How Henry Kissinger controlled the most powerful people in the world | Jeremi Suri and Lex Fridman

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  • Опубликовано: 24 дек 2024

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  • @keithwahrer2223
    @keithwahrer2223 3 года назад +1998

    This guy is missing some major aspects of Kissinger here. Kissinger was a heartless broker of war and destruction, and thought of people as cattle.

    • @gj1234567899999
      @gj1234567899999 3 года назад +247

      This is the traditional way leaders thought about people. No different than Egypt’s pharaohs, Roman generals, Chinese emperors, the mongols, European Kings etc. it’s only recently that “morality” has even been given lip service.

    • @brandonburns5365
      @brandonburns5365 3 года назад +301

      @@gj1234567899999 still doesn't change the fact..

    • @lunchbox1398
      @lunchbox1398 3 года назад +57

      That is what he said. Listen better

    • @huzi46
      @huzi46 3 года назад +48

      @@gj1234567899999 that’s doesn’t mean those nations were correct in what they did, besides if u learn ur history you’ll find out they’re have been many nations in the past that expressed morality

    • @jerryevans4002
      @jerryevans4002 3 года назад +3

      @Neutral whoever insider "is" - he writes like a high schooler who failed spelling and grammar. You gotta touch up on your writing an character creation. Not convincing. Back to the drawing board with you.

  • @jameshook8871
    @jameshook8871 3 года назад +1634

    No mention of Chile or Cambodia? Surprising. It was an interesting chat, but I can't shake the feeling that Mr. Suri is deliberately glossing over the worst aspects of Kissinger while at the same time highlighting his supposed brilliance as a statesman. Describing the man as 'fascinating' and 'complicated' is all well and good, but he doesn't dare name him a war criminal. He treats Kissinger with a little too much respect and adulation for my taste. Or perhaps he's simply afraid of him?

    • @vedun9439
      @vedun9439 3 года назад +204

      If he is writing a book on him in the same manner as he talks about him in this interview, he must be on his payroll

    • @Siwsonvirusman
      @Siwsonvirusman 3 года назад +229

      Because the uncomfortable truth is that the difference between many brilliant statesmen and war criminals is the same as between a genius and a madman - the victory.

    • @markcarey67
      @markcarey67 3 года назад +66

      Lex was asking him about power, so he was explaining how Kissinger got and maintained power.

    • @barnabykent6698
      @barnabykent6698 3 года назад +27

      Excellent comment

    • @elingrome5853
      @elingrome5853 3 года назад +52

      Hitchens already wrote all we need to know...

  • @binky1135
    @binky1135 3 года назад +3218

    JRE has been lacking this type of content for a long time now. Thanks Lex.

    • @neelj5155
      @neelj5155 3 года назад +67

      Agreed..

    • @TheColdplay200
      @TheColdplay200 3 года назад +46

      faccts

    • @blunty6feetunder
      @blunty6feetunder 3 года назад +175

      Ya, Lex's podcast has overtaken Joe's spot for me. But Rogan is still the GOAT and without him we probably wouldn't even have this podcast and many others.

    • @vezzy_3221
      @vezzy_3221 3 года назад +104

      Joe has too many of his comedic friends... This is great by Lex.

    • @gregmattson2238
      @gregmattson2238 3 года назад +75

      yeah I think of lex as joe rogan with a brain. I'm just so sick of how joe bends to any number of inanities and doesn't evaluate his thoughts before saying something stupid.

  • @sanjayvaidya4925
    @sanjayvaidya4925 2 года назад +326

    Control oil and you control nations; control food and you control people. - Henry Kissinger

    • @lordjafar8528
      @lordjafar8528 Год назад +7

      Oh he's the one who said that?! wow

    • @pepenakamoto3675
      @pepenakamoto3675 Год назад +10

      Control money supply and you control the entire world

    • @davidschalit907
      @davidschalit907 Год назад

      He never said that!
      One of the biggest problems in modern life is the constant spread of nonsense disguised as truth. It will probably lead to mass death and attempted genocide, as people use this nonsense to advance conspiracies.

    • @MrPoopyPants-qg4kg
      @MrPoopyPants-qg4kg Год назад +18

      Evil human being

    • @kitsune090
      @kitsune090 Год назад

      and you cook food (people) in hot oil (nation) = soldiers who die for their country and for the oil in the middle east.

  • @johncashrocks221
    @johncashrocks221 Год назад +76

    I would never hold it against a Cambodian or Laotian person for not exactly looking at Kissinger with charity. That man has played a serious hand in a lot of unnecessary destruction of human life and intensifying of human misery

    • @Randsurfer
      @Randsurfer Год назад

      Kissinger is one of the most evil persons in human history.

    • @TheDennys21
      @TheDennys21 2 месяца назад +2

      ​@@wulfracheAfrica?

    • @vbgsantander
      @vbgsantander 2 месяца назад +2

      Yeah and not to mention Chile and the rest of South America.

  • @christopherscobie
    @christopherscobie 3 года назад +184

    Kissinger = Rivers of blood..

  • @Well_Earned_Siesta
    @Well_Earned_Siesta 3 года назад +477

    "The realpolitik becomes self defeating, because you're constantly running to keep power but you forget why."
    Such a critically important insight!

    • @davidpilgrim3455
      @davidpilgrim3455 2 года назад +8

      Yeah agreed, only for the thrill of power. You became addicted.

    • @gs7828
      @gs7828 2 года назад +13

      Realpolitik's one of the tools, along with idealism, peace-making and geopolitics. Finding the balance and the recipe is the art of international affairs.

    • @Coolrunnings007
      @Coolrunnings007 2 года назад +3

      Um it’s not that complicated, it power for your country’s well being. That’s the underlying goal much in the same way we take care of our families or procreate in the first place. We advance our interests. There’s no great mystery underneath it.

    • @anaesthesia1549
      @anaesthesia1549 2 года назад +9

      @@Coolrunnings007
      Your family’s welfare is dependent on the wellbeing of your neighbourhood. Making your family powerful at the expense of your neighbourhood will not provide long lasting peace.

    • @Coolrunnings007
      @Coolrunnings007 2 года назад +2

      @@anaesthesia1549 we’ll actually it doesn’t have to come at the expense of your neighborhood. That’s an assumption that is made but not required in order for you to advance. A modern example would actually be China who largely has risen at without violence ( externally that is). They focused on defensive postering while growing economically ( I do know that there has been changes recently). Russia followed a different method and it is not looking good for them right now. So it doesn’t require for it to be too violent or even detrimental to the neighborhood.

  • @biljanao448
    @biljanao448 3 года назад +198

    Casually speaking about Kissinger being a skillful negotiator and power chess player on the world scene...Nobel Prize winner, for God's sake... He was not alone while active (supported by wealthy oligarchs), he was extremely traumatized, even a classic villain. Let's not normalize abuse and violence. Respect for Kissinger? Terrible human.

    • @deevnn
      @deevnn 3 года назад +8

      Biljana...you are correct and Neutral is nuts.

    • @eddiegill
      @eddiegill 3 года назад +2

      Not a compressive policy. He ran around putting out fires with poor results

    • @universalconquest4447
      @universalconquest4447 3 года назад

      Tako je Biljana!

    • @seams4186
      @seams4186 2 года назад +3

      Everyone should respect Kissinger. Like it or not he brought prosperity to America and the world.

    • @dekae2631
      @dekae2631 2 года назад +22

      Human? You give him to much credit by even referring to him as a terrible human. Dude was a monster in his most treacherous form. I'm surprised he wasn't found scaring children through their closet doors to collect their screams for a multi billion dollar company ran by a 8 legged freak. 🚪👻💀😱

  • @naas699
    @naas699 11 месяцев назад +28

    Anthony Bourdain (RIP) said it best - “Once you’ve been to Cambodia, you’ll never stop wanting to beet Henry Kissinger to deth with your bare hands

  • @fredricksmith-something.2125
    @fredricksmith-something.2125 3 года назад +45

    I like watching LEX interviews because he actually let's the guest speaker TALK most of the time.

  • @bennettbullock9690
    @bennettbullock9690 3 года назад +61

    I can't figure Kissinger out, to be honest. Growing up in DC in the 80s, I remember people fell into his aura, would excitedly talk about meeting him. Back then, he was what passed for "exotic", I guess. I think the breaking point was when I lived in China and read his book on the subject. He did not get China at all - his book is basically gpt3 trained on fortune cookies. I get the impression that he actually believed that he was making a strategic alliance against the USSR, and that it was something unusual or unprecedented for China to open itself to trade and foreign influence, and that this openness would endure. When in fact this happened again and again in Chinese history, and was almost always followed by a closing up. Which is exactly what we are seeing today.

  • @atypicaltexan3834
    @atypicaltexan3834 3 года назад +618

    Henry Kissinger was a sadistic hollow death merchant for Mordor.

    • @robdawg007rc
      @robdawg007rc 3 года назад +9

      except when he was making peace between countries? according to the interview i just watched here 🤷‍♂️

    • @robdawg007rc
      @robdawg007rc 3 года назад +3

      i mean what you said does make sense but he brokered peace talks with japan, got us talking to commie china and got the middle east to stop fighting for a time..are you meaning he started all these conflicts just so he can brokerage a favorable deal...with the US? Himself? The jews? it sounds like there's more to Kissinger than what these guys just said cuz what you said doesn't fit here.

    • @atypicaltexan3834
      @atypicaltexan3834 3 года назад +14

      @@robdawg007rc As my enlightenment continues I have come to realize humans can not live in abstract fictions in large numbers. Constructing reality out of abstract thought creates madness. Look at the history of rise and collapse. It always leads to madness. You are in the matrix, 1984, Lord of the rings and the walking dead simultaneously.

    • @robdawg007rc
      @robdawg007rc 3 года назад +2

      @@atypicaltexan3834lol well since you sound like Saruman ill be Frodo...wait wait...ill be the chick with the samurai sword...this is good. You already sound like you're going mad and im just trying to survive

    • @atypicaltexan3834
      @atypicaltexan3834 3 года назад +8

      @@robdawg007rc Can you not see the metaphor? What happens when one acquires the ring of power? Mad lust for power maybe? Can you think of any examples of power causing madness? The world does not work like the reality show on media. Representative gov't. is just a facade obscuring the same feudal system of history.

  • @vikrantsubakade9281
    @vikrantsubakade9281 3 года назад +302

    I'd also suggest the viewers to read "The trial of Henry Kissinger" by Christopher Hitchens. There is also a biography on Kissinger by Walter Isaacson (the guy who wrote Steve Jobs' biography) which is also very interesting...

    • @lawrencedavid9728
      @lawrencedavid9728 3 года назад +24

      The Price Of Power By Seymour Hersh 1983 is excellent on HK corruption, highly recommended by Seyom Brown

    • @TerryStewart32
      @TerryStewart32 3 года назад +4

      Niall Ferguson has written an authorised biography of Henry Kissinger

    • @kevinnates1736
      @kevinnates1736 2 года назад +1

      At 2:48 of this video what is it that he’s saying? Kissinger left right before what?

    • @studywithmir1994
      @studywithmir1994 2 года назад

      I´ll take my perseption of him by the venture brothers. But thanks anyway.

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 2 года назад +1

      @@studywithmir1994 So, you're not a reader.

  • @fallout3freak360
    @fallout3freak360 2 года назад +116

    Kissinger is extremely fascinating. I first read about him in Robert Greene’s “The 48 Laws of Power”. A guy who just always seems to come out on top no matter what. Worked under multiple presidents including Nixon - came out of watergate unscathed.
    Another figure that comes to mind is Talleyrand - once Napoleon’s chief diplomat. There are a lot of parallels between the two

    • @wiseonwords
      @wiseonwords 2 года назад +15

      @fallout3freak360 - Talleyrand was repugnant, but Kissinger elicits even more contempt than that repellent figure.

    • @frilansspion
      @frilansspion 2 года назад +32

      its almost like hes part of some powerful network or cabal isnt it

    • @gabbar51ngh
      @gabbar51ngh 2 года назад

      @@frilansspion keep in mind Kissinger himself didn't care for rest of the Jewish community and unironically said it's not American concern if tomorrow Soviets puts their Jews into gas chamber too.

    • @suffeeirshad
      @suffeeirshad 2 года назад +7

      @@frilansspion he might be a powerful cabal. But i know muslim immigrant who did the same thing as henry kisinger to climb the ladder of power with strategy and succeeded in becoming crucial diplomat. Saying he is in a jewish mafia or cabal which i do not deny, diminished kissinger brillance

    • @frilansspion
      @frilansspion 2 года назад +9

      @@suffeeirshad I dont know or really care if its an exclusively jewish thing. And dont get me started on muslim infiltration :) That ethnic groups work together for their own purposes is not surprising or that outlandish a thought of course

  • @FearlessP4P1
    @FearlessP4P1 2 года назад +38

    Kissinger perfectly fits the caricatures the fringes portrayed him as. He’s one of the worst people in American history. He didn’t just luckily get to these positions. He greatly benefited from nepotism and lobbying from special interests groups. This dynamic still exist.

  • @robertafif55
    @robertafif55 3 года назад +160

    So let me get this straight. 'If you don't like Kissenger your anti sametic"... is it just me or is something very wrong with this statement...

    • @walterwolf5354
      @walterwolf5354 3 года назад +1

      Kissinger is not a Semitic.

    • @davidrubel6295
      @davidrubel6295 3 года назад +1

      Anti-semites are just one of the many kinds of people who don't like Kissinger...most Jews don't like him either, so...

    • @-kepha8828
      @-kepha8828 3 года назад +2

      The problem with the statement, is that ashkenazi jews were not real jews. Kissenger is a fraud, not a real jew. Although he is a kabbalist who worships satan through the occult.

    • @daskalman
      @daskalman 3 года назад +39

      It's the same issue with criticizing Soros...

    • @benitosotelo444
      @benitosotelo444 3 года назад +12

      It's just a copout

  • @mrweasel
    @mrweasel 3 года назад +34

    Superb interview and very well spoken and articulated guest. As a political and social actor, Kissenger was thoroughly corrupted by and driven to pursue power.

  • @SmedleyButlerIII
    @SmedleyButlerIII 3 года назад +234

    The hand of the king...
    with an army of Economic Hitmen
    deployed for Empire...

    • @Claxiux
      @Claxiux 3 года назад +15

      An evil empire

    • @the-selfish-meme7585
      @the-selfish-meme7585 3 года назад +19

      Smedley Butler - Kissinger is exactly what he was talking about - war is a racket, and Kissinger was the racketeer in chief.

    • @keithsweet8840
      @keithsweet8840 3 года назад

      @Neutral
      elaborate ,,i dare you,,,
      what was the most metaphysical,,and or majikal answers...i dont clikck on link's that are possible ,hack attack's/phishing...

    • @freefreespeech6722
      @freefreespeech6722 3 года назад +3

      @@keithsweet8840 good for you, knowing everyones phones are already hacked in a way is reassuring. Jk. It was just a link to a book about a bloodline insider. Someone's been reading Icke. If anything he said were true, hed be in a cell in belmarsh next to assange.

    • @TheDennys21
      @TheDennys21 2 месяца назад

      ​@@Claxiuxall empires are evil.

  • @aaronfuller881
    @aaronfuller881 2 года назад +38

    Loved the podcast with your dad. It was the first of your podcast that I saw. Very humble of you to share how you felt after doing that podcast.

  • @920411140
    @920411140 Год назад +49

    Lex, I've listened to about 20 of your episodes and wanted to thank you for spreading knowledge, seeking insight and making the case for love. Keep up the great work.

    • @LevisH21
      @LevisH21 Год назад

      "love" at the expense of lies probably.
      sorry but many of Lex's guests are nothing else but bias foot soldiers of their elite overlords.
      even this guy in the video isn't really critical of Kissinger. he is more or less "fascinated" by him.

  • @eIicit
    @eIicit 3 года назад +107

    Now this was a really interesting conversation.

    • @eIicit
      @eIicit 3 года назад +12

      @Late Laterson Whew, that was close. Thanks for that context man, I was completely oblivious to Kissinger’s existence prior to this interview and formed my entire perspective from this singular subjective conversation on a podcast. That could have been bad. If it wasn’t for you, saving the day with your incredible insight, reminding me that it’s “only telling the fluff zio side.” Amen. Whatever those words with a random sequence of letters mixed in there, whatever that means…, A-m-e-n. I’m with it. I’m getting that tattooed, and it will be the name of my first born. I nearly disavowed everything I know and stand for, like fundamentally… I mean, I was so close to becoming one of the people who just regurgitates what he hears from uncorroborated sources. Thank you Late “fluff zio side” Laterson. You are truly the greatest mind of a generation, and I mean that.

    • @jj342
      @jj342 3 года назад +1

      @@eIicit absolutely!!!

  • @REwing
    @REwing 3 года назад +152

    There is no possible excuse for what this man planned for the world, he is sheer evil to the bone.

    • @Tounguepunchfartbox
      @Tounguepunchfartbox 2 года назад +24

      Simple worldviews are for simple people.

    • @Godshonestruth
      @Godshonestruth 2 года назад +30

      @@TounguepunchfartboxYou are such an impressive enlightened utube poster. 😂

    • @jadedwitness9840
      @jadedwitness9840 2 года назад +12

      @@Tounguepunchfartbox simple he was objectively evil so yeah I guess it’s not hard to comprehend

    • @Tounguepunchfartbox
      @Tounguepunchfartbox 2 года назад +1

      @@Godshonestruth it’s facts. Simple people subscribe to simple models of thinking. Nuance and uncertainty melts their brains lol. Kind of how ideological people tend to be pretty fu**in stupid.

    • @Godshonestruth
      @Godshonestruth 2 года назад +8

      @@Tounguepunchfartbox We are all one. To elevate yourself over “everyone else” intellectually shows your insecurity and lack of intellect. Not to mention ego. Kissinger did more bad for the world than good. There is evil in this world.

  • @benhansen3345
    @benhansen3345 3 года назад +158

    That was a profound moment when you both touched on the topic of trauma - Lex, thank you for your willingness to be vulnerable in what you shared. Can you please bring on Gabor Maté re the topic of trauma and addiction? There's so much that we can all gain from understanding how our parents unwittingly pass their brokenness on to us, how it shapes our personality, and how we all have an opportunity to process that trauma and break the cycle (from a place of love and understanding).

    • @sperez3275
      @sperez3275 2 года назад +1

      Does he have a book?

    • @osamaahmad4265
      @osamaahmad4265 2 года назад +2

      @@sperez3275 The myth of Normal

    • @lawrencevandenberg7725
      @lawrencevandenberg7725 2 года назад +1

      Here's a boost for discussing/understanding parental influence--conjugal fraudulence. We're delivered to this understanding; we're, unfortunately the product of need and mutual dependency. Parents are still working this out, individually, when more children come along. What to do? Admit the marriage is a conscription--to one another, and the babies? Fat chance of that. Possibly some few couples enter into baby making with mutual surrender--"We'll make these babies for our God's eternal company. That's it. No restrictions from us." Mary & Joseph did this, for One Child--special case. Who else? The Kissingers of Germany? Who's asking?

    • @dose1208
      @dose1208 2 года назад +1

      As a struggling addict I choose to be this way I know there’s a better way just lack self will I’m looking for anything self research to help myself please

    • @lawrencevandenberg7725
      @lawrencevandenberg7725 2 года назад +2

      @@dose1208 Jose--the way out is "beyond self." Any self. Can't just dump on somebody else. Self won't ever "will to love." Self is the common addiction. Getting high is still attached--you come back to the same launch site. Hold still. Wholeness will absorb and absolve you. You belong to wholeness--not to your self. You're welcome.

  • @richvandervecken3954
    @richvandervecken3954 Год назад +16

    Really enjoyed this discussion! I was always perplexed by how influential Kissinger was among the most powerful people in the world. I suspect He was always fostering close personal relationships with whoever the current director of the CIA happened to be. Being able to keep secrets is a very powerful tool when it comes to foreign affairs. Listening to this conversation makes me wish I could have been there so I could ask questions! LOL Thanks again for sharing I have not really thought about Kissinger in at least 20 years or so. I am very interested in history and believe the truth is way more messy than what makes it into the history books.

  • @aromero385
    @aromero385 2 года назад +26

    I Remember in the 70s, In many Latin American countries, thousands of people were tortured, murdered in those killing fields.
    Is difficult to comprehend why a person who suffered nazi savagery would design such same cruelty.
    In contrast, we recognize down here, what a decent human being, Jimmy Carter was to put a stop to that violent craziness.

    • @ifatsultanate1
      @ifatsultanate1 2 года назад +7

      The oppressed always end up becoming oppressors themselves..

    • @aromero385
      @aromero385 2 года назад +1

      @@ifatsultanate1 Yeah, happens many times.
      Worse, many Jewish people around here in S. America fell victims due to his policies.

    • @Chibibowa
      @Chibibowa 3 месяца назад

      Well it’s because there was some truth in NS.

  • @granthawkins88
    @granthawkins88 3 года назад +41

    Lex - fwiw, the episode with your father was one of my favorite podcasts ever.
    Father-son relationships are complex and (nod to Tolstoy) each is complex in its own way. The evident strain is what makes it so real. Thankful that you'd share something so personal.

    • @jean-paulmorin913
      @jean-paulmorin913 3 года назад +7

      Someday when you are far enough away from your father ( time wise) you may see him in a different life. Your mind needs to take some of the emotion out of the equation to hopefully resolve anything. In my guesswork, you will need to do all the flexing. I had so many issues that I could not iron out as he died 50 years ago and only now am I accepting that he was who he was and no reasoning in the world satisfied my questions.

    • @jean-paulmorin913
      @jean-paulmorin913 3 года назад +1

      Light,not life. Thank you very much for your openness.

    • @TywinLannister666
      @TywinLannister666 2 года назад

      Any thoughts on how much of todays popular pop culture media (TV, Movies, Comics, Manga, Basically everything) revolves around storylines involving "fraught" relationships between fathers and sons?

    • @agustinetcheverry2175
      @agustinetcheverry2175 2 года назад

      @@jean-paulmorin913 rrrhh tr

  • @furmanodell
    @furmanodell 3 года назад +107

    Kissinger's policy of playing China against the Soviet Union has the greatest long lasting effect on geo-politics.

    • @toddgaak422
      @toddgaak422 3 года назад +59

      Yep. And now China and the Soviet Union are playing us against ourselves.

    • @furmanodell
      @furmanodell 3 года назад +12

      @@toddgaak422 If the occupant of the White House had any brains he would apply Reverse Kissinger onto the Chinese. But given 'ole Joe's foreign policy record, not likely.

    • @crowdic
      @crowdic 3 года назад +3

      @@furmanodell because you know more than the secretary of state right

    • @CharlesAlkhal
      @CharlesAlkhal 3 года назад +6

      @@crowdic Blinken has no clue either. He sat there and took a beating from the Chinese in Alaska like a dog. I have never disrespect like it on our soil...

    • @100Mmore
      @100Mmore 3 года назад +10

      He just helped intensify animosity, China and the USSR had issues with each other as soon as Stalin died.

  • @CosmicValkyrie
    @CosmicValkyrie 3 года назад +64

    The fact that the US has not put him to trial only shows it's true colours.

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 2 года назад +6

      That will never happen. HK is a servant of power.

    • @healthaton
      @healthaton Год назад +6

      I'm not trying to be a dick but that sounds naive dear, the system requires, rewards and protects such people who do a shit ton of evil for the "greater good"

  • @ChristAliveForevermore
    @ChristAliveForevermore 2 года назад +121

    Kissinger is literally Emperor Palpatine before he officially became Emperor.

    • @MrHarryc727
      @MrHarryc727 Год назад +5

      No my friend, Grand Admiral Thrawn

    • @lldd3072
      @lldd3072 Год назад +1

      48 laws of power taught me bout this guy

    • @tsriftsal3581
      @tsriftsal3581 Год назад

      Primarch of the God Emperor.
      Something, something the heretic
      Purge the something or other
      ... Joe Biden

    • @tsriftsal3581
      @tsriftsal3581 Год назад

      @@MrHarryc727 pawn of the rock challenged by lack of some word.

    • @ChristAliveForevermore
      @ChristAliveForevermore Год назад

      @@MrHarryc727 Grand Admiral Thrawn was respectable. Kissinger is deplorable.

  • @Red-Feather
    @Red-Feather Год назад +10

    My father grew up in Germany during the war but was too young to fight. The idea that he had no power also haunted him all his life. He had my sister become a lawyer.

  • @dovlication
    @dovlication 3 года назад +118

    so now we're empathizing with and humanizing the biggest warmonger in the world?

    • @scififan698
      @scififan698 3 года назад +19

      Exactly. With so much New World Order propaganda, I can only react as we small fishes can: downvoted and unsubscribed. Me need no stinking world government.

    • @mortyjames5897
      @mortyjames5897 3 года назад +10

      How do you expect to understand Henry Kissinger without empathizing with him? Empathizing just means "understand and share the feelings of another".

    • @ryanlankford8634
      @ryanlankford8634 3 года назад

      Lex is quite obviously a lizard brained sociopath who suffers from the black and white thinking of capitalist good commie bad since he is from Ukraine.

    • @baldanders
      @baldanders 3 года назад +2

      Yes because he was a human just like you

    • @isblue3189
      @isblue3189 3 года назад +2

      To defeat your enemy you need to understand him. To undo or change what biggest warmonger did you need to see the human in him

  • @Cultured_Barbarian
    @Cultured_Barbarian 3 года назад +63

    First time I have heard another person mention those people referred to as Court Jews. Very interesting story of a people and time.

    • @Jimi_Lee
      @Jimi_Lee 3 года назад +5

      Like the original Rothschild guy in England.

    • @Cultured_Barbarian
      @Cultured_Barbarian 3 года назад +1

      @@Jimi_Lee Yes. Exactly.

    • @melvinmorales1349
      @melvinmorales1349 3 года назад +1

      Scriber in ancient times as well..

    • @chrishale5213
      @chrishale5213 3 года назад +4

      @@Jimi_Lee Nathan Rothschild wasn't the original, it was Mayer of Frankfurt.

    • @andymullarx6365
      @andymullarx6365 3 года назад +1

      Now consider Shakespeare's take on lawyers.

  • @kellymc3020
    @kellymc3020 3 года назад +34

    I am definitely not intellectual enough or Lex and his guests, yet I can always follow the conversations. I truly appreciate this ability to speak to all that are interested in these complex topics. I appreciate this podcast.

    • @MichelleAllen206
      @MichelleAllen206 3 года назад +4

      Ditto!

    • @mikasasukasa4479
      @mikasasukasa4479 Год назад

      i think youre more intelligent than you give yourself credit for if you can follow along.

    • @charmaine8512
      @charmaine8512 7 месяцев назад

      Me too, fascinated with intelligent podcasts and it makes sense to see and understand why the Western way of life is bewildering to us ordinary people who come from third world countries (this label framed by colonialists) as we progressed without interfering in the dirty politics outside India. I see a link to colonial powers and those who fled wars due to these 2 figures _ UK and US and their cronies

  • @DelandaBaudLacanian
    @DelandaBaudLacanian 3 года назад +11

    15:05 ""you get this mutual dependency in a Hegelian way [..] Kissinger builds this through ego and performance""
    such an interesting deconstruction of a...remarkable man. Thank you Lex, I'm learning a lot about human nature through your discourse.

  • @samansiddiquie1902
    @samansiddiquie1902 Год назад +3

    You know what I miss on these podcasts, one person who was in my opinion the best orator, polemic and observer of the now and history. Christopher Hitchens. I miss him. I really do. His eloquence, his articulation, his erudite commentary. What a man.

  • @formercanadiancitizen4756
    @formercanadiancitizen4756 3 года назад +368

    Even as a child growing up watching him on TV it was overwhelming obvious to me that he was evil personified

    • @skp8748
      @skp8748 2 года назад +22

      That's AntiSemetic

    • @georgewallace8933
      @georgewallace8933 2 года назад +107

      @@skp8748 lol

    • @gilligan87
      @gilligan87 2 года назад +62

      If that's what you took away from this video, you are exactly the kind of person who makes it impossible to have reasonable discussions about controversial people and events.
      Kissinger isn't evil. He has done some evil things. He has done some good things. He is a complicated, powerful person. Can you say for sure that you would've caused less harm in his position? I don't think you can, and if you assume you can, ask yourself what makes you so confident - ask yourself what makes you so sure you'd always make the right call.
      People who make bad calls are just as confident in their decisions as you are in your ability to avoid them. That kind of self-assured attitude is precisely what fools people into making bad decisions.

    • @skp8748
      @skp8748 2 года назад +1

      @@georgewallace8933 😉😉😉

    • @skp8748
      @skp8748 2 года назад +1

      @@gilligan87 like Hitler.

  • @iamspartacus7756
    @iamspartacus7756 3 года назад +19

    Ran into Kissinger @25 yr ago at the Kimball Art Museum in Ft Worth for an exhibit from Egypt. He was with an ancient socialite who was thinner than a toothpick. I remember hearing his voice and knew immediately without turning around who was behind me.

    • @paulheydarian1281
      @paulheydarian1281 2 года назад +7

      Sounds creepy af. Hopefully, you weren't traumatized.

    • @itsmatt2105
      @itsmatt2105 2 года назад +4

      I sat in front of him in a movie theater once. I didn't turn around and look but I knew it was him, it was a war movie and every time a group of soldiers got blown up, I heard an enthusiastic, guttural "WONDERFUL!"

    • @nolongerblocked6210
      @nolongerblocked6210 Год назад +7

      @@itsmatt2105 I'll take "Things that never happened" for 1000 Alex

  • @andymullarx6365
    @andymullarx6365 3 года назад +39

    This seems to be an attempt to justify the actions of Kissinger and those he actually represents.

    • @faismasterx
      @faismasterx 3 года назад +6

      That's what it sounds like.

    • @seams4186
      @seams4186 2 года назад

      Well, that's OK tbh. People are acting like Kissinger is evil or something. He's an american hero.

  • @bingolio
    @bingolio 2 года назад +15

    If any one but 2 Jews were having this conversation it would be immediately labeled Antisemitic. Sad!

  • @xfhghe
    @xfhghe 2 года назад +17

    Though short, this was the most insightful analysis of Kissinger that I've heard. His unethical aspect is well known. But what drives him, his rise to power, and his approach; I find that interesting.

  • @---zg7ex
    @---zg7ex 3 года назад +17

    I am really amazed how this is the 1st RUclips video mentioned Henry Kissinger ; this dude is the No.1 VIP guest for China as he really smoothed the relationship between US & China and contributed significantly to the China's rise.

    • @frilansspion
      @frilansspion 2 года назад +4

      Another nefarious act then. Devastating for world peace, world economics, and the environment

    • @romanval69
      @romanval69 2 года назад

      ​@@frilansspion It was probably deliberate to keep China from having an alliance with the USSR. After all, China profited immensely from western economies, much more then they ever could if they stayed closed off.

  • @lancestabler7650
    @lancestabler7650 3 года назад +150

    I will never understand why this man doesn't shave his head. Great conversation though.

    • @nakedsnake6076
      @nakedsnake6076 3 года назад +9

      was thinking the same haha bet he woud look alot better bald

    • @starduster1265
      @starduster1265 3 года назад +10

      Because from his perspective in front of the mirror, he still sees LOTS of hair.

    • @bigjoncash4297
      @bigjoncash4297 3 года назад +2

      he is too lazy to not look like a slob

    • @Nobodyyoucarabout
      @Nobodyyoucarabout 3 года назад +1

      Seriously he should grow out the beard and shave the whole head he's handsome!

    • @ballisticcranberrypeat7777
      @ballisticcranberrypeat7777 3 года назад +7

      @@bigjoncash4297 But not too lazy to write books, be successful, and have useful insights? What does that say about everyone who is wasting their time trying to polish the turd of their looks? Apparently you're too lazy to capitalize letters or use punctuation, you must put every ounce of effort into grooming every day. Keep it up guess?

  • @Fryepod3628
    @Fryepod3628 3 года назад +18

    Zbigniew Brezenski wasn't as famous but holy shit he was just as effective if not more, we still use his book as reference what US Central Command does and purpose. He personally went to Pakistan to inspire ethnic tribes to rise up in Jihad against the Soviets in Afghanistan, even filmed it. *only thing was, Russia hadn't invaded yet*.
    The whole thing was a setup.
    "What's more important, the fall of the Soviet Union, or a few angry Muslims" -Zbig late 1990s on his massive "success"

    • @SmedleyButlerIII
      @SmedleyButlerIII 3 года назад +6

      "Between Two Ages" and "The Grand Chessboard"
      Technocracy: a Scientific Dictatorship, through fear..and safety

    • @Fryepod3628
      @Fryepod3628 3 года назад +4

      @@SmedleyButlerIII nailed it. Between two ages is brilliant. I don't agree with 98% of the shit in there but it's quite a masterpiece regardless of my opinion on it.

    • @aquilatempestate9527
      @aquilatempestate9527 3 года назад +4

      You aware of Antony Sutton? Type into search bar if not.

    • @EmilyHartley25989
      @EmilyHartley25989 3 года назад +6

      Absolutely agree. Brzezinski’s role to the same effect as Kissinger’s is extremely understated on a mainstream basis, which instantly prompts more attention for some of us. To my mind, much of what occurs today internationally stems from catalysts birthed during the latter half of the Carter administration, particularly activated by Brzezinski.

  • @SYSTEMERROR01
    @SYSTEMERROR01 Год назад +2

    Kissingers international seminar was set up in 1950 by his mentor William Yandell Elliott a political advisor to six US presidents. Klaus Schwab was selected to attend Kissinger's seminar where he was mentored by Herman Kahn & John Kenneth Galbraith from 1964-67. They would go on to create the European Management Symposium which became the European Management Forum and then the World Economic Forum. Interesting to note that Kissingers international seminar was funded by the CIA through 'American friends of the middle east' founded by Kermit Roosevelt Jr, the 'Farfield foundation' a front for covert funding & the Asia Foundation founded in 1951 also as a CIA operation

  • @danecjensen
    @danecjensen 7 месяцев назад

    Chapters (Powered by ChapterMe) -
    00:00 - Henry Kissinger One of the most fascinating figures in history
    02:42 - Fritz Kramers life and career
    06:41 - Former Secretary of State Henry Kissingers career highlights
    11:28 - Strategic elements in Kissingers foreign policy
    13:43 - Former US Secretary of State Henry Kissinger Personalistic, effective, powerful
    15:53 - Gangsters shun loyalty, manipulate others
    18:42 - Former Secretary of State Henry Kissingers Real Politics SelfDefeating
    20:19 - Discussing US foreign policy with former Secretary of State Henry Kissinger
    21:27 - Former President Barack Obamas refusal to share classified information with Congress Hypocrisy

  • @ntskl
    @ntskl 3 года назад +43

    What an amazing cohencidence that he just happened to be at all the right places at all the right times.

    • @thomcarr7021
      @thomcarr7021 3 года назад +15

      The devil is everywhere.

    • @x9147
      @x9147 2 года назад +6

      ok, antisemite

    • @WOEEW
      @WOEEW 2 года назад

      laughs in Jewish lobby

    • @alexanderiii1638
      @alexanderiii1638 2 года назад

      @@x9147 Huh what?

    • @x9147
      @x9147 2 года назад +1

      @@alexanderiii1638 „cohencidence“
      A combination of a jewish name „cohen“ and the word „coincidence“.
      It’s an insider word for people who think jews are behind everything and there are no coincidences.

  • @333rdAlchemist
    @333rdAlchemist 3 года назад +42

    I enjoyed what Luke Rudkowski did to Kissinger, everyone should look up WeAreChange confronts Kissinger.

    • @Captain_MonsterFart
      @Captain_MonsterFart 3 года назад

      I can't get over how different the internet influencer types are now. WeAreChange was so subversive in its day. The whole cultural vibe is completely different now.

    • @Captain_MonsterFart
      @Captain_MonsterFart 3 года назад

      ruclips.net/video/_d2bCirm6NA/видео.html

  • @YiannisANO1911
    @YiannisANO1911 3 года назад +17

    The Cyprus Problem is also something Kissinger was more than involved in, its been 40 years his choices are still being lived

    • @kloschuessel773
      @kloschuessel773 3 года назад +1

      You would have liked the turks to have it?

    • @YiannisANO1911
      @YiannisANO1911 3 года назад +6

      @@kloschuessel773 they have half the island, i'd rather they didn't have any

    • @babiskatopodis2787
      @babiskatopodis2787 3 года назад

      @@YiannisANO1911 Ποιος νομίζεις ότι κερδίζει από την κατάσταση στην Κύπρο

    • @YiannisANO1911
      @YiannisANO1911 3 года назад

      @@babiskatopodis2787 mono i Tourkia kerdizi me afti ti katastasi. O xronos ine me to meros tis

    • @babiskatopodis2787
      @babiskatopodis2787 3 года назад

      @@YiannisANO1911 Ο Τουρκία δεν έχει κερδίσει τίποτα ακόμη. Τα μόνα κράτη που κερδίζουν είναι η ΗΠΑ η Βρεττανία και το Ισραήλ.

  • @BunnyWatson-k1w
    @BunnyWatson-k1w Год назад +1

    Kissinger has had an amazing life. He had a three part biography written about him, since there so much to tell. He came to America as a Jew. He later joined the US military doing intelligence work and was on the front line for the liberation of Europe from the Nazis. He was able to interrogate Nazis who had just wiped out much of his people. He earned a PhD from Harvard and was an advisor to several US Presidents. Kissinger much later on was involved in the Bilderberg conferences which lead to things like common currencies, common economic policy, international law and war policy.

  • @norbertdrage
    @norbertdrage 3 года назад +14

    The guy who said "the illegal we do immediately; the unconstitutional takes a little longer" (or something to that effect) should never be seen as a role model..

  • @geo8rge
    @geo8rge 3 года назад +8

    @3:50 'he could only live in a Jewish only dorm' . Wikipedia says while at Harvard he lived in Adams House, which was not a Jewish only residence.

    • @Thecoochincanoocheecreek
      @Thecoochincanoocheecreek 3 года назад +5

      Wikipedia has a lot of untruths. That’s why you have to read, listen to and watch numerous sources before coming to a conclusion about facts.

    • @geo8rge
      @geo8rge 3 года назад

      @@Thecoochincanoocheecreek adamshouse.harvard.edu/house-history

    • @marksulzman1551
      @marksulzman1551 3 года назад +1

      ​@@geo8rge Nicely done, thanks.

  • @gavin7772
    @gavin7772 3 года назад +4

    Every other podcast feels like apower point after listening to lex

  • @wyattrussell7496
    @wyattrussell7496 2 года назад +7

    Imagine bringing democracy to the land, where you overthrew democracy 60 years ago, after learning about democracy from it 200 years prior.

  • @bender8275
    @bender8275 2 года назад +3

    Just for context, "Gymnasiumlehrer" is a highschool/ grammar school teacher, not a Professor (as in university), still someone with status (back then).

  • @carminumbarritus8220
    @carminumbarritus8220 3 года назад +10

    A very interesting discussion about a former high profile figure, who's name still raises interest after many years.
    Jeremi Suri's book sounds like a good read.

    • @itsmatt2105
      @itsmatt2105 2 года назад +2

      Have no fear, Kissinger at 99 is still QUITE active and powerful behind the scenes, like he always has been. While I'm a realist, I can't shake the sense that Kissinger was unnecessarily evil and had/has a different agenda for the US than most US citizens would consider to be in our best interest.

  • @pa9121
    @pa9121 3 года назад +27

    The smile Suri has on his face when he describes Latin America and Africa as irrelevant to Kissinger because they have no power is diabolical.

    • @flashgiz1
      @flashgiz1 2 года назад +2

      sounds like you're looking for something that isn't there imo

  • @spaceowl5957
    @spaceowl5957 3 года назад +11

    A "Gymnasium Lehrer" isn't like a professor it's like a highschool teacher

    • @oldandnewpieces
      @oldandnewpieces 3 месяца назад

      Not even that, right. Gymnasium is the period before high school. I'm not saying that they are less prepared or deserving of less respect.

  • @nikobellic7586
    @nikobellic7586 2 года назад +2

    Wish one day we can have Mayo Zambada in these Lex clips. A career criminal. Most powerful and dangerous man in Mexico. A career that expands since 1975 til today. Has built an empire that overlaps 6 out of 7 continents.

  • @aLby_doira
    @aLby_doira Год назад +12

    lots of smirky lightheartedness here- i wonder if vietnam, cambodia, laos , east timor, chile, pakistan, etc...etc... are smirking too.

  • @docvaliant721
    @docvaliant721 3 года назад +27

    War criminal

  • @HillbillyHippyOG
    @HillbillyHippyOG 3 года назад +36

    Kissinger sure sounds like a CIA plant to me. It’s the only thing that would explain the phenomenon around him.

    • @sherifnabil9663
      @sherifnabil9663 3 года назад +2

      You mean he’s the fake face of the deep state?

  • @ballisticcranberrypeat7777
    @ballisticcranberrypeat7777 3 года назад +24

    Do you think Jeremi draws a little heart when he dots the "i" in his name? Like a Tiffani, or Terri, or Brittani? Smart guy, regardless.

  • @theriffguy8237
    @theriffguy8237 Год назад +1

    Kissinger said "diplomacy is the art of restraining power".
    He also observed "it never ceases to amaze me how extraordinary men are bought undone by the most ordinary of things".
    In Diplomacy, he says "the new world order will be fully visible by 2045".
    Kissinger has a company called Kissinger & Associates.
    A great statesman, but at 99 years old, times up.

  • @Intuitioncalling
    @Intuitioncalling Год назад +2

    From Pakistan. Kissinger has a huge role to play in our country’s politics. He’s one of the most despised persons in here

  • @ygaudreault
    @ygaudreault 3 года назад +5

    Henry Kissenger on china was one of the most fascinating books I read in a while.

  • @Motivational.Quotes10k
    @Motivational.Quotes10k 3 года назад +12

    The corrupting nature of power... Well said

  • @devgoswami1584
    @devgoswami1584 3 года назад +5

    Professor Suri was a professor of mine in Wisconsin, time has changed him but still a brilliant guy.

  • @ikiruyamamoto1050
    @ikiruyamamoto1050 2 месяца назад +1

    Very cool interview Lex, thanks!

  • @charlesvanderhoog7056
    @charlesvanderhoog7056 2 года назад +2

    Jeremi Suri forgets to mention that Kissinger was extremely intelligent and bright. At the age of 21, he was sent as an envoy to Adenhauer, the German president, just to see what he was all about. I advise all the people full of prejudices to read books by Kissinger, especially the absolutely brilliant book "Diplomacy" and the insightful "On China". Don't forget that Kissinger is STILL being consulted by Washington AND Peking.

  • @2sevensdaievans
    @2sevensdaievans 3 года назад +31

    hands down down the best clip I've ever watched! damn...

    • @2sevensdaievans
      @2sevensdaievans 3 года назад +1

      @fa q ha why?

    • @theplaylistchannel6300
      @theplaylistchannel6300 3 года назад +2

      @@2sevensdaievans it's a decently informative clip but it's but a drop in a bucket of infinite information on everything ever

  • @MrTonycapt
    @MrTonycapt 3 года назад +51

    the architect of the Vietnam war that l lost friends in.

    • @AndriesduPlessis
      @AndriesduPlessis 3 года назад +5

      My country was sold out due to this evil man. I will sell my soul to meet him in hell personally

  • @martiansurgery
    @martiansurgery 3 года назад +19

    Kissinger also was instrumental in creating the Petro-dollar. Which allows the US military to be rented to the highest bidder

  • @toddvanfleet2029
    @toddvanfleet2029 2 года назад +3

    Not the dramatic type but history is history.
    I'm not a historian, but according to the record
    Most of Kissinger's major maneuvers, influence and advice in foreign policy both directly and in, was responsible millions of dead innocent people.

  • @countanimeavenger6536
    @countanimeavenger6536 3 месяца назад

    I love Jeremi Suri's books, and his podcast is amazing to listen to.

  • @jasonmcconnell9419
    @jasonmcconnell9419 3 года назад +12

    I'm not sure Kissinger's track record is the endorsement of genius Mr. Suri thinks it is. He ruined everything he touched.

  • @MrRudy-vk7xx
    @MrRudy-vk7xx 3 года назад +11

    Is this the whole interview? Did I miss the part where you guys speak about the real influences on the world stage?

  • @Patchaddictedpolymath
    @Patchaddictedpolymath 3 года назад +12

    Christopher Hitchens talking about Henry Kissinger changed my thoughts about America in a lot of ways

  • @majesticblue92
    @majesticblue92 2 года назад +6

    So Ye was right?

  • @kinggamez2667
    @kinggamez2667 2 года назад +1

    12:30 I have been saying this for ages. US foreign policy is by definition keep your friends close and enemies closer. Look how we did Our European Allies. They are bearing the brunt of the economic impact of the war in Europe, while American corporations profit on energy prices. I can’t say I wouldn’t want that upper hand tho.

  • @RyanPerrella
    @RyanPerrella 3 года назад +13

    Thank you Lex for all your work, thank you for hosting this great conversation and opening the book on these critical topics to understanding the world which we all find ourselves in.

  • @gasa6272
    @gasa6272 3 года назад +92

    Dr Kissinger and Dr Mengele are the same kind of doctors

    • @lukealadeen7836
      @lukealadeen7836 3 года назад +11

      Doctors of death

    • @ramanujamsooriamoorthy4743
      @ramanujamsooriamoorthy4743 3 года назад +8

      Except that Kissinger is much worse.

    • @chengezhussaini1464
      @chengezhussaini1464 3 года назад +6

      Kinda sounds ironic. A man from a Holocaust surviving family does something similar to what was done toy the aforementioned. May God help him and the rest of us I would say.

  • @mika274
    @mika274 3 года назад +6

    When you say the European kings wanted the Jews to run their administration. In India, it was the Brahmins who were doing these kinds of things mainly because they were strong in maths and could handle Kingdom finances.
    Now of course they did centuries of suppressing people outside the Caste. But you know they were good academically when no one else was

  • @brodyharris7631
    @brodyharris7631 Год назад +2

    'You're constantly pursuing power but you forget why' wow. Nothing sums up politics more specifically democracy more than that statement

  • @vmasing1965
    @vmasing1965 2 года назад +2

    20:40 It's fascinating how undoubtedly very smart people, real experts in world politics can completely forget what it was that made America so successful. It's not democracy, it's the constitutional republic where democracy is only one component among many. It's also a system tailored for one specific culture, which is in turn based on one very specific religion. Without all of those components, you got nothing, just a handful of dead building blocks that will never make a house. Remove one, and even the house you already had built will fall apart instantly (on the time scale of world history).
    And so we end up with entire generation of intelligent well-educated people desperately trying to implement this "magic system" (in their poor little confused mind) and then are so surprised when it keeps collapsing and leading nowhere. Humans...

  • @BFaluup
    @BFaluup 3 года назад +11

    If I could only explain how much damage people like him and of the same identity have caused..think of how many things they are the head of and what they have done.

    • @cynthiadiaz2343
      @cynthiadiaz2343 3 года назад +3

      Oy vey, stop noticing

    • @BFaluup
      @BFaluup 3 года назад

      @Walter U. Talmbaut-Willis yep...kind of like Erick Weinstein.

    • @BFaluup
      @BFaluup 3 года назад

      @Walter U. Talmbaut-Willis unless they are playing us too..that has been documented in the past. They are extremely intelligent and seem to cover all bases pretty well.

    • @lucasgrey9794
      @lucasgrey9794 3 года назад +2

      Kissinger is the reason the U.S has such a high standard of living.

    • @BFaluup
      @BFaluup 3 года назад +1

      @@lucasgrey9794 the high standard of living was thanks to our values, effort and hard work..people like him are responsible for the decaying society we are now experiencing and will continue to experience..they are siphoning off our society and destroying it taking us from 1st world to 2nd and ultimately 3rd.

  • @RKade22
    @RKade22 3 года назад +9

    This guy sugar coated the shit out of Kissinger..sounds to me like he's trying to fake and sound like he's giving praise and criticism for the bad but doesn't even talk about the horrible shit hes been involved in

  • @fredhoupt4078
    @fredhoupt4078 3 года назад +9

    That was very good. I would add that two things should have been referred to, both as dark blotches on Kissinger's career. 1) Chile, the overthrow of Allende, the installation of the butcher Pinochet. Nixon is heard on tape raging away that he will make Chile's economy howl. Well, he and Kissinger did more than upset the economy of Chile. I see that Kissinger has Chilean blood on his hands and he will have to answer for that. He mostly lied about his involvement but lucky for us, the late polemicist, Christopher Hitchens, located a trove of declassified documents which shows just how up close Kissinger was in the overthrow. Hitchens wrote a book about it which greatly embarrassed and upset Kissinger. 2) Kissinger and Nixon have to answer for extending the war in Viet Nam years longer than was needed. In the end they more or less settled for what they could have accepted when Nixon was elected to his first term. Thousands and thousands of American and Vietnamese died so that Nixon could have his fucking "peace with honor". Well, Nixon was no peace maker, regardless the words on his tombstone. Kissinger was all too willing to accommodate Nixon's goals. History will hold them both accountable for needless bloodshed. Vietnam collapsed and decades later emerges as a rapidly growing economy.

  • @miighankurt1930
    @miighankurt1930 2 месяца назад

    7:26 we all from the former USSR block e all the same. the thing about Henry Kissinger is that his loyalty was to the US.. He viewed himself as an american no an Israeli.

  • @DORC101
    @DORC101 2 года назад +2

    The ending sums him up imo. Excellent stuff Lex, and big thanks to your insightful guest.

  • @stevenvonsancho
    @stevenvonsancho 3 года назад +33

    I think Epstein would be a more accurate example of how the most powerful people are controlled while Kissenger could tell you how to control the least powerful people like with food

    • @leonscott543
      @leonscott543 3 года назад +1

      Epstein didn't control crap. He was just a black mail collection agency for the CIA and mossad and probably black market actors as well

    • @stevenvonsancho
      @stevenvonsancho 3 года назад +1

      @@leonscott543 I think you missed my point

    • @DaedalusR
      @DaedalusR 2 года назад +1

      Both jewish

    • @stevenvonsancho
      @stevenvonsancho 2 года назад

      @@DaedalusR I doubt either of them were religious

    • @stevenvonsancho
      @stevenvonsancho 2 года назад

      @Chris Porter I doubt they are religious whatsoever

  • @fernandoschmidt8
    @fernandoschmidt8 3 года назад +9

    Great conversation

  • @jamesmiltenbergerjr2250
    @jamesmiltenbergerjr2250 3 года назад +6

    I read a book called "Henry the knife" back in the 80s very enlightening.

  • @walkertongdee
    @walkertongdee 2 года назад +5

    Lex dropped the ball about the evil monster

  • @Six_Cats_Watching_Birds
    @Six_Cats_Watching_Birds 3 месяца назад +1

    Perhaps the right guy for U.S.A.'s interestes but many believe he was the wrong guy for Greeks and their interests. Much suffering is probably connected with his dark role in the politics of Eastern Mediterranean. He would be really brilliant if he could achieve his interests with less pain and suffering for other people.

  • @sebastianwalls7001
    @sebastianwalls7001 3 года назад +14

    Great conversation, fascinating topics were discussed. Thanks for this!

  • @peterdeacon4628
    @peterdeacon4628 3 года назад +14

    Christopher Hitchens writes about Henry Kissinger in detail

  • @unknmanserbia2642
    @unknmanserbia2642 3 года назад +21

    So many "jewish are above all" vibe from this guy.

    • @jessefay4984
      @jessefay4984 3 года назад +2

      @@GodsOwnPrototype nor is the IQ evenly distributed, makes sense.

    • @flyingface
      @flyingface 3 года назад

      wow...really. mate, look at yourself in the mirror

  • @Linda-oi4pj
    @Linda-oi4pj 2 года назад +12

    He inspired Klaus’s WEF

  • @perfectfutures
    @perfectfutures Год назад

    Fascinating, from nothing, he went straight to the top and helped win the war. And the growing openness to cosmopolitan figures. Valuing people who know rather than just people from a particular family- which is how you win.
    It sounds from this like he learned the need to have power to survive and it became something of a way of life. But I feel the world is safer, more stable, for his interventions than without them.

  • @Franciscasieri
    @Franciscasieri 3 года назад +15

    A war criminal.
    The Trial of Henry Kissinger by C. Hitchens covered this in depth.

    • @badrogor5725
      @badrogor5725 3 месяца назад +1

      Мир стал чище, он долго его загрязнял, этот Киссинджер.

    • @rami666
      @rami666 3 месяца назад

      It’s a repeating theme with the 🕍

    • @ikiruyamamoto1050
      @ikiruyamamoto1050 2 месяца назад +1

      Blah, blah, blah....one man's opinion.

    • @Franciscasieri
      @Franciscasieri 2 месяца назад

      @ikiruyamamoto1050 just the facts baby...just the facts...

    • @ikiruyamamoto1050
      @ikiruyamamoto1050 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Franciscasieri Obviously very few agreed, because Kissinger travelled the world free as can be. A lot of ignorant people like to throw around terms like "war criminal," but have no idea what it means.