Shrink The Nation

Old Crow in a Gold Bottle: Confidence, Competence, and the Cost of Pretend

54 min · 5. maj 2026
episode Old Crow in a Gold Bottle: Confidence, Competence, and the Cost of Pretend cover

Beskrivelse

In Season 2, Episode 17, Dr. David and Dr. Rob start with Old Crow in a fancy bottle and end up with the central problem of American politics right now: putting confidence in the place where competence is supposed to go. Trump sold himself as the guy who could fix the vacuum, clean the house, and somehow rebuild the engine by throwing tools at it. But salesmanship is not governance. Certainty is not strategy. And a gold bottle does not make bad bourbon better. This episode looks at why people mistake confidence for competence, how systems lose their ability to correct error, and why Congress keeps acting like the drunk friend’s buddies who keep buying him shots instead of taking away the car keys. It’s about political corruption, learned helplessness at scale, broken institutional guardrails, and the part citizens still have left: using their voice before the tax on laziness gets any more expensive

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Alle episoder

53 episoder

episode Hopium, Hormuz, and the Price of Pretend cover

Hopium, Hormuz, and the Price of Pretend

In Season 2, Episode 19, Dr. David and Dr. Rob return after a week off, bruised by life and bourbon, to talk about the psychology of pretending physics does not apply. The war with Iran may be getting described as something other than a war, but oil still has to move through the Strait of Hormuz. Gas still costs more. Markets still keep responding to promises, vibes, and whatever gets bleated out next. Rob calls it hopium: the belief that if enough people say the crisis is almost over, maybe the supply chain will stop being real. David and Rob get into market denial, magical thinking, regime-change fantasy, the cost of ego, and why “we’re close to a deal” starts sounding a lot like a guy installing a sex swing for his wife’s boyfriend. Also: Jefferson’s Ocean, shattered bourbon bottles, the International Energy Agency acronym disaster, Trump’s self-settlement fund, and RFK Jr.’s tanning-bed energy.

26. maj 202659 min
episode When the Joke Is the Test cover

When the Joke Is the Test

In Season 2, Episode 18, Dr. David and Dr. Rob look at what happens when taboo ideas get dressed up as jokes. The episode starts with reports of young Republican group chats using Nazi language and imagery, then follows the familiar escape hatch: it was just a joke, stop overreacting, why are you censoring us? From there, David and Rob get into taboo laundering, the Overton window, peer pressure, group loyalty, and why private organizations still have a responsibility to police their own mess before pretending everyone else is the problem. Also discussed: FBI bourbon swag, Woodford Reserve, the Poodle Room, ceasefires that apparently still involve firing, and David’s proposed brave new movement: anti-Nazi, anti-rape, anti-murder. Controversial stuff, apparently. This is not about banning ugly speech. It is about noticing when a group starts making ugly speech socially safe.

12. maj 202651 min
episode Old Crow in a Gold Bottle: Confidence, Competence, and the Cost of Pretend cover

Old Crow in a Gold Bottle: Confidence, Competence, and the Cost of Pretend

In Season 2, Episode 17, Dr. David and Dr. Rob start with Old Crow in a fancy bottle and end up with the central problem of American politics right now: putting confidence in the place where competence is supposed to go. Trump sold himself as the guy who could fix the vacuum, clean the house, and somehow rebuild the engine by throwing tools at it. But salesmanship is not governance. Certainty is not strategy. And a gold bottle does not make bad bourbon better. This episode looks at why people mistake confidence for competence, how systems lose their ability to correct error, and why Congress keeps acting like the drunk friend’s buddies who keep buying him shots instead of taking away the car keys. It’s about political corruption, learned helplessness at scale, broken institutional guardrails, and the part citizens still have left: using their voice before the tax on laziness gets any more expensive

5. maj 202654 min
episode Just a Guy: Power, Loyalty, and the Refusal to Be Checked cover

Just a Guy: Power, Loyalty, and the Refusal to Be Checked

Dr. David and Dr. Rob look at what happens when political power stops treating checks and balances as legitimate constraints and starts treating them as personal insults. The episode starts with Trump’s tariff refunds: companies can now apply to get money back after part of the tariff structure was struck down, but Trump has suggested he will “remember” who asks for refunds. From there, David and Rob trace the bigger pattern: symbolic victories, loyalty tests, humiliation, institutional erosion, and the strange danger of surrounding one person with people who keep saying yes. This is not about diagnosing anyone. It is about the psychology of power when friction disappears. When courts, Congress, advisers, agencies, and even reality itself are treated as obstacles to be managed, the system starts bending around one person’s need to look undefeated. And underneath all of it is the simplest corrective available: he is just a guy.

28. apr. 202653 min