Joe Rogan discussed how children provided clear footage of the ongoing war between Ukraine and Russia.
Earlier this week, Rogan released episode #2172 of 'The Joe Rogan Experience' featuring Sebastian Junger as the guest. Junger is an author, journalist, and filmmaker who focused on articulating various aspects of the brutal circumstances surrounding war and high-level combat.
During their conversation, Rogan and Junger discussed the Ukraine-Russia war. At one point, the UFC commentator had this to say about seeing high-resolution footage from the war due to children and young adults having the technology to show what's happening:
"These f*cking kids are filming things now, which is really crazy. The footage you get out of Ukraine right now is so nuts. It's so nuts because it's high-resolution cell phone cameras and GoPro footage."
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In February 2022, Russia officially waged war on Ukraine. Since then, Russia's Vladimir Putin has also claimed the United States as their enemy, due to the Joe Biden-run country offering financial assistance to Ukraine.
Watch Rogan's comments below starting at 23:40:
Joe Rogan questions when people worldwide will stop engaging in wars
The Ukraine-Russia conflict isn't the only violent war taking place in the world. The battle between Israel and Hamas has also become a controversial topic in many countries, including the United States, as most people have picked a side for various reasons and further divided the human race.
During the previously mentioned podcast episode, Joe Rogan asked Sebastian Junger about a hypothetical world without war. Rogan had this to say about conflict being "unavoidable" when people are in groups:
"When does the human race ever get out of this cycle? Individuals as human beings are capable of co-existing in harmony, but when we get into groups, there's always something. It's like unavoidable."
Joe Rogan's discussions about war are likely influenced by the United States' involvement in the Ukraine-Russia conflict. Russia's Vladimir Putin signed a treaty with North Korea's Kim Jong Un, creating concerns about whether we are getting closer to widely-discussed World War III.