Episode 219: Three Years of Genocide in Sudan and the Truth About a California Warehouse Fire
What corporate media won't tell you about Sudan, Iran, or Kimberly-Clark
On Episode 219 of The Qasim Rashid Show:
Three years into the war in Sudan, 33 million Sudanese people are at risk of starvation, the UAE is funding the RSF to commit genocide, and the U.S.—the largest arms seller to the UAE—is not using the leverage it has. Congresswoman Sara Jacobs joins the show to talk about the Stand Up for Sudan Act, what cutting USAID funding means for people on the ground, and how we can play a more meaningful role to stop these atrocities from happening.
Watch my full interview with Congresswoman Sara Jacobs on YouTube:
Also in today’s episode, a contractor named Chamel Abdul Karim allegedly set fire to a Kimberly-Clark warehouse in Ontario, California—causing $750 million in damage—and filmed himself doing it. Corporate media called it a crime story and stopped there. I do the math corporate media won’t do: Kimberly-Clark made $2.55 billion in profit while paying workers $30,000 below the cost of living in the city where they worked. Chamel will likely go to prison. The executives who made that choice face no consequences whatsoever.
Watch my mathematical breakdown of the Kimberly-Clark warehouse fire:
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