What in the World is Happening? A Fireside Chat with a Geopolitics Expert, Peter Zeihan

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 31 дек 2024

Комментарии • 725

  • @chrishooge3442
    @chrishooge3442 Год назад +27

    I found Peter Zeihan in 2021 at the outbreak of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. I went back on YT to 2014 when he was hawking his first book. Between 2014 and 2021 the feel of those talks was he was having to convince people that what he was saying was based on real data, demographics, geography, economics, etc. Everybody was freaking out about China and deciding whether they liked Putin or not based on their political affiliation. Nobody is really challenging him anymore. His talks and books have largely become prophetic and they just want to know what's coming next.

    • @PeerReview-tq3pn
      @PeerReview-tq3pn Год назад

      The pgozin points seem very wrong. But who knows

  • @TimothyKirkby
    @TimothyKirkby Год назад +7

    I've heard Peter Zeihan talks so often, but they never get old. It's just all so straightforward.

  • @romlyn99
    @romlyn99 Год назад +120

    I lived in Japan for 22 years and have a family in Japan. One thing I would say is that the cost of food and the quality of the diet is much better than western countries. And this might seem like a small thing to some. The cost of food, the availability of good food has a run on effect in the economy. And this is where the US, UK and Australia have a huge problem. Because of the addiction to sugar and the use of HFCS (High Fructose Corn Syrup) in all processed foods, we see obesity, cancer, heart disease and diabetes rates skyrocketing. In the UK they amputate more limbs each year due to diabetes than all of the amputation due to war. So this is why Japan is aging gracefully and in general are more healthy and productive in old age.

    • @John-uh8kl
      @John-uh8kl Год назад

      Japan, nutrition.
      One you're right, ok, supermarket food is often false, treated for shelf life, doctored so as to oblige the no sugar lunatics, and then, the buy food with, fat, sugar, carbohydrate, with no food in it.
      Two, all, ALL thw health maladies you draw our attention to are caused, thw chief, major cause, is thw hate orchestrated against the West, it's populations.

    • @User-54631
      @User-54631 Год назад

      Japan also leads the world in automation And Americans don’t exercise at all. Not this American but most.
      I’ve read a poll from Japanese woman a few years ago that between the ages 18-24 if memory serves despise sex.
      That’s a problem

    • @samuelphillian1286
      @samuelphillian1286 Год назад

      Japanese kill themselves before they get the diabetes

    • @joezop
      @joezop Год назад +4

      Sugar. Yes what you eat matters... I stooped the Sugar in 2007.
      I mostly cook for myself becouse when eating out you never know what your getting... Food in the States is mostly unhealthy.....

    • @robertstout7756
      @robertstout7756 Год назад +3

      With a background like that Romlyn you must have some thoughts about why Japan has maintained its diet, while much of the western world has gotten so unhealthy.

  • @jarrettbobbett5230
    @jarrettbobbett5230 Год назад +91

    Been following Peter for Many years now & this is one of the best formats I have seen.
    Great job by the hosting organization.

    • @robertpendrick341
      @robertpendrick341 Год назад

      ​@@juliusjanardhanseptimus352p p

    • @anthonycordova3481
      @anthonycordova3481 Год назад

    • @HanSolo__
      @HanSolo__ 11 месяцев назад

      Thats all great but Japan has 1500 years tradition of taking an orphan or a young worker as their son/daughter. Blood bonds are not as important to them as deep friendship and relations in family.

    • @HanSolo__
      @HanSolo__ 11 месяцев назад

      Thats all great but Japan has 1500 years tradition of taking an orphan or a young worker as their son/daughter. Blood bonds are not as important to them as deep friendship and relations in family.

  • @johntc03
    @johntc03 Год назад +67

    Peter is great. And this was always going to be the decade he got popular.

  • @KahurangiSteez
    @KahurangiSteez Год назад +26

    I still don't know what to make of Peter, but I like to check in now and then with an open mind and full belief he's a bit of a crackpot. Whatever people think of his opinions, they're unique and interesting, and a diversity of conversation is never a bad thing.

    • @User0resU-1
      @User0resU-1 Год назад +2

      He's turning out to be wrong about almost everything, which is quite an achievement.
      He's clever with facts and details, but a fool to his own mental biases, hence can't think objectively about the big picture.

    • @grebulon9558
      @grebulon9558 Год назад +2

      Yeah.
      That's why I check-in with Peter from time-to-time too.
      I also think he's way off the mark on a lot of things, but he's worth listening to for broadening perspective.

    • @2ifbysea
      @2ifbysea Год назад

      Remember, he sells lots of books!!

    • @thepianoroommusic
      @thepianoroommusic Год назад

      @@User0resU-1Im new to geopolitics, what are some things he has been wrong about? And what are some things he has been right about?

    • @youknowwho5900
      @youknowwho5900 Год назад

      @@thepianoroommusic Well, I certainly will not be doing your homework for you but I tried following PZ some time back and after a long break got here only out of curiosity to see if anything in his "analysis" has changed. Nope, he drums the same beat over and over. The US's doing great, China's dying, Russia's dying. Had to stop watching around 15mins when he's got to Russia with same "dying" thing saying that 50 odd invasions failed due to bad weather. I guess, London must be the safest due its to shitty weather. :-) His military expertise is beyond laughable. Well, as the rest of his "analysis". I am sure some of his childishly-exuberant followers might disagree.

  • @kimpreston3628
    @kimpreston3628 Год назад +14

    You had me at “kids - +1 because that’s how you find out it’s to many kids”
    Great start 😂

  • @nicksanta
    @nicksanta Год назад

    Hello Thankyou Burt and Forman! Appreciation to Mr. Peter Zeihan. Regards

  • @peteygonemadarts4765
    @peteygonemadarts4765 Год назад +35

    Another big difference between pre world War 2 and post world War 2 is the overall home structure . The city has always been kind of different but most American families lived together in same house or on same property for generations. Basically most Americans didn't leave home and therefore there was not a major issue with childcare or senior care because the family took care of this as a natural part of the household. This doesn't mean even in this structure no one left home but most either didn't or returned. Interestingly this trend also coincides with the collapse of family generational wealth .
    So while some unjustly say youth staying home longer is un-American is egregiously untrue but the fact that youth staying home tend to contribute less to the household is new in this general traditional household .

    • @User-54631
      @User-54631 Год назад +3

      I’m American my group of friends were out of the home by 19. We grew up in the 90s

    • @peteygonemadarts4765
      @peteygonemadarts4765 Год назад +5

      @@User-54631 so did most kids post WW2 ... point is prior to WW2 it wasn't uncommon for the opposite.

    • @clarencebillette1792
      @clarencebillette1792 Год назад

      ​@@peteygonemadarts4765and

    • @sunnyseacat6857
      @sunnyseacat6857 Год назад +1

      Out of the home at 17-18 for those kids who went away to college; community college kids were the ones who stayed home for the duration of college. Staying home or living with ones parents was definitely looked down upon in the 80s.
      Pre WWIi - agricultural lifestyle for those NOT in cities. Growing your own food was a non-negotiable.
      Creation of cities lured people off farms/self-sufficiency to perhaps higher paying jobs but at what cost? Incompetence in food sovereignty and placing a paycheck before tangible skills. Computerization of the workplace further created a non- skilled population and hence, perhaps, a reason college students stayed at home or moved back home after college: laziness and lack of mental fortitude. Sitting behind a computer is not a skill, neither is pushing a cart down a food aisle in a food store.
      "Young" adults today are not skilled like youth prior to WWII, the great game changer in the 1900s along with the office lifestyle/ mentality.

  • @gailforce
    @gailforce Год назад +22

    There's so much superfluous work being done in modern societies. Yes we don't have the workers to maintain the socio- economic system we've developed since the 70s, OK its time to rethink that system.

    • @hill2750
      @hill2750 Год назад +8

      The managers and administrators could do with thinning out

    • @RecessionJobSearcher
      @RecessionJobSearcher Год назад +2

      Rethinking and creating/ evolving the system means you have to go against the status quo which generates its own fractions and resistances.
      I agree with you but it is a monumental yet necessary task

    • @jeremytaylor3532
      @jeremytaylor3532 Год назад

      That is actually the problem not the solution. People tearing down our systems without comprehending how we actually got here from there.
      The fact that schools are not creating enough engineers to keep the infrastructure running and having to import 95% of the real labour due to kids being destroyed one way or another.
      If we were a closed society like China we would have collapsed 20 years ago. Due to idiots running the schools, institutions and government agencies.

  • @MovieRiotHD
    @MovieRiotHD Год назад +1

    Where is Bill Burr?

  • @inzhener2007
    @inzhener2007 Год назад +4

    Peter, the Nord Steam is no a single pipeline. I twas NS1, consisting in fact of 2, and newly build NS2, also of 2 line with cross connector.

  • @rolandvantol2338
    @rolandvantol2338 Год назад +13

    Fascinating that your vieuws are so positive regarding the position of Ukraine. I’m not sure what to make of it. Where do you get your intel?

    • @Koz4concern
      @Koz4concern Год назад +2

      Zohans intel comes from his wild imagination. He does throw in a few facts here and there to gain some cred, but overall his opinions are laughable at best

    • @Markdmarque
      @Markdmarque Год назад +2

      He has been paid to say positive things about a very bad situation for Ukraine and the west

    • @NathanShattuckIsHere
      @NathanShattuckIsHere Год назад +1

      I’ve been fascinated by Peter’s demo/econ/pol analysis for a while, but the longer you listen to him the clearer it becomes that he’s a clever mouthpiece for Establishment preferences (western governments, multinational corps, media corps, Democrats/Labor/Liberal parties, etc).

    • @rolandvantol2338
      @rolandvantol2338 Год назад

      @@Koz4concern Thank u, other people told me the same.

  • @basic48
    @basic48 Год назад +16

    What you are providing Peter is the most important information regarding Geopolitics that anybody could give...outstanding. Thank you for presenting this highly professional and information dense video.

  • @gloriaharbin1131
    @gloriaharbin1131 Год назад

    Thank you so much for sharing this on RUclips.

  • @JP-dh4mm
    @JP-dh4mm Год назад +41

    Unfortunately I'm rapidly losing confidence that Peter is giving us unbiased analysis of things, particularly the situation in Ukraine. No genuine military commentator or even competent observer would share Peters positive outlook for the success of the AFU. I'd prefer to just get the truth straight, no matter how difficult that is to digest.

    • @alderontyran
      @alderontyran Год назад +9

      I've gotten the same impression...

    • @user-mq1up2fw4r
      @user-mq1up2fw4r Год назад

      It's pretty stunning how biased some great intellectuals are with the Ukraine conflict. It's clear Ukraine is washed.

    • @tonyr4873
      @tonyr4873 Год назад +11

      Also seems very biased against Trump, unreasonably so.

    • @imcbocian
      @imcbocian Год назад +2

      It no bias. He just not completely know what he is talking about and hugely oversimplifies

    • @jjoohhhnn
      @jjoohhhnn Год назад +1

      Ukraine's capabilities will increase once they get a majority of the tanks, jets, missils and other complex systems so while they've slowed now, they'll hopefully regain momentum.

  • @PatriciaGoodsonpianist
    @PatriciaGoodsonpianist Год назад +2

    Does anyone know where Petr gets the idea that the Russian system of education collapsed in 1986? I have heard him say this elsewhere, but it’s such a broad, sweeping statement that I can’t imagine what form this collapse might have taken, and why. They seem capable of producing armies of hackers, if nothing else. Is he speaking about engineering?

    • @anthonygreen6219
      @anthonygreen6219 Год назад +1

      I was going to mention that this is a real exaggeration that Russians are not educated. Again a remark hat sounds like a US three letter agency. I have heard that Russian students read at a higher level than US students. I believe a good part of the data otherwise is reliable, but his insight into it is deeply tainted.

  • @bobmcmanis
    @bobmcmanis Год назад +10

    Excellent ! He really shows us and communicates the current situation.

  • @johndodson8464
    @johndodson8464 Год назад +3

    46:08 pretty darned prescient. This was recorded June 29. Bridge was blown on July 17.

  • @wadedavies3924
    @wadedavies3924 Год назад +33

    The resources that provide Peter's data are probably three letter agencies but it doesn't discount the validity of his conclusions. We just need to be aware of whom is pushing this dialog.

    • @tonyr4873
      @tonyr4873 Год назад +8

      Yeah, and he seems to be very unreasonably anti-Trump. Called him 'under indictment', without mentioning that they are BS indictments.

    • @simonmasters3295
      @simonmasters3295 Год назад +3

      Narrative, not dialogue?
      Surely?

    • @wadedavies3924
      @wadedavies3924 Год назад +1

      @@simonmasters3295 corrected again. I'm trying to be positive, damn it!

    • @bubbajones6907
      @bubbajones6907 Год назад +4

      ​@@simonmasters3295 "Narrative" is their euphemism for "telling stories".

    • @simonmasters3295
      @simonmasters3295 Год назад +3

      Apologies for pedantry, on distinguishing narrative (storyline) from dialogue (learning through discussion), but it felt important to suggest that we are all fed narratives and are therefore challenged to maintain an open mind.
      I am saying conversation is often delightful and enlightening.
      Curiously both words have to do with illumination.

  • @SorenK392
    @SorenK392 Год назад

    Love these talks. Ever since I realized Peter’s voice is identical to the character Tom’s voice from “Succession” though, I can’t get that out of my head. Lol.

  • @cokrlicix
    @cokrlicix Год назад +4

    Almost half a million views and only 160 comments, all of them assertive...what a joke

  • @gagamba9198
    @gagamba9198 Год назад +1

    Peter is a bit incorrect about Russia's 'bad weather' ejecting invaders. The Mongols weren't ejected by that. The Mongols were acclimatised to even worse weather and their ponies were tougher than the warriors. They succumbed to infighting and fractured. The Golden Horde was one of successor Mongol khanates, occupying southern Ukraine, Crimea, and Central Russia south and east of Ryazan. The Germans in WWI weren't booted due to weather. They defeated Tsarist Russia and the new governing Bolsheviks surrendered an enormous amount of territory. It was the western Europeans defeating Germany that forced Berlin to give up these winnings. In WWII Germany's poor logistics had the panzers outrunning the horse-and-wagon infantry and logistics. (The same was happening in North Africa when Italian merchant vessels were sunk, depleting Rommel's supplies and ending his offensive capability tin Egypt.) This was happening in summer and autumn in the USSR. Fuel, lubricants, spare parts, food, fodder for the horses, medicine, etc were affected by the over-stretched lines of communication. This prevented the Germans from pressing the advantage, allowed the Red Army to regroup and dig in. But, Germany's tactics were better suited for western Europe where British and French ran out of room to manoeuvre. The USSR had abundant space to manoeuvre, though Stalin misused this advantage. In 1941 the USSR had even worse logistics than the Germans. By 1944 its logistics were mechanised and radio transmitters were a force multiplier.

    • @Mike-gi2oi
      @Mike-gi2oi Год назад

      He’s just doing his job for the CIA. Leave the man alone. If the US elite thought he was right they would have attacked Russia long ago. 🤣

  • @12235117657598502586
    @12235117657598502586 Год назад +4

    Only 167 comments… After nearly half a million views?!
    Something isn’t adding up here!? 🤔🤔🤔

  • @michaelmulcahy2277
    @michaelmulcahy2277 Год назад +1

    Thank you Peter, that was really interesting.

  • @gandalfgreyhame3425
    @gandalfgreyhame3425 Год назад +4

    One thing you need to look into is the fact that when the shale boom started in the US, it was made possible because capital investment was so cheap back then. What will happen when this capital suddenly dries up?

    • @lucasward9506
      @lucasward9506 Год назад +4

      I doubt much, because the industry is profitable unlike many of the things that have been made possible by cheap capital.

    • @gandalfgreyhame3425
      @gandalfgreyhame3425 Год назад

      @@lucasward9506 Well, the shale industry has been steadily driving down the COSTS of drilling for shale, but for sure, the early days of the shale boom were made possible only because of >$100/barrel oil, and massive amounts of cheap capital made especially cheap because of the near zero Fed fund rates. It would be interesting to have Peter do a deep dive into what the exact break even costs of drilling for shale oil are now. I know at one time, it was around $60/barrel, which was why in 2016, MBS opened the Saudi spigots to drive the price of oil DOWN, with the expressed intent of driving the shale operators out of business.
      There is a limit to how cheap shale oil can get, simply because new shale wells have to be drilled constantly - each horizontal borehole generally produces only for about 3 years and then dries up, and so they have to keep drilling constantly, unlike the giant oil fields where a single drilled well will tap into a huge pool of oil that can produce for decades.

    • @USandGlobal
      @USandGlobal Год назад

      @@gandalfgreyhame3425capital investment has never been this great especially at the start of Covid. How long far back are you talking about? Your still thinking in pre Covid and pre Ukraine war. There are only a few places where this energy is possible and security is another problem what happens when the Iranians and Saudis get into a war?

  • @ericmcmanus5179
    @ericmcmanus5179 Год назад +18

    America blew up the pipeline because then, any country that sided with Ukraine wouldn't be able to turn back once their economic problems started hurting them. America figured that if everyone sided with the Ukraine, and THEN they blow up the pipeline, they have public agreements from everyone and now will never be able to take it back. Its not hard to see this as a reality. The idea that America wouldn't force another countries hand on foreign affairs is laughable

    • @jeremytaylor3532
      @jeremytaylor3532 Год назад +1

      We know that a private Yacht was seen on satellite leaving a Polish Port and going to the area days before and returning to port afterward. The Polish and Ukrainian governments deny involvement. However this operation could easily have been carried out by anyone with Seal type training. Even private individuals like a Wagner group or a western equivalent.

    • @Worselol
      @Worselol Год назад +3

      ​@@jeremytaylor3532something like this can't happen without US approval.

    • @imcbocian
      @imcbocian Год назад +2

      ​@@jeremytaylor3532Dude. Where can you rent a yacht with huge decompression chamber, heavy duty diving equipment for at least 3 divers and other specialised tools? It is not recreational diving in coral reef 😂
      Marine monitoring registered only few fat dudes with fishing poles, coolers and few backpacks. That was just false trail.
      Even if you find such a specialised yacht (and that wasnt one of them) you would need it for at least four days. Or four of them.
      Forget
      You need submarine to do this effectively and unnoticed.

    • @chadwells7562
      @chadwells7562 Год назад

      Good analysis. Of course that’s why we blew it up. Now the Russians don’t have any leverage on the rest of Europe.
      I’m not sure why people are talking about yachts and divers. The US has nuclear submarines specifically equipped for specical ops support and underwater autonomous vehicles, it’d be child’s play for us to blow up an underwater pipeline.

  • @leenickshramko1100
    @leenickshramko1100 Год назад

    Why is LukOil still operating gas stations in upstate NY?

  • @M-N00
    @M-N00 Год назад

    good info, but....who's your audio mixer?

  • @ronnatalia3130
    @ronnatalia3130 Год назад +6

    I hope the social credit system goes down as well

  • @IdahoHobo
    @IdahoHobo Год назад +1

    First time I've head scatched on some points Peter presented here. How exactly did NAFTA benefit the US worker?

  • @iancormie9916
    @iancormie9916 Год назад

    May I suggest you put the arctic circle on you horizontal Russian map - it will certainly make things easier to understand by your Canadian (and perhaps) USA fans. And perhaps a 49th parallel to emphasize climatic conditions.

  • @w4mps1964
    @w4mps1964 Год назад +15

    Fascinating and enlightening. I’m a registered independent. In my opinion, the largest single problem I’m worried about is CORRUPTION. I’m not accusing you of being a Biden apologist, but you don’t seem to be too concerned about that. Objectively (which none of us frankly are) I wouldn’t vote for Biden because of that, and, again objectively from my perspective, I don’t see evidence of that on the Trump side.

    • @shawnd5746
      @shawnd5746 Год назад +3

      Yeah, I'm not sure what his source is on the views of typical Trump voters. I follow some of the "extreme right" and they don't talk about any of those things.
      But he's still great for understanding macroeconomic trends, geography, and their implications.

    • @jjoohhhnn
      @jjoohhhnn Год назад

      You don't think the hundreds of millions trump has gotten from the Saudis is a little sketchy? Or the 2 billion to Kushner? He's definitely corrupt, even if he is outside the usual Washington bubble.

    • @NathanShattuckIsHere
      @NathanShattuckIsHere Год назад +2

      I’ve been fascinated by Peter’s demo/econ/pol analysis for a while, but the longer you listen to him the clearer it becomes that he’s a clever mouthpiece for Establishment preferences (western governments, multinational corps, media corps, Democrats/Labor/Liberal parties, etc).

    • @jjoohhhnn
      @jjoohhhnn Год назад +1

      @NathanShattuckIsHere the maverick of Wallstreet and Perun have the best economic and geopolitical coverage on RUclips imo, but once you know the lens Peter uses his analysis becomes more useful.

    • @Tony-ft4jp
      @Tony-ft4jp Год назад

      Not impressed with info!!

  • @ericmcmanus5179
    @ericmcmanus5179 Год назад +1

    What if you place a sea type oil rig in th bogs? If you treat the permafrost/bog areas as if it has no solid ground and just anchor a drilling rig deap into the ground, couldn't that work?

    • @NurElv
      @NurElv Год назад +4

      It is not about anchoring the drilling rig, it is about delivering oil from the drilling place to the shipping point or oil receivers by means of pipes. The oil pipeline would go over the permafrost which constantly changes its surface which means that you need constant maintenance of the pipelines.

  • @supersasquatch
    @supersasquatch Год назад +2

    he's wrong about a bunch of russian facts, which puts into question the rest of his narrative

  • @romlyn99
    @romlyn99 Год назад +3

    Intel, Samsung, Micron and TSMC have all announced and are currently building high-end chip Fabs in the USA. So they are already planning for when they lose chip fab from Taiwan and China.

  • @gilligan87
    @gilligan87 Год назад +38

    Great talk, with the usual caveats.
    Peter knows so much, but when he starts talking about technology, I always find myself heaving a big sigh and thinking about skipping. I usually don't, just to see what he's learned, or what he might know about related tech supply chains that I don't - I still learn something new about tech-related materials supply chains almost every time he does a big new talk.
    But that's where his insight on tech begins and ends.
    I'm an electrical engineer and have worked in tech for over a decade between three countries in telecom and computing hardware manufacturing and design, and I can confidently say that almost everything Peter says about tech is either half-right and sort of missing the point, or dead wrong. He suffers from massive confirmation bias on this specific subject. It's a glaring weakness of his worldview and unfortunately leads him - and therefore presumably his paying clients - slightly astray in an area where you need reasonably comprehensive knowledge to understand industry trends and how certain technologies actually work. Peter is a generalist, and unfortunately for him, tech isn't something you can "fake it 'til you make it" on.
    He should stop talking about tech (except for relevant supply chains). It makes him look bad.

    • @ScottStephenSmith
      @ScottStephenSmith Год назад +10

      It's a good reminder for the audience. These caveats appear on most of his videos.
      I love his work, but agreed. You need to have some awareness about where he's less precise.
      It would be great for him to make these caveats himself.

    • @afarwiththedawning4495
      @afarwiththedawning4495 Год назад +2

      As someone who has talked to a lot of engineers, I appreciate your honesty about technology.

    • @gilligan87
      @gilligan87 Год назад +2

      @Chris-zd7gw not really, no. I've questioned and done deeper dives on many things he talks about, and I've never found glaring holes in his info on other topics.

    • @imcbocian
      @imcbocian Год назад +8

      ​@@gilligan87i do, when it comes about his stance on for example history or its interpretation.
      In similiar fashion i heard many times he hugely oversimplifies economy policies and trade.

    • @imcbocian
      @imcbocian Год назад

      ​@@gilligan87ah, not to mention about biggest BS he repeat after Russians. About this need of buffer space to protect themselves. It is not fcking XVII century when Poles took Moscow with their cavalry.
      Russia have fcking nuclear deterrent.
      And even if they take whole Ukraine, it is only like 15 additional minutes for rockets missle or Jet fighters and bombers...

  • @TinoTM1986
    @TinoTM1986 Год назад +4

    Many great points. I’m not sure where the animosity against trump comes from & the hatred for Russia. Would it be such a bad thing to have peace with Russia?

    • @SueFerreira75
      @SueFerreira75 Год назад

      Read extensively Russian history and politics to understand - US history too

    • @NathanShattuckIsHere
      @NathanShattuckIsHere Год назад +1

      The part about Tucker Carlson statements having a Slavic syntax was hilarious and ridiculous. After 7 years of 24/7 unhinged screeching about Russia controlling every aspect of US govt, social media, elections, etc now obviously complete rubbish, it’s hard to believe anyone would still voice such blatant silliness with a straight face.

  • @AlbionTVLondon
    @AlbionTVLondon Год назад +2

    Hoping for incidents with oil tankers and calling it "weird" that I didn't happen simply shows Peter's complete detachment from reality.

  • @dantegray1994
    @dantegray1994 Год назад +13

    This was an excellent conversation.

  • @rodserling6955
    @rodserling6955 Год назад

    Zeihan is right on...very good info!

  • @ronniemacsween6977
    @ronniemacsween6977 Год назад

    How does Canada look?

  • @Archibald_von_Munch
    @Archibald_von_Munch Год назад +6

    Well, old Peter just lost me by bad mouthing Tucker Carlson. That is the grain of salt you have to take with you dose of “Peter Z”. He has a lot of wonderful data and I don’t necessarily disagree with many of his theories on what outcomes will be, especially related to demographics. However, never forget, he is a globalist and uni-party man who seems to love the main stream media and all the dross they dish out. I still do love his presentations except when he talks about anything having to do with Trump simply because his responses are knee jerk globalist responses.

  • @gonzalesorgaz735
    @gonzalesorgaz735 Год назад +1

    However much of the inflation is driven by corporate greed

    • @2ifbysea
      @2ifbysea Год назад

      Yes, but what precedes that is revving up the economy with a supercharged printing machine designed to rev the economy with money flowing everywhere to start a massive rug pull on the middle class; print trillions of dollars, create massive inflation, then increase interest rates to then crash economy, (which is coming), then the elites buy all the depressed property assets and depressed stocks after the crash. And the cycle begins again! The wealthy get wealthier and it starts every time with massive printing of dollars!! Americans are too damn dumb to vote for an outsider like Vivek he’s our only chance of changing the system.

  • @Johnconno
    @Johnconno Год назад +2

    Chaos, Greed and Stupidity reign.

  • @davidbrunette6692
    @davidbrunette6692 Год назад

    Thank you peter

  • @mutual-aid
    @mutual-aid Год назад

    will the coming dearth of labor in germany be adequately counterbalanced by more ai and hardware tech?

  • @XxGOTARxX
    @XxGOTARxX Год назад

    Thanks. Good talk.

  • @thinman8621
    @thinman8621 Год назад +4

    Mr. Zeihan reports Tucker Carlson's syntax is indicative of Russian influence. Oh boy!

  • @mmmdesignllc
    @mmmdesignllc Год назад +4

    I've listened to Peter a lot. Love his economics but he leans left. It's interesting that the corruption by the CIA, FBI, DOJ or even the President is ever mentioned in these discussions.
    Just heard the comment about rule of law. Wow. Listen to his economics, leave the political questions to others.

  • @charlesd4572
    @charlesd4572 Год назад

    Put some plots together on one variable then project this onto every complex issue to make your story fut - and if the data doesn't fit just modify it.

  • @johnrichardson-ru1mx
    @johnrichardson-ru1mx Год назад

    What I want to know is were does Peter here gets his information from

  • @szaveljev
    @szaveljev Год назад +2

    "We're going to see the end of the chinese system within a decade"
    2010. jan. 22. Peter Zeihan, Business Insider: I would say we expect the economic collapse of China in this decade
    Lol. Zeihan predicts this for at least 15 years, still did not happen.
    This is not an analysis, this is wishful thinking.

  • @rolandvantol2338
    @rolandvantol2338 Год назад +5

    Germany choose, yeah right but under immense pressure from the friendly US of A. Because there was a risk that Germany would lean towards Russia. Anyway your vieuws could also be very wrong…..As I think. Greets, roland from holland

    • @86_Nix
      @86_Nix Год назад

      And Germany influences policy in Scandinavia... Scary.

  • @pstewart5443
    @pstewart5443 Год назад

    We are looking at new nuclear, it's just SMR, look up Clinch River and TVA's investment in the SMR tech.

  • @killianthegrunt
    @killianthegrunt Год назад +7

    I like Peter and I've read almost all of his books. He has great insight and information on certain topics but when it comes to talking about war, politics, and propaganda he's a prime example of a professional who has "drank the kool-aid" and is just parroting talking points and buzz words that have either been given to him or that reinforce his own biases. Maybe both? 🤷‍♀️

    • @NathanShattuckIsHere
      @NathanShattuckIsHere Год назад +4

      I’ve been fascinated by Peter’s demo/econ/pol analysis for a while, but the longer you listen to him the clearer it becomes that he’s a clever mouthpiece for Establishment preferences (western governments, multinational corps, media corps, Democrats/Labor/Liberal parties, etc).

    • @johnl.7324
      @johnl.7324 Год назад +1

      Do you have any specific examples? He did predict Rusisa would invade 2022 in 2014...

    • @WindingEssensialsTogether
      @WindingEssensialsTogether Год назад

      ​@@jamartin888 Well for starters Georgia....

    • @dicksonluiakitperday2532
      @dicksonluiakitperday2532 7 месяцев назад

      He have been predicting the collapse of China since the 2010. He is wrong every single time and there is no need to listen to this moron.

  • @dennygoodgodshall
    @dennygoodgodshall 10 месяцев назад

    Yes, they do have migrants. I just watched a video on RUclips of a migrant from South America working in Japan.

  • @MrMinnesota99
    @MrMinnesota99 Год назад +5

    Nice graphics, some good nuggets of information. Take this guy with a grain of salt, no comment on wagner repositioning to belarus training their army and within striking distance of kiev and polish Lithuanian border. Also ignorant of the navy p8 operating over nordstream explosion site at the time.

  • @danasaylor2017
    @danasaylor2017 Год назад +1

    Many believe that AI will be more harmful than beneficial. What’s being done to prevent this from happening?

  • @beerman204
    @beerman204 Год назад +2

    Peter seems to work for himself, while most pundits in USA these days owe their allegiance to some entity above them who they must not cross.

  • @uli5869
    @uli5869 Год назад

    Thank you very much for explaining everything :P

  • @kitkakitteh
    @kitkakitteh Год назад +2

    Half of the “expert” are screaming about World overpopulation, the other half are warning of population collapse😂

  • @VernRozelle-kn7wf
    @VernRozelle-kn7wf Год назад

    Outstanding communicator !!

  • @ares106
    @ares106 Год назад +8

    It’s amazing listening to this 3 weeks later, it’s like listening to someone making assessment and predictions colored by events from 2013.

    • @User-54631
      @User-54631 Год назад +1

      3 weeks is comparable to a decade?

    • @ares106
      @ares106 Год назад

      @@User-54631 so much has changed it feels like a decade to me.

    • @ares106
      @ares106 Год назад

      @@eduardomartin8510 I have explained above.

  • @friendofcoal
    @friendofcoal Год назад +3

    The most logical explanation of today's events that I've heard so far....

    • @Koz4concern
      @Koz4concern Год назад

      You must be of below average intelligence

  • @kathryncolton4423
    @kathryncolton4423 Год назад +23

    He lost me at the Nordstream pipeline. I guess he doesn’t believe the Seymour Hersh article, or didn’t hear Biden and his admin telling the press that the pipeline “will not go forward”, whatever that means. Most of what he says about the world economic order makes sense, but only under ideal conditions. Conditions under which all world leaders make wise, calculated decisions that don’t lead to war or nuclear conflict. Seems we have a lot of world leaders who are mentally unstable these days.

    • @86_Nix
      @86_Nix Год назад +1

      He has been pretty accurate so far, but I also mentioned what I see as the biggest wildcard.

    • @hoots187
      @hoots187 Год назад +1

      Per the article it was placed 3 months before it went off. Entirely possible that once placed there was no deactivation possible remotely. He doesnt mention this contingency.

    • @htown148
      @htown148 Год назад

      ​@hoots187 Seymore harsh was the same guy who refused to claim Syria used gas on their population. Dude has been a effin nutjob for awhile. He provided ZERO EVIDENCE

    • @mkkrupp2462
      @mkkrupp2462 Год назад

      And the most mentally unstable one of all in the west is waiting in the wings - in Florida.

  • @ericmcmanus5179
    @ericmcmanus5179 Год назад +3

    We better not lose high end chips. Im not gonna stop upgrading my gaming rig. No way man.

    • @jjoohhhnn
      @jjoohhhnn Год назад

      The market is kinda crappy for gpu's anyways so...

  • @teaja211
    @teaja211 Год назад

    10:35 no way !! I need to find that video !!

    • @teaja211
      @teaja211 Год назад

      37:38 Oh noo you called it.

  • @kckaz4453
    @kckaz4453 Год назад

    Well done, M8. Thank you.

  • @brendatenorio5721
    @brendatenorio5721 Год назад +2

    Peter was interrupted before he covered off-shore African oil. And he wasn't able to cover the northern hemisphere, Norway, Scotland, Iceland, Greenland, the Arctic etc

  • @martino8114
    @martino8114 Год назад

    Peter, you astounded me!

  • @leenickshramko1100
    @leenickshramko1100 Год назад +1

    The delay by the west last year allowed Russia time to put the mines and dragons teeth in place. Our fault.

  • @andreww4898
    @andreww4898 Год назад +8

    Sounds Peter just saying something which the western is willing to believe

  • @cross3fire
    @cross3fire Год назад

    Some of the best details, data. Ever.

  • @joycehaines2055
    @joycehaines2055 Год назад

    I'm an independent and you got us all wrong. The problem is most states don't let one vote independent we have to choose between recognized parties.

  • @nalejbank
    @nalejbank Год назад

    You made an early statement that young people, in the earlier demographic, spent all the money and that their action was inflationary.
    Correction: Spending money already in circulation has no bearing on or causes "inflation".
    Only those in charge of increasing the quantity of paper currency and "credit" cause inflation.

  • @cherienafo7676
    @cherienafo7676 Год назад

    Australia/ Thank you - I only have one word- AMAZING.

  • @noticedruid4985
    @noticedruid4985 Год назад +10

    While i really like Zeihans work, I think his take on Trump is incredibly ridiculous.

    • @htown148
      @htown148 Год назад

      Because he doesn't support a domestic terrorist? The only people who disagree with his trump take is you MAGAts

  • @iancormie9916
    @iancormie9916 Год назад

    If subsidies are eliminated, does wind make economic sense anywhere?

  • @whoisthis4130
    @whoisthis4130 Год назад

    It’s such a wild concept to me as a man to think that fleeing my home country while simultaneously leaving my wife and kids in the middle of a civil war to fend for themselves is something a man could live with.

  • @vclazlo929
    @vclazlo929 Год назад

    Independents can vote in any primary of their choice in some key states like New Hampshire.

  • @VisualGeopolitics
    @VisualGeopolitics Год назад +3

    Credit to Peter for delivering geopolitics the way he does. So refreshing.

  • @alexharnden7121
    @alexharnden7121 Год назад +7

    Are you on CIA’s payroll Mr Zheihan?

    • @jhrusa8125
      @jhrusa8125 Год назад +4

      He's a consultant for the CIA .

  • @Joe-t7e8c
    @Joe-t7e8c Год назад +5

    I love graphs but they were a little hard to read maybe be cause of each country flag I each graph

    • @21972012145525
      @21972012145525 Год назад

      The individual bars aren’t important, but the general shape of it is

  • @Hyperactivman2
    @Hyperactivman2 Год назад

    Ist die deutsche Entwicklung das Ergebnis der politischen Entscheidungen?

  • @georgeriszko
    @georgeriszko Год назад

    If Russia loses this war, or looks though it may lose the score, where did resort to nuclear threats? If so, where would be the logical strategic places to detonate nuclear weapons?

    • @danielsmithiv1279
      @danielsmithiv1279 Год назад

      Logical places to detonate? They don't have to detonate anything. They'll just throw the nukes like a football man...
      They have missile launchers. They don't have underdeveloped weaponry programs...

  • @gilligan87
    @gilligan87 Год назад +16

    We hacked the Chinese from their own balloon? Love it. This is the stuff I love learning from Peter.
    I'd love to give him a lesson on tech, but he always has new info that I haven't head.

    • @imcbocian
      @imcbocian Год назад +12

      This is why he is popular. Becouse he usually tells what americans would like to hear 😉

    • @criSOME1
      @criSOME1 Год назад

      That’s all that these CIA RUclipsrs do, they try to tell you stories to convince you of the false narrative

    • @dallysinghson5569
      @dallysinghson5569 Год назад +6

      That still doesnt tell us if this is true or not. One can spout true things one loves to hear if you understand what i mean.

    • @MrJustinMN
      @MrJustinMN Год назад +1

      You do understand computers are hackable? Just like the phone in your pocket? Its plausible it could happen, any streamlined source of information via satellite or whatever it used. All plausible lol

    • @USandGlobal
      @USandGlobal Год назад

      @@imcbocianhmm so I wonder why governments around the world hire him to give presentations on his views 🥱. More like you don’t like what he has to say

  • @charlessoukup1111
    @charlessoukup1111 Год назад +1

    Regeneration. Happens so slowly we don't even notice it until the effects come to occur on us. We miss that "point if no return" until a couple of decades later.

  • @thecurious926
    @thecurious926 Год назад

    Really insightful. Can I find where this guy has his sources? Where he gets his data from?

    • @SueFerreira75
      @SueFerreira75 Год назад

      Google it - here is his bio - en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Zeihan

  • @__Andrew_
    @__Andrew_ Год назад

    OUCH, this guy is sharp.
    i would like to see sources.
    --

  • @nickclark324
    @nickclark324 Год назад +2

    Loved the part when they glossed over a missing russian general who has nuclear launch codes . . . LOL

  • @larsthorwald3338
    @larsthorwald3338 Год назад +3

    Every sentence uttered by this guy is a revelation, an empirical claim which, if true, should be common knowledge by now if the major media outlets were doing responsible journalism. And yet, the picture of things described by Zeihan bears no resemblance to what I get from domestic US and European news channels. So, my question is this: why is so much basic information--the view presented here--simply omitted by the major media outlets? I'm prepared to accept the possibility that every one of Zeihan's claims about the world is true; I just find it odd that so many basic, important facts, which, collectively amount to a description of a parallel reality, are totally absent from the main news outlets' reportage. The disjunction is spectacular.

    • @luckybait
      @luckybait Год назад

      Your key words are (if true) …

    • @johnskalos8025
      @johnskalos8025 Год назад +1

      The attention span of the typical consumer of news is declining rapidly. Peter's insights are beyond the intellectual bandwidth of most.

    • @danielsmithiv1279
      @danielsmithiv1279 Год назад

      @@johnskalos8025 Basically, WW3 is coming soon.

    • @2ifbysea
      @2ifbysea Год назад

      He’s selling books!! Money is his motivation, plain and simple

    • @luckybait
      @luckybait Год назад

      The main stream media is owned by the government and managed by the CIA. We are being directed like puppets. They have managed to pick Presidents until Donald Trump came along and exposed the media and tipped the Apple cart! NOW THEY ARE TRYING TO GET THE GENIE BACK IN THE BOTTLE!

  • @riverfreddy
    @riverfreddy Год назад

    I'm 72. I'm going back to work just like a lot of my age group. This distorts Zeihan's graphs.

  • @leenickshramko1100
    @leenickshramko1100 Год назад +1

    How is it we didn’t hear about Bidens ultimatum to tech sector Americans in China anywhere but here?

  • @rdlewis3616
    @rdlewis3616 Год назад

    Could immigration be the reason the US chart looks favorable compared to the other countries?

  • @kendallkahl8725
    @kendallkahl8725 Год назад +4

    In case of an East Pacific War its always been a wonder to me that we don't keep back up reserves of soldiers ships and planes in American Samoa. Is to far away and Okinawa is within range of medium range missles. I went to American Samoa and Pago Pago harbor is the oily deep water port for miles so China can't buy out local Island nations to have ships in range. Its big enough to hold a significant naval strike force of ships at a safe distance.

    • @paddygoes175
      @paddygoes175 Год назад

      Aren’t you Americans tired of warring and enslaving yet?

    • @ranjitkundu7919
      @ranjitkundu7919 Год назад

      The US itself is an Intruder.. into the Pacific & NAmerica. So value judgements of the kind expressed - are Puerile, biased, loaded, loose & no basis for an Argument.
      Unless you prefer STUPID ARGUMENTS❗🗿🎯🤔

  • @robertstout7756
    @robertstout7756 Год назад +3

    Can you imagine a future without economic growth?

    • @sedonars1
      @sedonars1 Год назад

      Yes. It's the only future where humans can exist as a species. There is no ecosystem that supports large vertebrates as the unlimited economic growth paradigm requires.

    • @arizenation3188
      @arizenation3188 Год назад

      As a gen Z I was born in it

  • @davidrandall7708
    @davidrandall7708 Год назад +1

    Do you know if Mexico will be importing people out of Ukraine to work ? Do you know of a web site where one could find workers from Ukraine ?

    • @luckybait
      @luckybait Год назад

      Russia and Ukraine are about to be run by women!!! After this war most Ukraine 🇺🇦 and Russian men will have 2-5 wives !!! That’s the only way either country will survive!!!

    • @luckybait
      @luckybait Год назад

      David , you better be looking for Ukrainian wives!!!

  • @HailCaesar-lm4bq
    @HailCaesar-lm4bq Год назад +2

    AMERICA wanted pipe closed to keep EU dedicated to the cause

  • @CAMacKenzie
    @CAMacKenzie Год назад +2

    The idea of a weakened Russia or China sounds so good to most Americans, but... If/when Russia or China collapses, What then? I worry that the chaos resulting therefrom could lead to something much worse. Kind of like the collapse of Mexican drug cartels bringing in newer, more violent replacements. And the idea of attacking thos drug cartels militarily is absurd. It's the one thing that would unite Mexico against the U.S., perhaps including a lot of Mexicans living in the U.S. Pershing's expedition against Villa is instructive.

    • @TedSeay
      @TedSeay Год назад

      Zeehan doesn’t want China on its last legs, he’s pointing out WHY China is on its last legs.
      It’s the war pigs that fearmonger a strong China in their analyses…

    • @USandGlobal
      @USandGlobal Год назад

      It’s not and idea it’s reality! The USSR collapsed about 30 years ago