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Energy Geopolitics & the Remaking of the Modern World | Helen Thompson 

Hidden Forces
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In Episode 257 of Hidden Forces, Demetri Kofinas speaks with Helen Thompson, author and Professor of Political Economy at the University of Cambridge. Thompson’s current research concentrates on the political economy of energy and the long history of the democratic, economic, and geopolitical disruptions of the twenty-first century, which she explores magisterially in her new book “Disorder: Hard Times in the 21st Century.”
For those of us who grew up in the 1980’s and 1990’s, the nature of the world as we knew it to be only seemed to be getting better and better. The price of energy and the cost of capital kept getting cheaper, the world kept getting safer and more interconnected, and liberal democracy and free-market capitalism were seen as inevitable outcomes of the end of history. Today, all of that feels like it was almost a dream.
The last two decades have brought a powerful tide of geopolitical, economic, and democratic shocks onto the world. Their fallout has led central banks to create over twenty-five trillion dollars of new money, brought about a new age of geopolitical competition, destabilized the Middle East, ruptured the European Union, and exposed old political fault lines in the United States. Fault lines that seem to challenge even those of the tumultuous 1960’s and 1970’s when the specter of nuclear war and the trauma of violent riots and political assassinations cast a long shadow over the future of the Republic.
This conversation between Helen Thompson and Demetri Kofinas endeavours to draw a line of continuity between those turbulent years and the present political moment as we try to imagine how a future situated in the long arch of human history with all its political challenges, economic imperatives, and destructive wars might unfold. It recounts three histories. One about geopolitics, one about the world economy, and one about western democracies, and explains how in the years of political disorder prior to the pandemic, the disruption in each became part of one big story, much of which originates in problems generated by fossil-fuel energies and our efforts to control them. And it explains why, as the green transition takes place, the longstanding predicaments that energy invariably shapes will remain firmly in place.
You can access the full episode, transcript, and intelligence report to this week’s conversation by going directly to the episode page at hiddenforces.io/ and clicking on "premium extras." All subscribers gain access to our premium feed, which can be easily added to your favorite podcast application.
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Producer & Host: Demetri Kofinas
Editor & Engineer: Stylianos Nicolaou
Follow Demetri on Twitter at @Kofinas
Episode Recorded on 07/06/2022

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10 июл 2022

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Комментарии : 22   
@mart7379
@mart7379 Год назад
One of the very best podcasts out their, and this is a tremendous episode.
@bentray1908
@bentray1908 2 года назад
This is an amazing consilience
@barbaraherda9212
@barbaraherda9212 2 года назад
37:15 Japan may not “seem” to have an inflation problem, but let’s not forget their Nikkei index crashed in 90/91 and NEVER recovered. That massive wealth-transfer alone “impoverished” the country’s people - it would be interesting to really take a closer look at that, especially since the BOJ is heavy on US treasuries, ie debt.
@ableasdale2000
@ableasdale2000 2 года назад
Dmitri interviews Oliver Twist on international politics.
@barbaraherda9212
@barbaraherda9212 2 года назад
Henry Ford’s wife, Clara, had and preferred her 1914 Detroit Electric vehicle. At minimum, by 1939 via the Manhattan Project, “they” already knew thorium was better for nuclear energy (cleaner, less radioactive waste, greater quantities, etc), yet all focused on uranium cause you can’t make a bomb with thorium. Of course, I didn’t learn this in our pathetically controlled & manipulated school system. Here we are, over a century later. That folks, IS the history lesson. Follow the “money” … or shall I say fiat currency that they trained us to call money; and then work for and save, of course. We’ve been had by the biggest scam artists in history. Follow the trail of our so-called “great leaders”. They all became a part of it, either knowingly or through ignorance. No more.
@nicosmind3
@nicosmind3 2 года назад
How can 1970s inflation be only blamed on oil? All prices went up!! Normally when oil prices go up that means less money for everything else, that means prices adjusting down. It's not like everyone is sitting on a ton of money they can freely spend on rising prices, we have to make choices, shop around etc. A lot of people live paycheck to paycheck, blaming it oil as a main driver is madness. It reminds me of the Weimar Republic that type of thinking. Prices went up so they "had to" print money so people could afford the high prices. Owners heard about the printing of money on the radio, and raised prices in anticipation of more money flooding their stores
@michaels4255
@michaels4255 2 года назад
Exactly. Inflation was already "taking off" in 1969, two years before US production peaked and four years before the OPEC oil embargo and subsequent doubling of oil prices. The oil squeeze made it worse, but it did not get the ball rolling. An additional issue: if rising oil price inputs are what drive inflation, then why do falling oil price inputs never drive deflation?
@sweetaznspice1
@sweetaznspice1 11 месяцев назад
If my recollection is correct, not the best of monetary policies by Fed Chair Burns inflating the money supply contributed to the persistent inflationary environment in the 70s prior to the oil market issues.
@harveytheparaglidingchaser7039
@harveytheparaglidingchaser7039 5 месяцев назад
My simple reasoning is that if oil prices go up all prices go up. There's nothing you can grow or produce without oil (unless you grow it in your garden)
@indonesiamenggugat8795
@indonesiamenggugat8795 Год назад
🌹🌹
@cooldudecs
@cooldudecs 2 года назад
Well 1970s also had the largest generation in history buying homes … Similar to what we see today with the millennials inflation. You add foreign scared money flossing into us markets buying anything not nailed done
@kirstinstrand6292
@kirstinstrand6292 2 года назад
They don't understand inflation because they were all trained in the Elite Colleges (all classmates) in Keynesian Economics!
@melsenbabe
@melsenbabe Год назад
Dr. Thompson's assessment starting around 36:30 on the contributors of the current inflationary environment is ambiguous and incomplete to say the least, and has its own political implications. Comparison of fiscal stimulus in the US under the Biden administration vs. lack of fiscal stimulus in the euro area during the same timeline? Fine. What about the parallel of the disorderly transition toward ESG and outright hostility to fossil fuels (even the more environmentally friendly natural gas) in both jurisdictions? Not addressed. What about the spillovers of US fiscal and monetary stimulus globally, including the euro area? Not addressed.
@timothyjohnson1511
@timothyjohnson1511 Год назад
With the price of energy up so much, why is the following not front page news? Decentralized, off-grid, home-scale *unlimited FUSION energy* technology independently verified by Stanford Research Institute and with license to manufacture available today from *Brillouin Energy* . This is not front page news, since the corporations that get rich selling you overpriced energy do not want you to have unlimited, off-grid, cheap energy.
@barbaraherda9212
@barbaraherda9212 2 года назад
46:00 Although I appreciate where your guest is going with her discussion, imho, sanctions have never worked, ever - they’ve only resulted in damaging the middle class and made the poor more poor, and the rich richer (banksters, oligarchs/plutocrats, politicians). So using sanctions as a “coherent reason” for why anyone goes to war will, imho, never make sense. To me, coherency requires a certain level of logical reasoning.
@garyhundt
@garyhundt Год назад
Volume level is way too loud, compared to typical youtube levels!
@edreeves121
@edreeves121 2 года назад
Once again, D talks way too much and overrides the guest. Tiresome.
@JohnRobertsTV
@JohnRobertsTV 6 месяцев назад
This interviewer needs to learn how to ask concise questions. He takes too long and is too concerned about his own feelings on a topic when he has a really interesting guest who should get more time to speak.
@advocate1563
@advocate1563 2 года назад
They made us vote twice until we got the "right" answer.
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