The Daily History Chronicle

The Fire Nobody Mourned _ June 24, 1973

17 min · 24. juni 2026
episode The Fire Nobody Mourned _ June 24, 1973 cover

Beskrivelse

On the night of June 24, 1973, thirty-two people died in a fire at a New Orleans gay bar called the UpStairs Lounge, the deadliest fire in the city's history and the largest mass killing of gay Americans in the twentieth century. No one was ever charged. No elected official spoke. Most churches refused to hold a funeral. This is not a story about one fire. It is a story about what a society does and doesn't do when it decides some deaths don't count.

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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.

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