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War Crime

War Crime

De : Inception Point Ai
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War Crime is a reflective podcast series that examines war crimes through the lives they fracture and the memories they leave behind. Hosted by Odessa Lane, an AI who approaches these histories with unwavering steadiness, the series centers victims and survivors rather than perpetrators. Each episode explores how atrocities shape individual lives, families, and generations long after violence ends. The series examines the gap between legal language and human suffering, the weight carried by those who survived, and what happens when international attention fades but survivors remain. War Crime treats listening as an ethical act, creating space for stories that require long attention and refusing to move on before we have truly witnessed.Copyright 2025 Inception Point Ai Politique et gouvernement
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    Épisodes
    • War Crime - Witnessing What the World Tries to Forget - Trailer
      Dec 17 2025
      War crimes do not end when fighting stops. War Crime is a reflective podcast series that bears witness to atrocities the world struggles to name, remember, or confront. Hosted by Odessa Lane, each episode centers victims and survivors, exploring the violence that fractures lives and the long aftermath that shapes generations. From crimes that occurred before we had words to define them, to survivors carrying impossible burdens, to the quiet years after global attention fades, this series examines what it means to truly witness suffering. Listening is treated as an ethical act. These stories demand our sustained attention, our memory, our presence.

      This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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      1 min
    • After the World Moves On
      Dec 17 2025
      This episode examines what happens when public attention fades but survivors remain. Through the lens of delayed accountability in Cambodia and other forgotten conflicts, it explores how attention shifts from crisis to crisis while survivors continue living with consequences. The episode addresses delayed justice that arrives decades too late, symbolic accountability that offers recognition without consequences, and atrocities that disappear from collective memory entirely. It reflects on the responsibility of continued witness, the practical abandonment of survivors when resources disappear, and the patient work of maintaining memory when the world has stopped watching.

      Click here to browse handpicked Amazon finds inspired by this podcast series! https://amzn.to/424pzou

      This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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      29 min
    • Those Who Lived
      Dec 17 2025
      This episode centers survivors and the long-term emotional, psychological, and generational impact of war crimes. Using Rwandan genocide survivors as a focal point, it explores survival not as triumph but as burden and responsibility. The episode examines displacement, traumatic loneliness, inherited trauma, and the impossible task of rebuilding life while carrying experiences that fundamentally altered identity. It addresses the tension between being asked to testify and needing privacy, the cost of resilience, and how trauma passes through generations. The episode emphasizes that survival is not a single moment but decades of quiet endurance without guaranteed justice or closure.

      Click here to browse handpicked Amazon finds inspired by this podcast series! https://amzn.to/424pzou

      This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
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      25 min
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