Curious Machines
What if the fight over Prohibition in 1920s America followed the exact same political playbook as today's healthcare debates? In this episode, Alex Romano reveals the surprisingly identical patterns of coalition-building, cultural warfare, and unintended consequences that shaped both fights - and why politicians keep using this same strategy over and over. đŻ What You'll Learn: ⢠Why the federal government lost 30% of its revenue when alcohol became illegal (and how money drives policy more than morals) ⢠How women's suffrage activists teamed up with rural Protestants against urban immigrants - the original culture war coalition ⢠The shocking role anti-German sentiment played in targeting breweries during WWI, and what it reveals about scapegoating ⢠Why both Prohibition and healthcare debates split along the same urban vs. rural, immigrant vs. native-born lines đ¤ Perfect for: lifelong learners and anyone passionate about personal growth who wants to spot political patterns before they repeat themselves. đ Chapters: [00:00] Alex Romano introduces the Prohibition-healthcare connection [01:30] The money problem: how losing alcohol taxes changed everything [04:00] Strange bedfellows: women's rights meets religious conservatism [07:00] The immigrant scapegoat playbook that's still used today [10:00] Why geographic and cultural divides predict political battles [12:00] Key patterns you can spot in current debates This isn't just history - it's a blueprint for understanding how American politics actually works. You'll start noticing these same coalition patterns in everything from climate change to immigration debates. đ Never miss an episode: Follow Curious Machines on Spotify or Apple Podcasts and turn on notifications. New episodes drop daily - your next favorite insight is one tap away. đ Topics: prohibition history, political coalitions, healthcare debate, cultural warfare, American politics ----------- Keywords: brain psychology, science communication, human cognition, psychology podcast, science podcast, behavioral economics, human behavior Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices [https://megaphone.fm/adchoices]
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