142 episodes

Weekly long-form conversations with fascinating people at the creative edges of national security. Unscripted. Informal. Always fresh.
Chatter guests roll with the punches to describe artistic endeavors related to national security and jump into cutting-edge thinking at the frontiers where defense and foreign policy overlap with technology, intelligence, climate change, history, sports, culture, and beyond. Each week, listeners get a no-holds-barred dialogue at an intersection between Lawfare's core issue areas and something from Hollywood to history, science to spy fiction.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Chatter Lawfare

    • Society & Culture

Weekly long-form conversations with fascinating people at the creative edges of national security. Unscripted. Informal. Always fresh.
Chatter guests roll with the punches to describe artistic endeavors related to national security and jump into cutting-edge thinking at the frontiers where defense and foreign policy overlap with technology, intelligence, climate change, history, sports, culture, and beyond. Each week, listeners get a no-holds-barred dialogue at an intersection between Lawfare's core issue areas and something from Hollywood to history, science to spy fiction.

Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Libertarianism and National Security with Katherine Mangu-Ward

    Libertarianism and National Security with Katherine Mangu-Ward

    Libertarianism doesn’t fit easily on the traditional left-right spectrum of American politics. The philosophy upholds personal liberty as a core value. What does it have to say about matters of foreign policy and national security, which encompass ideas about self-defense but also protection of the state? 
    Katherine Mangu-Ward sat down with Shane Harris to discuss the libertarian view on war and diplomacy, how it approaches the question of nation-state conflicts, and the differences between libertarianism and the Libertarian Party. Mangu-Ward is the editor-in-chief of Reason magazine, the leading publication on libertarian thought and ideas. She started her journalism career in 2000 as an intern at Reason and later worked at The Weekly Standard and The New York Times. Her writing has also appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and many other publications.  
    Political philosophers, publications, and novel state concepts discussed in this episode include: 
    Ayn Rand https://aynrand.org/ 

    Fusionism https://reason.com/2021/02/10/is-there-a-future-for-fusionism/ 

    Friedrich Hayek https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/friedrich-hayek/ 
    The Yale Free Press 
    Students for a Democratic Society https://www.pbs.org/opb/thesixties/topics/politics/newsmakers_1.html 
    Prospera https://www.prospera.co/ 
    Read and listen to more of Mangu-Ward’s work: 
    https://reason.com/people/katherine-mangu-ward/ 
    https://reason.com/podcasts/the-reason-roundtable/ 
    https://twitter.com/kmanguward?ref_src=twsrc%5Egoogle%7Ctwcamp%5Eserp%7Ctwgr%5Eauthor 
    Chatter is a production of Lawfare and Goat Rodeo. This episode was produced and edited by Noam Osband of Goat Rodeo. Podcast theme by David Priess, featuring music created using Groovepad.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 1 hr 16 min
    The People Who Turn Lies into Reality, with Renée DiResta

    The People Who Turn Lies into Reality, with Renée DiResta

    Renée DiResta is the author of Invisible Rulers: The People Who Turn Lies into Reality. Until the other day, she was one of the brains behind the Stanford Internet Observatory, where she did pioneering work studying Internet information streams how they generate. The day before this podcast was recorded, news broke that Stanford was shutting down—or revamping—the SIO, and DiResta is no longer associated with it. In this conversation with Lawfare Editor in Chief Benjamin Wittes, DiResta talks about how she came to study online information flows, how they work, and how she and her work came to be the subject of one herself.
    Chatter is a production of Lawfare and Goat Rodeo. This episode was produced and edited by Noam Osband of Goat Rodeo. Podcast theme by David Priess, featuring music created using Groovepad.


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    • 1 hr 18 min
    FDR, Charles Lindbergh, and Presidential Libraries with Paul Sparrow

    FDR, Charles Lindbergh, and Presidential Libraries with Paul Sparrow

    Paul Sparrow, who served as Director of the Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library and Museum from 2015 to 2022, has written the book Awakening the Spirit of America about the war of words between FDR and Charles Lindbergh in 1940-41.
    He joined host David Priess to discuss his path to the FDR Library, the history of presidential libraries, how the Roosevelt-Lindbergh war of words reveals much about the American experience before and during the Second World War, why Lindbergh never ran for president, the America First movement, Roosevelt's chaotic approach to intelligence, FDR's popular legacy, and more.
    Works mentioned in this episode:
    The book Awakening the Spirit of America by Paul Sparrow
    The book The Plot Against America by Philip Roth
    The book K is for Killing by Daniel Easterman
    The book Those Angry Days by Lynne Olson
    The podcast Ultra
    The book Prequel by Rachel Maddow
    The book The Wave of the Future by Anne Lindbergh
    The book An Unfinished Love Story by Doris Kearns Goodwin
    The book The Killing Shore by K. A. Nelson
    Chatter is a production of Lawfare and Goat Rodeo. This episode was produced and edited by Cara Shillenn of Goat Rodeo. Podcast theme by David Priess, featuring music created using Groovepad.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 1 hr 17 min
    The Harrowing History of the Soviet Space Program with John Strausbaugh

    The Harrowing History of the Soviet Space Program with John Strausbaugh

    In the wake of World War II, the United States and the Soviet Union set off on the great space race, competing to see which super power could put the first human in space and eventually land them on the Moon. As historian John Strausbaugh writes, that race should have been over before it even started. 
    Strausbaugh’s new book, The Wrong Stuff: How the Soviet Space Program Crashed and Burned, is a harrowing and frequently hilarious account of how political leaders and engineers slapped together a space program with little apparent concern for the lives of the cosmonauts they hurled into Earth’s orbit. Moscow blustered about the size of its rockets and the triumph of its space pioneers. But that patriotic rhetoric hid the true nature of a program that was harried and haphazard, and whose leaders weren’t quite sure how to return their pilots to Earth after launching them into space. 
    The Soviet space program stands in stark contrast, Strausbaugh told Shane Harris, to the methodical and comparatively risk-averse NASA program, which eventually overtook its rival. 
    Books, historical figures, and near-death space walks discussed in this episode include: 
    The Wrong Stuff: How the Soviet Space Program Crashed and Burned https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/titles/john-strausbaugh/the-wrong-stuff/9781541703346/?lens=publicaffairs 
    The Right Stuff by Tom Wolfe https://us.macmillan.com/books/9780312427566/therightstuff  
    Off the Planet: Surviving Five Perilous Months Aboard the Space Station Mir by Jerry Linenger https://www.amazon.com/Off-Planet-Surviving-Perilous-Station/dp/007136112X  
    Sergei Korolev https://www.skyatnightmagazine.com/space-missions/sergei-korolev-life-history-timeline 
    Yuri Gagarin https://www.pbs.org/redfiles/rao/gallery/gagarin/index.html 
    Alexi Leonov https://time.com/5802128/alexei-leonov-spacewalk-obstacles/ 
    More about John Strausbaugh:
    https://www.hachettebookgroup.com/contributor/john-strausbaugh/?lens=twelve 
    Chatter is a production of Lawfare and Goat Rodeo. This episode was produced and edited by Cara Shillenn of Goat Rodeo. Podcast theme by David Priess, featuring music created using Groovepad.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 1 hr 15 min
    Oceania's Nuclear and Climate Storytelling with Anaïs Maurer

    Oceania's Nuclear and Climate Storytelling with Anaïs Maurer

    Raised in Mā’ohi Nui (French Polynesia), Dr. Anaïs Maurer is assistant professor of literature at Rutgers University and author of The Ocean on Fire. Her research and writing, including this book, have explored the intersection of the legacy of colonial powers' massive nuclear detonations in Oceania, critical threats from climate change, and the stories the people of Oceania tell about it all.
    David Priess chatted with Maurer about her experience growing up in Oceania, the scope of the nuclear detonations in the region, how the people of Oceania have addressed radiation effects through stories, why cultural resilience has remained a greater theme than individualism or victimhood, how these narratives inform our current era of climate change, and more.
    Works mentioned in this episode:
    The book The Ocean on Fire by Anaïs Maurer
    The book Quand le cannibale ricane by Paul Tavo
    The short story "Eden" in the collection Vai: La Rivière au ciel sans nuages by Ra'i Chaze
    The book The Whale Rider by Witi Ihimaera
    The visual art French Apocalypse Now by Cronos
    The Coconut poetry series by Teresa Teaiwa
    The book Pensées insolentes et inutiles by Chantal Spitz
    Chatter is a production of Lawfare and Goat Rodeo. This episode was produced and edited by Cara Shillenn of Goat Rodeo. Podcast theme by David Priess, featuring music created using Groovepad.


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    • 1 hr 11 min
    American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism, with Tim Alberta

    American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism, with Tim Alberta

    Tim Alberta is an American journalist and author, and son of an evangelical pastor. Following his father’s death in 2019, Alberta began a four year journey, talking to American evangelicals ranging from megachurch pastors who preach to thousands to pastors at churches with a few dozen congregants to understand the schism occurring in the American evangelical community. His book “The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism,” puts American evangelicalism under a microscope as Alberta grapples with how the community he grew up in has changed.
    Lawfare Associate Editor Anna Hickey spoke to Alberta about what led him to write this book, the effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the evangelical community, the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, what Croatian theologist Miroslav Volf warns about creeping totalitarianism that results from religion, how evangelicals talk about Christian nationalism, and more.
    Among the works mentioned in this episode:

    The book, “The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory: American Evangelicals in an Age of Extremism,” by Tim AlbertaReporting in The Atlantic by Jennifer Senior
    Chatter is a production of Lawfare and Goat Rodeo. This episode was recorded by Noam Osband and produced and edited by Cara Shillenn of Goat Rodeo. Podcast theme by David Priess, featuring music created using Groovepad.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    • 57 min

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