The Common Ground
Is American democracy actually ending, or does it simply feel that way? In this episode, we explore that question together. We begin by examining the mechanisms often associated with democratic backsliding: pressure on referees, sidelining of key players, and attempts to tilt the playing field. We then look at the guardrails: judicial review, open political competition, and structural fragmentation built into the Constitution itself. Despite tension and polarisation, these institutional constraints continue to function. Finally, we ask why it feels different today. We explore how social media and permanent exposure to political conflict shape perception. Chapters: 00:00 Intro 01:31 I — The Pressure on the Guardrails 02:20 I.1. Capturing the Referees 05:28 I.2. Sidelining the Key Players 08:18 I.3. Tilting the Playing Field 11:24 II — The Guardrails Still Function 11:24 II.1 Institutional Resistance 13:32 II.2 Competitive Pluralism Remains Open 15:35 II.3 Fragmentation as Protection 17:03 III — Why It Feels Different Today 17:22 III.1 From Episodic Escalation to Permanent Escalation 19:16 III.2 When Politics Becomes Identity 20:49 III.3 Scale, Exposure, and the Amplification of Distrust 23:10 Conclusion
2 episodios
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