Transcript: Trump’s Bilateral Meeting w/ the Emir of the State of Qatar in Evian https://t.co/PtQuyKblMK via @SingjuPost
REPORTER: "Are you frustrated with Netanyahu, sir?"
PRESIDENT TRUMP: "No. We had a great relationship. We're talking about some end details. I didn't like that he did an attack based on a — you know, there was a very minor little thing with some drones that were released. And he ends up doing a very — I saw that attack. I saw where that bomb went. Did you see what happened? That was not — that was a vicious — that was too much. You know, you can do too much also. But we've had a very effective relationship."
"Without us — without the United States, there would be no Israel. Without me, there would be no Israel, because no other President was willing to do what I did. I've had a great relationship with Bibi, but now Bibi has to be more responsible with respect to Lebanon."
Founder Mindset: w/ Reese Witherspoon on Hello Sunshine (Transcript) https://t.co/jYaAuEk7In via @singjupost
REESE WITHERSPOON: "So I always had this idea that no one's coming to save me. I didn't have a financial safety net. My parents were loving and kind, but they didn't have the means to send me to college. I knew I was going to have to do it on my own, and if I didn't succeed, there wasn't anybody coming to save me."
"So when I ended up going to Stanford, about a year in, I realized I couldn't pay the tuition. It was costing, I remember it was $33,000 a year."
On Purpose: w/ Dr. Ramani Durvasula on Family Estrangement (Transcript) https://t.co/FdAtUHmg6t via @SingjuPost
JAY SHETTY: "Can you please define what no contact means?"
DR. RAMANI DURVASULA: "It's just what it sounds like. It's no more contact. It's no more digital contact. It's no more in-person contact. You're not taking that person's calls. You're not showing up to where they are. It's almost like the death of a relationship even while the people are living."
Jeffrey Sachs: US-Iran Deal Reached - Peace or Tactical Pause? (Transcript) https://t.co/xsqOPBhTn4 via @singjupost
Professor Jeffrey Sachs: "So if I could put it in ancient terms, the Roman Empire was an expansionist empire through Augustus and through the 1st century AD. And then it reached its limits. Of course, it reached its limits in Germania early on in the Battle of Teutoburg Forest."
"When the Roman Empire decided "we won't conquer Germania," that painful loss happened early on. I think it's in 9 AD, if I remember correctly. But after that, the Romans said, "We're not going to really fight in Germania, we're going to hold a line.""
"Then by the time Hadrian became the emperor, I think it's 117 AD, he said, "We've reached the limits of the empire. We'll live in peace, or maybe we'll battle on our borders a bit, skirmishing, but we're not going to expand."
Frank Dikötter and the True History of Communist China (Transcript) https://t.co/IY8ShvM4vD via @singjupost
FRANK DIKÖTTER: "A small number of historians have used a volume or two. But overall, very little of it has been read. So I guess my answer is: go and ask them. Also, when it comes to post-'49, how come others don't use these archives as extensively as I have? Go and ask them. It is not my problem."
"But there is an issue. For instance, these sources are fundamental, but there are sources in Russian, which are also absolutely fundamental. You cannot understand the rise of the Communist Party of China from '21 to '49 if you do not have access to the material that circulated between the Comintern, established in 1919, and the Communist Party of China — in Russian. And you can buy it, you can read it. It's about 5 volumes, each 1,000 pages. But if you don't read Russian, then quite frankly you shouldn't even try to do the history of modern China."
In Depth: w/ Kobe Bryant on NBA Journey (2012) (Transcript) https://t.co/pFxDpyg2v5 via @SingjuPost
GRAHAM BENSINGER: "Is there something you're most excited about?"
KOBE BRYANT: "Well, yeah, I think just seeing the expression on kids' faces now that they have a place to kind of go in and to kick back and to relax and to kind of feel at home. Yeah, I think that's the most thrilling part."
Tucker Carlson Show: w/ Trita Parsi on Iran Peace Deal, Israel’s Nightmare (Transcript) https://t.co/S6zUgbVYlJ via @SingjuPost
On US-Iran Peace Deal:
TUCKER CARLSON: "Straits open, some of Iran's cash gets unfrozen. What else in the deal?"
TRITA PARSI: "And then, of course, after that, the real stuff begins in terms of the negotiations over the nuclear issue. But one other thing that will happen before that is what the Iranians have insisted on, and I think the administration correctly agreed to, which is that there has to be a regional ceasefire. For this to be an end to the war, it cannot allow for other wars to continue in the region that can drag the US and Iran back into it."
"And this is where also the biggest weakness or vulnerability of this deal is, because it means that the United States has to constrain Israel, and the Iranians are going to have to constrain Hezbollah. And we saw just hours before the announcement of the deal that the Israelis did everything they could to sabotage the deal by attacking southern Beirut, which they knew was a red line for the US and a red line for the Iranians."
Diary Of A CEO: w/ Dr. Darren Candow on Creatine (Transcript) https://t.co/yB748A6WD7 via @SingjuPost
STEVEN BARTLETT: "So are we deficient in creatine?"
DR. DARREN CANDOW: "There are small populations with— unfortunately, they were born with the inability to synthesize creatine. They would have a deficiency and they are required to take supplementation."
"The other unique population is vegans and vegetarians. So vegan and vegetarian diet is extremely healthy. The downfall, though, is they're not getting any dietary creatine because creatine is only found in animal-based flesh. So red meat, seafood, and poultry. They're naturally synthesizing about 1 to 2, maybe even 3 grams a day through amino acids in their food."
"But vegans and vegetarians respond literally the best on the planet because now they're taking in a supplement to allow that in."
Raj Shamani FO521: w/ Nobel Laureate Abhijit Banerjee - India’s Economy, Poverty, GDP & AI (Transcript) https://t.co/47WoadGdI3 via @singjupost
RAJ SHAMANI: "But so we are 6th in the world, 6th largest economy, and yet we have one of the world's most poorest populations in the country. How are both of those things true at the same time?"
ABHIJIT BANERJEE: "But for poverty, what matters is per capita income. And we're still very poor in per capita income. Because it's not — we have a gigantic economy, but we have an even more gigantic population. So once you do the division, you get to where the real meat is."