Us was legitimately partners with many countries, becuase it needed to be in the cold war. but as teh cold war ended and winded down, those countries mostly by and large stopped being pertners with the US and enjoyed being 'dependants' where they benefitted from the arrangement but really didn't have to put very much into it, and the US was basically stuck, trapped by years of tradition and outstanding agreements. and now that the US is pulling back, those countries are discovering that they need to remember how to take care of themselves again in many ways. the funny thing to me is that for the past two decades, for hte most part, whenever anything happens in the world, if the Us intervened in whatever happened, the rest of the world complained about american imperialism, and when the US didn't get involved, the world complained about the US not assisting. well, now the world gets both, the U won't be intervening or assisting, and they are discovering that thats actually not really what they wanted, but it's what they asked for so they have to live with it
@jamesburke38033 ай бұрын
Peter sees demography in a one dimensional way. High birthrates ,good. Low birthrates, bad. But actual populations don't work like that. I live on the Mexican border, and unchecked immigration is absolutely an issue. However, the Hispanics coming across are Christians speaking a related language, and so assimilation works. In France, most immigrants are Muslims who do not speak an indo European language. We have 1,300 years of history of the clash between Islam and Christianity (or post Christian culture), and I challenge you to show ANYPLACE where the two have successfully integrated. In France's case, a high birthrate amongst an immigrant population which will not assimilate is a recipe for civil war. NOT a financial boon!
@jeanlamb50263 ай бұрын
I must admit, I was amused by the juxtaposition of two articles in a paper about France not too long ago--'Whatever shall we do about our pension system?' and 'Whatever shall we do about all the immigrants?' The US has its fun racism etc., but we appear to assimilate people better than say, Germany, with its fifth-generation Turkish guest workers. Educating the immigrants and getting them to work at jobs suffering from labor shortages and paying taxes would seem to be one good solution.
@Ontonaut3 ай бұрын
Deerborn, Michigan is one place where Muslim and Christian cultures have integrated successfully. I think it’s because the U.S. integrates its immigrants well in general. And the Muslims who want to immigrate here value separation of church and state
@siddarthshah17732 ай бұрын
@@Ontonauti am from india and even we have the same issue with islam.. this are our own people who converted during medieval period invasion of india by mughals but for 800 years we have never been in peace with them coz they have a cult like belief system where they keep on screaming therr is no god other than allah and the slogan allah hu akbar by slitting the non muslim throat in an ISIS style
@antalpoti2 ай бұрын
@@Ontonaut was it Deerborn where the Muslims were chanting 'd*ath to America'? Or was it the Muslims from Hamtramck? You might want to reconsider how well all those Muslims assimilated. Because they never do. Once they consider there are enough of them, all those Imams flirting with Sharia everywhere start to pop up. That's the point of no return. Stop deluding yourself. Muslims never ever integrate into a majority Christian culture.
@WeekendWisdom3 ай бұрын
@AUSTRIALIA here. What you are saying Z makes a lot of sense in light of recent moves inside AUKUS partnership. The MRF-D (estimated 2,500 annually), upgrades to the Larrakeyah Defence Precinct and upgrade facilities @ RAAF Darwin and Tindal confirm your thinking.😊
@someyoungguyjohnson72393 ай бұрын
I remember thinking something was up when Abe visited the golden palace the first day Trump was voted in.
@matthewhernando65703 ай бұрын
I can actually hear everything just fine, but ... that's an impressive collection of bottles behind you, Mr. Interviewer. ;-)
@thaaatheef3 ай бұрын
Ya I thought it was fine
@nochan993 ай бұрын
Please buy a new microphone!
@TheClardydawg3 ай бұрын
His microphone is fine, get better speakers
@painfullyhumanharry3 ай бұрын
who is the guy talking with Peter? his background is amazing!
@nikhtose3 ай бұрын
An expansionist Turkey? With chronic inflation, a restive Kurdish minority, the EU at its borders and utter dependence on Western imports, expect a lot of talk, no action.
@familyguygaming_3 ай бұрын
The Kurds are getting boxed in rn. America is no longer interested in protecting them, so Turkey, Iraq, Syria, & Iran are moving in. Diplomatic posturing between Turkey & Iraq is particularly worrying for the Kurds. The Turks are already geopolitically on the move
@abupinhus3 ай бұрын
They are dreaming about "Turkistan" expasion with former USSR states, Ajerbadjan, Tadjikistan, Uzbekistan, Kazastan and all other "stans"
@muslimturk13282 ай бұрын
:)
@apextroll2 ай бұрын
I didn't even notice the audio. It is the quality of the information that I'm interested in.
@fredrubble43052 ай бұрын
You must have liver lips.
@apextroll2 ай бұрын
@@fredrubble4305 Not sure, but I definitely don't have OCD over aesthetics.
@Rainonasphalt3 ай бұрын
I doubt the US can afford to carry on with 800 military bases anymore. The US is forced to retreat.
@TitoRapa302 ай бұрын
Wether we're forced to or not doesnt matter. The publics been wanting this for years. Europe can take care of itself.
@professorakiba4343 ай бұрын
Not just New Zealand but Canada which has enjoyed benefits from being a "middle power" in a multi-lateral system
@darrenmclaughlin13623 ай бұрын
I was surprised there was no mention of India.
@henriikkak20912 ай бұрын
What about India? A country that calls itself the largest democracy in the world -- that's a laugh -- has responded to the current shakedown between the autocratic and democratic world with "we're not interested in getting involved. We just want to make a few bucks while we slide into isolationism and irrelevance".
@louisgiokas22063 ай бұрын
This is Peter's wheelhouse, and I think he nailed it. As one wag once said, history doesn't repeat, it rhymes. The big difference today is nukes. That is it. That is the whole difference between today and the time before WWII. I have seen reports of a French official, I think it was a military officer, who posited that the French might have to go in and take control, directly, of some places in Africa. There are instances of that colonial mindset creeping in all over. The Chinese and the Russians want a multipolar world. They will get it. As Peter has often pointed out that is the norm throughout human history. By the way, the Chinese and Russians did not fare so well in that world. They might want to consider that.
@happytomeetyou.30273 ай бұрын
Audio is the most imporant part of a video, this one fails.
@shaunmalay41653 ай бұрын
You can’t hear him talk? It ain’t ASMR now…
@dant.35053 ай бұрын
@@shaunmalay4165 some words are cut off though. I had to rewind and repeat a few times.
@sharpshooter_productions2 ай бұрын
For the love of God, please get a decent microphone in the studio, and some sort of windshield for your mic that you use on the trail. It's difficult to follow sometimes because of the audio quality. I'm a technical specialist for AV production, I could make some recommendations.
@gregparks3023 ай бұрын
Zeihan is always wrong but never in doubt
@shev19702 ай бұрын
His videos never age well but always so certain
@wambam17413 ай бұрын
Production wise the camera angle of the interviewer interviewer is amateurish: Try an angle the camera so it there’s not so much headroom. Peter’s got it right.
@JimNZ3 ай бұрын
Peter talking about my country!! go NZ.. let's survive by being far away from everyone haha
@PisoMojado-kl8es3 ай бұрын
Love Kiwis but after Jacinda Ardern's rein NZ may never recover and will remain an indefensible two islands that will be taken over by the Chinese in the near future. US is not interested in protecting Marxist dictatorships.
@kirtmanwaring36292 ай бұрын
Someone should give this man a shokz opencom for Christmas. Seems a lot like his speed for home and the trail, much better audio.
@EmazingGuitar3 ай бұрын
It’s 6am eastern time, I can’t sleep, thank you.
@RamzyTheDad3 ай бұрын
Time to wake up anyways !
@london2resistance3 ай бұрын
New Zealand biggest problem is when the Penguin army finally decides to invade
@guydreamr3 ай бұрын
Or Emutopia.
@DawidFRF3 ай бұрын
😂😂😂
@stapleman0072 ай бұрын
"March of the Penguins" documentary was ignored. Now their Penguins are coming home to roost!
@littlestbroccoli2 ай бұрын
"Pingwings"
@seanlander93213 ай бұрын
Japan and New Zealand have a strategic relationship with Australia. America leverages its relationship with Australia to maintain a balance of power in South East Asia and The Pacific, but make no mistake, it’s Australia that will dominate the region and America can’t afford to ever let the Australians isolate themselves.
@davedeville65403 ай бұрын
As a Swede, I feel Peter is discounting Norway way too much. Norway has full access to the Swedish labour force without having to pay for their unemployed relatives. Also, Norway has not ruined their foreign relations with empty feminist poser foreign policy (hi Turkey, Saudi, Israel). Oh, and Norway is the richest country in the world (oil rich) and will not have to participate in the next EU bailout since they’re not a member.
@NLJeffEU3 ай бұрын
Sweden got waaay more of a complex industry. Pumping up gas isn't that hard. 😅
@misterwhipple28703 ай бұрын
@@NLJeffEU Now all Sweden has to do is defend it . . .
@misterwhipple28703 ай бұрын
As a Minnesota "Norwegian", all I can say to Sweden is: Hee hee hee hee heeeeee . . .
@Mads_on_YT3 ай бұрын
Norway, however, has a very simple economy. Mostly the export of energy and fish. Sweden and Denmark have much more diversified economies.
@naturelife4183 ай бұрын
yeah but it gives a hefty revenue stream @@NLJeffEU .. saudis of the north
@richardgreen80033 ай бұрын
As much as we want to avoid conflict, how do you see us doing this and keeping the Middle East from exploding into war after war? What's your solution? If you were POTUS, what would your policies be? Please let me know. Thanks
@Odevonclose3 ай бұрын
Perhaps I'm a bit confused here, but what are the cultural connections between the US and New Zealand'? Besides both being former British colonies.
@Zarkil3 ай бұрын
I was thinking the same thing, though admittedly I know very little about New Zealand culture. Maybe because of America and Australia's expanding alliance? Though I'm not sure how similar Australia and New Zealand are culturally.
@JohnJaneson2 ай бұрын
Movies and social immigration, I think.
@Hijabibti9252 ай бұрын
Greetings from Mexico🇲🇽 from an X-Pat🇺🇸
@TheTraderGuy2 ай бұрын
Why is this man still talking about Russia losing the Ukraine war?
@peterpayne22193 ай бұрын
Really good video!
@donbrutcher45013 ай бұрын
The audio is choppy.
@dennisclapp75273 ай бұрын
Thanks Peter
@RamAms-y4k3 ай бұрын
I have been fortunate to learn how unreliable some or Peter’s perspectives are on some topics. Just a reminder to the ether that predicting all the many things that one day seem a non-issue and the next boil to the forefront, make it likely any person, no matter how informed, is wrong.
@hankhillsnrrwurethra3 ай бұрын
Who you like in the LSU-USC game?
@RamAms-y4k2 ай бұрын
@@hankhillsnrrwurethra no matter how informed, I might be just wrong (USC lol)
@chuckhoyle12113 ай бұрын
I believe that the USA will begin to concentrate more on their own backyard (North and South America) and less so on places like the Middle East and Europe because the USA is, more or less, energy independent and globalization is collapsing due to demographic collapse in China. The biggest issue that brings to the forefront is that Mexico, who the USA shares a border with, is, essentially, a failed narco State. I can see an Afghanistan-style nation building exercise where you replace the Taliban with the cartels. However, with Mexico being in such close proximity the USA could just say "We are in charge now." and, essentially, annexing Mexico and turning it into a quasi-Puerto Rico.
@jordanhoon3 ай бұрын
Please get a new headset and microphone!
@rauldutari75323 ай бұрын
Hi Peter, excellent content as always. What do you think the future of Panama will look like in this new world order?
@dwreckglass3 ай бұрын
All the comments referencing poor audio quality and yet my audio is fine.
@HeathInHeath3 ай бұрын
I've been concerned for some time that the US Navy has become excessively dependent upon the carrier strike group as the primary and near exclusive means of projecting force. In the era of drone swarms and hypersonic missiles this seems even more shortsighted than before. It is said that the generals always plan for how to win the last war. It would seem this is also the case for the admirals.
@captainyossarian3883 ай бұрын
I think the history books are going to record this as the worst decision America ever made. America made a huge amount off of globalization, its economy grew by leaps and bounds, so I find this desire to disconnect to be reactionary and irrational.
@jasonneugebauer53103 ай бұрын
It's all about posturing and being obnoxious. Th US will always be in the middle of world politics. Either overtly or covertly.
@ashcarrier66063 ай бұрын
Actually, we put the most into it and benefit from it the least. We certainly don't get out of it what we put into it, unless you're Raytheon or Lockheed-Martin. We fight wars that whether we win or don't win, have no effect on daily life in America at all.
@jasonneugebauer53103 ай бұрын
@@ashcarrier6606 I disagree. We got cheap consumer goods and the ability to export our inflation to the word.
@ashcarrier66063 ай бұрын
@@jasonneugebauer5310 At the low, low price of exporting our manufacturing. But hey, when you can't work at the mill or factory your grandfather raised a family on with one income, you can always join the Army and serve as the armed muscle for the globalist system that ended that way of life!
@clintonperkins98463 ай бұрын
It is no longer profitable. As Asia and Europes population collapse in numbers. India is an exception but they keep most of their economics within their own nation.
@nHautamaki3 ай бұрын
My question is what happens to nuclear non proliferation if the US no longer acts as the security backstop of last resort for the majority of the world outside of Africa. If the US tells the world they're on their own, doesn't that mean at least 50 countries have nukes within 5 years? Doesn't that mean the risk of nuclear Armageddon go up exponentially? Isn't that the real reason the US continues to be the world's security backstop of last resort?
@geezerdude48733 ай бұрын
The US is tired of playing "policeman of the universe" when others can pay for some of that role now, long after WWII. E.g., why should WE be the ones to deal with the Houthis, since Suez trade matters extremely little to us?
@thannoose12893 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@Rick_13373 ай бұрын
I agree with you 100%. Let Europe, Asia, Africa, and especially the Middle East deal with their own problems. Those areas have been fighting each other for 1000's of years and I don't see them ever stopping. I feel the US should focus our attention on developing trade and partnerships with countries in North and South America. If we treat those countries fairly and stop trying to topple governments we don't like, we could create a similar system to the EU. We have all the resources we need on this side of the globe. Protect our trade routes just off the coast of these continents and let the others do what they've been doing forever.
@jasonneugebauer53103 ай бұрын
The Suez canal red sea terrorist action is costing the U.S. a ton of money. The U.S.has maintained a large expeditionary force there since near the beginning of the attacks. The additional price of responding with counter strikes would be negligible. Shipping rates and insurance have increased world wide. We have a world economy where a huge amount of U.S. consumer goods are partly manufactured in Europe and partly in Asia, costing Americans more for these goods.
@aidan57153 ай бұрын
@@Rick_1337agreed and the countries in South America don’t have thousand year blood feuds between each other and glaring cultural friction between them. This side of the hemisphere is pretty nice with a bit more work
@edwardgrant50983 ай бұрын
@@Rick_1337 i truely believe that is the larger longer term goal of the US government, why pay trillions every year to protect a world that hates it's self when us ad our neighbors have everything WE need no more than a stones throw away. and our demographics on this side of the planet look a hell of a lot better accross the board than the rest of asian,europe and africa. who are we protecting at this point? and who are we protecting them from? and why are we bothering to protect them? those are all questions we have asked ourselves in the last 15 years. and the rest of the world is not going to like the answers and conclusions we came to.
@cptxaggie3 ай бұрын
Question for future episode: Has Xi been sidelined recently? Been hearing reports of this and wanted to hear your take.
@CraigMader3 ай бұрын
Always the best channel with the worst audio.
@YaofuZhou3 ай бұрын
This is how Rome fell. When Rome became the only superpower in the Mediterranean, having friends in the Roman senate equals to political victory for a foreign stakeholder. For the Romans, Egypt is about cheap grains. For the Egyptians, befriending Rome is about survival. Those “offerings” will inevitably be sources of corruption.
@TheGreatBizarro3 ай бұрын
Its time for the kids to leave home and stand on their own 2 feet.
@Lazris593 ай бұрын
We'll miss that free labor from those kids. There is a lot we benefit from having all of these dependent relationships with our allies and partners.
@alexswanson71273 ай бұрын
As I recall, it was the Yanks in 1956 who told the British and French that from then on they weren't to do global politics, Uncle Sam was taking over. Now they're discovering that it's a bigger job than they thought
@u2beuser7143 ай бұрын
Globalism is a sham , a big mistake
@rocks4brains2 ай бұрын
When Rome found themselves under siege by the Carthaginians (ever heard of Hannibal), who had been a long standing trading partner of ag products to Rome, after they were eventually repelled and Rome had economically recovered from defending themselves from them, they sail across the Mediterranean, invaded, killed all of them and salted the earth that no one could rebuild. Problem solved. Rome eventually fell, but it wasn’t because of the Carthaginians.
@DivoGo3 ай бұрын
FIX YOUR AUDIO!!!!!
@ernesthale24713 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@Tennisbull-match-statistics3 ай бұрын
That won’t be enough to buy him a quality mic 😂
@Dominic-hc2fx3 ай бұрын
Don't understand how Germany can be junior partner when it comes to Sweeden wheb they have 8 times the population. Even in the long term Sweden will not gain that much population.
@asdasdasddgdgdfgdg3 ай бұрын
If you have followed Peter for a while you will know that he hates Germany (and a few other countries) and always wants to put them down for no reason. That's just how Peter rolls.
@mja4wp2 ай бұрын
Sweden has a healthy population pyramid - Germany does not. Sweden has energy access while Germany does not.
@Dominic-hc2fx2 ай бұрын
@@mja4wp Even if Belarus had a strong population pyramid and an exceptionally robust energy sector, it would not make Russia the Junior partner. Or take Kazakhstan for example.
@mja4wp2 ай бұрын
@@Dominic-hc2fx geography
@Dominic-hc2fx2 ай бұрын
US and UK then.
@EzekielBrockmann3 ай бұрын
Hi Peter. I searched for _"Ween Homo Rainbow"_ and Lo & Behold! - Here you are!
@thehedgeknightnc36813 ай бұрын
Let me shorten this to a single sentence. USA: " We are tired of paying for your Sh!t".
@stapleman0072 ай бұрын
$36T
@Iwantalloftheinformation2 ай бұрын
Our economic strength comes from our international connections.
@bellwether94963 ай бұрын
The globe in the background looks like Peter has crazy hair. Lols
@superdusmanu3 ай бұрын
Nice bottle collection on the left 👌 😅
@michaellane13163 ай бұрын
The Middle East has fought among themselves for centuries, they will continue. Europe/Russia, the Asian peninsula has had, over the centuries done a slightly downsized version. North & South America have kept a lower outline overall. Point is, The Middle East seems destined to self implode. Turkey seems to be on a road to circumvent their position in so much as to keep in focus their survival while maintaining some interest in that area in only to assure someone will be the adult in the room. Interesting insights here. We are an ever changing world, this is for sure. Peter keeps us on our toes, pin pricking certain hot spots and occasionally throwing us a bone with but a little meat left on so that we may seek a slight taste of what may or may not be coming. Whether one agrees with Peter, he does have internal knowledge of worldly events which when relayed, at least through only tidbits, is at times, something to chew on. Thanks Peter.
@Tuathadana2 ай бұрын
Turkey just beat up U.S marines over the weekend 😡😬😬😬
@JR-ii4lq3 ай бұрын
Yep don't worry about NZ, nothing to see here, no need to "fix" any maps. Hey look, what's that over there?....
@misterwhipple28703 ай бұрын
It's a Bunny Rabbit!
@MARCMOEYАй бұрын
I've lived long enough to see the US come full circle. As I tell my Eastern European and Middle Eastern friends. GOOD LUCK! I wish you nothing but peace and happiness. WERE OUT !!! ............FINALLY.
@virtual21523 ай бұрын
What is the answer to the thumbnail question? Is it clickbait then?
@tryagainnoob1013 ай бұрын
Half the videos lately is like hearing a gypsy woman trying to read palms.
@Redmanticore3 ай бұрын
0:25 i would imagine that cheap small headset which presses directly into ear, not around the ear, but unto ear, actually hurts your ear after few minutes of use.
@troyboyd31003 ай бұрын
I'm always looking at bookshelves in the backgrounds to see what the person is reading. The interviewer's background is unfortunate, not just the empty alcohol bottles either. I do have great respect for Peter Zeihan. Even people who disagree with him have to admit that he thinks about global politics a lot, and has been doing this a long time, so he knows more than almost all of us do (especially me). Thanks Peter!
@ryankline11643 ай бұрын
How has he not changed this? It looks so bad. Why hasn't Peter bought him a green screen? 😂
@cragnamorra3 ай бұрын
Ha, I do the same thing with folks' bookshelves in these type of videos. I enjoy Peter's videos and watch him a lot. But I gotta say, on naval topics I often (as 22-yr retired USN) find his "knowledge" very shallow in that particular subject matter. As one example, at a university appearance this past March, he stated that US aircraft carriers can attain 90-knot speed...which is obviously not even close to true. It kinda makes me wonder what else he's not gotten right in other areas with which I'm not as familiar first-hand.
@ronarnett48113 ай бұрын
@@cragnamorra Peter speaks and writes in far reaching generalities designed to catch attention. Much of his commentary is designed to appeal to cultural chauvinism. EG: Sweden is a tiny country in terms of productive land and a small, shrinking, complacent population. The compelling argument in the debate leading up to Sweden's decision to join NATO is that it would enable Sweden to cut its defense budget in half. It is big fish only in the Baltic Sea small pond. It can never be more than that. While his arguments are interesting, they have little factual basis and really just opinions based on his own feelings about issues.
@johnlaudenslager7063 ай бұрын
The US is in such an enviable position to be a global supplier of food, and self sufficient in energy, I'd be happy for us to allow most all other countries to sell their manufactured products to each other, while keeping our manufacturing base self sufficient and high tech. I think our military could safely and usefully be much smaller, especially as to carrier groups, but rely much on submarines, building temporary bases quickly when and where required, and staying equal or ahead in space.
@ItsJoKeZ3 ай бұрын
audio problems match the value of video at this point. so if the audio sucks it must be a horrible take.
@Wardenofthewell2 ай бұрын
Hey Peter, You say that Mexico is the next major manufacturing hub- I have a couple thousand to invest (and possibly lose)- how does one get in on this game? (I know it’s a drop in the bucket- but stocks for Google, Facebook, etc. were the same.) Thanks!
@ryandorgan35553 ай бұрын
WOOOOOOOOOOOOO!!!!!!! Hey Peter, very curious on the future of the Northwest Passage and what Canada needs to do to ensure it stays in Canada's possession.
@aisaxonawiat64843 ай бұрын
Get rid of Trudeau
@daniellescott67013 ай бұрын
@@aisaxonawiat6484😅😂❤❤😂 YEP.
@Wolfvain-qs5su3 ай бұрын
@@aisaxonawiat6484 I was going to say the same.
@ryandorgan35553 ай бұрын
I agree with getting rid of Trudeau, but Pollievre is just as unconcerned about our north and our NATO commitment as troo-dope.
@burneternally3 ай бұрын
Hey Peter, there are a few great AV companies in Colorado I have worked with. DHE was great and Colorado Audio Video was too. Please hire someone in that industry to enhance your studio audio.
@jasonneugebauer53103 ай бұрын
Peter has quite the opinion of the relationship that all countries should have with the United States. You must all bow down before our self-absorbed mightynes, or you will not survive the coming change. So U.S. centric. How can the US withdrawal interest from the world and yet be the most important foreign power that all other countries must bow down to? I think in this case Peter is insulting every country but the U.S. and I hope U.S. foreign policy makers take a less insulting and more mutually beneficial approach when interacting with every other country on earth. Most people around the world don't like to be insulted and told the USA is most inportant and they need to beg for scraps if they want to do well.
@Mads_on_YT3 ай бұрын
Well, it's not wrong... And this is coming from a European. Only a US civil war is going to change the fact that the US will remain the world's hegemon for the foreseeable future. The US is the world's leader in AI and robotics, and these industries will decide who rules the future.
@chrise-ih4ix3 ай бұрын
How yet be the most important power? Only nation with intact supply chains, largest military, lights going out everywhere else. Easy as that.
@chrise-ih4ix3 ай бұрын
@@Mads_on_YT I guess you got the wrong industries. Peter mentioned a few more important ones.
@jonathanblanchard64803 ай бұрын
He's joyous...
@netxfarmer52523 ай бұрын
I would like Peters thoughts on a scenario where if Belorussian troops cross into Ukraine and join the fight directly with Russia, would NATO use that as a reason/excuse to deploy troops into Ukraine themselves?
@Wolfvain-qs5su3 ай бұрын
Peter thinks Ukraine is winning so why would Nato help?
@GowthamNatarajanAI3 ай бұрын
@@Wolfvain-qs5su When did he say Ukraine is winning? Actually in the beginning he said russia will win soon.
@zill06783 ай бұрын
i imagine peters answer will be no. Belarus like Russia still wouldn't be attacking a NATO member and NATO is a DEFENSIVE military alliance. its members cant attack a country and expect the others to join it. it only works if a member is attacked that the others are obligated to join. so if Belarus attacks say Poland then yeah game on but Ukraine, under the terms of NATO then no.
@Wolfvain-qs5su3 ай бұрын
@@GowthamNatarajanAI Every western Analyst said Russia would win in 3 days...when that didn't happen it was Russia who said it and Russias a joke for not doing it
@gagamba91983 ай бұрын
@@zill0678 True, but Nato is not obliged to sit out. It may choose to intervene, for example Nato's intervention in Yugoslavia. And, of course, nothing in the Nato arrangement forbids countries acting independently or in concert with a few other members.
@chk61942 ай бұрын
Peter, your take on the Turkish BRICS application?
@danjones453 ай бұрын
My wife just pointed out that Peter looks like Kenny Everett.... Now I can't unsee it 😂
@jimbodimbo9813 ай бұрын
And then all my clothes fell off, but it was done in the best possible taste
@AlGorup3 ай бұрын
I love the "Brave New World" reference. If you've read the book then you know about the happy ending it had, putting a certain vibe on his speech.
@julonkrutor46493 ай бұрын
As a german, i am happy being the junior partner as long as Poland, Denmark, the low land countries, Austria and Spain ect are also in that partnership. Also, i am not sure if the USA will like the results.
@chrise-ih4ix3 ай бұрын
Why all these catholics? Austria is completely infiltrated by Russian influences and agents since the end of the war. Wirecard was/is a part of that problem for example. Spain is debt ridden. Etc.
@misterwhipple28703 ай бұрын
As a lowly American, I can assure you: The USA does not give a sh*t. Have fun!
@yidiandianpang3 ай бұрын
As an American at some point we will be forced to care again, and that might be a very ugly time.
@briget34562 ай бұрын
It is high time that European countries worked together more effectively, but they never will, too many historical and cultural fears and barriers. This suits the US to the T because they lie when they say they are withdrawing.
@tina-g8p2 ай бұрын
LOL oooohhhh we're so scared. Not.
@danthep3 ай бұрын
Speaking of New Zealand, you forgot to put it on that map behind you
@markturnwald12093 ай бұрын
with its umbilical cord connection to Australia
@blokeabouttown24903 ай бұрын
That headset makes Peter look like he's working drive-through at McDonalds.
@gaius_enceladus3 ай бұрын
I can understand why the US would want to "leave the global stage" for at least a while, focusing on things at home. It's still a concern though. Whatever your thoughts on the US, I think most people would probably say that it would be preferable for the US to be dominating the "stage" rather than Russia, China or Iran. The US pulling back will leave a vacuum, and you can bet your last dollar (or pound or euro or whatever) that the "bad guys" out there will see that vacuum and will take advantage of it.
@uwesibert9843 ай бұрын
Is that the headset they wore in the PzKpfw. IV ?
@therealdkgray3 ай бұрын
I do note, that the Kiwis didn’t make it onto your map projection. Proves the point of them “being off the end of the earth”
@leaningtoweravenger3 ай бұрын
The defence apparatus of the US is massive and it moves an enormous amount of money. To be able to justify the expenditure, the US has been patrolling the seas and intervene into wars across the globe. I understand that the Us is starting to suffer from "imperial fatigue" and would like to disengage from the world affairs but it will be easier said than done with such a massive and lucrative apparatus. Moreover, I expect the high spheres of the military not to be super happy from such disengagement either. Countries, or if you prefer societies, are unstable balances that require little to be smashed. History will tell.
@cmajaa13 ай бұрын
Problem is that because of the political situation at home and inflation most Americans have had enough of what appears to be dead end adventurism that only benefits the few, think the tail end of the Vietnam war.
@Skunk1063 ай бұрын
The American public could give a shit about what our military does as long as the dying isn't on our side. America is 1-2 decades from completing our multigenerational, grandmaster level, world monopoly takeover. What looks like imperial fatigue is just the rearranging of the pieces for the next phase. This doesn't mean the American public is going to benefit or be happy. Only that America will be in power!
@leaningtoweravenger3 ай бұрын
@@cmajaa1 that's one example of the unstable balance that I was referring to: people are tired of the adventurism but the defence apparatus employes lots of people, directly and indirectly. Moreover, the apparatus has lobbyists (I never understood how the US permits such an antidemocratic system) who can pressure the government. Anyway, we'll see how the pieces will end up
@raintamer81213 ай бұрын
Full Video?
@sog2423 ай бұрын
Fun fact. The swedish royal family comes from France
@asdasdasddgdgdfgdg3 ай бұрын
Not the Queen though. She comes from Germany.
@dmitrykazakov28293 ай бұрын
Yep, treacherous, ungrateful, unfaithful Bernadottes. Although, Russian royals came from Sweden. Ruricks were Norsmen bandits... 😀
@Mads_on_YT3 ай бұрын
The Danish originates from Germany 😅
@misterwhipple28703 ай бұрын
Napoleon's Pets!
@sog2423 ай бұрын
@@asdasdasddgdgdfgdg Yes, they met on a flight where she was a flight attendant.