The Rick Robinson Show
America may still share one flag and one map, but millions of citizens are already separating from the institutions that claim to represent them. Rick Robinson examines the growing movement among rural Illinois counties to escape the political gravity of Chicago and Cook County, along with the broader “representation fatigue” driving Americans away from political parties, legacy media, schools, cities, and states they no longer trust. The show then turns to the collapse of Graham Platner’s Senate campaign and the Democratic machine that tolerated warning sign after warning sign until the polling finally made him inconvenient. Rick argues that modern political accountability is increasingly based not on truth or character, but usefulness: scandals remain “complicated” while a candidate can still win and become disqualifying only after the campaign becomes a liability. Also covered: a second Middle Eastern government rejecting an LGBTQ-focused cruise, Tim Walz’s pardon of a foreign national convicted of a child sex crime before federal officials deported him, new questions about Detroit absentee-ballot chain of custody, the unraveling Iran memorandum, attempted municipal freelancing with Iran’s ambassador, and the unusually lengthy preliminary hearing in the Tyler Robinson case. Across politics, foreign policy, culture, and the courtroom, the standard keeps changing whenever consistency becomes inconvenient. A country can survive disagreement, bad leaders, and hard elections—but it cannot survive forever once its people stop believing the rules are real.
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