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Wall Street and the Russian Revolution, with Richard B. Spence

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Manage episode 318294376 series 2910122
Content provided by Harrison Koehli, Elan Martin, Adam Daniels, Harrison Koehli, Elan Martin, and Adam Daniels. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Harrison Koehli, Elan Martin, Adam Daniels, Harrison Koehli, Elan Martin, and Adam Daniels or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

History is rarely cut and dried, but important historical events are quite often portrayed in a very limited context, providing a very narrow understanding of how the world actually works. Or how the omission of a certain set of facts can almost completely upend our ‘map of reality’; the commonly understood factors which brought about the Russian Revolution of 1917 being just such a story.

When we can begin to ask whether or not the U.S. government was actively engaged in undermining the Tsarist power structure in Russia, or how, at the same time, some of the largest and most powerful figures in American banking and industry helped organize and fund radical left causes there, or how U.S.-based media magnates twisted the news out of Russia to fit the agendas of the above - then we may start getting somewhere..

This week we speak with author and historian Richard B. Spence about his book Wall Street and the Russian Revolution, and delving into the data, agendas and dynamics that led to what is arguably one of the most profoundly destructive developments of the 20th century. And if the broader picture presented is more accurate than the more simplistic view, then we will surely be better equipped to see and understand what it is the Western world may be experiencing right now.

  continue reading

164 episodes

Artwork
iconShare
 
Manage episode 318294376 series 2910122
Content provided by Harrison Koehli, Elan Martin, Adam Daniels, Harrison Koehli, Elan Martin, and Adam Daniels. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Harrison Koehli, Elan Martin, Adam Daniels, Harrison Koehli, Elan Martin, and Adam Daniels or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://player.fm/legal.

History is rarely cut and dried, but important historical events are quite often portrayed in a very limited context, providing a very narrow understanding of how the world actually works. Or how the omission of a certain set of facts can almost completely upend our ‘map of reality’; the commonly understood factors which brought about the Russian Revolution of 1917 being just such a story.

When we can begin to ask whether or not the U.S. government was actively engaged in undermining the Tsarist power structure in Russia, or how, at the same time, some of the largest and most powerful figures in American banking and industry helped organize and fund radical left causes there, or how U.S.-based media magnates twisted the news out of Russia to fit the agendas of the above - then we may start getting somewhere..

This week we speak with author and historian Richard B. Spence about his book Wall Street and the Russian Revolution, and delving into the data, agendas and dynamics that led to what is arguably one of the most profoundly destructive developments of the 20th century. And if the broader picture presented is more accurate than the more simplistic view, then we will surely be better equipped to see and understand what it is the Western world may be experiencing right now.

  continue reading

164 episodes

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