Vox

Syria’s new president — once an al-Qaeda commander — visits the White House. Saudi Prince Mohammed Bin Salan (MBS) heads to Washington with chips and security on the agenda. And Trump calls for renewed nuclear testing. Jake Sullivan and Jon Finer break down a week of shifting alliances and rising risks in From Terrorist to President, Episode 2 of The Long Game.
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00:00 Intro
02:42 Trump Meets Syria’s New President
06:11 The Rise of Ahmed al-Shara
10:04 Can Syria Stabilize?
17:02 Saudi Crown Prince in Washington
28:51 Trump Instructs U.S. Nuclear Tests
45:37 Red Team/Blue Team: Should Israel Strike Iran Again?
01:04:22 The Wrap: What Jake & Jon Got Wrong
01:11:24 Outro
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The salmon dilemma - November 13, 2025 - Vox
Earth’s population is growing. We’re expected to have 2 billion more mouths to feed by 2050. But how can we feed all those people in a way that is still sustainable and ethical? Many have argued that aquaculture (or fish farming) is one of the most sustainable ways we can consume animal protein, since it requires less land use. It’s currently the quickest-growing form of food production in the world. But how exactly does it work? And is it really the best path forward?
To find out more, Vox video producer Nate Krieger went down the rabbit hole on salmon aquaculture. Salmon is currently the most popular fish in the US: The average American consumes 3.2 pounds of salmon annually. And over 70% of that salmon comes from farms, totalling 3 million tons of salmon a year.
To understand the impact that the salmon industry is having on our planet and our future, and on the salmon themselves, we spoke to industry insiders, marine biologists, and fish welfare experts.
This is a complicated issue, full of lots of caveats and trade-offs. But the more we know about the food we eat and where it comes from, the more responsible we can be.
Sources and further reading:
Read more of Vox's reporting on salmon farming: https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/468348/atlantic-salmon-farm-cruelty-pollution
Vox's Future Perfect team reports on what it takes to feed the fish involved in aquaculture, which turns out to be one of the most important impacts to consider:
https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/464898/trump-tariffs-china-trade-war-soybeans-exports
https://www.vox.com/future-perfect/379564/fish-farming-sustainable-wild-caught
The website for the Global Salmon Initiative, a collaboration between some of the world’s biggest salmon farming companies, whose CEO we spoke with for this piece. Its handbook is a great resource for information on salmon aquaculture:
https://globalsalmoninitiative.org/en/about-salmon-farming/gsi-handbook/
The World Wildlife Fund’s page on the tradeoffs involved in salmon farming: https://www.worldwildlife.org/our-work/oceans/sustainable-seafood/farmed-seafood/farmed-salmon/
This video is part of a series supported by Animal Charity Evaluators, which received a grant from EarthShare.
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We use “Orwellian” to describe everything from campus dust-ups to authoritarian crackdowns. But what did George Orwell actually stand for, what did he get wrong, and what can we learn from him about our age of surveillance capitalism and distraction?
Sean’s guest is Laura Beers, historian at American University and author of Orwell’s Ghosts: Wisdom and Warnings for the 21st Century. They dig into Orwell’s defense of truth over ideology, his crusade against euphemism, his experience with propaganda and persecution in Spain, and why 1984 and Animal Farm only capture part of his project.
Host: Sean Illing (@SeanIlling)
Guest: Laura Beers, historian and author of Orwell’s Ghosts
00:00 Intro
05:52 Truth in political speech
11:01 Doublethink: holding two mutually contradictory ideas in your head
12:35 Orwell did not support the women's movement
17:27 Colonialism and Orwell's essay: Shooting an Elephant
22:00 What is the value of reading Orwell today?
27:23 Uses and abuses of language
35:58 Why did Orwell understand totalitarian societies?
42:05 What did Orwell get wrong?
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In their first episode, Jake Sullivan and Jon Finer tackle three flashpoints central to U.S. national security interests right now: U.S. / China relations, the Russian - Ukraine War and the situation unfolding in the Caribbean and the Eastern Pacific Ocean. They close with a discussion about the new Netflix film A House of Dynamite, a story about crisis decision-making that, for two people who’ve lived those moments, hits uncomfortably close to home.
Vox will be sharing the first four episodes of "The Long Game" with our audience. You can continue watching by subscribing to the show’s official YouTube channel: youtube.com/@podlonggame
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0:00 - US / China The Literal Long Game
04:46 - Trump’s Playbook
06:22 - Export Controls
09:17 - Supreme Court Case on Tariffs
10:00 - Uncertainty and Ambiguity
12:48 - Continuing Russian War Against Ukraine
13:54 - Is an End Closer Now?
23:03 - Finally the Battlefield
27:35 - Possibility of Hybrid Warfare?
32:01 - Trump’s Backpeddling
35:40 - Approach to our own Hemisphere
37:15 - What is the Objective with Venezuela?
39:53 - What are the Targets?
42:42 - Post Intervention Risks
43:40 - A House of Dynamite
50:15 - Portrayal of Three Dimensional Characters
52:00 - Analogy to Missile Hitting Poland
57:15 - Uncertainty Over Attribution and Reaction
Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out http://www.vox.com.
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We all think of ourselves as authors of our lives. The difference between our happy ending and someone else’s tragic one are the choices we each make. But what if none of that’s true?
Sean’s guest today is Robert Sapolsky, a biologist and neuroscientist at Stanford University and author of Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will. They dig into Sapolsky’s claim that free will is an illusion and discuss what the science says about genes, stress, culture, and how all this research might reframe the way we think about meritocracy, blame, punishment, and even hatred.
This episode originally aired in November of 2023.
Host: Sean Illing (@SeanIlling)
Guest: Robert Sapolsky, biologist and neuroscientist at Stanford University and author of Determined: A Science of Life Without Free Will.
00:00 Intro
07:12 What is determinism?
24:47 Can you choose to change?
36:37 Are we just responding to stimuli?
46:22 Can we claim credit for our successes?
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Vox.com is a news website that helps you cut through the noise and understand what's really driving the events in the headlines. Check out http://www.vox.com.
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