Episodios

  • Gaza, Genocide and the West’s Moral Failure
    Sep 5 2025

    In this charged episode of Mid-Atlantic, host Roifield Brown is joined by Palestinian analyst Mouin Rabbani, along with regular contributors Cory Bernard in Manchester and Mike Donahue in Los Angeles, to lay bare the harrowing conditions in Gaza and the political cowardice of the West. With over 60,000 Palestinians killed and famine declared by the IPC, the panel asks a blunt question: why does the so-called democratic world continue to stall, excuse, and equivocate?


    Rabbani underscores the systematic assault not just on Gaza, but on the Palestinian people as a whole — from military aggression and forced displacement to attempts at erasing Palestinian refugees from political consideration. The conversation pivots to the deafening silence from Washington, London, and Brussels, and the wider consequences for international law, human rights, and geopolitical credibility. Meanwhile, domestic shifts are underway: US support for Israel is fracturing along generational lines, while in the UK, groups like Palestine Action face state repression under terrorism legislation — raising questions about civil liberties and the hypocrisy of Western democratic claims.


    Finally, the guests wrestle with the viability of a two-state solution. Mouin Rabbani insists that any hope for Palestinian sovereignty must come with political renewal and an end to the current PA-Hamas schism. But even that hinges on one thing Western governments refuse to offer: meaningful pressure on Israel. For now, the focus must be immediate — stop the famine, stop the bombs, and stop the enabling.


    Selected Quotes
    1. "The PA has essentially assumed the role of a powerless spectator." — Mouin Rabbani
    2. "It's Marjorie Taylor Greene saying, 'Why are we supporting genocide?' That's how much the conversation has shifted." — Roifield Brown
    3. "You should not be able to break into an RAF base. That says more about our military than it does about Palestine Action." — Cory Bernard
    4. "The West has made Israel a special case because of the Holocaust. That indulgence is eroding — and fast." — Mouin Rabbani
    5. "We can talk about statehood tomorrow. But tonight, people are starving. Get them food." — Roifield Brown

    Further Reading & Resources
    • Famine Review Committee / IPC: https://www.ipcinfo.org
    • Haaretz Podcast & Coverage: https://www.haaretz.com
    • International Court of Justice – South Africa v. Israel (Genocide Case): https://www.icj-cij.org/case/192
    • Palestine Action: https://palestineaction.org
    • UN Headquarters Agreement: https://www.un.org/en/about-us/host-country

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

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    59 m
  • Gaza, Moral Clarity and Complicity
    Aug 15 2025
    Mid-Atlantic: Gaza—Moral Clarity and Complicity

    Guests: Dave Smith (North London), Michael Donahue (Los Angeles), Tonye “T” Trade (East London), Safana “Saf” Monajed (East London) Host: Roifield Brown


    Episode summary

    Roifield opens with a stark personal statement: Gaza is a genocide, and Britain’s leadership—particularly the Labour government—has failed morally and politically. The panel examines the collapse of a “rules-based order,” Western complicity, media cowardice, the role of the IDF, Netanyahu’s politics, and why Arab and Western governments have not stopped the slaughter. The conversation closes with appeals to justice, courage, and hope.


    One quote per speaker
    • Roifield Brown (Host): “There comes a point when you have to stand up and call out mass murder and crimes against humanity when you see them on your smartphone, your TV, in your newspaper.”
    • Dave Smith: “Yes, it is genocide—ethnic cleansing—and a holocaust in our own time; the rules-based order has given way to might-is-right.”
    • Michael Donahue: “Netanyahu isn’t leading so much as riding a wave of anti-Palestinian sentiment—everything about this is just crushingly depressing.”
    • Tonye Altraide “This is the naked expression of extreme Zionism; our media’s silence is enforced by influence, cowardice, and self-preservation.”
    • Safana “Saf” Monajed: “What you see on the micro you see on the macro—states and people alike choose self-preservation over justice.”

    Key themes
    • The collapse of Western moral authority and selective application of “rules-based order.”
    • Genocidal rhetoric, systematic targeting of civilians, and destruction of civilian infrastructure.
    • Media gatekeeping and the costs of speaking plainly about Gaza.
    • U.S./UK complicity through arms and political cover; cautious divergence only very recently.
    • Arab regimes’ calculus of self-preservation.
    • Holding onto a “moral imperative of hope” and a future Palestinian state.


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    48 m
  • Westminster vs. Washington: Musk’s Exit Scam
    Jun 3 2025

    This week’s Mid-Atlantic served up a blistering transatlantic roundup, with host Roifield Brown and a sharp panel of commentators dissecting political dysfunction from the White House to Westminster. First, Elon Musk’s abrupt departure from the Trump administration drew collective side-eye. Denise Hamilton called it a “planned grift,” while Michael Donahue reminded us Musk’s firms are still swimming in government contracts. As for public perception? Let’s just say Tesla’s aura now smells a lot like diesel.


    Next, Trump’s vendetta against Harvard and foreign students provoked righteous fury. Michael labelled it “vindictive chaos,” while Denise broke down how this could gut America’s soft power for decades. Meanwhile, Cory Bernard coolly suggested British universities may opportunistically benefit from Trump’s xenophobic overreach. A win for Oxford, a loss for everyone else.


    On the UK side, Labour’s Brexit “reset” is, according to Cory, “technocratic fudge.” While the EU quietly standardises global regulation, Britain remains a rule-taker masquerading as a rule-maker. The panel skewered Starmer’s “quiet alignment” approach, calling it necessary but cowardly. Gaza and the UK’s too-little-too-late condemnation of Israeli settlements brought a sombre close, with Denise lamenting performative outrage after the damage is done. Oh, and Trump’s tariffs? Illegal, inflationary, and economically suicidal—now rubber-stamped as such by the courts.


    Selected Quotes from the Episode

    1. “This is just a three-card monte. You’re looking over here, meanwhile, you’re being robbed mercilessly.” – Denise Hamilton
    2. “You can’t run a country like a business because government’s job isn’t to make money—it’s to deliver the mail and send checks to old people.” – Michael Donahue
    3. “The UK’s condemnation is just performative. Now that Gaza’s flattened, suddenly everyone finds their moral compass.” – Cory Bernard
    4. “We are experiencing a level of grift we can’t even process.” – Denise Hamilton
    5. “The EU is stealthily rewriting global corporate governance—and Britain is just cosplaying sovereignty.” – Roifield Brown

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    58 m
  • Post-Election Blues, Reform’s Rise, and Labour’s Messaging Meltdown
    May 15 2025

    British politics post-local elections resembles less a democracy in action and more a therapy session with occasional shouting. In this episode of Mid-Atlantic, the panel tears into the latest electoral results, with Reform UK bulldozing their way through local councils, Labour sleepwalking through governance, and the Tories doing their best impression of a political hospice.


    Dave Smith kicks things off with a cold, hard look at Reform UK’s momentum. With council control and a surprise mayoral win in Lincolnshire, Reform is no longer on the fringes. Smith calls them a “galvanising force for the working class,” prompting an awkward reckoning from the left. Labour, once the natural home for these voters, is now seen as distant, managerial, and uninspiring. Steve O’Neill admits his past support for Labour’s “do nothing and hope” Ming vase strategy was misplaced—an understatement.


    Tonye Altrade and Leah Brown grapple with Labour’s post-landslide hangover. Starmer’s white paper on immigration is dissected not just for its policies but for the gaping hole where vision should be. It's tough to sell a national direction when no one can tell what lane you’re driving in. Leah Brown underlines the real crisis: Labour may be governing, but Reform is winning the emotional war by peddling a message of hope, however dubious the details.


    The Tories, according to Brown, are in survival mode. Talk of new leadership is already swirling, with Kemi Badenoch eyed as the phoenix to rise from electoral ashes. But internal division and reformist flirtations risk turning the party into political mulch. Meanwhile, the Lib Dems are cheerfully slicing up the Tory carcass in the South West and beyond. Steve O’Neill calls it “vibes-based campaigning,” and frankly, it's working. While Reform is tapping into disillusionment and Labour fumbles the bag it just won, the Lib Dems are slowly, quietly positioning themselves as the adults in the room—if only anyone knew who Ed Davey was.


    5 Quotes from the Episode

    1. “It's still like being crowned the tallest dwarf.” – on Lib Dems’ electoral wins.
    2. “Populism doesn’t equate to good governance.” – Leah Brown
    3. “Labour basically ran on being ‘not the Tories’. Now Reform is running on being ‘not Labour’.” – Dave Smith
    4. “Starmer behind a lectern won't fix Britain's sinking ship. He needs to be laying bricks on a building site.” – Royfield Brown
    5. “We knew what the last Tory government said it stood for. I have no idea what this one does.” – Steve O’Neill


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    47 m
  • Canada Votes 2025 – A Maple-Syrup-Soaked Middle Finger to Trumpism
    Apr 30 2025

    In this post-election special of Mid-Atlantic, host Roifield Brown and Canadian political analyst Adam Schaan break down what might be the most consequential Canadian election in recent memory—not just for the results, but for what they signal about the country’s identity. In a week where Donald Trump’s bombastic threats of annexation echoed from below the 49th parallel, Canada’s electorate responded with an unmistakable rejection of populist rhetoric, economic fearmongering, and American political toxicity.


    Mark Carney’s Liberal Party managed to claw its way back into minority power, with 169 seats and 43.7% of the vote, largely thanks to a generational divide and the NDP’s collapse. While Pierre Poilievre’s Conservatives posted their strongest popular vote showing since 1988, a loss of his own riding and a perception problem with key demographics (read: older voters and women) left the party licking its wounds. The NDP, Greens, and Bloc all bled support, caught in the crossfire of a campaign where sovereignty and survival overshadowed ideology.


    Adam Schaan, fueled by cigarettes and sheer political obsession, paints a picture of a fractured federation temporarily glued together by a fear of becoming the 51st state. Whether unity can hold, and whether Carney truly walks the walk of humility and coalition-building, remains to be seen. But one thing’s clear: Canada is reasserting its independence not with sabres, but with ballots.

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

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    39 m
  • Executive Overreach and Rightwing Realignments
    Apr 28 2025

    In Washington, a rare flicker of institutional resistance is lighting up the political gloom. As the Supreme Court sides 7-2 against mass deportations and Harvard takes legal aim at executive power, Roifield Brown and his panel ask the awkward but necessary question: Is the American Republic finally growing a spine? Panelists Denise Hamilton and Mike Donahue agree that while Trump’s pressure tactics aren’t new, the scale of legal and educational defiance certainly is. Meanwhile, they also highlight the existential threat: America’s fragmented information ecosystems mean citizens no longer even start from the same facts, making any comeback for democratic norms a grinding uphill struggle.


    Across the Atlantic, a different kind of existential crisis unfolds. Robert Jenrick, already measuring the curtains for Tory leadership, hints at a tactical realignment between the Conservative Party and Reform UK. Cory Bernard and Steve O’Neill dissect the fine line between electoral pragmatism and political self-destruction. They warn that while Britain’s political history favours the Conservative Party's survival, wealth inequality and voter volatility could easily tear up the rulebook. Roy Field, clearly unimpressed by complacency, reminds everyone that assuming Britain’s institutions are immune to collapse is dangerously naive.


    The panel closes with a lighter moment: each guest picks a hometown hero worthy of a street name. Harriet Tubman, Jackie Robinson, and Clement Attlee are among the choices, though Steve O’Neill’s initial bid for "Roger Federer Street" suggests some people should stay away from naming contests. Throughout the episode, the tone is bracing: whether it's executive overreach in the U.S. or far-right drift in the U.K., democracy’s defenders will need a lot more than nostalgia and wishful thinking to hold the line.


    5 Selected Quotes:
    • “I think what we're seeing is a stiffening of the spine and a bigger commitment to holding up our institutions.” — Denise Hamilton
    • “It’s not left versus right anymore — it’s institutions versus chaos.” — Roifield Brown
    • “You can't rationalize with people who aren't working with the same facts.” — Mike Donahue
    • “Britain's political history doesn't guarantee immunity from collapse.” — Roifield Brown
    • “One street at a time, we still get to choose who we celebrate.” — Denise Hamilton


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

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    48 m
  • The Tariff Tantrum, Trump and the End of Brand America
    Apr 11 2025

    This week on Mid-Atlantic, Roifield Brown hosts a packed panel to break down Donald Trump's latest economic gamble: a 10% blanket import tariff and steeper levies on select countries, with China squarely in the crosshairs. The result? Global market chaos, retaliatory threats, and international alarm bells over the US’s role in the rules-based economic order.


    Joining from across the Atlantic and the US are Logan Phillips in D.C., Michael Donahue in L.A., and Cory Bernard in Manchester. The panel weighs whether the tariff plan is part of a coherent economic strategy or just political theatre aimed at riling up Trump's base — spoiler: coherence is not in attendance. More than just a trade war, this marks a serious erosion of trust in the US as a trading partner. The dollar might be strong, but America's brand value? Not so much.


    The second half turns sharply towards the UK's options in a world where the US is a geopolitical liability. Roifield pitches a Commonwealth-centric economic bloc as a post-Brexit survival strategy — cue a full-on diplomatic skirmish. What follows is a clash of economic realism, nostalgia, and pride as the panel debates whether Britain should grovel, realign, or get louder. Yes, tempers flare. And yes, someone gets called Neville Chamberlain.


    Five Standout Quotes:

    1. “This was not Team Trump’s best moment. It’s like trying to put out a fire with gasoline.” – Logan Phillips
    2. “If you know tariffs are coming and then vanishing, there’s billions to be made — and lost. That’s terrifying.” – Michael Donahue
    3. “Brand America just took a six-trillion-dollar hit. But it’s the trust deficit that really stings.” – Roifield Brown
    4. “Trump won’t lose his base until their wallets feel it. If they can’t feed their families, that’s the break.” – Cory Bernard
    5. “I’m not giving away the Sudetenland — I’m trying to build a coalition against economic lunacy.” – Roifield Brown

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

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    53 m
  • Signal Failure, Leaks, Bombs, and Budget Cuts
    Mar 29 2025

    This week’s Mid-Atlantic felt like reading classified memos in the group chat, except the group chat accidentally included a journalist and the memos were about bombing Yemen. Host Roifield Brown and his panel of sharp minds, Aram Fischer in Oakland, Denise Hamilton in Houston, Steve O’Neill in London, and Leah Brown in Broadstairs, looked at two transatlantic absurdities: national security leaks from Team Trump 2.0, and a British Labour government budgeting like it’s still 2010.

    In the US, cabinet officials used Signal to discuss military strikes in Yemen, adding a reporter to the chat by mistake. The conversation quickly turned from emoji-filled incompetence to existential dread. Denise Hamilton called it what it is: “a cabinet of convenience and fealty,” while Aram Fischer reminded us that when the “vibes” run the state, reality bites hard. Bombs fell, 53 people died, and somehow no one resigned.


    Across the pond, Chancellor Rachel Reeves delivered a Spring Budget that sounds progressive until you read it. Welfare cuts, frozen benefits, and a forecast of a quarter-million more people—including 50,000 children—falling into poverty. All while wealth remains virtually untaxed. The panel didn’t hold back. “Tories in all but name,” Roifield declared, with Steve admitting he didn’t vote Labour to get austerity rebranded with a red rosette.


    Takeaway: If this episode had a moral, it’s this: Government by vibes kills. And Labour’s soft technocracy might just be Tories on mute.


    5 Pull Quotes:
    1. “This is not a cabinet of excellence. This is a cabinet of convenience and fealty.” – Denise Hamilton
    2. “They added a journalist to the Signal thread and thought, ‘Eh, it’s fine.’ That’s where we’re at.” – Aram Fischer
    3. “Nothing really matters as long as the vibes are right.” – Aram Fischer, summarising MAGA foreign policy
    4. “Labour’s playing a long game with no message. That’s a strategy with a short shelf life.” – Leah Brown
    5. “You knew what the Tories stood for. I’ve got no idea what this lot stand for.” – Roifield Brown


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

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    47 m