He analogizes current geopolitics to the 1930s: increasing isolationism and global depression risk emerge if Gulf and trade links continue to break down.
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He analogizes current geopolitics to the 1930s: increasing isolationism and global depression risk emerge if Gulf and trade links continue to break down.
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"Our oil, our gas, our coal, our nuclear power. And when it's available and it's appropriate, we could maybe get some energy from wind..."
"What impact will that have, do you think, on geopolitics globally? I think that we are coming to a point where the world is..."
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.
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