They want, what, like a book sign . So you. And Annie Jacobsen, thank you very much for sitting down and talking about your book. Its a pleasure to meet you. Im delighted to have this opportunity. How are you feeling . Im delighted to be with you. So all the compliments back that you. It really is a pleasure. Thank you. Well, lets get right into this. This is a brilliant book. This isnt the right thing to say about a book. Nuclear war. But i really enjoyed reading it. It reads like a thriller. Youve taken policy and history and details and Nuclear Weapons effects and war games and wove them together into a page turner. I read this in about two days, just while taking extensive notes. So lets get right into one of your essential points of the book, which is the concept of nuclear. Dr. Strangelove tells us in the movie after him that deterrence, the art of instilling in the mind of the enemy, the fear attack. But in your hands deterrence almost becomes character in your book. It changes,
One of the most difficult things to do when youre considering becoming a whistleblower is taking on a giant international conglomerate. They have armies of lawyers, they often times have infiltrated government. They can afford to ignore local laws and just pay fines on the rare occasions that theyre caught violating the law or somebodys rights. And if an employee dares to confront them to take them on, especially in public, then its often times an all out of war to destroy the whistleblower. Thats exactly what our next guest faced. Im john kerry onto welcome to the whistle blowers the. 2 2 2 2 2 2 we are joined today by a major or International Business whistleblower. Shes going to tell us about her whistle blowing revelations in their aftermath, working against samsung in south africa. Its a story that will sound familiar to you. A story about waste, fraud abuse and illegality. But what makes this whistle . Blowers so important is what she chose to do. In the aftermath of her whistle
So you. And Annie Jacobsen, thank you very much for sitting down and talking about your book. Its a pleasure to meet you. Im delighted to have this opportunity. How are you feeling . Im delighted to be with you. So all the compliments back that you. It really is a pleasure. Thank you. Well, lets get right into this. This is a brilliant book. This isnt the right thing to say about a book. Nuclear war. But i really enjoyed reading it. It reads like a thriller. Youve taken policy and history and details and Nuclear Weapons effects and war games and wove them together into a page turner. I read this in about two days, just while taking extensive notes. So lets get right into one of your essential points of the book, which is the concept of nuclear. Dr. Strangelove tells us in the movie after him that deterrence, the art of instilling in the mind of the enemy, the fear attack. But in your hands deterrence almost becomes character in your book. It changes, morphs, and it almost has motivatio
And Annie Jacobsen, thank you very much for sitting down and talking about your book. Its a pleasure to meet you. Im delighted to have this opportunity. How are you feeling . Im delighted to be with you. So all the compliments back that you. It really is a pleasure. Thank you. Well, lets get right into this. This is a brilliant book. This isnt the right thing to say about a book. Nuclear war. But i really enjoyed reading it. It reads like a thriller. Youve taken policy and history and details and Nuclear Weapons effects and war games and wove them together into a page turner. I read this in about two days, just while taking extensive notes. So lets get right into one of your essential points of the book, which is the concept of nuclear. Dr. Strangelove tells us in the movie after him that deterrence, the art of instilling in the mind of the enemy, the fear attack. But in your hands deterrence almost becomes character in your book. It changes, morphs, and it almost has motivation. It be
So all the compliments back that you. It really is a pleasure. Thank you. Well, lets get right into this. This is a brilliant book. This isnt the right thing to say about a book. Nuclear war. But i really enjoyed reading it. It reads like a thriller. Youve taken policy and history and details and Nuclear Weapons effects and war games and wove them together into a page turner. I read this in about two days, just while taking extensive notes. So lets get right into one of your essential points of the book, which is the concept of nuclear. Dr. Strangelove tells us in the movie after him that deterrence, the art of instilling in the mind of the enemy, the fear attack. But in your hands deterrence almost becomes character in your book. It changes, morphs, and it almost has motivation. It becomes one of the central drives of your of your storyline. So please tell us how you think about the concept of Nuclear Deterrence and how it works in theory and in practice. I mean, thank you for that in