Send us Fan MailThe hardest truths in public life are usually the ones we’ve trained ourselves not to see. We start by talking with Cornel West about Race Matters and the reality that racial injustice is not only about explosive moments on the news, but also about the “quiet riot” of daily suffering in South Central, Harlem, and any place where poverty and despair are treated as normal. We unpack why hope is not optimism, why small victories of love and care count, and how a renewed public sphere and real political courage matter if America is serious about racial justice.From there we widen the lens to foreign policy and ask a question that never stops generating heat: why does the United States support Israel so consistently? We trace the long arc from Christian Zionism and settler colonial history to Cold War strategy, military aid, and intelligence alignment. Along the way, we examine how media framing shapes what the public is allowed to call an invasion, an occupation, or a peace offer, and how “minimal honesty” might change what leaders can get away with.The episode closes on a moral note, pairing a humanist warning about greed and despair with scripture on suffering and endurance, not as an escape from politics but as a reminder that language, conscience, and solidarity still matter. If you care about race in America, Cornel West, public policy, U.S. Israel relations, and human rights, this conversation is built to challenge your assumptions without asking you to turn off your compassion. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: what truth do you think our politics is avoiding right now? Support the show