S8 Ep648: SHOW SCHEDULE JOHN BATCHELOR SHOW 3-26-26 1920 TROTSKY AND THE ARMORED TRAIN
The John Batchelor Show
John Batchelor
4.5 • 2.8K Ratings
🗓️ 27 March 2026
⏱️ 7 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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Summary
SHOW SCHEDULE JOHN BATCHELOR SHOW 3-26-26
1920 TROTSKY AND THE ARMORED TRAIN
1. John Batchelor and Anatol Lieven discuss how the Middle East conflict impacts the global economy through energy and fertilizer shortages. They explore whether major powers like Moscow and Washington are losing focus on the war in Ukraine due to the escalating crisis in the Persian Gulf. (1)
2. Rising oil prices have significantly increased Russian confidence and revenue, providing an extra $150 million daily. However, a potential U.S. ground war in Iran could force a choice between defending Ukraine or the Gulf, potentially allowing China to decisively intervene in either theater. (2)
3. Economist John Cochrane warns that government subsidies for high gas prices compound oil shocks into inflation. Comparing current trends to 1979, he argues that price controls lead to shortages, while free-market incentives are necessary to encourage production and efficient consumption. (3)
4. Conrad Black notes that while Canadians support regime change in Iran, they view themselves as spectators regarding oil impacts. He emphasizes that closing the Strait of Hormuz constitutes a war on the world, though Canada lacks the naval resources to assist in reopening it. (4)
5. This discussion focuses on the unreliability of AI, noting its tendency to "hallucinate" and apologize for errors. Experts suggest the future belongs to those with imagination who can test AI relentlessly, warning of a class divide between AI-savvy workers and those left behind. (5)
6. Scientific testing reveals that AI agents can go rogue, potentially compromising private information like bank statements. Despite these risks, participants believe humans maintain an advantage through innovation, as AI merely scrapes existing data rather than creating original, competitive thoughts. (6)
7. NASA Administrator Jared Isaacman outlines a mission to establish a permanent moon base by the early 2030s. The plan utilizes commercial providers like SpaceX and Blue Origin to secure the "high ground" and prepare for future Mars exploration before China can dominate the region. (7)
8. The lunar race intensifies as China plans multiple settlements to achieve solar system hegemony. NASA aims to leap ahead using nuclear electric propulsion and competitive private contracts, focusing on redundancy and safety to ensure a sustained American presence on the lunar surface. (8)
9. Josh Ireland examines the violent roots of the Russian Revolution, where founders were executed for "Trotskyism". He explores the personal rivalry between Trotsky and Stalin, two outsiders whose shared passion for Marxist theory transformed into a decades-long conflict that reshaped world history. (9)
10. Stalin built power through patience and bureaucratic alliances, while the charismatic Trotsky viewed him as a "gray blur". Trotsky’s failure to grasp practical politics was exemplified by his decision to skip Lenin’s funeral, allowing Stalin to position himself as the revolution’s rightful heir. (10)
11. Stalin systematically marginalized Trotsky by suppressing his speeches and removing his allies from the Kremlin. By labeling Trotsky a "gravedigger of the revolution," Stalin used him as a spectre of failure to justify total control and internal purges of his own peers. (11)
12. Trotsky’s exile in Mexico was defined by a fatalistic awareness that Stalin’s assassins would eventually succeed. Despite the protection of his entourage and famous hosts like Diego Rivera, he realized no individual could withstand an empire's mobilized secret police. (12)
13. Guest Cliff May defends the war with Iran as a necessary "war of choice" to deter decades of aggression,. He emphasizes preemptive action against gathering threats and discusses Iran’s crippled regional proxies,. (13)
14. Guest Mary Anastasia O'Grady examines Cuba’s desperate plea for private investment amidst an energy crisis. She warns of the regime’s history of exploiting investors and argues that progress requires total democratic regime change,. (14)
15. Guest Veronique de Rugy analyzes the $300 billion cost of the Iran war, detailing legislative paths like reconciliation to bypass Senate filibusters,. She highlights the risks of rising inflation and massive national debt,. (15)
16. Guest Max Meizlish explores Iran’s use of "market asymmetry" and information warfare to manipulate global energy prices,. By denying peace progress, Iran spikes oil costs, providing a significant financial boon to Russia,. (16)
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Good evening. The show tonight has the first hour of a two-hour conversation with the author |
| 0:05.4 | Josh Ireland, his new book, The Death of Trotsky, about the stalking of the man who was most |
| 0:13.2 | identified with the Russian Revolution right up until Stalin drove him out of the Politburo, Moscow, |
| 0:19.8 | Russia, and across the map of Europe, |
| 0:22.3 | and finally taking refuge in Mexico, where he was murdered by an agent sent by Stalin in a roundabout fashion. |
| 0:30.8 | This is the revolution from the first half of the 20th century. |
| 0:34.1 | We're witnessing revolution in the first half of the 21st century. The Iran wars, |
| 0:39.8 | the Gaza wars, the Lebanon wars, the war in Ukraine. These are all left over disputes from |
| 0:46.1 | empires that perhaps are forgotten, but their loyalties remain in the minds of some of the members of the Once Upon a Time empire, |
| 0:56.8 | the Russian Empire, the Ottoman Empire, the Hoenzhouler and the Hobsburg, the Holy Roman Empire, |
| 1:03.8 | the Victorian British Empire, all of them rubbing up against each other, and now we have the |
| 1:09.2 | American Empire. |
| 1:17.0 | It's a combination of events and timing and personalities and communication system, |
| 1:24.3 | and I follow the trail as best it can be followed, given the uncertainty of Mr. Trump's pronouncements. It was a five-day ultimatum, now it's a 10-day ultimatum, |
| 1:28.7 | which is why Trotsky feels a lot easier to talk about, because I know that Stalin gave |
| 1:35.1 | the order, and I know that Trotsky was murdered in his study in Mexico, outside of Mexico |
| 1:40.6 | city, a suburb of what is now Mexico City, murdered by an agent a Spaniard |
| 1:47.1 | who was sent by his mother and the NKVD, that era's KGB or FSB. And he won his way into the |
| 1:58.9 | trust of the family that was guarding Trotsky and took a pickaxe because |
| 2:04.8 | he'd been a mountain climber in some fashion and brought it down on Trotsky's head, a seven-inch |
| 2:11.0 | gash while Trotsky was reading. Trotsky lived another day, but there was no surgery that was available in those days |
| 2:21.1 | to save him, and he died saying kind things to his wife as best he could because he was losing |
... |
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