The Daily History Chronicle

America's Most Violent Political Era - July 11, 1804

22 min · 11. juli 2026
episode America's Most Violent Political Era - July 11, 1804 cover

Beskrivelse

On July 11, 1804, the sitting Vice President of the United States shot and killed the former Treasury Secretary in a duel at dawn and then finished out his term in office. Most people know this story as a clash of two proud men. What they don't know is that it was the inevitable endpoint of a political era so venomous, so personally destructive, that it makes anything in modern American politics look mild by comparison. This episode of The Daily History Chronicle examines what the Burr-Hamilton duel really reveals: not about honor or ambition, but about what American democracy does to the people who run it and what it costs a republic when it can't contain the warfare it generates.

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episode When Democracy Voted Itself to Death - July 10, 1940 cover

When Democracy Voted Itself to Death - July 10, 1940

On July 10, 1940, the elected representatives of the French Third Republic gathered at a casino in the spa town of Vichy and voted 569 to 80 to hand dictatorial powers to an 84-year-old war hero named Philippe Pétain. No tanks. No coup. A democracy dismantled itself using democratic procedures in an afternoon. This episode explores the four truths that coexist inside that single vote: the terror and shock that made capitulation feel rational to hundreds of elected men; the 80 who said no and changed nothing; the war hero who believed he was saving France while helping destroy it, and the mechanism that political scientists now study as the original case of democratic suicide, a playbook that has been used again and again, in country after country, in the decades since.

I går22 min