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  • From Timbuktu to Tehran: Why American Leaders Keep Misreading the Landscape
    2026/04/01

    Episode 6 is a critique of how U.S. leaders and institutions repeatedly misread societies they intervene in—because they rely on the wrong frameworks and reward the wrong metrics. Michael lays out an “operating framework” of three assumptions American analysis applies almost everywhere: people primarily seek economic maximization; people behave with universal rationality (avoiding death and extreme risk); and American cultural success implies cultural superiority that others will adopt. Each assumption is partly true, he argues—but dangerously incomplete.

    The episode draws a sharp line between what deep understanding actually requires and what the policy system rewards. Real understanding demands language ability, time in the landscape, knowledge of social architecture (who owes what to whom), historical memory, and forensic curiosity. But institutions reward measurable outputs, speed, contractor-driven frameworks, and indicators that fit pre-existing models—often written by people with little direct experience of the places affected.

    Michael illustrates the consequences through cases: Vietnam (where kinetic metrics looked strong but political will and identity proved decisive), Somalia (Cold War transactional logic without understanding clan dynamics), Mali (ROI-driven programming creating strategic vacuums later exploited by armed groups), and Congo (Cold War decisions that set long-tail costs in motion for decades). He then applies the pattern to Iran, arguing that U.S. assessments often emphasize measurable “kinetic” achievements while failing to measure civilizational identity, institutional resilience, and strategic frameworks rooted in long historical and theological narratives.

    The episode’s bottom line: when leaders measure only what their models can see, responsibility for failure is easily externalized onto the people they never bothered to understand—and the costs land asymmetrically on everyone else.

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

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    36 分
  • India, Israel & 50K Workers: What happens to the Palestinians?
    2026/03/29

    This episode argues that one of the most consequential developments in the Israel–Palestine landscape isn’t a headline-grabbing battle or speech—it’s a “boring” labor agreement that quietly reshapes incentives on the ground. Michael breaks down the India–Israel deal signed Feb 25–26, 2026: a broadened strategic partnership with major defense, tech, cybersecurity, and agriculture/water cooperation—and, crucially, a commitment to bring 50,000 additional Indian workers to Israel over five years (on top of tens of thousands already arriving since late 2023).

    The episode’s central claim is that this labor provision is not a side detail; it’s a mechanism. Before October 7, Palestinian labor in Israel functioned as a major economic tie—creating practical reasons for channels to remain open. After October 7, permits were revoked and Palestinian access collapsed. Replacing that workforce with new foreign labor doesn’t just fill jobs; it severs interdependence and reduces the structural incentives to negotiate. Michael places this in a wider global pattern of migrant labor systems, but stresses the key difference: in Israel/Palestine, a pre-existing workforce is being replaced in a political context where economic ties once helped keep a two-state possibility alive.

    He then connects the labor deal to a broader regional realignment happening in the shadow of escalating conflict with Iran—arguing that while the world watches missiles, durable “administrative” decisions become embedded and irreversible. The conclusion is stark: rational moves by each actor can add up to an outcome nobody voted for—the quiet foreclosure of a political future millions still need.

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

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    26 分
  • The American Offset Model: We offset our mining. Our emissions. Our standards. Our conscience.
    2026/03/19

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

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    26 分
  • America’s Copper Contradiction
    2026/03/18

    Disclaimer:
    The Unpopular View with Michael Brown is independently owned and produced by Michael Brown. PulsePoint Media Atelier LLC serves solely as the distribution and promotional partner for this podcast. All content, opinions, and intellectual property rights remain the exclusive property of the creator(s).


    No part of this podcast may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the copyright owner.


    © 2026 Michael Brown & The Unpopular View. All rights reserved.

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    29 分
  • From Somali Gunpoint to MN Welfare Fraud: The Oversight Failures We Repeat
    2026/03/11

    In 1983 Somalia, I discovered systematic aid fraud that nearly got me killed. That taught me how oversight collapse—not any one group—creates fraud at scale.

    40 years later, Minnesota's Somali community is taking heat for welfare fraud, and yes, the evidence is real. But fixating only on Minnesota Somalis misses the bigger story: SNAP fraud, Medicaid fraud, PPP fraud—it's happening nationwide across every demographic because we've built systems that invite exploitation and then act shocked when it happens.

    This episode connects what I learned at gunpoint in Mogadishu to America's refusal to learn the same lesson: fraud isn't about ethnicity or geography. It's about weak oversight, perverse incentives, and our pattern of blaming symptoms instead of fixing structures.

    Why do we keep ignoring what the evidence shows?

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    25 分
  • Bridging Boomers, Gen Z & the Global Realities We Ignore
    2026/03/11

    This is The Unpopular View: Challenging the Narratives Dividing Boomers, Gen Z, and the Global South.

    I'm Michael Brown. I've spent 50 years in 80+ countries—Somalia, Mali, Congo—working on development, conservation, and climate projects. I've seen what works, what fails, and lived with remote communities while advising governments on policy. I also know what we tell ourselves to avoid uncomfortable truths.

    This podcast exists because we're replacing evidence with tribal loyalty. We're choosing sides instead of testing claims. We're ignoring lessons from places we've never heard of while repeating the same mistakes at home.

    Each episode tests a story: Is it true? Who benefits from believing it? What does the evidence actually show?

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    35 分