The Chris Morgan Podcast

Episode 14 - t’s All a Game

• Chris • Season 1 • Episode 14

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🎙️ It’s All a Game
Are we really in control… or just pawns on the board?

In this episode, Chris Morgan unpacks how global politics, power, and personal agendas are shaping our world—and why ordinary people are the ones paying the price.

#Podcast #GlobalPolitics #ItsAllAGame #ThinkDeeper

SPEAKER_00

Hello and welcome to the Chris Morgan podcast. This one is is called It's All A Game. Most of you, as well as myself, would call ourselves ordinary people. We used to refer to the man in the street, a term that captured the concept of the ordinary person invited to cast an opinion for comparison with the views and behavior of the famous and the expert. But he inverted commas, since gone non-binary into they inverted commas, loses a degree of street credibility as we see less of that person in the street, more difficult to consult as they are either more cautious and scuttle away in haste, or they're late for work or desperate to get to the supermarket before he closes. One wonders about the extent to which the ordinary person feels like they are a pawn in a chess game within the context of our world today, and especially modern politics. The ordinary people are an essential feature of the game, but at a very low level and highly dispensable along the path to victory or defeat. Only the major pieces have any real impact in a chess game, and it's just the same on the world stage, and they're rarely those big major pieces and the major players on the world stage are rarely the ones to suffer when their games lead to failure. Far too often we're seeing leaders of powerful countries indulging in games, usually contests, where in the first instance they are generally motivated to pursue or defend what they believe is right and proper for their people. But these then evolve into a personal contest and not a satisfactory one. There are some who, in common with the infinitely friendier game of football, build a team around themselves that strengthens and protects them into the creation of an oligarchy, where their political image becomes more important than the safety of their people. An example of this is Russia itself exhibiting the characteristics of an oligarchy. The game is quite clearly an effort to rebuild and restore the United Soviet Socialist Republic, known as the USSR, that left this world in 1991, abandoning a desperately unhappy Vladimir Putin. It is now a personal game or contest where the broader picture of what's best for the Russian people has got lost in the maelstrom. This man and his team have a deep obsession to revive an empire of communism that simply did not work. The concept itself was that everybody should be equal. Well, nothing wrong with that, except remember, some were more equal than others. It was Georgia Orwell who wrote that, using animals that could talk, of course, in the classic book Animal Thumb. Now go west precisely as encouraged in that excellent song of yesteryear, you will find the USA, another example of games at work to sanitize for the general public the mistakes being made at a high political level. More an oligarchy than a democracy, where an elite group led by Mr Donald Trump has, without adequate explanation, brought the world to a state of economic fragility and more poverty for the poor. Perhaps it's just him alone. The personal game, largely through social media, playing around. He appears to be the one where he acts aggressively and very often threateningly, intending that the opposition will cower away in fear and timidly conceal all the conditions that they have presented. The crude and aggressive personal style of communication may well have been the contributor, the main contributor, to Mr. Trump's business success, but it is not at all the way to deal with Iran. What started as a mutual distrust between the two countries has evolved counterproductively into a slangy match, and frankly, it's mostly one way. Trump will not secure peace when talking like that to Iran's leaders. Insulting them is tantamount to insulting their faith. That's disastrous. And even the Pope is now not being respected. The Muslim religion itself espouses peaceful and respectful behavior. Though in a number of countries an extreme application of Islam is promoted and at times ruthlessly defended. Their game is a strongly conceptual one against the infidel, not by definition vicious, but a contest nevertheless. And that game is dominating a country, Iran, where they are branded as America's enemy. Ironically, many among the millions suffering in Iran would like to see their regime dismantled to allow freedom to express views and not be pressured into religious extremism. The tens of thousands of deaths in the January 2026 protests are a testament to that, given that only a small number of supporters of an issue will actually take to the streets to demonstrate about it. Our world is going backwards. We really did hope Vice President J.D. Vance would manage to inject a catalytic dose of good intellectual and diplomatic negotiation. The peace talks in Islamabad were, however, an unequivocal failure, hugely disappointing across the world. The word on the street, I'm not sure which street, was that Vance's reticence from the start about the Iran Wai was seen as disobedience. So no better way of diminishing his political status than to deliver to him what in rugby is known as the hospital pass, is where you get hit by the opposition as you receive the ball. We were aware that as Vance stepped off the aircraft at Islamabad, the mutually exclusive conditions of the USA and Iran left him severely handicapped for the game that followed. Well, a few things have happened since then, but time is running out on the peace fire, and we now have to hope that peace will be continued after it. But it there's still games, and games still dominating our world. But they're no fun either. Thank you.