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today on keeping It Real, we're taking a step back and we're looking at the big picture. Over the past year, a series of geopolitical moves have been unfolding during Trump's second term. And at first glance, they look unrelated. Different regions, different conflicts, different headlines. But when you start connecting the dots, a pattern does begin to emerge, and it's one that raises a bigger question about power and economics and the long game that's being played on the global stage. So let's unpack what might actually be going on in Trump's head behind the scenes and of course, always. Guys, if you're liking the show, please do me a huge favor, like share, comment and subscribe. It helps us out a ton with the algorithm. Here we go. Keeping It Real with Jillian Michaels. Is it just me or when you go to tune in to the news, whether it's, you know, your favorite podcaster or legacy media, you feel like you see a map of the world that looks like a series of random disconnected dumpster fires. Over in the Middle east, you've got a conflict that's seemingly over escalating nuclear tensions with Iran down south. In Venezuela, you've got the ousting of Maduro over what we're told is a fentanyl crisis. But then later we're told it's also likely about oil. It's in Central America, there's a sudden, intense battle as of 2025 over who actually controls the Panama Canal. Up north, we have these completely bizarre, recurring conversations about the United States trying to buy Greenland. And if you listen to the establishment press, these seem like isolated crises, right? Geopolitical oddities, completely separate stories. Both sides, right and left, default to their partisan stance. You know, who, who's right, who's wrong, and they begin debating the surface level issues that we've been handed. If it's really about fentanyl, why are we going to Mexico before Venezuela? What's the real time frame in regard to Iran's ability to attack the US or there's Russian submarines In Greenland. I'm not trying to make light of this. I, I think all of this commentary, though, is missing the big picture. I'm not seeing a ton of dot connecting and there are a host of reasons, I think. First, very often all the little points that get litigated are definitely valid pieces of the puzzle, but they're exactly that. They're pieces of a larger puzzle. And it's pretty easy to fall into these sand traps when some of the biggest news media personalities who should be the most credible source of information on the topic, are pushing a singular issue agenda quite passionately.
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By the way, this happened because Israel wanted it to happen. This is Israel's war. This is not the United States war. This war is not being waged on behalf of American national security objectives to make the United States safer or richer. This war is not actually even about weapons mass destruction. Maybe, you know, rethinking our military support for Israel.
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It breaks my heart because the current leadership in Israel is walking us down that path. Are we at war? Are we not at war? Do we want regime change or do we not told the Iranian people in his very first moment. You know, I know this may sound controversial, and a number of, among my friends, some of them is controversial. I don't think it's right to say that President Trump has started a war with Iran. I think President Trump wants to finish a war that, that Iran started in 1979, 47 years ago. They said we have the inalienable right to enrich.
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They, they, they bragged about having 60% enriched fuel, enough for 11 bombs.
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Look, everyone has a different take, but I'm just, I'm just nowhere close to buying this. And while the not one issue but all the issues together argument does feel more accurate to me. Right. The majority of those issues are starting to feel like bonus points. In other words, like, sure, we want our allies to be safe. Sure, we never want Iran to have any type of weapon that can hold the U.S. hostage. Yeah, we want better oil prices. We want to defang terror proxies. We want less fentanyl in America. But I, I, I don't know. I just am not believing that Trump went into Venezuela because Maduro made fun of his YMCA dance. And you know what? Somebody actually said that, by the way, somebody credible. And I just don't believe that Trump is playing this kind of high risk poker just for Israel or even to liberate millions of Iranians from a horrific, torturous authoritarian regime. You know, guys, when, when I take a step back to examine These issues critically, and I look for the connective tissue. Not only do these matters seem deeper than what's largely discussed, they also don't appear to be isolated incidents. Iran, Venezuela, Greenland, Panama. These are all highly calculated, coordinated moves with an unquestionable overarching conflict. I see a supply chain cold war. Think about this for a second, right? Wars have been fought over ideology, and that's a relic of the past. We're no longer doing the whole, like, commie red scare thing. And so is the traditional arms race, this cold calculus of counting warheads pointed at one another. That belongs to the 20th century. We can all pretty much nuke each other fully into oblivion at this point. So how does a country gain leverage in the 21st century? It's supply chain dominance. It's. It's warring over logistical choke points, critical minerals and the energy lifelines that keep the modern world running. And China has built its rapid economic ascent by securing those choke points and global supply chains. Corporations shifted manufacturing to China is the labor was cheap, and Washington went along with it, dressing the arrangement up in the language of free markets and democratic progress. And the democracy angle wasn't entirely baloney. I mean, a lot of people genuinely believed that economic integration would moderate the Chinese Communist Party, but the real driver was margin. Companies got cheaper production, consumers got cheaper goods, and the geopolitical consequences were absolutely treated as an afterthought. You know, what followed was China leveraging open markets, Western capital, and a World Trade Organization membership to become the dominant force in global supply chains. They did not become a. A liberalized democracy. And we should have had the foresight to appreciate that the cheaper element has an inverse relationship with the safer element. We just offshored manufacturing, but we also offshored our leverage and our national security. So here's my hypothesis. My hypothesis is that Trump's primary objective is to systematically throttle and dismantle the economic hegemony of the People's Republic of China. If China flipped a switch tomorrow and zero shipments arrived from them, the United States wouldn't face a slow economic decline. It would face immediate systemic paralysis. So here's an idea of how I think that collapse would play out, sector by sector. First, the pharmacies go empty. And this is the most terrifying and immediate threat because the United States relies on China for a massive percentage of its active pharmaceutical ingredients. Guys, we are talking about the baseline chemicals required to make everything from antibiotics to ibuprofen to blood pressure medications and cancer treatments. The New York Post has been delivering impactful headlines for over two centuries. And every weekday morning, I'll bring them straight to you. I'm Caitlin Becker, host of the New York Post. Cast from Washington to Wall Street. If it matters to you, you'll hear it here. And it wouldn't be the Post without the stories other outlets like to ignore. So ask your smart speaker to play the NY Postcast, listen and subscribe on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, or wherever you get your podcasts. So within a matter of months, hospital supply closets would run dry. Your local pharmacy shelves would be stripped bare. It would be pretty much an instant nationwide public health crisis. Number two, the tech and communications freeze. I mean, we might design the world's best microchips in California, but the physical hardware, the smartphones, the servers, the motherboards, the routers, all of that is overwhelmingly assembled in China. If the supply stops, nothing gets fixed or replaced. It infrastructure would begin to degrade. Telecommunications networks would struggle to maintain servers. The device that runs our financial markets, hospitals, power grids would all face critical hardware shortages. Number three, the military industrial crisis. You can't build 21st century weapons without 21st century materials. And China absolutely dominates the processing of rare earth elements. And if they cut off the supply tomorrow, the United States defense sector would slow almost to a crawl. We would lose a huge amount of the raw materials required to build F35 fighter jets, guided missiles, night vision equipment, and advanced radar systems. The arsenal of democracy would effectively be starved of its raw ingredients and number. Instant hyperinflation and retail collapse. Take a walk through Walmart, Home Depot, an auto parts store. The sheer volume of replacement parts, basic machinery, textiles, everyday consumer goods that come from Chinese factories, it's staggering. And if that supply vanishes, whatever is left on American shelves would skyrocket in price overnight. You would see inflation that makes the last few years look like a joke. The bottom line is that we don't just lose cheap flat screen TVs, okay? We lose our ability to heal our sick power, our grid arm, our military. And that's the terrifying reality of a supply chain cold war. And Donald Trump has made it clear, if you've been paying attention, that this is a massive concern and something that he's working to remedy relentlessly in an unapologetic move away from globalization no longer. Right. Instead of worshiping open markets, the new doctrine is aggressive decoupling. By weaponizing massive tariffs, threatening secondary sanctions, issuing blunt force ultimatums to our allies, all while he's executing a parallel campaign of logistical annexation to sever China's global arteries. I mean, we are watching in Real time, the annexation of the nodes that, that run the global economy. Panama's a node, Greenland's a node. Venezuela's a node. Iran's a node. We're taking the board piece by piece. So let's, let's walk through this one issue at a time and let's start with Iran. Okay, if the United States topples the Iranian regime or even permanently cripples it, it structurally mitigates China's ability to rule the global economy in three specific devastating ways. So first, Beijing has made it super duper clear that they want to replace the United States as the global alpha dog. Well to do that they gotta dethro the US Dollar. And as long as the world buys oil in dollars, the petrodollar, America can weaponize the swift banking system to freeze anyone out of the global economy. So Iran is Beijing's ultimate beta test to bypass this because Iran is locked out of the Western system. So they're perfectly willing to sell billions in crude to China in Chinese currency. And if the US collapses the Iranian regime and installs a Western aligned government or permanently freezes their export capacity, China's dream of building a parallel sanction proof financial ecosystem quite literally dies in the crib. And the US dollar maintains its absolute supremacy. But second, look at a map of the Middle east and Central Asia. Historically, if China wants to import its energy or export its goods, it, it hasn't put them on a boat. So why does China care so much about overland routes? Because of two massive ocean choke points. The Strait of Hormuz, which we've all been hearing a ton about now, and the Strait of Malacca. So right now to get Middle Eastern oil, a tanker has to sail out of the Persian Gulf through the Strait of Hormuz, cross the ocean and then squeeze through the Strait of Malacca, which is a narrow waterway near Singapore where massive amounts of China's energy imports currently flow. And who controls the world's oceans? The United States Navy. And Beijing knows that. And they know that in a real conflict the US Navy could blockade the Strait of Malacca tomorrow and starve the Chinese economy in a matter of weeks. It's literally their ultimate strategic nightmare, I'd imagine. And I'm sure you've probably heard of China's Belt and Road Initiative, which is basically an escape route. Okay, so China's multi trillion dollar attempt to build a massive overland network of railways and pipelines, hardwiring a supply chain that completely bypasses the US Navy. That's what they're trying to do. But of course there's a catch, right? Because for China to secure a direct transport line to the energy rich Middle east and lock down that southern corridor, the Mediterranean has to pass through a geographic fortress, and that is Iran. As the indispensable land bridge to the Persian Gulf, Iran became China's insurance policy. It's a way to guarantee a massive energy supply without passing through US Controlled waters. China's grand strategy depends on an allied subservient Tehran keeping that southern route open. So if Washington breaks Iran, you blow a massive hole in China's map, you permanently sever their overland bridge to the Middle east and you cripple their energy security. If you take Iran off the board, you force China right back into that Malacca trap. And then look at Venezuela. Did we go in to topple a dictator of narco terrorism? Did we do it to bring the ballot box to the people of Venezuela? Did we do it to stick it to China? I think yeah, probably to all of it. But it kind of seems to me that this move was a heck of a lot more about the US Playing defense as opposed to playing offense. Because China spent 20 years and roughly $60 billion trying to lock up Venezuelan oil. They lent Caracas money, they signed contracts, they sent in state oil companies, and they built themselves what probably looked a heck of a lot like a reliable energy pipeline right in our backyard. Venezuela has the largest proven oil reserves on the planet, and China probably thought it had first claim on all of it. But if we look back to Trump's first term, the US didn't try to take that oil by force. Trump made it pretty much radioactive. He put sanctions so severe that no Western bank would finance it, no major shipping company would touch it, no legitimate refinery would process it. China could still get some of those barrels through shadow fleets and falsified shipping records and back channel deals, but at a super duper tremendous cost and effort. And crucially, those same sanctions also strangled Venezuela's ability to maintain its own oil infrastructure. They couldn't get spare parts or chemicals or outside investment, so their wells started rotting, production cratered. And China's $60 billion loan, which was supposed to be repaid in oil, was increasingly being repaid in a trickle of really expensive, hard to move barrels from a collapsing industry. So at the time January 3, 2026 rolled around, the night Delta Force pulled Maduro out of bed in his jammies, China's Venezuela position was already kind of a slow motion disaster. Right? I mean, in hindsight, it seems the real winner of that night wasn't decided by what China lost But rather what America gained. The largest oil reserves on earth. A country whose southern mining region holds the very same categories of critical minerals that China has been weaponizing against us through export controls. You know, we didn't just remove a piece of that chessboard from Beijing. We picked that up and we put it on our side of the board. Clearly, it's a resource acquisition that was dressed up in the language of law enforcement. And then let's look at the Panama Canal. Remember Trump's 2025 inauguration when he looked at the world and he said, china's operating the Panama Canal when we gave it to Panama and we're taking it back. And he spent the following year calling the 1977 handover a ripoff deal where Jimmy Carter gave away control of the canal that America built for essentially nothing. So let's look at the backdrop real quick. The Panama Canal is a 50 mile stretch of water that connects the Pacific and the Atlantic Oceans. And it is the jugular of the American economy. 40% of all US containers move through that canal every year. And over 70% of everything that transits through that canal is either coming from or going to an American port. Every ship carrying electronics, cars, food, oil, military supplies has to pass through two gates there. Balboa on the Pacific side and Cristobal on the Atlantic side. All right, team, picture this. You're scrolling and bam. That perfect product hits your feed. You add it to the cart. You shop a bit more, you head to check out, but your wallet is across the room. And then you spot it. That purple shop pay button. No digging for your card, no forgotten passwords. 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Sign up for your $1 per month trial today at shopify.com Jillian go to shopify.com Jillian that's shopify.com Jillian high blood pressure is the number one risk factor for mortality. And one in two adults has it. So that means there's a 50, 50 chance you're a walking time bomb. But here's the good news. You can take control of your blood pressure naturally without relying on Big Pharma. 120 Life is a blend of great tasting superfruit juices that have been shown to help lower blood pressure. It's backed by hundreds of doctors and trusted by thousands of people who've seen measurable results. And here's the best part. It's completely risk free. So try 120Life for two weeks and if you don't see a difference in your numbers, you. You get your money back. Go to 120-life.com that's 120-life.com. use the code Jillian to save 20% and get free shipping. Because, guys, this is serious. This is your life we're talking about. 120 life can help. For 25 years, both of those gates were controlled by a Chinese linked company called CK Hutchinson. Washington called it normal international commerce, and Trump, of course, called it a security threat. But here's why. Hong Kong, despite having its own government on paper, operates under a Chinese Communist Party. That's made one thing legally explicit in a national security situation. Chinese companies, they comply with Beijing. So the operators sitting at both ends of America's most critical shipping lane, they weren't neutral. This was not a neutral business. It was a company that if Beijing made a phone call, they'd have to pick up and think about what that actually means. C.K. hutchinson controlled the cranes that load and unload every ship, the scanning systems that check what's inside every container, the computer systems and the data. Which means they know exactly what's moving through and where it's going and who it belongs to. So that's not commerce. That's operational intelligence in the hands of a foreign adversary. And it's worse than surveillance. It's a kill switch. Because if Beijing ever wanted to strangle 40% of American trade without firing a single shot, they don't need a navy. They need a software glitch and a phone call. So, of course, yeah, Trump moves swiftly and aggressively to end it. And here's the timeline. So it's January 2025. Trump's inaugurated, and he publicly declares China's running the canal that same day. Panama's Comptroller General, who has his own issues and reasons to be angry with China, launches a formal audit of CK Hutchinson's port operations. And it turns out that CK Hutchinson had gone about 20 years without paying Panama meaningful concession fees. So Panama's own citizens knew they were being shortchanged. And it's likely that US Pressure gave them the political cover to act on a grievance that they've been sitting on for years now. At the same time, throughout 2025, the Trump administration applied pressure on every front simultaneously, which we all watch, right? Marco Rubio travels to Panama City, and he makes it clear that favorable US Trade policy depends on removing Chinese linked operators from the ports. So the head of the Federal Maritime Commission announces publicly that the US can issue massive daily fines and bar Panamanian ships from American ports. Trump, of course, in Trump fashion, refuses to rule out military force, invoking a 1977 treaty that gives the US the right to intervene if the canal's neutrality is threatened. Well, Panama is a small country, guys, okay? So an entire country whose economy runs on trade does not take that as an abstract threat. Meanwhile, CK Hutchinson is reading the room. So they try to, you know, they try to cut their losses. They try to sell their global port assets to a Western consortium led by BlackRock for 23 billion. They want a clean exit, right? But Beijing immediately intervenes. They block the deal, and they demand that a Chinese state owned shipping company receive a controlling stake before they're willing to approve anything. Okay, this moment should tell you everything you need to know. A private Hong Kong company tried to sell its own assets and the Chinese government stepped in to stop it. Well, now It's January of 2026, and Panama's Supreme Court rules that C.K. hutchinson's contracts that they held for about 30 years are unconstitutional, and they annul them. The Panamanian government physically seizes both facilities, taking control of the cranes, the vehicles, the computer systems, and the software. CK Hutchinson is told to leave. And when its employees refuse, Panama threatened criminal prosecution. And from that point forward, you had two companies who are Western. One called Maersk, which is a Danish shipping company, they took over Balboa. And another one called msc, which is a Swiss shipping company, they took over Crystal Ball. Bottom line, now it's firmly out of Beijing's reach. And CK Hutchinson calls it unlawful. And they filed for international arbitration. China has warned Panama they're going to pay a heavy price, but the bottom line is it's done. China spent 25 years building a strategic position at the front, and back door of the Western Hemisphere's most critical waterway. And they lost it almost overnight in through a Panamanian audit, a Supreme Court ruling, and frankly, a president who just decided that this particular arrangement was over. Which brings me to Greenland. So now it's 2019, and this is actually the first time Trump had floated the idea of buying Greenland. A lot of us forgot about this. And at the time, everybody laughed. They called it a vanity project, a real estate developer's fever dream. Well, no one's laughing anymore. Because on January 5th of 2026, Trump sat in the Oval Office and said, we need Greenland for the safety and the security and the survival of our planet. And of course, he made it clear that he wouldn't rule out military action. Why? Well, Greenland sits on what geologists believe are amongst the largest untapped deposits of rare earth minerals on the planet. I'm going to butcher these names, but the Tan Breeze and the Kaven Fell deposits are sitting in the ground on an island we've been paying to defend for decades. Because by the way, that's the other part of this. We're paying towards Greenland security through NATO. While Denmark sits back. And they allowed Chinese state owned mining companies to quietly move in. There's a company called Shanghai Resources that has already established a foothold in Greenland's mining sector. So here we are subsidizing the military defense of an island that was slowly being handed to our biggest strategic rival. And Trump looked at that and decided it was finished. And we all know that he did not ask nicely. He issued an ultimatum. Join the family or face the consequences. And he backed it up with money. So in June 2025, the US Export Import bank committed $120 million to fund development of the Tan Breeze mine, specifically to get those minerals into Western supply chains before Chinese companies could lock up the output of through offtake agreements. Essentially, these are contracts that guarantee China first rights to buy whatever comes out of the ground. So that's the mineral play. But Greenland isn't just about what's under the ground. It's also about where Greenland sits. On a map, at the northern tip of Greenland sits Petufic Space Base, which is one of America's most important early warning radar sites. So its radar tracks intercontinental and submarine launched ballistic missiles that are heading towards North America. And it feeds data directly into the US Missile warning network. And as missile defense becomes more automated and AI driven, that radar infrastructure becomes even more important. Which is why controlling Greenland would give Washington far greater freedom to expand and secure that Arctic sensor network. Plus, as the Arctic ice is receding, Greenland becomes the perfect location for the massive data centers that the AI era is going to require, because that cold air provides natural cooling. And then you've got untapped hydroelectric power and a geography that puts this part of Greenland at the center of what could become the fastest shipping routes in the Arctic. So here's. Here's the bottom line, okay? Trump is moving to lock down the Arctic high ground militarily and technologically, while simultaneously denying China access to Greenland's massive mineral reserves and securing them for the U.S. like, ultimately, what I think we're watching is the birth of a new doctrine. For 30 years, Washington operated under what you might call the religion of open markets. You know, the idea that global integration would make everybody richer, calmer, and more cooperative. But it seems that experiment might be coming to an end, and what's replacing it is something harder. You know, call it an economic autarky. You know, a strategic push for greater national control over the resources and the supply chains that actually keep a country running. The minerals that build the chips, the energy that powers the factories, the port that moves the goods, the corridors that carry the trade, control those. And you don't just compete in the global economy. You set the terms of it. And I personally can't help but wonder if Iran, Venezuela, Greenland, and the Panama Canal are simply the opening moves in what may become the defining geopolitical struggle of our time. Thank you so much for watching. If you enjoyed the podcast, please, like, comment, subscribe, and share, and make sure to let me know what guests you want to see on in the future.
Episode: Trump’s Trillion-Dollar Masterplan – Trade Wars, Iran, Venezuela, Greenland
Date: March 11, 2026
Host: Jillian Michaels
In this episode, Jillian Michaels steps away from traditional wellness topics and dives deep into global current events, exploring what she describes as the “big picture” strategy behind a series of seemingly disjointed geopolitical crises during Trump’s second term. Michaels connects the dots between US actions in Iran, Venezuela, the Panama Canal, and Greenland, arguing that these interventions are all part of a calculated “supply chain cold war” aimed at systematically weakening China’s global economic leverage and reshaping the world order.
Quote:
“Is it just me or … you feel like you see a map of the world that looks like a series of random disconnected dumpster fires... I think all of this commentary, though, is missing the big picture. I'm not seeing a ton of dot connecting.” (02:11)
Timestamp: 00:32–03:00
Quote:
“My hypothesis is that Trump's primary objective is to systematically throttle and dismantle the economic hegemony of the People's Republic of China.” (09:45)
Timestamp: 04:35–10:00
Quote:
“If Washington breaks Iran, you blow a massive hole in China's map, you permanently sever their overland bridge to the Middle east and you cripple their energy security.” (20:14)
Timestamp: 18:00–21:00
Quote:
“Clearly, it's a resource acquisition that was dressed up in the language of law enforcement.” (27:59)
Timestamp: 24:40–28:30
Quote:
“China spent 25 years building a strategic position at the front, and back door of the Western Hemisphere's most critical waterway. And they lost it almost overnight.” (38:59)
Timestamp: 34:50–41:10
Quote:
“Trump is moving to lock down the Arctic high ground militarily and technologically, while simultaneously denying China access to Greenland's massive mineral reserves and securing them for the U.S.” (47:11)
Timestamp: 44:30–48:00
Quote:
“For 30 years, Washington operated under what you might call the religion of open markets... But it seems that experiment might be coming to an end, and what's replacing it is something harder… You set the terms of [the global economy].” (51:04)
Timestamp: 48:00–52:00
On Media’s Narratives:
“We want better oil prices. We want to defang terror proxies. We want less fentanyl in America. But I, I, I don't know. I just am not believing that Trump went into Venezuela because Maduro made fun of his YMCA dance… I just don't believe that Trump is playing this kind of high risk poker just for Israel or even to liberate millions of Iranians…”
(05:10)
On China’s Dominance and US Vulnerability:
“If China flipped a switch tomorrow and zero shipments arrived from them, the United States wouldn't face a slow economic decline. It would face immediate systemic paralysis.”
(09:46)
On the Panama Canal Intervention:
“It's worse than surveillance. It's a kill switch. Because if Beijing ever wanted to strangle 40% of American trade without firing a single shot, they don't need a Navy. They need a software glitch and a phone call.”
(35:45)
On Greenland and Rare Earths:
“So here we are subsidizing the military defense of an island that was slowly being handed to our biggest strategic rival. And Trump looked at that and decided it was finished. And we all know that he did not ask nicely. He issued an ultimatum. Join the family or face the consequences.”
(45:19)
| Segment | Timestamp | |------------------------------------|-------------| | Opening—Connecting the Dots | 00:32–03:00 | | Supply Chain Cold War Thesis | 04:35–10:00 | | US Systemic Vulnerabilities | 10:00–14:30 | | Iran and China’s Energy Strategy | 18:00–21:00 | | Venezuela Resource Play | 24:40–28:30 | | Panama Canal Takeover | 34:50–41:10 | | Greenland: Minerals and Strategy | 44:30–48:00 | | New US Doctrine: Autarky | 48:00–52:00 |
Jillian Michaels paints a compelling, critical portrait of a new era in US geopolitical strategy—one focused not just on military strength or ideological confrontation, but on the deliberate, surgical control of the world’s material arteries. She suggests that Iran, Venezuela, Panama, and Greenland may just be “opening moves in what may become the defining geopolitical struggle of our time,” urging her audience to stay informed and look deeper.
For listeners seeking a synthesis of global headlines, supply chain dynamics, and 21st-century power politics, this episode is a thought-provoking and accessible guide to the hidden currents shaping tomorrow’s world.