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Murtaza Hussain

Journalist and co-host of Intercepted, focusing on international affairs and the Middle East.

Top 5 podcasts with Murtaza Hussain

Ranked by the Snipd community
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9 snips
Oct 14, 2023 • 1h 29min

IBW Episode #3: The Israel-Palestine conflict

Sarah Haider, Shadi Hamid, and Murtaza Hussain discuss the effects of the Israel-Palestine conflict on geopolitics and American culture, including eliminationist rhetoric, the divide between the West and the Global South, and potential changes in American foreign policy. They also address the impact of the conflict on American culture, cancel culture concerns, offensive rhetoric, the perception of the conflict in the US, and the compatibility of being a Zionist and a feminist or humanitarian. Additionally, they delve into personal experiences, Twitter personas, age gap discourse, the fracture of the American cultural left, and the importance of humanity amidst escalating tensions.
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7 snips
Sep 22, 2023 • 39min

Inside Biden’s Secret Arms Deal

Ryan Grim and Murtaza Hussain discuss their reporting on a secret arms deal between the U.S., Pakistan, and Ukraine, exploring the political and economic crisis in Pakistan, the U.S.'s pressure to remove former Prime Minister Imran Khan, the influence of the IMF, and the complex relationship between Pakistani democracy, the military, and weapons sales. They also discuss Pakistan's current political situation, the dominance of the military, and give recommendations for true crime podcasts.
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7 snips
Mar 19, 2023 • 1h 10min

Introducing the intellectual brown web (IBW)

On this episode of Unsupervised Learning, Razib hosts three guests, Sarah Haider of A Special Place in Hell, Shadi Hamid of the Brookings Institute and Murtaza Hussain of The Intercept. Razib, Haider, Hamid and Hussain discuss the current state of the culture from the perspective of “brown” observers of the public sphere dominated by woke vs. anti-woke factions. Despite ideological differences, all four are skeptical of the ideological orthodoxies regnant in American culture, even though one, Hamid, identifies strongly as a partisan Democrat who is liberal. In a wide-ranging conversation (which begins with a review of how to pronounce each other’s names), they discuss the case of Raquel Evita Saraswati, a woman Haider knew casually from the social activism sphere, who represented herself as a queer Muslim of Arab, Latino and South-Asian background. Saraswati, a Muslim who somewhat perplexingly co-opted the name of a Hindu goddess as her surname, was born Rachel Elizabeth Seidel and is of British, German and Italian ancestry. Due to her fifteen years of lying about her ethnic background, she was recently forced out of a position as chief equity and inclusion officer for the American Friends Service Committee. Haider and Hamid, in particular, discuss the pressure felt in some social justice movements for people to present incongruous backgrounds, like being a “queer Muslim,” and how it has created a demand that is being satisfied by grifters like Saraswati. Saraswati highlights the role of religion and how it is inextricably connected to brown identity in the US, whether it is coded Muslim or Hindu. Razib and Haider, both atheists from a Muslim background, and Hamid and Hussain, both believing Muslims, discuss the American religious scene in the wake of New Atheism and the social and functional value of religion in an age where moral frameworks have been overthrown and updated. Hamid questions Haider on her views on the value of religious wisdom in maintaining and perpetuating social norms that she supports, like the idea that there are two sexes and her deemphasis on the importance of “gender identity.” Hussain explains that religion, in a philosophical sense, should be considered distinctively from a more primal and animistic set of intuitions. All four meditate on the fact that they are outsiders not by dint of their race or immigrant background (or parental immigrant background), but their dissent from the dominant social norms of the ascendant professional-managerial class.
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Mar 22, 2024 • 1h 19min

Murtaza Hussain: Gaza and the global left

The podcast delves into the generational divides on Israel, Hamas vs. Israel, intellectual history of the conflict, global Left's perspective on Palestinian nationalism, US engagement in the Middle East, and the importance of dialogue and compromise for peace and understanding.
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Mar 21, 2024 • 20min

Murtaza Hussain & Yair Rosenberg On A Israel-Palestine Path to Peace

Journalists Murtaza Hussain & Yair Rosenberg discuss a path to peace for Israel-Palestine, questioning US involvement and proposing a third-party mediator. They explore Arab-Israeli alliances, breaking the cycle of violence, embracing differing opinions, and personal growth through education and empathy. Humorous insights on Gaza tunnels add a light touch to the conversation.