My Weird Prompts

Settler Violence in the West Bank: The Permission Structure

28 min · 6. juni 2026
episode Settler Violence in the West Bank: The Permission Structure cover

Beskrivelse

Why do settler attacks on Palestinian villages continue week after week with no real crackdown? This episode examines the legal and military architecture that processes settler violence into impunity—where 98% of attacks result in no indictment, soldiers film crimes instead of stopping them, and price-tag operations function as a calculated deterrent against government action. Drawing on data from Yesh Din, B'Tselem, and Palestinian oral histories, we trace how this system evolved from the 1980s Jewish Underground through the post-2005 price-tag doctrine to the present day.

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av My Weird Prompts sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

200 Episoder

episode How Central Banks Fight Currency Speculation cover

How Central Banks Fight Currency Speculation

On June 4, 2026, the Bank of Israel made a rare currency market intervention—buying $801 million to counter what it described as irregular volatility and possible speculative trading. The shekel had strengthened 4% in two weeks, driven largely by hedge funds exploiting the carry trade: borrowing cheaply in yen or euros to park money in high-yielding Israeli assets. This episode unpacks the mechanics of sterilized intervention, why central banks sometimes fight their own currency's strength, and who wins and loses when they do. We explore the two-step dance of buying dollars while selling bonds to neutralize inflation risk, the political economy of favoring exporters over consumers, and how oddly specific intervention amounts send their own message to speculators.

I går30 min
episode Why a Dead Attacker Still Gets Evidence Markers cover

Why a Dead Attacker Still Gets Evidence Markers

When you watch footage of a terrorist attack in Israel, you'll see small yellow numbered placards scattered across the ground — on shell casings, weapons, even the attacker's body. But what are they actually for? And why, when the attacker is dead and the threat is over, is the entire area still treated like a crime scene? This episode unpacks the forensic protocol behind evidence markers: how grid searches prevent investigators from rushing to the most dramatic evidence, why numbers are assigned in order of discovery (not importance), and how a single marker can feed into six simultaneous investigations — from criminal prosecution of accomplices to tracing weapons supply networks. We also look at the Israeli-specific context, where the stakes of counterterrorism forensics mean more markers, longer scene closures, and an unbroken chain of custody that can make or break a prosecution.

I går25 min
episode How Do You Actually Seize Enriched Uranium? cover

How Do You Actually Seize Enriched Uranium?

When President Trump says Iran's enriched uranium is "contained," what does that actually mean? This episode explores the rare and difficult history of seizing highly enriched uranium from sovereign states. From the 1994 Operation Sapphire that airlifted 600 kilograms of weapons-grade HEU out of Kazakhstan, to the 2023-2024 voluntary repatriation of 13 kilograms from Venezuela, to a 2008 sting in Georgia that recovered just 100 grams — each case reveals different logistical, diplomatic, and security challenges. We break down what "containment" really means versus physical security, why Iran's 275 kilograms of 60% enriched material is uniquely dangerous, and what would actually be required to move, store, and secure fissile material if a seizure were attempted.

I går28 min