Jiang says the main place to follow his geopolitical analysis is his Substack, Good Deal of History, and points listeners to a recent essay on his understanding of the national security strategy.
Topic brief
A Jiang Lens evidence brief for this topic, built from source tags, transcript matches, and linked source refs.
Self Description
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "No, I mean, if you're interested in my geopolitical analysis, the best place to find my work is my Substack, Good Deal of History...."
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Topic Scope And Freshness
A transcript-matched topic anchored by excerpts such as "No, I mean, if you're interested in my geopolitical analysis, the best place to find my work is my Substack, Good Deal of History...."
Key Notes
Jiang identifies his Predictive History Substack as the main place where he publishes his geopolitical analysis.
Jiang tells listeners that his geopolitical analysis is best followed on his Predictive History Substack, while also naming his X account and YouTube channel.
Timestamped Evidence
"No, I mean, if you're interested in my geopolitical analysis, the best place to find my work is my Substack, Good Deal of History...."
"Yeah. So I have a sub stack. It's called Predictive History. And that's where I write down my geopolitical analysis. So if you're interested..."
"the end of the day, China and the United States are status quo powers, they want things to stay the same, Russia, Iran, North..."
"you as you mentioned. So it's but if you really want to know more about my geopolitical analysis, then the best place is Substack."
Relevant Lectures And Readings
Jiang starts with a tactical question about Trump and Venezuela, but the interview keeps widening until Venezuela becomes only the first front in a larger story: a Monroe Doctrine empire that prefers calibrated coercion...
Jiang's through-line is that American decline will not end in a peaceful handoff to China or Russia.
The interview starts with an optimistic claim about a China-US reset, then widens into a harsher model of late-order politics: China and America still need each other, but both systems are drifting toward state...
Related Topics
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