In Pakistan and Afghanistan, people strip their shirts off and whip themselves with knives. There's something quite cathartic about that, isn't it? I feel particularly in Britain where we're very kind of stiff upper lip, we're missing out on something. The United States, we're all over the map, right? You got your Latinas in California, and they're just, you know, singing and dancing all over. And then you've got your Asians, which is what my wife's family is. It's really, we really run the gamut, but you're right. That would be jarring.
GiveDirectly President Rory Stewart talks about "mad" politics, long walks in warzones, and ensuring our charitable donations actually aid people in need.
What We Discuss with Rory Stewart:
- What makes the UK's system of government "slightly mad" (even when compared to that of the US)?
- How the kind of skills that get someone elected as a politician can get in the way of governing well.
- How did Rory survive a walk across post-9/11 Afghanistan — just weeks after the fall of the Taliban, in the middle of winter, during a war, stalked by hungry wolves — despite being "guaranteed" it would mean certain death?
- What it was like to be one of the first people to see the ruins of a once-thriving city since Genghis Khan had destroyed it over 800 years before.
- How we can ensure that every penny of our charitable donations to developing places like Afghanistan and Kenya helps the people who really need it instead of stuffing the pockets of warlords, corrupt officials, and middlemen.
- And much more...
Full show notes and resources can be found here: jordanharbinger.com/867
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