This contemporary application episode examines reporting on foreign influence in the decisions that led to war with Iran. Drawing on the New York Times investigation by Jonathan Swan and Maggie Haberman, the resignation testimony of former National Counterterrorism Center Director Joe Kent, and the President’s own public statements, the episode applies the founders’ framework — particularly Washington’s Farewell Address warnings about “passionate attachment” to foreign nations — to analyze what has been reported. The episode maintains epistemic humility about classified information while examining the documented record, presenting sources directly and allowing listeners to draw their own conclusions.
Playback speed
×
Share post
Share post at current time
Share from 0:00
0:00
/
Transcript
The Echo Chamber — Foreign Influence and the Iran War
Contemporary Application to the Empire of Liberty: America's Foreign Entanglements from the Founders to the Forever War - Ep. 14
Apr 13, 2026
Consequential Actions Podcast
Our overall goal is to help ourselves and the audience understand the rationale behind the actions of our collective past in order to learn from and address (effectively) the consequences of our present, and of our future. Help others understand what preceded us in various disciplines of study so that we will not waste our efforts reinventing what is already working, or by repeating and perpetuating our faults; but rather to refine the successes and correct the failures.
We should learn from others, in their own words, to understand their motivations and determine their effectiveness over time. We live in a time of accountability and merit. Empathize with, and encourage, those who make mistakes and learn from them. Critique those who repeat the failures of the past, or aim to manipulate outcomes and obfuscate intentions.
Our overall goal is to help ourselves and the audience understand the rationale behind the actions of our collective past in order to learn from and address (effectively) the consequences of our present, and of our future. Help others understand what preceded us in various disciplines of study so that we will not waste our efforts reinventing what is already working, or by repeating and perpetuating our faults; but rather to refine the successes and correct the failures.
We should learn from others, in their own words, to understand their motivations and determine their effectiveness over time. We live in a time of accountability and merit. Empathize with, and encourage, those who make mistakes and learn from them. Critique those who repeat the failures of the past, or aim to manipulate outcomes and obfuscate intentions.Listen on
Substack App
Apple Podcasts
YouTube
RSS Feed
Appears in episode
Recent Episodes








