You Can't Find Real News Anymore

And you know it.

You open the news. You scan the headlines. And within seconds, you can tell exactly which way the outlet leans.

It's not even subtle anymore.

The same event gets reported completely differently depending on who's writing or talking about it. One source says it's the most important thing that's ever happened. Another barely mentions it. A third spins it as proof of whatever political point they were already trying to make.

You're not getting news. You're getting someone's opinion about the news, wrapped up in selective facts and emotional language designed to make you feel a certain way.

It's gotten so bad that you've stopped trusting anyone.

When a major international story breaks, you find yourself reading three or four different sources just to try to figure out what actually happened. Even then, you're left guessing which parts are real and which parts are spin.

You've noticed that reporters seem more interested in being activists than journalists. They don't just want to tell you what happened - they want to tell you what it means, how you should feel about it, and what you should do next.

Foreign affairs coverage is especially bad. Everything gets filtered through domestic politics. A complex situation involving multiple countries with their own interests somehow becomes a story about our political parties.

They're doing this on purpose. They know you want the truth, but they're betting you'll settle for their version of it because you don't have anywhere else to go.

You just want someone to tell you what's really going on.

No agenda. No bias. No emotional manipulation. No dishonesty.

Just: here's what happened, here's why it probably happened, and here's what it might mean.

Is that too much to ask?

There's a better way.

I spent years as an intelligence analyst, which means I got paid to figure out what was actually happening in different parts of the world. Not what I wished was happening. Not what would make for a good story. Just what was really going on.

Here's what I learned: most of the people writing about international affairs have no idea what they're talking about. They're journalists who learned about geopolitics from other journalists. They focus on press releases and official statements while ignoring how power actually works.

Countries don't make decisions based on ideals. They make decisions based on pressure, interests, and capabilities. Once you understand that, the noise fades away and the actual story becomes much clearer.

Now I write about geopolitics the way I analyzed it when it mattered. No corporate sponsors telling me what I can and can't say. No agenda except helping people understand what's really happening.

Twice a week, I break down the most important international developments and topics in plain English. I explain what the major players actually want, what they're capable of doing to get it, and what it means for the rest of us.

Try it free for 4 weeks.

If you find value in what I write, then it's a win-win. If not, no hard feelings - and you don't have to pay a dime.

At least then you'll know if there's still someone out there telling the truth.

What My Readers Are Saying

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"What I like about Geopolitics Insider is that they dig deeper than most. Very few publications can explain the intentions of geopolitical actors and predict their next moves in a such simple and yet comprehensive way."

★★★★★ Thomas M. - France

"I am in investment banking, and understanding political risk is important for my work. I am impressed by the quality of their insights and how actionable they are."

★★★★★ Somnath L. - USA

"Superb analysis. They connect the dots in a way that would put mainstream publications and media to shame."

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