
Free Daily Podcast Summary
by Matthew Carano, CJ Killmer
Get key takeaways, quotes, and insights from Brave The New World in a 5-minute read. Delivered straight to your inbox.
The most recent episodes — sign up to get AI-powered summaries of each one.
CJ Killmer of the Dangerous History Podcast is back after a brutal few months, and we walk through where the United States actually stands two and a half months into the war with Iran.The blockade is theater. Iran controls the Strait of Hormuz. Every justification the administration has given has shifted, and every objective they set is unreachable. Trump is in Beijing this week asking Xi for help on a war he says he doesn't need help with.CJ takes us back to 1948 and walks the full history of the Israel lobby's grip on American foreign policy. Truman's reelection calculation. Eisenhower at Suez. Kennedy on Israeli nukes. Reagan's one and only pushback. Carter's Camp David walkback. Why Netanyahu's time preference is shorter than Trump's term.We get into the Massie primary, the Tucker apology, the Charlie Kirk void, the campaign promises Trump has run against, and why the midterms are going to cream Republicans.Subscribe for new episodes weekly.
Iran sent its response to the United States this weekend. Trump posted "TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE" on Truth Social.He knows what the deal is going to look like. So does anyone willing to look at the receipts.The Strait of Hormuz belongs to Iran. The blockade is theater. The polling at home is the worst any wartime president has ever seen. Gas is climbing toward five dollars and the midterms are six months away.This episode walks through what's actually on the table, what's actually happening at the Strait, and why Lebanon is the piece this whole thing turns on. Israel went to war to topple Iran. Israel couldn't. So Netanyahu pivoted to taking land — Gaza, the West Bank, southern Lebanon. The trade Trump is negotiating right now is whether the United States keeps providing the cover.Plus the four pressure points crushing Trump's clock at home, the damage to American credibility abroad, and what to watch in the next two weeks.Chapters0:00 — Trump Knows2:00 — What's Actually on the Table9:00 — The Strait, the Blockade, and the Geography Problem17:00 — Lebanon Is the Real Trade27:00 — Why Trump's Clock Is Running Out37:00 — The View From Outside45:00 — What Comes Next, and the CloseWhat this episode coversThe 14-point US Memorandum of Understanding and Iran's counterproposalWhy the US naval blockade of Iranian ports is theaterThe Lebanon-as-carrot trade between Trump and NetanyahuThe third round of direct Israel-Lebanon talks at the State Department this Wednesday and ThursdayThe Trump-Xi summit in Beijing the same daysThe Massie primary in KentuckyThe five signals to watch over the next two weeks
Florida Governor Ron DeSantis has flown to Jerusalem multiple times to sign Florida laws on foreign soil. He's not the only one. Thirty-eight US states have adopted the IHRA framework — a definition of antisemitism whose own author, Kenneth Stern, has been telling Congress for years is being weaponized to silence political speech about a foreign government.This episode walks through what's actually been built. The state laws. The federal Title VI enforcement wave. The lobbying network — Joseph Sabag, Eugene Kontorovich, Richard Goldberg, the Brandeis Center, the Combat Antisemitism Movement, ALEC. The federal court rulings calling it viewpoint discrimination and a smokescreen for ideologically-motivated assault. The Americans already hurt — Mahmoud Khalil, who missed the birth of his first child during 104 days in a Louisiana detention facility for activities the State Department's own memo described as "otherwise lawful." Harvard, hit with a $2.2 billion funding freeze before a federal judge struck it down.Then the foreign comparison. The United Kingdom: thirty arrests per day for online speech. Germany: five years in prison proposed for a phrase. France: criminal prosecutions for calling consumer boycotts. The destination is named, and the only thing standing between the apparatus already built here and the cases unfolding there is the First Amendment — which the architects know they cannot beat in a fair fight.If free speech falls, no other right is safe. This is a documentation of what has been built, who built it, who it serves, and what it has already cost.CHAPTERS:00:00 — DeSantis in Jerusalem 05:00 — What Free Speech Actually Is 14:00 — The IHRA Tool 22:00 — Florida Step by Step 33:00 — Who Built It 46:00 — Are These Laws Doing Damage? 51:00 — Where This Leads
The Southern Poverty Law Center was just indicted by a federal grand jury for fraud, money laundering, and paying the people it told its donors it was fighting. A Klan-affiliated informant got over a million dollars. The Unite the Right coordinator got $270,000. The money moved through shell companies with names like "Fox Photography" and "Rare Books Warehouse."And in the fiscal year after Charlottesville — the rally their paid informant helped coordinate — SPLC donations jumped from $50 million to $132 million.But the SPLC is not the story. The SPLC is the clearest possible view of a much bigger machine.In this episode, Matt Carano walks through three cases of the same structural model operating at three different scales:— The SPLC and the manufactured domestic extremism it fundraises off of — The National Endowment for Democracy, USAID, and the US regime change apparatus that replaced what the CIA used to do covertly — with Ukraine 2013–14 as the worked example — Benjamin Netanyahu's decade-long strategy of propping up Hamas to prevent a Palestinian state, in his own wordsOne machine. Three scales. The threat is the product.
Iran announced today that the Strait of Hormuz is "completely open" for commercial traffic. Iran announced it. Not the US Navy or Trump. Iran opened the strait the same way they closed it — by deciding to, tied to the ceasefire in Lebanon.That's the whole story. Iran controls the Strait of Hormuz. They always did. Their coastline runs the length of it. They hold seven of eight islands. The shipping lanes are two miles wide and funnel every tanker within range of shore-based drones, mines, and fast-attack boats. The president himself admitted they can threaten those lanes "no matter how badly defeated they are."So what was the blockade for?In this episode, I walk through why Iran's control over Hormuz is permanent, what they built during the war (a toll system collecting Chinese yuan and crypto that was actually moving oil), who the US blockade was actually targeting (the ships getting through — mostly bound for China), and who paid the price for all of it (Americans, Europeans, Australians — not Iran, and definitely not Russia, who's having their best quarter in years).The blockade was theater. The opening today proved it.Sources and receipts are linked at Brave The New World — bravethenewworld.comChapters: 00:00 Iran Just Opened the Strait 04:00 The Map Doesn't Lie 09:00 The Insurance Is the Weapon 13:00 The Toll Booth 20:00 Who Was on Those Ships 25:00 Who's Paying for This 32:00 The Blockade of a Blockade
Tuesday night, the US and Iran agreed to a ceasefire. Pakistan brokered it. Both sides confirmed. Markets surged. Oil dropped 13%. Families in Beirut packed their bags to go home. Twelve hours later, Israel launched 50 jets into Lebanon. 100 targets. 160 munitions. 203 dead. The largest strike of the entire war — after the ceasefire. Netanyahu said Lebanon wasn't included. Trump backed him over his own mediator. Called 203 dead "a separate skirmish." In this episode: — What the ceasefire deal actually was and why Trump accepting Iran's terms was a concession — How Netanyahu vetoed the deal within hours — Who inside the White House is fighting for peace and who's fighting for Israel — The inner circle: Kushner, Witkoff, Rubio, Huckabee, Adelson, and the structure around Trump — Iran's response and why the ceasefire is collapsing in real time — The pattern: Israel has torpedoed every peace process for decades — What comes next if the restraint faction loses — ground troops, Kharg Island, and the point of no return Sources: NPR, Al Jazeera, CBS, NBC, CNN, Axios, Washington Post, Foreign Policy, Times of Israel, PBS, Fox News
President Trump addressed the nation on the Iran war Wednesday night. The White House promised "an important update." What he delivered was 19 minutes of talking points that contradict his own intelligence chief, his own counterterrorism director, his own words from the night he started the war, and his own Reuters interview published the same day. In this episode, I take the speech apart line by line. Every claim checked against the receipts. The nuclear deal he broke and then blamed Iran for. The diplomacy he sabotaged and then said he tried. The regime change he pursued on camera and then denied. The 45,000 dead Iranian civilians he cited as justification while promising to bomb them back to the stone ages and destroy their electrical grid. Sources include the IAEA, Arms Control Association, the White House's own transcript, Reuters, CNN, NPR, Al Jazeera, Antiwar.com, and the president's own words on tape.
While every camera in the country points at Iran, the US is quietly waging war across the Western Hemisphere. And the Pentagon just told Congress it's "just the beginning."In this episode I walk through:— Operation Southern Spear: 46 boat strikes, 159 dead, no evidence, no trials. The UN calls them extrajudicial killings. A former ICC prosecutor calls them crimes against humanity.— Operation Total Extermination: joint US-Ecuador land strikes along the Colombia border, with a 500-pound bomb landing on a Colombian farm— Cuba: three nationwide blackouts in March, zero oil shipments in three months, a regime change operation targeting a dictator's grandson— Venezuela: a puppet state held together by the threat of criminal indictment— The Donroe Doctrine: how Trump flipped a 200-year-old defensive policy into a license for American empire— The 18-nation coalition nobody voted for and nobody can define— The full list of countries the US is currently bombing, blockading, or operating in — simultaneously, in a single year, without congressional authorization— Who benefits from the Latin America thread vs. the Middle East thread — and why they're different
Free AI-powered daily recaps. Key takeaways, quotes, and mentions — in a 5-minute read.
Get Free Summaries →Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.
Listeners also like.
Brave The New World is a weekly show that analyzes current events through a liberty-first lens, connecting today's news to historical patterns so you can recognize manipulation in real-time.Hosted by Matt Carano and CJ Killmer (The Dangerous History Podcast), each episode breaks down 2-3 stories using a consistent framework: What's the narrative? What's the reality? Who benefits? Where have we seen this before? And what can you actually do about it?No partisan hackery. No doom-scrolling. Just follow the money, recognize the pattern, and brave the new world.
AI-powered recaps with compact key takeaways, quotes, and insights.
Get key takeaways from Brave The New World in a 5-minute read.
Stay current on your favorite podcasts without falling behind.
It's a free AI-powered email that summarizes new episodes of Brave The New World as soon as they're published. You get the key takeaways, notable quotes, and links & mentions — all in a quick read.
When a new episode drops, our AI transcribes and analyzes it, then generates a personalized summary tailored to your interests and profession. It's delivered to your inbox every morning.
No. Podzilla is an independent service that summarizes publicly available podcast content. We're not affiliated with or endorsed by Matthew Carano, CJ Killmer.
Absolutely! The free plan covers up to 3 podcasts. Upgrade to Pro for 15, or Premium for 50. Browse our full catalog at /podcasts.
Brave The New World publishes weekly. Our AI generates a summary within hours of each new episode.
Brave The New World covers topics including News. Our AI identifies the specific themes in each episode and highlights what matters most to you.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.
Free forever for up to 3 podcasts. No credit card required.