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Episode 6 – The Chosen Ones
🎙️ Who Yelling Now? by Olga Foreign
What happens when a nation—or an idea—begins to believe it is untouchable?
In this gripping episode, Olga Foreign takes us into the unsettling territory of global ego, weaponized suffering, and the performative righteousness that excuses violence in the name of history, security, and divine right.
"The Chosen Ones" is not a quiet conversation. It’s a poetic excavation of the sacred shields people wrap around power—where cries of self-defense echo louder than cries of the innocent. It asks: who gets to declare themselves righteous while raining destruction on others? And what happens to the world when that righteousness becomes immune to critique?
Across seven bold spoken-word poems, Olga doesn’t whisper—she yells, but with precision and care. Each piece explores the uncomfortable truth about how narratives are manipulated to justify mass harm:
"I Have the Right to Defend Myself" becomes a haunting chant used to cloak unchecked aggression.
"Holy Contact" reimagines every act of violence as a twisted act of mercy.
"The Mirror’s Blessing" reveals the self-worshipping face of domination.
"Antispeech" confronts the weaponization of words like “antisemitism” to silence global critique.
"Chosen for What?" asks whether survival grants moral license—or moral blindness.
"When the Scar Becomes a Sword" examines how past trauma becomes present terror.
"I Was Just Following God" challenges the spiritual cowardice behind modern justifications for cruelty.
This isn’t a sermon. It’s not propaganda. It’s not even a protest.
It’s an invitation to think.
This episode recognizes the danger of saying too little—and the price of saying too much. It’s about silence disguised as safety, and the quiet complicity that allows power to bulldoze dignity worldwide. And yes, it’s risky. Because as Olga reminds us, there are powerful groups who do not tolerate questions—only allegiance.
But Who Yelling Now? was never meant to be safe.
“If I spit on you, be grateful.
If I bomb you, it’s a blessing.
If I kill your children, I was just defending mine.”
These words are not satire. They’re mirrors. Held up to the world’s face—and our own.
Listen bravely. Share widely. Discuss loudly.
Because if the “chosen ones” cannot be questioned, then none of us are free.
Let me know if you'd like an alternate tone (e.g., shorter promo version, more subdued, more humorous, etc.) or an image overlay of the text.
Episode 6 – The Chosen Ones
🎙️ Who Yelling Now? by Olga Foreign
What happens when a nation—or an idea—begins to believe it is untouchable?
In this gripping episode, Olga Foreign takes us into the unsettling territory of global ego, weaponized suffering, and the performative righteousness that excuses violence in the name of history, security, and divine right.
"The Chosen Ones" is not a quiet conversation. It’s a poetic excavation of the sacred shields people wrap around power—where cries of self-defense echo louder than cries of the innocent. It asks: who gets to declare themselves righteous while raining destruction on others? And what happens to the world when that righteousness becomes immune to critique?
Across seven bold spoken-word poems, Olga doesn’t whisper—she yells, but with precision and care. Each piece explores the uncomfortable truth about how narratives are manipulated to justify mass harm:
"I Have the Right to Defend Myself" becomes a haunting chant used to cloak unchecked aggression.
"Holy Contact" reimagines every act of violence as a twisted act of mercy.
"The Mirror’s Blessing" reveals the self-worshipping face of domination.
"Antispeech" confronts the weaponization of words like “antisemitism” to silence global critique.
"Chosen for What?" asks whether survival grants moral license—or moral blindness.
"When the Scar Becomes a Sword" examines how past trauma becomes present terror.
"I Was Just Following God" challenges the spiritual cowardice behind modern justifications for cruelty.
This isn’t a sermon. It’s not propaganda. It’s not even a protest.
It’s an invitation to think.
This episode recognizes the danger of saying too little—and the price of saying too much. It’s about silence disguised as safety, and the quiet complicity that allows power to bulldoze dignity worldwide. And yes, it’s risky. Because as Olga reminds us, there are powerful groups who do not tolerate questions—only allegiance.
But Who Yelling Now? was never meant to be safe.
“If I spit on you, be grateful.
If I bomb you, it’s a blessing.
If I kill your children, I was just defending mine.”
These words are not satire. They’re mirrors. Held up to the world’s face—and our own.
Listen bravely. Share widely. Discuss loudly.
Because if the “chosen ones” cannot be questioned, then none of us are free.
Let me know if you'd like an alternate tone (e.g., shorter promo version, more subdued, more humorous, etc.) or an image overlay of the text.