Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast – Details, episodes & analysis

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Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast

Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast

Dr. Roy Casagranda

Education
History
Government

Frequency: 1 episode/6d. Total Eps: 18

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The Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast is dedicated to unerasing the erased peoples of the world. Too often, history is written by the powerful, leaving entire communities, cultures, and truths out of the dominant narrative. This show seeks to tell those stories.

Through these conversations, Dr. Roy digs for the truth, weeds out misinformation, and challenges conventional wisdom. The conversations span politics, world history, philosophy, and culture, always with an eye toward justice and a deeper understanding of where we've been, where we are, and where we are heading. 

This is the official podcast of Dr. Roy Casagranda and Sekhmet Liminal Productions, FZCO.

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The Origins of the Syrian Crisis

Season 1 · Episode 12

jeudi 6 novembre 2025Duration 01:50:41

The Syrian Civil War didn’t begin in 2011; it began centuries earlier. Dr. Roy explores how the legacy of empire, the carving up of the Middle East after World War I, and repeated Western interference destabilized Syria and Iraq long before the Arab Spring. Along the way, Dr. Roy connects the dots between the fall of the Ottoman Empire, the Sykes-Picot Agreement, the CIA’s 1949 coup in Damascus, the rise of pan-Arabism, and the creation of ISIS. 

Takeaways:

  • Why the Arab Empire’s collapse and the rise of the Ottoman Empire set the stage for modern fragmentation.
  • How the 1916 Sykes-Picot Agreement divided the Middle East into artificial borders serving European interests.
  • The British and French betrayal of Arab independence after World War I - and the creation of Iraq, Syria, and Jordan as “made-up” states.
  • How the CIA’s 1949 assassination of Syria’s democratically elected leader shattered the country’s early democracy.
  • The rise and fall of pan-Arabism and the short-lived United Arab Republic (1958-1961).
  • U.S. and Soviet competition for influence in the region during the Cold War, including coups and proxy wars. 
  • How the 2003 Iraq War, U.S. sanctions, and failed interventions paved the way for ISIS’s emergence.
  • The Syrian Civil War, the refugee crisis, and how global powers continue to fuel instability today.

Resources & References:

Beyond the podcast: 

How Islam Saved Western Civilization

Season 1 · Episode 11

mercredi 29 octobre 2025Duration 01:58:59

Western civilization didn’t vanish when Rome fell - it moved east. Dr. Roy explores how the libraries of Persia, Egypt, and Baghdad became the true heirs of the ancient world. From the Great Library of Alexandria to the Academy of Gundishapur, from Persian mathematicians to Arab engineers, this episode traces how Islamic civilization safeguarded humanity’s collective knowledge through centuries of turmoil. Dr. Roy connects forgotten innovations, the scientific method, algebra, optics, medicine, philosophy, and shows how the Islamic Golden Age laid the groundwork for modern science, governance, and thought.

Takeaways:

  • The myth of Rome’s “fall” in 476 AD, and why civilization actually shifted, not collapsed.
  • How the Great Library of Alexandria inspired centuries of learning that continued under Persian and Islamic rule.
  • The creation of the world’s first Bill of Rights by Cyrus the Great, predating the Magna Carta by two millennia.
  • How the Academy of Gundishapur became a bridge between Greek, Indian, Persian, and Chinese knowledge.
  • Why Arab scholars like Alhazen, Al-Khwarizmi, and Avicenna revolutionized optics, mathematics, and medicine.
  • How Islamic thinkers preserved Aristotle and Plato, and later reintroduced them to Europe through Spain and Sicily.
  • The invention of algebra, algorithms, and the scientific method centuries before the Renaissance.
  • Why Western history omits the Islamic Golden Age, and how recognizing it changes our understanding of progress.

Resources & References:

Beyond the podcast: 

Leaders Who Shaped the Future

Episode 2

mercredi 10 septembre 2025Duration 01:02:46

Why does leadership matter, and how do small decisions ripple across the future? Dr. Roy begins with the hidden dangers of implicit bias, from medicine to global politics, before diving into the story of Theodore Roosevelt. From cowboy adventurer to America’s youngest president, Roosevelt’s choices reshaped U.S. foreign policy, transformed the presidency, and continue to influence what leadership looks like today.

Takeaways:

  • How implicit bias influences medical treatment, politics, and global perceptions, often without people realizing it.
  • Why Roosevelt’s rise from “Rough Rider” to president was more accidental than planned, and how he built power without party backing.
  • The role of “shuttle diplomacy” in shaping U.S. foreign policy and Roosevelt’s Nobel Peace Prize.
  • Roosevelt’s domestic reforms, from breaking up Standard Oil to reshaping football safety rules.
  • The darker side of his presidency, including the war in the Philippines and his failure to support child labor reform.
  • Why Roosevelt’s approach to foreign policy still echoes in the American presidency today.

Resources & References:

Beyond the podcast: 

This lecture was originally recorded at the Museum of the Future for the series Lessons from the Past (2025).

The 1,000-year Legacy of Ibn Sina

Season 1 · Episode 1

mercredi 10 septembre 2025Duration 59:42

Known as the “Father of Modern Medicine,” Ibn Sina was a Persian polymath whose writings transformed science, philosophy, and ethics. In this episode, Roy traces the turbulent world Ibn Sina lived in, the intellectual traditions that shaped him, and the groundbreaking discoveries that continue to impact our lives today.

Takeaways:

  • The political and cultural backdrop of Ibn Sina’s time, including the collapse of empires and the rise of learning centers like the House of Wisdom.
  • Ibn Sina’s early genius: memorizing the Qur’an at 10, mastering philosophy as a teenager, and serving as a court physician by 17.
  • His most famous work, The Canon of Medicine, which introduced the revolutionary idea that diseases are distinct and can be prevented, not just cured.
  • His contributions to philosophy, including early ideas of entropy and the concept of a singularity, foreshadowing the modern Big Bang theory.
  • Why Ibn Sina’s legacy remains vital to medicine, science, and human knowledge.

Resources & References:

  • Ibn Sina, The Canon of Medicine (1025)
  • Secondary readings: Aristotle, Metaphysics; Euclid, Elements; Ptolemy, Almagest; Al-Farabi’s commentary on Aristotle; Writings preserved and translated through the House of Wisdom (Islamic Golden Age)

Beyond the podcast: 

This lecture was originally recorded at the Museum of the Future for the series Lessons from the Past (2025).

Introducing the Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast

mardi 2 septembre 2025Duration 00:41

History is never just the past. It’s the stories and people we choose to remember, and the ones we choose to erase.

Welcome to the Dr. Roy Casagranda Podcast: a space where history, politics, and culture are woven together to reveal the threads that connect us all. 

Dr. Roy believes everything we do as a species is linked: past to present, present to future, one culture to another. In this podcast, he traces those fibers across oceans and generations, uncovering how we arrived at this moment and what it means for where we’re headed. 

The goal? To better understand our shared humanity and ensure the future we’re building is one worth striving toward.

A Brief Overview of the U.S. Presidency

Season 1 · Episode 10

mercredi 22 octobre 2025Duration 01:56:32

What exactly is the job of the U.S. president? Dr. Roy traces the presidency from its constitutional origins through major turning points in U.S. history, exploring how each era redefined executive authority. He discusses the balance between leadership and restraint, the rise of presidential power through war and crisis, and how charisma, fear, and media have transformed the office into a symbol of national identity. 

Takeaways:

  • Why the Founders designed a limited executive branch after rejecting monarchy.
  • How George Washington set enduring precedents for presidential conduct.
  • The evolution of presidential powers through war, reconstruction, and industrialization.
  • The shift from congressional dominance to a “modern presidency” under Franklin D. Roosevelt.
  • The rise of the “imperial presidency” and executive overreach after World War II.
  • How media, from radio and TV to social platforms, reshaped public perception of leadership.
  • The tension between charisma and competence in presidential politics.
  • What the presidency’s evolution reveals about American democracy and its future.

Resources & References:

Beyond the podcast: 

World War II: Part X - Warsaw Ghetto Uprising

Season 1 · Episode 9

mercredi 15 octobre 2025Duration 01:30:30

*Listener discretion advised:

This episode contains descriptions of violence, genocide, and other traumatic historical events that may be disturbing to some listeners. Please use discretion and take care of yourself while listening. 

The Warsaw Ghetto Uprising was not just a fight for survival; it was a moral stand against annihilation. In April 1943, Jewish resistance fighters in Nazi-occupied Poland rose up against the SS after learning the truth: that deportations were not leading to “resettlement” but to extermination. Dr. Roy explores the deeper historical context, from centuries of pogroms and racial ideology to the rise of the Nazis and the Holocaust, and recounts the final days of the ghetto with unflinching honesty and transparency.

Takeaways:

  • The difference between patriotism and nationalism, and how nationalism enables genocide.
  • How centuries of antisemitism, from the Crusades to the Inquisition, laid the foundation for Nazi ideology.
  • The rise of scientific racism, eugenics, and the myth of the “master race.”
  • How the Warsaw Ghetto was created, starved, and ultimately revolted against Nazi occupation.
  • The heroism of the Jewish Fighting Organization (ŻOB) and Jewish Military Union (ŻZW).
  • The leadership of Mordechai Anielewicz and the moral courage of those who fought and died in the uprising.
  • Why much of the world, including Allied nations, turned away from the Holocaust until it was too late.
  • Lessons on moral responsibility and the danger of ignoring suffering today.

Resources & References

Beyond the podcast: 

World War II: Part 2 - Interwar Chaos

Season 1 · Episode 8

mercredi 8 octobre 2025Duration 01:19:25

When World War I ended, the fighting didn’t. Dr. Roy traces how a defeated Germany, shattered empires, and vengeful allies created the perfect storm for World War II. From the breakup of Austria-Hungary and the birth of the Weimar Republic to the hyperinflation crisis, communist revolutions, and Mussolini’s rise to power, this lecture explores how desperation, nationalism, and fear paved the road to fascism and war.

Takeaways:

  • Why the Treaty of Versailles and other postwar agreements humiliated Germany and destabilized Europe.
  • The disintegration of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and the messy redrawing of borders in Eastern Europe.
  • How Woodrow Wilson’s principle of “self-determination” applied selectively, empowering some nations while ignoring colonized peoples.
  • The birth of the League of Nations and why its failure doomed the hope of lasting peace.
  • The Russian Revolution, communist uprisings in Germany and Hungary, and the global spread of ideological warfare.
  • Germany’s postwar collapse: massive debt, reparations, and the infamous hyperinflation that destroyed the economy.
  • How economic despair and political chaos gave rise to new movements like Italian fascism under Mussolini and eventually Hitler’s Nazi Party.
  • The eerie parallels between Germany’s and Italy’s postwar struggles, and how veterans’ trauma and disillusionment fueled totalitarian politics.

Resources & References:

Beyond the podcast: 

World War II: Part 1 - World War I

Season 1 · Episode 7

mercredi 1 octobre 2025Duration 01:50:35

World War II didn’t appear out of nowhere. Dr. Roy begins by going back to the 18th and 19th centuries, explaining how the rise of the British Empire, the exploitation of India, the discovery of oil, and the unification of Germany set the stage for catastrophe. Along the way, he explores how nationalism spread through Europe, how industrialization and imperialism changed the global order, and why multipolar competition made world war almost inevitable.

Takeaways:

  • Understanding World War II requires examining the British Empire, German unification, and industrial capitalism.
  • How the Seven Years’ War, the American Revolution, and the conquest of India shaped British imperial dominance.
  • The role of oil in shifting global power, from Persia to Standard Oil and BP.
  • The unification of Germany and Italy, and the rise of nationalism after the French Revolution and Napoleon.
  • How the Revolutions of 1848 signaled the struggle between socialism and nationalism across Europe.
  • The collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the tangled alliances that destabilized Europe.
  • How competition, arms races, and colonial rivalries pushed the world into World War I, and why that war’s aftermath guaranteed another.
  • Why World War I was the worst war in history for soldiers, and how its horrors set the stage for even greater civilian suffering in World War II.

Resources & References:

Beyond the podcast: 

Modern Ideologies

Season 1 · Episode 6

mercredi 24 septembre 2025Duration 01:05:36

Ideologies are powerful tools, but also deeply flawed. Dr. Roy explains how the human brain processes fear and emotion, why leaders exploit hatred and fear to gain power, and more. From Napoleon’s use of nationalism, to socialism’s fight against capitalist exploitation, to the rise of liberalism and its sub-ideologies, Dr. Roy traces the evolution of modern politics. He also covers communism’s revolutionary promises, Mussolini’s fascism, and religious fundamentalism, while urging us to replace tolerance with a genuine celebration of others’ existence.

Takeaways:

  • How our brains filter information, and why fear and hatred mobilize voters better than reason.
  • The difference between factions and ideologies in monarchies versus electoral republics.
  • Nationalism: from Napoleon’s mobilization of the French Revolution to Nazi Germany.
  • Socialism: born as a pushback against capitalism’s harshness in 19th-century factories.
  • Liberalism: the ideology created to defend capitalism, with its four sub-branches (conservatism, populism, libertarianism, and liberalism).
  • Communism: a more radical socialist path advocating violent revolution for rapid change.
  • Fascism: Mussolini’s reaction to modernity and his dream of reviving the Roman Empire.
  • Fundamentalism: the religious equivalent of nationalism, rooted in superiority and intolerance.
  • Why ideology today is breaking down, with politics increasingly dominated by emotional manipulation rather than coherent ideas.

Resources & References:

Beyond the podcast: 

This lecture was originally recorded at the Museum of the Future for the series Lessons from the Past (2025).


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