The People We Meet with Ty Bruner

Slapped in Paris — A Diplomat’s Wake-Up Call

1 h 18 min · 2 de abr de 2026
Portada del episodio Slapped in Paris — A Diplomat’s Wake-Up Call

Descripción

When Scott Rasmussen — a husband, father of eight and former U.S. diplomat — is struck in a Paris park, a single shocking moment becomes the first page of a much larger story. That slap sparks a curiosity that sends him from the tightly controlled streets of Asmara to the anxious borders of Poland and into the volatile neighborhoods of Jerusalem, asking a simple question: how do we learn to see each other as human? Through vivid scenes of forced national service in Eritrea, the living memory of war in Poland, and fragile peacebuilding work in Israel and Palestine, Scott shares the small, stubborn practices that actually connect people: conversations, shared projects, and the messy work of cooperation.  Back in the U.S., he turns that hard-earned perspective inward, tracing how contempt and division creep into families and communities and how pluralism — respect, relationship, cooperation — can be a practical antidote. This episode invites listeners to sit down, listen, and rethink what it takes to rebuild trust in a polarized world.

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2 de jun de 20261 h 0 min
episode Slapped in Paris — A Diplomat’s Wake-Up Call artwork

Slapped in Paris — A Diplomat’s Wake-Up Call

When Scott Rasmussen — a husband, father of eight and former U.S. diplomat — is struck in a Paris park, a single shocking moment becomes the first page of a much larger story. That slap sparks a curiosity that sends him from the tightly controlled streets of Asmara to the anxious borders of Poland and into the volatile neighborhoods of Jerusalem, asking a simple question: how do we learn to see each other as human? Through vivid scenes of forced national service in Eritrea, the living memory of war in Poland, and fragile peacebuilding work in Israel and Palestine, Scott shares the small, stubborn practices that actually connect people: conversations, shared projects, and the messy work of cooperation.  Back in the U.S., he turns that hard-earned perspective inward, tracing how contempt and division creep into families and communities and how pluralism — respect, relationship, cooperation — can be a practical antidote. This episode invites listeners to sit down, listen, and rethink what it takes to rebuild trust in a polarized world.

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