The Architecture of American Power
Federalism, Political Parties, and American Identity (TP Newsroom White Paper Series)
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ナレーター:
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Malcholm Reese Jr
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著者:
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Malcholm Reese
このコンテンツについて
This book examines how authority in the United States is organized, how it shifted over time, and why the system now feels unstable and adversarial regardless of which party holds power. It is not about elections or candidates. It is an examination of how the system itself works and how it drifted away from the balance it was designed to maintain.
At its core, the book focuses on federalism. It explores how power was meant to be shared between the federal government and the states, how that balance was intended to slow conflict and force negotiation, and how repeated national crises altered that relationship.
The Republican and Democratic parties did not arrive at their modern roles by accident. Their approaches to power evolved in response to war, economic collapse, civil rights struggles, and institutional pressure. Both adapted to the incentives they faced, and neither restored the balance the system depended on. Over time, emergency measures became permanent. Federal authority expanded as trust in institutions declined. Courts, agencies, and executive power increasingly replaced legislation as the primary tools of governance.
This book does not argue that one party is right and the other wrong. It shows how escalation replaced resolution and how political dysfunction reflects a failure of structure rather than ideology. It offers a framework for understanding why American politics feels the way it does and why that understanding matters before change is possible.
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