Byline with Ben Dennis

Is There Such a Thing as a Fair Election?

38 min · 12 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Is There Such a Thing as a Fair Election?

Descripción

Is there such a thing as a fair election? This week on Byline, Penn State mathematics professor Andrea Boito joins me to unpack the hidden math behind democracy — from ranked-choice voting and the Electoral College to apportionment, strategic voting, and why mathematicians say a perfectly “fair” voting system may actually be impossible. We dive into the formulas and theories that shape how leaders are elected, why the same votes can produce different winners under different systems, and what Americans should understand before the next major election cycle. It’s a fascinating conversation about politics, power, and the numbers quietly deciding who wins. 🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and wherever you get your podcasts.

Comentarios

0

Sé la primera persona en comentar

¡Regístrate ahora y únete a la comunidad de Byline with Ben Dennis!

Prueba gratis

Empieza 7 días de prueba

$99 / mes después de la prueba. · Cancela cuando quieras.

  • Podcasts solo en Podimo
  • 20 horas de audiolibros al mes
  • Podcast gratuitos

Todos los episodios

26 episodios

episode The Constitution Meets Artificial Intelligence: Who’s in Charge of America’s Future? artwork

The Constitution Meets Artificial Intelligence: Who’s in Charge of America’s Future?

Artificial intelligence is no longer theoretical. It’s already shaping how we search for information, communicate with coworkers, consume news, and increasingly how society functions behind the scenes. But as AI systems become more embedded into everyday life, a larger question is emerging: Who decides the rules? In this episode of Byline with Ben Dennis, Ben sits down with legal scholar and former Department of Justice attorney Alan Rozenshtein to explore whether America is entering a new constitutional era driven by artificial intelligence. The conversation examines: — whether democratic institutions can realistically keep pace with AI development — how executive power could expand alongside AI systems — the growing influence of private tech companies over public life — whether the Constitution is flexible enough to adapt to machine learning and algorithmic governance — and what kinds of legal guardrails Americans may ultimately demand — or reject Rozenshtein argues the Constitution was designed to survive periods of massive technological and political change. The founders never imagined AI chatbots, recommendation algorithms, or machine-generated speech. But they also never imagined electricity. So what happens when innovation moves faster than regulation? And if government fails to establish meaningful boundaries, are Americans comfortable allowing the people building these systems to increasingly shape the economy, culture, and flow of information themselves? As the United States approaches 250 years since its founding, this conversation asks a broader question: What technological guardrails are Americans willing to accept before AI becomes fully embedded into the next chapter of public life? #ArtificialIntelligence #AI #Constitution #Technology #Politics #SamAltman #ElonMusk #AIGovernance #ExecutivePower #MachineLearning #BylineWithBenDennis

26 de may de 202656 min
episode Is There Such a Thing as a Fair Election? artwork

Is There Such a Thing as a Fair Election?

Is there such a thing as a fair election? This week on Byline, Penn State mathematics professor Andrea Boito joins me to unpack the hidden math behind democracy — from ranked-choice voting and the Electoral College to apportionment, strategic voting, and why mathematicians say a perfectly “fair” voting system may actually be impossible. We dive into the formulas and theories that shape how leaders are elected, why the same votes can produce different winners under different systems, and what Americans should understand before the next major election cycle. It’s a fascinating conversation about politics, power, and the numbers quietly deciding who wins. 🎧 Listen now on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and wherever you get your podcasts.

12 de may de 202638 min
episode Who Controls Your Feed? What You See Now—and How AI Is Changing It artwork

Who Controls Your Feed? What You See Now—and How AI Is Changing It

You open your phone. Within seconds, you’re scrolling—posts, videos, headlines, all arranged in a way that feels almost intuitive. But why that post? Why that video? Why that story—right now? In this episode, Ben Dennis speaks with Katie Harbath, former Facebook public policy director and CEO of Anchor Change, about how those decisions are made—and how quickly they’re changing. Because what shows up in your feed isn’t random. It’s shaped by signals—what you watch, what you skip, what you engage with, and what you don’t. But that’s only part of the story. As artificial intelligence becomes more embedded in these systems, the process of deciding what you see is starting to shift—moving beyond simple recommendation into something more dynamic, and less visible. So what does that mean for what you’re seeing today? And what might it mean for what you see next? This conversation explores how platforms interpret behavior, why certain content rises, and how AI could reshape not just your feed—but how information itself is delivered. 🎧 Listen to the full episode.

4 de may de 202650 min
episode Is the U.S. Ready for War? A General Warns We’re Running Low on Weapons artwork

Is the U.S. Ready for War? A General Warns We’re Running Low on Weapons

The missiles have flown. The ceasefire looks fragile. What happens if this conflict doesn’t stay overseas? How long could this fighting last? What happens to gas prices if it drags on? And what does it mean for Americans here at home? In this episode of Byline with Ben Dennis, I sit down with retired U.S. Army Major General John Ferrari to go beyond the headlines and break down what’s actually happening—and what comes next. We get into what happens after strikes are launched… how prepared the U.S. really is for a prolonged conflict… and whether America is built for sustained warfare. Ferrari also explains a critical imbalance: the U.S. has to succeed on multiple fronts—military, strategic, and public perception—while an adversary may only need one to claim success. This isn’t about fear. It’s about understanding what comes next. Because while the conflict is happening thousands of miles away… the real question is what it means if it doesn’t stay there.

27 de abr de 202646 min