Huey Long, Every Man a King
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概要
He wasn’t a president, but he may be the most dangerous almost-president in modern American political history. We’re joined by Barbara Sean Beinberg to unravel Huey Long’s rise in Louisiana and the seductive promise behind “Every Man Is A King” and “Share Our Wealth.” Long sells himself as a plainspoken champion, yet operates with a level of tactical brilliance that even his enemies struggle to dismiss.
We talk through the part of the story that still wins people over: roads that finally connect communities, toll-free bridges, expanded schools, free textbooks, and a state that feels like it’s catching up to the modern world. Then we follow the cost of that momentum as Long consolidates power, bends institutions, intimidates opponents, and treats the state like a personal machine. It’s a sharp reminder that populism can deliver real material gains while quietly eroding democracy, constitutionalism, and any meaningful separation of powers.
From there, we zoom out to the national stakes. Long’s redistribution pitch plays like a marketing campaign, his math draws criticism, and his planned 1936 challenge to FDR fuels fears that the US could slide toward authoritarian rule without ever looking like a classic dictatorship. We also cover his killing in the Louisiana Capitol, the lingering ballistics questions, and why the “near miss” still matters when people feel tempted to trade process for results.
If this made you think, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review. What’s the line where “gets things done” becomes too much power?
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