
Trump rejects Netanyahu’s claim that kids in Gaza aren’t starving
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Diverging Reports Breakdown
Live updates: Israel pauses some Gaza fighting as trickle of aid reaches starving Palestinians
More than 100 trucks delivered humanitarian aid to Gaza on Sunday. More supplies have been airdropped in from Jordan and the United Arab Emirates. But humanitarian workers urge this is not enough to “even scratch the surface” Doctors Without Borders: “Airdrops are an incredibly inefficient way to deliver aid” The UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) says it has seen “children and adults dying of hunger and infants literally dying in their mothers’ arms” in Deir al-Balah.
Children and elders scavenge trash bins for food. Exhaustion sends people to hospital. Friends waste away to the point of being unrecognizable.
This is the reality confronting aid workers in Deir al-Balah, central Gaza, a UN spokesperson on the ground told CNN on Monday.
“I have seen this with my own eyes… children and adults dying of hunger and infants literally dying in their mothers’ arms,” said Olga Cherevko, from the UN’s Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA).
Beyond the front door of her guest house, Cherevko said she witnesses people of all ages rummaging through the trash for scraps on the street.
“I myself don’t recognize my friends because they look so thin,” she added.
Last week, Israeli tanks pushed into Deir al-Balah, an area that had not previously seen ground operations in the 21-month war.
The city is packed with displaced Palestinians. Now, it is one of three areas included in Israel’s “tactical pause” zones, where more than 100 trucks delivered humanitarian aid to Gaza on Sunday.
“Inefficient” air drops: More supplies have been airdropped in from Jordan and the United Arab Emirates. But humanitarian workers urge this is not enough to “even scratch the surface”.
“Airdrops are an incredibly inefficient way to deliver aid,” Executive Director of Doctors Without Borders, Avril Benoit, told CNN on Monday.
“What we really need is to open up those land borders again and allow all the trucks to come in, all the food to come in.”
“Prior to this latest escalation, prior to October 7, there were 500 trucks entering Gaza every day. Now to compensate for all the gaps and the months of siege, we would need thousands of trucks to meet the needs.”
Benoit said it is not just a question of quality but also the quality of aid entering the strip, stressing the importance of specialized food to treat the malnourished.
“You can’t just give them rice and porridge and grains. They need something more substantial to be able to recover from all of the medical consequences even in the short term,” she added.
Micronutrient-rich therapeutic foods are needed for malnourished children in particular, she added, to treat damage to their internal organs and developing brains.
Trump refuses to accept children starving in Gaza as Starmer says people in UK ‘revolted’ by scenes of hunger
Donald Trump would not say children are starving in Gaza as he met Sir Keir Starmer for talks in Scotland. Prime Minister struck a more critical line of Israel’s actions over the besieged strip, stressing that people in Britain are “revolted” over the scenes of hunger. More than 100 aid agencies have warned of “mass starvation’ in the growing crisis. Trump blamed Hamas for the failure to get a truce, saying he had expected the terror group to stall on peace moves once it only had around 20 Israeli hostages left. The leaders will also discuss the US-UK trade deal, with a headline 10% tariff level imposed on British imports, but concerns remaining over a 25% level of steel, and the rate set to be imposed on pharmaceuticals. They will also talk about the war in Ukraine.
The Prime Minister struck a more critical line of Israel’s actions over the besieged strip, stressing that people in Britain are “revolted” over the scenes of hunger.
More than 100 aid agencies have warned of “mass starvation” in the growing crisis.
Seven-month-old Salim Mahmoud Awad suffers significant weight loss due to the lack of baby formula and food after being displaced to Gaza City, (Anadolu via Getty Images)
Speaking to reporters as Sir Keir arrived at Turnberry, Scotland, where Trump has a golf course, the president was asked whether he agreed with Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that children are not starving in the small enclave of land.
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He said he did not know before adding: “Based on television I would say not particularly.
“There are some children who look very hungry.
“But we are giving a lot of money and a lot of food.”
He also praised the UK and other nations for “stepping up” to deliver desperately needed aid.
Sir Keir interjected, saying; “It’s a humanitarian crisis. An absolute catastrophe.
“People in Britain are revolted at what they are seeing on their screens.”
Palestinian children queue for a portion of hot food distributed by a charity kitchen at the Nuseirat refugee camp (AFP via Getty Images)
The Prime Minister praised Trump for “leading” on getting more aid into Gaza and a ceasefire.
The president blamed Hamas for the failure to get a truce, saying he had expected the terror group to stall on peace moves once it only had around 20 Israeli hostages left as otherwise it would lose its bargaining power.
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Ahead of the meeting, Business Secretary Jonathan Reynolds said Britain backed air drops to Gaza.
Air drops have been criticised for not being able to deliver aid on a sufficient scale and for risking the lives of desperate people seeking food who could be hit by the deliveries.
Burt Mr Reynolds told Sky News: “The point about the air drops is that we cannot wait, we have got to do something, its an unconscionable situation.
Pressed whether the Government would support direct RAF involvement on air drops, he added: “I believe we are working directly with the Jordanians on this.
“I don’t know whether they would be the one’s to distribute the aid in that way.
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“We might be supporting in a logistical capacity.”
Israel is now allowing a limited amount of additional aid into Gaza after strong condemnation of its actions on restricting food.
United Nations Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs Tom Fletcher: “One in three people in Gaza haven’t eaten for days in a row now.”
Trump and Sir Keir have built a rapport on the world stage despite their differing political backgrounds, with the US president praising Sir Keir for doing a “very good job” in office ahead of their talks on Monday.
The leaders will also discuss the US-UK trade deal, with a headline 10% tariff level imposed on British imports, but concerns remaining over a 25% level of steel, and the rate set to be imposed on pharmaceuticals.
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They will also talk about the war in Ukraine, with Trump saying he was “disappointed” with Vladimir Putin’s failure to agree to a ceasefire.
Mr Trump’s private trip to the UK comes ahead of a planned state visit in September.
July 25, 2025 – Israel-Gaza news
Medical staff in Gaza rationing themselves to one meal every two or three days. One in four young children and pregnant women coming into MSF clinics in Gaza are malnourished. Israel has said it will allow aid air drops, something the UN has warned will be expensive and dangerous. More than 100 aid groups this week sounded the alarm in a joint statement, and said their own colleagues are suffering from the lack of food aid.
Medical staff in Gaza are now rationing themselves to one meal every two or three days as they treat patients during a severe aid shortage, according to a Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) doctor who recently returned to the US from the enclave.
“The situation is dystopian at best,” Dr. Aqsa Durrani, a pediatrician and epidemiologist, told CNN when asked what she was hearing from her colleagues working at the moment in Gaza.
She said that when she left the enclave three months ago, staff were eating only one meal per day and that she had thought at the time that things couldn’t get worse — but staff were now having to make a single meal last twice or three times as long.
“It’s impossible what we are asking from them,” she said of medical staff who she said are hungry and exhausted. Children have been “crying for food,” she added.
“The things that they are crying about is that they’re hungry, rather than their third degree burns or their amputation,” she said, stressing the need for food to be allowed in at scale.
More than 100 aid groups this week sounded the alarm in a joint statement, and said their own colleagues are suffering from the lack of food aid in Gaza amid Israel’s blockade. Israel has said it will allow aid air drops, something the UN has warned will be expensive and dangerous.
Durrani said one in four young children and pregnant women coming into MSF clinics in Gaza are malnourished and that the “tiny amount of food that air drops will provide in this dangerous and ineffective manner is not going to work.”
Gaza aid crisis: Why Gazans are dying of hunger or being killed by Israel on a near daily basis
Palestinians in Gaza are suffering from man-made “mass starvation” due to the aid blockade, the World Health Organization says. The United Nations says more than a thousand people have been killed by Israeli forces while seeking food since late May. The Gaza Humanitarian Foundation was created to replace the UN’s aid role in Gaza and has been widely criticized for failing to improve conditions. Israel has maintained tight control over the territory through a yearslong land, air and sea blockade, with severe restrictions on the movement of goods and people. The breakdown of social order in Gaza has led to the displacement of most of its residents and weakening Hamas’ grip on much of the territory, the UN says. the crisis was compounded by the Israeli campaign against the UN and its aid delivery system, which Israel said was ineffective and allowed aid to fall Hamas’ hands. The UN denies the accusations and says the situation in Gaza is now under control of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Society (ICRC)
Twenty-one months into Israel’s war in Gaza, the enclave is gripped by escalating scenes of death and hunger, with some killed while trying to reach aid, others dying of starvation, and growing condemnation of Israel’s conduct even among many of its closest allies.
Palestinians in Gaza are suffering from man-made “mass starvation” due to the aid blockade on the enclave, the chief of the World Health Organization warned reporters at a briefing on Wednesday.
“Parents tell us their children cry themselves to sleep from hunger,” Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said. “Food distribution sites have become places of violence.”
The United Nations says more than a thousand people have been killed by Israeli forces while seeking food since late May, when a controversial new Israel- and US-backed aid group, the Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, began operating.
Of those, hundreds have died near GHF sites, according to the UN. The GHF was created to replace the UN’s aid role in Gaza and has been widely criticized for failing to improve conditions.
All 2.1 million people in Gaza are now food insecure. On Tuesday, Gaza’s health ministry said 900,000 children are going hungry, and 70,000 already show signs of malnutrition.
But how did it come to this?
A complete siege after Hamas’ October 7 attack
Before the war, Gaza was already one of the most isolated and densely populated places on earth, with around two million people packed into an area of 140 square miles. Israel has maintained tight control over the territory through a yearslong land, air and sea blockade, with severe restrictions on the movement of goods and people. More than half of its residents were food insecure and under the poverty line, according to the UN.
Between 500 and 600 truckloads of aid entered Gaza daily before the conflict. That number has since plummeted to an average of just 28 trucks per day, a group of humanitarian organizations said Wednesday. It’s unclear if the figure includes trucks used in GHF’s operations.
Following Hamas’ October 7, 2023 attack, which left 1,200 people dead and more than 250 taken hostage, Israel ordered a “complete siege” of Gaza, halting the supply of electricity, food, water and fuel.
A humanitarian crisis swiftly unfolded, as trapped residents faced both hunger and a devastating Israeli military campaign in response. Human rights groups have repeatedly criticized Israel’s use of food as a “weapon of war” and accused it of imposing “collective punishment.”
Brief respite and a short-lived ceasefire
Following international pressure, the first trucks carrying aid entered Gaza in late October. A temporary ceasefire between Israel and Hamas began on November 24, 2023, slightly increasing aid flow. But the truce collapsed a week later.
Aid deliveries subsequently dwindled again, and stringent Israeli inspections further delayed shipments. Israeli authorities said screening was necessary to prevent Hamas from diverting supplies but humanitarian officials accused Israel of deliberately throttling aid.
Palestinians, including children struggle to receive hot meals distributed by a local charity in Gaza City on July 14. Mahmoud ssa/Anadolu/Getty Images
Further compounding the crisis was the Israeli campaign against the UN and its aid delivery system, which Israel said was ineffective and allowed aid to fall Hamas’ hands. The UN denies this.
Among the agencies targeted was the UN’s Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees (UNRWA), which Israel accused of having staff involved in the October 7 attack. A UN investigation found that nine of UNWRA’s 13,000 Gaza-based employees “may have” participated and no longer worked at the agency.
In January this year, Israel banned UNRWA from operating in Gaza, cutting off viral services like food, health care and education to hundreds of thousands of people.
The breakdown of social order
As Israel’s campaign leveled much of Gaza, displacing most of its residents and weakening Hamas’ grip on the territory, lawlessness began to spread.
Looting became a new hurdle for UN trucks, and casualties mounted at aid delivery points. Israel has repeatedly blamed Hamas and armed gangs for the chaos.
The UN warned just weeks into the war that civil order was beginning to collapse, with desperate Palestinians taking flour and hygiene supplies from warehouses. By November 2024, the UN again raised the alarm, saying the capacity to deliver aid was “completely gone.”
Injured Palestinians are transported to hospitals after Israeli forces open fire on civilians waiting for humanitarian aid in the Zikim area on Sunday. Ali Jadallah/Anadolu/Getty Images
In “one of the worst” looting incident, over 100 trucks were lost, it said. Drivers were forced to unload trucks at gunpoint, aid workers were injured, and vehicles were damaged extensively.
As Hamas’ grip on Gaza waned and the territory’s police force was hollowed out, gangs emerged to steal aid and resell it. Israel has also armed local militias to counter Hamas – a controversial move that opposition politicians have warned will endanger Israeli national security.
The arming of militias appears to be the closest that Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has come to empowering any form of alternate rule in the strip. Since the start of the war, the Israeli leader has refused to lay out a plan for Gaza’s governance once the conflict ends.
Another ceasefire collapse and a new aid system
On January 19, another temporary ceasefire was reached. Aid resumed, but remained well short of what was needed.
Israel reinstated a total blockade of Gaza on March 2 after the truce expired. Two weeks later, it resumed fighting, with officials saying the goal was to force Hamas to accept new ceasefire terms and release hostages.
By July, the World Food Programme (WFP) assessed that a quarter of Gaza’s population was facing famine-like conditions.
At least 80 children have died of malnutrition since the conflict began, the Palestinian health ministry says. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), most of these occurred after the March blockade.
In May, GHF, the controversial new Israeli- and American-backed organization, announced it would begin delivering with Israel’s approval. Just days before GHF began operating, its director Jake Wood resigned, saying it was impossible to do his work “while also strictly adhering to the humanitarian principles of humanity, neutrality, impartiality and independence.”
Injured Palestinians are transported to hospitals after Israeli forces open fire on civilians waiting for humanitarian aid in the Zikim area on Sunday. Ali Jadallah/Anadolu/Getty Images
The foundation was created to replace the UN’s role in Gaza, while complying with Israeli demands that the aid not reach Hamas. The GHF said it would coordinate with the Israeli military, but that security would be provided by private military contractors.
The UN has refused to participate, saying the GHF model violates some basic humanitarian principles. Critics have noted that there are only a small number of GHF distribution sites, in southern and central Gaza – far fewer than hundreds under the UN’s previous model. This has forced massive crowds to gather at limited locations.
The GHF has defended its system, saying it is a “secure model (that) blocks the looting.”
But soon after it began operating on May 27, the plan turned deadly as those seeking aid increasingly came under fire near GHF aid sites.
Palestinian officials and witnesses have said Israeli troops are responsible for most of the deaths. The Israeli military acknowledged firing warning shots toward crowds in some instances, but denied responsibility for other incidents.
And the deaths aren’t limited to the vicinity of GHF aid sites. On Sunday, Israeli forces killed dozens waiting for aid in northern Gaza, according to the Palestinian health ministry. Israel said troops fired warning shots after sensing an “immediate threat”
The ministry of health recorded nine deaths due to famine and malnutrition in 24 hours from Thursday, according to Health Ministry director Munir Al-Bursh, bringing the total of Palestinians who died of starvation to 122.
On Wednesday, 111 international humanitarian organizations called on Israel to end its blockade and agree to a ceasefire, warning that supplies in the enclave are now “totally depleted” and that humanitarian groups are “witnessing their own colleagues and partners waste away before their eyes.”
An Israeli official said at a press briefing on Wednesday that they expect more aid to enter the enclave in the future.
“We would like to see more and more trucks entering Gaza and distributing the aid as long as Hamas is not involved,” the official said. “As we see for now, Hamas has an interest: First, to put pressure on the State of Israel through the international community in order to (have) an effect in the (ceasefire) negotiation process; and second, to collapse the new mechanism that we have established that is making sure that they are not involved in the aid delivery inside Gaza.”
International pressure continues to mount on Israel, including from the United States.
And on Monday, the foreign ministers of 25 Western nations slammed Israel for “drip feeding” aid into the Gaza Strip. Israel’s foreign ministry said it “rejects” the statement, calling it “disconnected from reality.”
Rise of the Idiot Interviewer
A pair of pro-Trump Canadian prankster YouTubers called the “Nelk Boys’ recently interviewed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. David Frum says interviewers don’t always need to be subject matter experts. Frum: If you’re talking to a politician who has been accused of serious crimes, you need to do some goddamned research beforehand. The interviewer’s job is to get the facts on the table so that the audience is able to have an “educated view on the subject,” he says. The audience can only make up its opinion based on what they are exposed to, Frum writes, not exposed to counterarguments, such as those from the Nelk Boy’s own followers, who were critical of their interview with the prime minister, he adds. The “manosphere exploded with condemnation over their failure to critically question Netanyahu, as well as their decision to platform the Prime Minister,’ he writes.
So interviewers don’t always need to be subject matter experts. But my God, if you’re talking to a politician who has been accused of serious crimes, you need to do some goddamned research beforehand. You need to come prepared. Otherwise you’re not really doing an interview. You’re functioning as part of the public relations operation of a powerful figure, and you have surrendered the right to call yourself independent.
A pair of pro-Trump Canadian prankster YouTubers called the “Nelk Boys” recently interviewed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Netanyahu is responsible for the starvation of Gaza and a war on the population that kills hundreds of people per day. It is an unconscionable crime against humanity, which is why he is wanted by the International Criminal Court.
The Nelk Boys, by their own admission, did not do a good job interviewing Netanyahu, asking questions like: “You [and Trump] are very tight, right? Would you call it a ‘bromance’?” They asked Netanyahu what his go-to McDonald’s order is. They raved about the nightlife in Tel Aviv. (“Tel Aviv is lit!”) The closest they came to asking a critical question was when Nelk Boy Kyle Forgeard said that “I’ll see or read stuff on X and people will say, like Israel is killing babies or they’re starving people,” to which Netanyahu just replied “That’s completely false.” (It is true.) Forgeard admitted during the episode that “I see so much stuff about what’s going on in Israel and Iran and Palestine, and to be honest, I just really don’t know what is going on there.” That certainly showed.
The Nelk Boys received an overwhelmingly negative response to their interview from their own followers. Haaretz reports that the “manosphere exploded with condemnation over their failure to critically question Netanyahu, as well as their decision to platform the prime minister.” The Nelk Boys seemed somewhat chastened, noting that one of their fans said “having Netanyahu on is like having a modern-day Hitler on.” He admitted that “honestly, it's a good point. We're here to fucking learn, to be honest.” “I really wish I, personally, went at him harder,” said Nelk Boy Aaron Steinberg. They admitted they had been given scripted questions by Netanyahu’s staff. Elsewhere the Nelks said “We are so not qualified to do this. That's what’s interesting about this, we should just not be doing this." But they also deployed the argument that the viewers should simply make up their own minds:
“Sure, we’re probably not the best at asking questions. We’re not the best journalists, we never claimed to be, so we might not be the best at pressing them, but in my opinion, it’s up to the viewer to form their own educated opinion.”
“We’re probably not the best at asking questions” is a good candidate for the Understatement of the Century award. But this Nelk’s view that audiences should “form their own opinion” reflects a common mistake about the role of an interviewer. The audience can only make up its opinion based on what they are exposed to. If they’re not exposed to counterarguments, they’re not going to be able to reach an informed conclusion. The interviewer’s job is to get the facts out on the table so that the audience is able to have an “educated” view on the subject.
This is especially important when the person you are talking to is a head of state. Government officials lie and spin the facts, and they are very good at it, so an audience is not necessarily going to know when they’re being misled. The questioner must therefore cut through the evasions and half-truths and make the politician squarely face the truth. They will still evade, deflect, and mislead, but their evasions will at least be pointed out.
There are good interviewers working today. For example, look at how Mehdi Hasan has confronted figures like Erik Prince and Vivek Ramaswamy. One of the rules he lays out in his book Win Every Argument is that you must always “bring receipts”—do your research so that when someone says something false, you have the evidence showing that it’s false. Even Piers Morgan can be quite a good interviewer—witness how he grills Israel’s ambassador to the UK, and doesn’t let her get away with denying that Israel is killing children in Gaza. Morgan, importantly, will not let the ambassador change the subject, and is willing to ask a question over and over in an attempt to get a straight answer. (British journalists are famous for this. Witness Jeremy Paxman asking the same question 12 times in 90 seconds because a politician won’t answer it.)
Unfortunately, the Nelk Boys are not unique in being completely unprepared to interview political leaders. A number of independent podcasters who have interviewed Donald Trump and JD Vance have been similarly unwilling to do the basic research necessary to carry out an interviewer’s job. These podcasters do not consider themselves right-wing, and in fact hold many left-leaning viewpoints, but because they have totally failed in the task of studying the issues they’re having conversations about, they end up spreading unchecked propaganda.
Look at the kinds of questions that Lex Fridman asked Donald Trump, for instance:
What drives you more, the love of winning or the hate of losing?
You’ve been close with a lot of the greats in sport. You think about Tiger Woods, Muhammad Ali, you have people like Michael Jordan, who I think hate losing more than anybody. So what do you learn from those guys?
You’ve said that politics is a dirty game… So if it is a game, how do you win at that game?
You’ve been successful in business, you’ve been successful in politics. What do you think is the difference between gaining success between the two different disparate worlds?
How do you think you’ll do in the debate coming up, that’s in a few days?
You will not be surprised to learn that Trump thinks he will do well in the debate! From these ludicrous softballs, we learn nothing whatsoever of value about how Trump will govern the country. But even when Fridman approaches the realm of a substantive question, he allows Trump to get away with unbelievable bullshit. For instance, when Fridman says “Let me ask you about Project 2025. So you’ve publicly said that you don’t have any direct connection to—” Trump cuts him off, says he has nothing to do with Project 2025, and Fridman moves on. (After being elected, Trump appointed several of the project’s architects to key positions, and it is now estimated that nearly half of Project 2025 has already been implemented.) A good interviewer would have gone through Project 2025 item by item, demanding more clarity on whether Trump actually disagreed with the goals of Project 2025, and asking which parts of it Trump would specifically pledge not to implement.
Similarly, when Fridman asked another question that could have led to a substantive discussion (“how do we avoid war with China in the 21st century?”), Trump replied with one of the most worthless loads of vacuous verbiage I’ve ever heard:
Well, there are ways. Now here’s the problem. If I tell you how and I’d love to do it, but if I give you a plan, I have a very exacting plan how to stop Ukraine and Russia. And I have a certain idea, maybe not a plan, but an idea for China. Because we do, we’re in a lot of trouble. They’ll be in a lot of trouble too, but we’re in a lot of trouble. But I can’t give you those plans because if I give you those plans, I’m not going to be able to use them, they’ll be very unsuccessful. Part of it is surprise, right?
Oh, how compelling! As with Ukraine, a special secret plan! Just trust him! A real interviewer might have asked some follow-up questions like: What specific steps would you implement to reduce the risk of an arms race between the U.S. and China? Is China right to believe the U.S. wants to curtail its economic power in Asia? How can the U.S. maintain a commitment to Taiwanese democracy without taking steps that make China more likely to move to retake the island? Of course, Trump would have met these with more empty, muddled nonsense, but a good interviewer would not simply let go. Fridman simply replied: “Right.”
Joe Rogan was no better at interviewing Trump. In fact, he was much worse, because he ended up agreeing with a lot of Trump’s most egregious nonsense. Fridman at least tried to imply he was skeptical of Trump’s allegations of widespread election fraud in 2020, even if he hadn’t done the research necessary to refute Trump’s wild claims. Rogan and Trump, on the other hand, appeared to be playing a game of “bullshit tennis” in which turns are taken tossing ill-informed opinions back and forth. Here they are talking about wind power:
ROGAN:
I went to a ranch in south Texas. We had to drive past this enormous windmill farm, and it's gross. It's dystopian. You're looking in the left and the right and all you see is these big spinning machines that aren't even that effective at generating electricity.
TRUMP:
Correct. Most expensive form of electricity is a windmill, and then they start to rust and rot.
ROGAN:
And you have to replace them.
TRUMP:
And then they get abandoned by the people that built them because—
ROGAN:
Well, you have to get rid of all that material too. When you replace those blades, now you have a problem because you have to dispose.
TRUMP:
You can't bury them.
ROGAN:
Right. You have to dispose [of] these enormous windmills. And how do you dispose of them?
TRUMP:
By the way, they say you can't bury them. So, I even questioned that, but I'm not gonna get into it. But they say you can't bury them. So you have the blades and you can't bury the blades. You can bury the blades. It's not gonna matter…You'll find areas you can bury. But they come up, this is what I mean, they come up with this, but the environmentalist dream is windmills everywhere. You know what happens to them? After five years, they start to rot. After 10 years, you have to replace them. Did you ever look at certain parts of California where they have heavy windmills and they've been abandoned and they're all different manufacturers and all different companies and they all—
How about in New Jersey? Off the coast of New Jersey, they wanna build, the people are going crazy not to build them. But where you have them, the whales are washing up on shore. So in 50 years they had one whale come ashore. Now they had like 18 come in the last year.
ROGAN:
What is happening with the whales? I've read about this.
TRUMP:
Well, they say that the wind drives them crazy. It's a vibration because you have those—those things are 50 story buildings, some of them. Fifty!
ROGAN:
Right. And they're super sensitive to vibrations and sounds.
TRUMP:
The wind is rushing, the things are blowing. It's a vibration and it makes noise. You know what it is? I want to be a whale psychiatrist. It drives the whales frickin' crazy and something happens with them. But for whatever reason, they're getting washed up on shore. And yet the environmentalists—
ROGAN:
Conveniently ignored by the environmental people.
Yeah, it’s “conveniently ignored by the environmental people” because it’s bogus! Here’s Trump’s own NOAA (National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) saying that “there is no scientific evidence that noise resulting from offshore wind site characterization surveys could potentially cause whale deaths. There are no known links between large whale deaths and ongoing offshore wind activities.” And it’s totally false that wind power is “the most expensive form of electricity.” In fact, wind and solar are the cheapest sources of new power. It’s true that used turbine blades create waste, but that’s a problem that’s being addressed through innovating new ways to recycle blades, and the waste of used turbine blades has to be weighed against the severe damage done by burning fossil fuels. You can’t just look at used turbine blades and say “well, guess wind power is more harmful.” Does Rogan take a moment to challenge Trump on any of this? No, they just sit there talking about how stupid environmentalists are, when Rogan and Trump are the ones who don’t know what they’re talking about.
These interviewers are not just bad because of how they deal with the subjects they’re asking about. They’re also bad because they pick bad subjects. Fridman asked Trump about UFOs and psychedelics, for instance, but did not bring up the single most important issue that the president has decision-making power over: the climate crisis. Now, Trump is doing everything he can to escalate global warming. He made no secret of this on the campaign trail. He wanted to rip up all regulation on fossil fuel use. This is imperiling humanity’s future! You have a climate change denialist running for office, sitting in front of you, and you’re not going to ask him about the fact that he’s in complete denial about the most important problem facing the entire planet?! What’s wrong with you? What kind of worm has eaten your brain?
We know that Rogan knows full well about climate change. He once challenged Candace Owens in an interview about it, and was skilled at exposing her limited knowledge of the scientific evidence. So why isn’t he asking Trump why he’s actively committed to worsening the most serious problem facing humankind? Isn’t that something an interviewer probably ought to want an answer on? But I’ve come to expect very little from a man who thinks Atlantis was real.
The same problem of ill-preparation was evident when Theo Von spoke to JD Vance. Now, Von seems like a guy with a good heart. He’s been moved by the suffering of people in Gaza and has even called Israel’s actions there a genocide. To his credit, he brought the subject up with Vance, saying:
It feels like a massacre and it feels like, you know, I’ve called it a genocide, other people have different thoughts about it, and that’s fine. Right? And I don’t need anybody to share the same thoughts or you to… But I think where it gets scary is that we give, you know, we’re complicit in it because we help fund, like, military stuff…Sometimes it feels like we look out for the interest of Israel before we look out for the interest of America.
Now, this isn’t that elegantly stated (“like, military stuff”) but it’s a heck of a lot better than Fridman did with Trump. Vance, predictably, replied with some bullshit, saying that “If you have a soul, your heart should break when you see a little kid who’s suffering,” but saying that he rejects the claim of genocide because Israel isn’t “purposely trying to go in and murder every Palestinian.”
A prepared interviewer would follow up, and point out a few things. First, you don’t have to be trying to murder “every” member of a group in order to commit genocide. According to international law, genocide can involve the attempt to eliminate a group “in part.” Frequently, Israel’s defenders make the claim that the death toll would be higher if Israel was trying to commit genocide in Gaza, which amounts to saying that so long as you leave most members of a group alive, you cannot be committing genocide. But that’s not true, and we can immediately see why it’s not true by thinking about the Holocaust. If Hitler had only tried to reduce the Jewish population by 40 percent, would he still have been genocidal? Of course. If he had tried to eliminate ten percent of Jews, would he have been genocidal? Absolutely. A good interviewer would have gone through the evidence that shows Israel has gone beyond targeting Hamas and has intentionally made Gaza uninhabitable as part of a project of collective punishment and ethnic cleansing, whose ultimate goal is to drive the surviving Palestinians out and repopulate the Strip. This is a goal that many Israeli politicians announce openly and the government no longer bothers to deny.
Theo Von is better than Rogan, Fridman, and the Nelks, in that he seems to have a decent amount of common sense and empathy. (He’s a Bernie fan!) But it’s very clear he’s out of his depth talking to someone like JD Vance, a brilliant politician who has mastered the art of talking eloquently while saying very little. It takes a good interrogator, armed with facts, stats, and research, to deal with such a person.
Look, I wouldn’t want to interview JD Vance myself without a lot of prep-work. You have to go into these things understanding that politicians are trying to spin you, and they’re good at it. Unfortunately, these “independent” podcasters speak to odious right-wing figures and are terrible at challenging them. Sometimes that’s because, as with Rogan and Trump, they actually share the prejudices and misconceptions of the right-wing political figure. Other times, as with Von, they disagree with the right-wing figure, but haven’t read enough books or practiced the art of critical questioning. The result is a catastrophe for public understanding of the issues. I have no objection to these men podcasting. But I would beg them to stick to the issues they’re competent on. Drugs and exercise for Rogan, machine learning for Fridman, comedy for Von, and idiotic pranks for the Nelk Boys.
Source: https://www.axios.com/2025/07/28/trump-starvation-gaza-israel-netanyahu