[SOLVED] Can y'all help me find a copy of a lecture that appears to have been removed from Youtube?
The lecturer was Sarah C. M. Paine (works at the US Naval War College)
I believe the lecture host was The Heritage Foundation.
The lecture was focused on national strategies and motivations.
It touched on the differences between nations she described as maritime powers vs. geographic powers.
The part I'm most interested in watching again was her explanation of the compounding effects of economic sanctions over years/decades.
I believe this interview with Dwarkesh Patel touches on a lot of similar material
However I am 99% certain she delivered a very similar talk to The Heritage Foundation and the person I want to watch the video puts a lot more intellectual value into The Heritage Foundation than they do Dwarkesh Patel...
I'm also pretty sure I saved the heritage foundation video in one of my youtube playlists, but ... it's gone without a trace, and I'm finding no mention of it on The Heritage Foundation website now either.
Thanks and please let me know if I should post this under a more suitable topic.
Perhaps it was the Hudson Institute, which also names her by her nickname, Dr Sally Paine? Looks like there was at least a 7-part series of hers posted on their YT channel, but most of them are no longer found via search. I wonder if this one is the Continental and Maritime Power talk, or just an iteration of it. I can't listen to it at the moment to compare to the talk with Patel.
Edit: If your intended audience isn't thrilled with Patel or Hudson Institute, then maybe they would appreciate this article and accompanying podcast from the US Naval Institute.
I think you're on to something. It seems I conflated the Patel interview with the Hudson lecture and attributed it in my head to a Heritage Institute lecture... That's what I get for watching youtube as a way to fall asleep at night.
Thank you!!!
Have you tried searching wayback machine? It's most productive if you know the URL of the video you're trying to get. Perhaps if you have the link to the playlist you could start there, and see if it indexed the playlist with a list of the video URL's?
Can you remember any specific phrasing that might turn up an article or transcript?
@cfabbro thanks for adding the 'solved' tag - I didn't know that was a thing, excited to use it in the future.
YVW. :)