The Daniel Stih Podcast

Israel, Survival, and the Logic of the State

5 min · 4. kesä 2026
jakson Israel, Survival, and the Logic of the State kansikuva

Kuvaus

What if part of the Israel – Iran conflict is not about oil, politics, or ideology — rather about how states behave once survival and continuity become the organizing principle? In this episode, I explore the logic of the state: * why nations organize around preserving themselves * why some conflicts become inflexible * why support for opposing regional forces may be interpreted as existential threat rather than political disagreement. Using the American Indian analogy as a structural thought experiment, not a moral equivalence, we examine how states tend to think once continuity, territory, identity, and survival become central to decision making. This episode is not about taking sides. It's about asking better questions: What problem does the system believe it is solving? Solve the right problem.

Kommentit

0

Ole ensimmäinen kommentoija

Rekisteröidy nyt ja liity The Daniel Stih Podcast-yhteisöön!

Aloita maksutta

14 vrk ilmainen kokeilu

Kokeilun jälkeen 7,99 € / kuukausi. · Peru milloin tahansa.

  • Podimon podcastit
  • 20 kuunteluaikaa / kuukausi
  • Lataa offline-käyttöön

Kaikki jaksot

205 jaksot

jakson What Happens When We Put Principles on Walls? kansikuva

What Happens When We Put Principles on Walls?

Matthew McConaughey once asked a simple question: Why can't we put the Ten Commandments back in public schools? That seems reasonable. Many of the principles most people would agree with. That question led me somewhere unexpected. This episode isn't really about the Ten Commandments. It's about a broader pattern: Why do schools, companies, governments, and organizations put principles on walls? Mission statements. Core values. Slogans. Codes of conduct. The assumption seems to be that displaying principles changes behavior. Does it? Or are we confusing a principle with a mechanism? In this episode, I explore the difference between values and systems, why principles are often open to interpretation, and whether displaying them actually produces the outcomes people hope for. Before deciding what belongs on the wall, it may be worth asking: What problem are we trying to solve? And how would we know if the solution actually worked?

10. kesä 20269 min
jakson Israel, Survival, and the Logic of the State kansikuva

Israel, Survival, and the Logic of the State

What if part of the Israel – Iran conflict is not about oil, politics, or ideology — rather about how states behave once survival and continuity become the organizing principle? In this episode, I explore the logic of the state: * why nations organize around preserving themselves * why some conflicts become inflexible * why support for opposing regional forces may be interpreted as existential threat rather than political disagreement. Using the American Indian analogy as a structural thought experiment, not a moral equivalence, we examine how states tend to think once continuity, territory, identity, and survival become central to decision making. This episode is not about taking sides. It's about asking better questions: What problem does the system believe it is solving? Solve the right problem.

4. kesä 20265 min
jakson Communication ≠ Connection kansikuva

Communication ≠ Connection

This conversation started as a discussion about texting and dating. Underneath it is a broader question about communication, ambiguity, projection, and how technology changes human interaction. How much meaning do people invent from incomplete communication? In this episode we explore: * why texting often creates misunderstandings * the limits of digital communication * false intimacy and emotional projection * why words without tone create ambiguity * communication versus real connection * online filtering and first impressions * how technology changes relationship dynamics * why face-to-face interaction still matters A recurring theme throughout the discussion is that communication tools shape behavior. The more communication becomes compressed into short digital signals, the easier it becomes to confuse messaging with genuine understanding. This episode originally aired on a previous relationship-focused podcast project. What interests me now is the broader pattern of human communication, interpretation, technology, and decision-making under uncertainty.

14. touko 202621 min
jakson What Does "Ceasefire" Actually Mean? kansikuva

What Does "Ceasefire" Actually Mean?

What does the word "ceasefire" actually mean? Most who hear the term assume: * fighting stopped, * peace is beginning * both sides agreed In practice, the term is less absolute than the assumptions attached to it. In this episode, I explore how words like "war" and "ceasefire" are not fixed switches, rather labels applied to changing situations. We look at how governments, media, and the public use these terms, why they become useful, and how language compresses complex realities into emotionally manageable categories. This episode is not about arguing against the word "ceasefire." It's about examining the assumptions unconsciously imported into it. The label is not the structure. The label is a simplified representation of a changing structure. This is a broader conversation about: * language and assumptions * labels vs reality * how people construct certainty This is about why clear thinking begins when you separate a word from the structure attached to it.

10. touko 202610 min