Who Is George Soros?
Who Is?
iHeartRadio + NowThis
4.1 • 803 Ratings
🗓️ 11 August 2020
⏱️ 48 minutes
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Summary
In some ways, George Soros, the billionaire philanthropist who turns 90 this week, is the sum of the worst horrors and greatest triumphs of the twentieth century. A survivor of World War II who narrowly escaped Nazi concentration camps, Soros would escape totalitarianism twice, making his way to London on the eve of the Soviet occupation of his hometown, Budapest, Hungary. Soros went on to become one of the financial titans of global capitalism, a ruthless hedge fund manager whose aggressive currency speculation infamously broke the Bank of England. As he amassed an immense fortune, Soros would spend $32B on his Open Society Foundation, an organization through which he seeks to nourish liberal democracy worldwide. It’s that very work in support of democracy which has led Soros to become the reviled target of both Western antidemocratic conservatism and Eastern antiliberalism. On this episode of Who Is?, Sean Morrow explores the story of one of the most loved--and loathed--people on the planet.
- Timothy Garton Ash, a professor of European Studies at the University of Oxford and senior fellow at Stanford University, who has been writing about the transition to democracy in Eastern Europe for 40 years
- Hannes Grassegger, an investigative reporter based in Bern, Switzerland, who focuses on digital power and information warfare
- Kati Marton, a Hungarian born writer, journalist, and activist. Marton is currently working on her tenth book, a biography of Chancellor of Germany Angela Merkel
- Emily Tamkin, U.S. editor and Washington correspondent at The New Statesman, a political and cultural magazine based in the United Kingdom. Tamkin's new book, “The Influence of Soros: Politics, Power, and the Struggle for an Open Society,” is available now
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | He's, you know, the line, Sean, about we shall not see his like again. |
| 0:05.2 | Well, we shall not. |
| 0:06.8 | How could we? |
| 0:08.0 | Because he's the sum of all the most terrible and remarkable experiences of the 20th century. |
| 0:17.1 | And, you know, that a guy like that who barely got away from the Nazis who were hunting for Jewish boys like him in the streets of his hometown of Budapest. |
| 0:30.1 | He barely got away. |
| 0:32.3 | And look, he's now one of the wealthiest people in the world. |
| 0:37.0 | And he doesn't spend his billions on yachts. |
| 0:42.3 | He spends what he has on trying to make a difference. |
| 0:48.9 | And he made his bundle, and then he spent it on the rest of us. |
| 0:53.8 | That was Cadi Martin, a pretty legendary journalist and humanitarian, talking about her friend and colleague, George Soros. |
| 1:03.1 | But you've probably heard of Soros in a very different way. |
| 1:08.3 | Well, for many years, leftist billionaire George Soros has used his wealth to remake |
| 1:13.3 | our society, American society. |
| 1:16.1 | And Soros has effectively intimidated people into not criticizing him, some kind of moral |
| 1:21.6 | crime to call this to public attention, but it is in the public's interest to know. |
| 1:26.9 | That was Tucker Carlson, sounding a lot like me on this show, talking about someone like |
| 1:34.1 | Paul Singer or Charles Koch controlling our government. |
| 1:38.6 | I talk a lot about people manipulating world events from behind the scenes, and to some, no one better represents that than George Soros. |
| 1:48.5 | To a certain group of people, George Soros is the ultimate enemy of freedom. |
| 1:53.3 | The evil figure at the center of one of those conspiracy corkboards with all the red strings, |
| 1:59.0 | all the red strings lead to George Soros. |
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