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A ceasefire that’s “on life support,” a Strait of Hormuz that still shapes global energy, and a US military that looks powerful on paper but struggles to surge in reality: that’s where this conversation goes fast. I’m joined by retired Lieutenant Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski, a former Pentagon and NSA professional and a founding member of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, to sort through what’s signal versus noise.
We start surprisingly close to home with Virginia redistricting and gerrymandering, because engineered maps don’t just pick winners, they erode real representation and deepen political separation. From there we move into the Iran conflict and the question Karen keeps pressing: what does “victory” even mean if objectives keep shrinking, commercial shipping remains threatened, and Americans feel the blowback in gas prices and economic stress?
Then we get concrete about military readiness and the defense industrial base: production at scale, logistics, long deployments, and why modern warfare is being reshaped by cheap drones, rapid iteration, and adversaries who adapt quickly. We also touch the bigger arc of a multipolar world, rising interest in gold and precious metals, and what it signals when confidence in US power and strategy slips.
Subscribe for more conversations like this, share the episode with a friend who argues politics or foreign policy for sport, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.
By Produced and Distributed by OMG Media Partners, LLC.A ceasefire that’s “on life support,” a Strait of Hormuz that still shapes global energy, and a US military that looks powerful on paper but struggles to surge in reality: that’s where this conversation goes fast. I’m joined by retired Lieutenant Colonel Karen Kwiatkowski, a former Pentagon and NSA professional and a founding member of Veteran Intelligence Professionals for Sanity, to sort through what’s signal versus noise.
We start surprisingly close to home with Virginia redistricting and gerrymandering, because engineered maps don’t just pick winners, they erode real representation and deepen political separation. From there we move into the Iran conflict and the question Karen keeps pressing: what does “victory” even mean if objectives keep shrinking, commercial shipping remains threatened, and Americans feel the blowback in gas prices and economic stress?
Then we get concrete about military readiness and the defense industrial base: production at scale, logistics, long deployments, and why modern warfare is being reshaped by cheap drones, rapid iteration, and adversaries who adapt quickly. We also touch the bigger arc of a multipolar world, rising interest in gold and precious metals, and what it signals when confidence in US power and strategy slips.
Subscribe for more conversations like this, share the episode with a friend who argues politics or foreign policy for sport, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway.