Strategy & Influence with Aran S. Brifkani

Book Bans, Abortion & Broken Politics: A Congressional Candidate Speaks Out

1 h 5 min · 16 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Book Bans, Abortion & Broken Politics: A Congressional Candidate Speaks Out

Descripción

What happens when a third-party activist decides to run for Congress as a Democrat in MO? In this episode, Dan joins us to trace his political journey — from his work with the Alliance Party and his podcast Democracy on the Move to his decision to enter the race in Missouri. We get into the realities of running a grassroots campaign, the funding hurdles outsiders face, and Dan's candid views on the two-party system, gerrymandering, and U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East. The conversation doesn't shy away from the hard stuff. Dan shares his perspective on book bans, education, and how schools should navigate gender identity — including where parental concerns and student rights collide. We also discuss abortion rights and the question of viability, and clarify the facts around non-citizen voting, informed by his wife's experience as a resident. Finally, Dan makes his case for what voters actually deserve from politicians: transparency, engagement, and accountability. His advice? Don't just trust — verify. In this episode: * Why Dan left third-party politics to run as a Democrat * The grassroots funding problem nobody talks about * Gerrymandering and the two-party stranglehold * Book bans and gender identity in schools * Abortion, viability, and women's rights * The truth about non-citizen voting * How to hold your representatives accountable 🎧 Listen now and decide for yourself.

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4 episodios

Portada del episodio Book Bans, Abortion & Broken Politics: A Congressional Candidate Speaks Out

Book Bans, Abortion & Broken Politics: A Congressional Candidate Speaks Out

What happens when a third-party activist decides to run for Congress as a Democrat in MO? In this episode, Dan joins us to trace his political journey — from his work with the Alliance Party and his podcast Democracy on the Move to his decision to enter the race in Missouri. We get into the realities of running a grassroots campaign, the funding hurdles outsiders face, and Dan's candid views on the two-party system, gerrymandering, and U.S. foreign policy in the Middle East. The conversation doesn't shy away from the hard stuff. Dan shares his perspective on book bans, education, and how schools should navigate gender identity — including where parental concerns and student rights collide. We also discuss abortion rights and the question of viability, and clarify the facts around non-citizen voting, informed by his wife's experience as a resident. Finally, Dan makes his case for what voters actually deserve from politicians: transparency, engagement, and accountability. His advice? Don't just trust — verify. In this episode: * Why Dan left third-party politics to run as a Democrat * The grassroots funding problem nobody talks about * Gerrymandering and the two-party stranglehold * Book bans and gender identity in schools * Abortion, viability, and women's rights * The truth about non-citizen voting * How to hold your representatives accountable 🎧 Listen now and decide for yourself.

16 de jun de 20261 h 5 min
Portada del episodio Who Benefits When Americans Hate Each Other? Outrage, Propaganda, and Political Division

Who Benefits When Americans Hate Each Other? Outrage, Propaganda, and Political Division

America’s biggest threat may not come from China, Iran, or any foreign enemy. It may be right here at home. In this episode, Aran Brifkani sits down with David Beckemeyer, host of Outrage Overload, to examine how outrage became one of the most powerful forces in American politics. They break down how algorithms, media incentives, political campaigns, influencers, and propaganda tactics shape what Americans fear, believe, share, and vote for. The conversation covers modern propaganda, political polarization, family division, online outrage, and why so many people now see their political opponents not just as wrong, but as dangerous. This episode is not about left versus right. It is about how Americans are being pulled into anger, how to recognize emotional manipulation, and what it would take to have better political conversations in a divided country. Topics include: Modern propaganda, political polarization, outrage media, algorithms, political identity, family division, ethical persuasion, media literacy, and how voters can think more clearly in a polarized world.

28 de may de 202655 min
Portada del episodio Socialism, Capitalism, and America’s Economic Future

Socialism, Capitalism, and America’s Economic Future

In this episode of The Political Game, Dr. Doug Cardell discusses the growing debate around socialism, capitalism, education, work, and the role of government in American life. Dr. Cardell explains why he believes more people need a clearer understanding of economic systems, especially as frustration over inflation, wages, education, and opportunity continues to shape modern politics. He makes the case for capitalism as a system that has historically driven innovation, improved living standards, and rewarded value creation, while also addressing difficult questions around inequality, safety nets, government assistance, and economic insecurity. The conversation also explores how political parties approach economic policy, why legislation is often more complex than voters realize, and how Americans can better adapt to a changing economy. Dr. Cardell shares his views on education reform, the future of work, H1B visas, data centers, libertarian ideals, and the tension between pure capitalism and practical governance. At its core, this episode is about the kind of economic system we want, the tradeoffs behind political promises, and how individuals can create value in a changing world. Takeaways Understanding the difference between economic systems is important because these systems shape opportunity, work, education, innovation, and government policy. Capitalism’s core strength is its ability to reward value creation, drive innovation, and improve living standards over time. Political parties do not always fit neatly into one economic category. In practice, their policies often mix capitalism, regulation, welfare programs, protectionism, and government intervention. Economic frustration is real, especially around inflation, wages, housing, education, and the cost of living. Government safety nets can help people in difficult situations, but they also raise hard questions about incentives, dependency, and long-term sustainability. The future of work requires people to adapt, build useful skills, and think differently about education and career paths. Dr. Cardell emphasizes the importance of finding your bliss while creating real value for others.

18 de may de 202659 min