Professor Joanne Freeman is an award-winning historian who studies the politics and culture of America's past to better understand our history as a nation, and the roads and choices that have led us to the present day. Her work -- which spans the founding period through the Civil War -- centers on the doings of politics; political combat and violence; the making (and breaking) of the U.S. Congress; and the thoughts and writings of Alexander Hamilton. She is a professor of History and American Studies at Yale University.
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The speaker provides a historical framework starting from the 1935 Social Security Act and the New Deal, explaining how government involvement and regulation shaped postwar America (the liberal consensus).
Over time, a reactionary coalition, centered on deregulation, tax cuts, and a hierarchical view of society (racism, sexism) challenged that framework, culminating in the rise of the conservative/right-wing movement and the Republican party’s shift. Reagan era popularized deregulation and small-government rhetoric, but left a lasting tension between pro-business policies and social protections.
Since the 1980s-1990s, the coalition has emphasized concentrated executive power, anti-immigrant/racist rhetoric, and a narrative of “deserving vs. undeserving” to justify policies.
The speaker argues the current era represents a shift toward a kleptocracy—using state power to enrich a small elite—rather than a true oligarchy or dictatorship. Corruption is framed as selective and for the benefit of a few (pardons, privatization, contractor profits, etc.).
Trump’s presidency is seen as merging wealth concentration with racialized politics, while challenging long-standing alliance systems (NATO/US-led order) and pushing a Western Hemisphere emphasis.
The talk covers: the illusion of drug-war rationales in Venezuela policy, the misalignment of actual drug sources/trafficking, and the strategic ambition to redraw spheres of influence. In the short term, instability is predicted due to controversial actions, legal challenges, and internal power struggles. The speaker urges active citizen engagement: calling/e-mailing lawmakers, public speech, and organized grassroots pressure to defend democracy, protect civil rights, and demand universal services (healthcare, childcare, etc.).
Final call to action: democracy is not spectator sport; push for accountability and a positive vision that broadens participation and rebuilds democratic norms.
Suggested tags:
US politics and history Social Security Act (1935) and New Deal Liberal consensus / welfare state Conservative movement / Reagan era Deregulation & tax cuts Kleptocracy / corruption White supremacy / racialized politics Women’s rights / gender equality Immigration policy / detention Foreign policy / NATO / alliances Venezuela and US sanctions/foreign policy Executive power / judiciary politics Pardon power / criminal justice Privatization / public vs private goods Civic engagement / democracy defense Activism / political participation 2020s political landscape / Trump era Public infrastructure / national wealth Media framing / rhetoric vs. policy 💬 Chat with the transcript
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