Jiang says the program succeeded by conventional standards, including student outcomes and regional reputation, but the same stakeholders still pushed him out.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Firing
Jiang reframes Hormuz disruption as a production-system collapse and argues that escalation incentives make the Iran conflict a political-economic choke point beyond price shocks.
Showing 21 evidence items
No matching evidence on this topic page.
Topic Scope And Freshness
Jiang reframes Hormuz disruption as a production-system collapse and argues that escalation incentives make the Iran conflict a political-economic choke point beyond price shocks.
Key Notes
Timestamped Evidence
"of problems in beginning it became a very effective system after a semester or a year and not only that the students who went..."
"very similar to this, okay, but after that, after four years of doing this and being very successful at this, I was never allowed..."
"...now, mate. This is a serious warning, announced the IRGC after firing at a US warship. The Strait of Hormuz remains closed. The 100..."
"...sector she's no longer attorney general Hegseth was question impressed for firing eight top generals within the military it seems like although I mean..."
"...they were reporting israel's reporting that iran's debris from missiles was firing near al -aqsa mosque in jerusalem so it's that seems like the..."
"...last year during the 12 -day war in June, Iran was firing missiles at Israel. And what he's saying is, you know, that was..."
"...of power is the ability to show how much financial, um, firing power they have. So you have a massive PR blitz. Around these..."
"...also wonder if some wars are basically uh like a live firing training exercise for bored militaries like basically they're just using it as..."
"...Swiss, the Swift system. We've seen sort of maybe the the firing gun or the starting the start guard, like when you have the..."
"...if they lose a lot of battles. They can keep on firing soldiers at the enemy, okay? But the borderlands have three advantages that..."
"...like the majority of the world island it's like without even firing a single bullet they've inched towards you know this victory according to..."
"...was condemned to death. He was put in front of a firing squad. Along with others who were part of the subversion. And at..."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Jiang reframes Hormuz disruption as a production-system collapse and argues that escalation incentives make the Iran conflict a political-economic choke point beyond price shocks.
Sneako presses Jiang after the Iran war turns him into a sudden internet figure.
Jiang makes the Iran war a test of religious prediction: if Al-Aqsa survives and peace arrives, his model fails.
This interview is useful because it does not merely pile up predictions.
School says it teaches literacy, competence, creativity, and lifelong learning.
The host begins by asking how Jiang became a public analyst and ends by asking how history itself gets rewritten.
The interview begins with a European emergency and ends in the Caribbean, but Jiang treats both as one argument: Washington is willing to let allies absorb the blast radius while using regional pressure to...
A source-grounded reading of Jiang's Hellenistic World lecture: empire stabilizes itself into stagnation, borderlands beat it with energy and openness, Greece wins as a borderland, then becomes the empire whose universities, cities, and translations...
Related Topics
How To Use And Cite This Page
This topic page is a discovery surface. For generated synthesis, cite the human-readable source reading or lens page. For Jiang-spoken claims, cite the transcript segment, source ref, and YouTube timestamp. Raw text and Markdown mirrors are fallback surfaces for tools that cannot read this HTML page.