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Lessons Lost in Time

Lessons Lost in Time

Written by: William Murray
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About this listen

Welcome to the Lessons Lost in Time Podcast. I’m Bill Murray. Here, with a few fellow misfits and sharp minds, we’re digging through the wreckage of history—looking at how real leaders dealt with real problems when the stakes were high and the playbook was blank.

If you’re the kind of person who likes to question things, pick at the edges, and think a little deeper about why the world is the way it is and what we can do about it, then pull up a chair. Because if we want new solutions, we need to discuss old problems.



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William Murray
Political Science Politics & Government World
Episodes
  • A New Iranian Revolution: 47 Years of Uprising
    Jan 12 2026

    Smoke curls through the alley. The air stings—metal, burning tires, sweat, tear gas stings the nose and eyes. Shouts bounce off concrete walls, almost deafening. People push past each other, running, yelling, trying to be heard over the chaos. Somewhere, a phone records it all. Someone else is taking a breath that tastes like fear and defiance at the same time. You’re here, in the middle of it, and it’s not just a protest—it’s survival.

    Iran knows this better than most places on Earth. Since 1979, its people have taken to the streets more than 400 times. That’s not history. That’s a pattern. A 47-year argument between a people who refuse to stay silent and a government that refuses to listen.

    The revolutions that promised change, the uprisings that shook the streets, the moments that left scars you can still feel today. Why people keep risking everything, and why the world can’t just look away.

    Because right now, the streets are alive again. Ordinary people are standing in the smoke, facing down the impossible. Every chant, every step forward, every brick thrown—it matters. It’s not just about Tehran, or Isfahan, or Shiraz. It’s about a people testing the limits of power, courage, and history itself.

    You’re about to see the streets of Iran in a way most of the world doesn’t. And if you think this is another story you can scroll past—you’re already behind.


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    59 mins
  • The Venezuela Question: When Your Neighbor’s House Is On Fire
    Dec 23 2025

    A generator hums, dragging life into a street that shouldn’t need it. Kids kick a tattered ball, their laughter sharp, brittle against the heat, carried over the scent of diesel and frying arepas. Bolívar stares down from a mural, paint peeling, eyes split like the city itself. Lines curl around the corner for fuel, people shifting on cracked sidewalks, umbrellas doing double duty against the sun and the dust. The air is thick with waiting, impatience barely held in check, and even the dogs move slowly, like they know something’s off. Not war. Not yet. Just a country pretending the ground isn’t sliding out from under it, every heartbeat a quiet act of defiance.

    This is the Venezuela that rarely makes headlines anymore. The collapse did not happen in an explosion. It happened in exhaustion. Currency that loses value by the hour. Hospitals overwhelmed not by war wounds but by neglect. Politicians who shake hands on television while militias patrol the outskirts after dark. And beneath it all, a quiet resentment that is starting to find direction.

    The United States feels the pull whether it wants to or not. A flood of migrants crossing borders into Latin America and the Caribbean, putting pressure on nations that don’t need another crisis to worry about. Cartels and foreign powers carving influence in a region once considered firmly within Washington’s orbit. Oil reserves that still tempt, even after decades of mismanagement. And a government in Caracas that believes survival justifies any bargain, any ally, any escalation.

    This is not a story about good intentions or bad actors. It is about a moment when desperation meets geopolitics. When a collapsing state starts creating consequences far beyond its borders. When the United States realizes that distance is not the same thing as insulation.

    Today we dive into the questions nobody wants to say out loud: will the United States go to war with Venezuela, and what went wrong inside Venezuela to bring us to this moment?

    Because if you think war sounds unthinkable now, living with a failed state Venezuela may be a more difficult choice.


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    Further Reading

    https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/venezuela-crisis

    https://www.foreignaffairs.com/venezuela/grand-bargain-venezuela

    https://monthlyreview.org/articles/venezuelas-fragile-revolution/



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    43 mins
  • The Russo-Japanese War 1904: The Old Order on Notice
    Nov 25 2025

    You can still feel that wind off the Liaodong Peninsula if you listen hard enough, it carries the ghosts of Port Arthur, Mukden, and the empires that thought they were too big to fail. One bled out. The other walked away with a victory that cost it its soul.


    This was trench warfare before Europe even knew the word. Six hundred thousand men fed into a grinder that proved industrial war didn’t care about flags, prayers, or imperial fantasies. Japan thought victory would earn respect. Russia thought size meant destiny. They both walked into a century that would break them.


    And the West? It applauded, took notes, and learned absolutely nothing.


    If you want to understand how the 20th century actually started, this is for you. With ghosts, rust, barbed wire, and two empires testing how much suffering they could inflict before something inside them snapped.


    This week on Lessons Lost in Time, we go deep into the war that rewired global power.

    If you’re into history that punches you in the chest instead of patting you on the head, click the link and listen now.


    FURTHER READING

    https://digital-commons.usnwc.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?params=/context/nwc-review/article/2203/&path_info=The_Russo_Japanese_War__Primary_Causes_of_Japanese_Success.pdf


    https://eprints.lse.ac.uk/6906/1/Aspects_of_the_Russo-Japanese_War.pdf

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    57 mins
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