Ep. 11 - Fall 2025: Tragedy, Power Plays & Missed Priorities
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Headlines fought for attention all fall, but only a few moments truly shifted the ground. We open with the hardest one: the assassination of Charlie Kirk and what political violence steals from public life. You don’t have to share his views to feel the loss of a sharp, prepared voice who pushed hard debates onto campuses. When fear silences argument, fewer people step into the arena, and our civic muscles weaken. That is a cost no party should accept.
From there, we walk through the 43-day federal shutdown, the longest on record, and the perverse incentives that made it possible. SNAP interruptions, FAA disruptions, and a month-plus of uncertainty set a new low bar for “toughness.” If a shutdown used to be the fire alarm everyone ran to put out, it’s now background noise leaders exploit to rally their bases. We talk about how that happened, why the wins were illusory, and what it would take to make governing outcomes, not optics, the metric again.
Election night energy delivered predictable results: Democrats strong in blue-leaning states, momentum headlines, and fresh talk of flipping the House. We frame it as a treadmill, intense effort, little policy movement, then pivot to the story that ate the cycle: the Epstein files. The facts are grim and the unanswered questions real, but the frenzy drowned out the high-stakes work we keep postponing: a $38 trillion federal debt and rising interest costs, a stressed farm economy at harvest’s end, tariff policies acting like broad taxes without clear success metrics, and AI’s rapidly growing footprint of data centers, power draw, and jobs. These are solvable problems if we define goals, timelines, and tradeoffs.
A surprising spark came from culture, with Billy Bob Thornton calling himself a “radical moderate” on a major show. That phrase captures the spirit we push for: argue hard from facts, measure what matters, and make deals that stick. If more of us reward that approach, by clicks, shares, and votes, shutdown theater loses its audience and real policy gains the stage.
Subscribe, share with a friend who’s tired of outrage loops, and leave a review with one priority you want on the 2026 agenda.