I want to start with a big thanks, as usual, to everyone who thanks and supports my work. A couple notes: Some have noted that I didn't offer any solutions here. I didn't see that being appropriate. I really only studied and thought about presenting the problem. Solutions are difficult, and I think should be given similar time and consideration. I've seen a lot of people offer their own, and I'm personally grateful to see it and am energized by it. If that's you, thanks. Lastly, I've seen a number of commenters here that wanted to see a greater emphasis on the role of money in politics, with some even saying it's the key to the whole problem (meaning this video can essentially be disregarded). I do think it's an important subject worth discussing, especially depending on the president, but you can take it away as a factor and the major problems presented here still remain. There's still a falling trend in support for the office, and still a problem of attracting the best and brightest of Americans to the job. Perhaps most importantly, the performance issue still remains. Presidents still wouldn't be able to do what they tell voters they'll be able to do (because of institutional blocks and the fundamental design of the role). From my research the influence of money in politics is important, but it plays a far greater role in the problems Congress faces. I've covered that in some detail in an older video 'Why Is The Government So Wasteful?' If you wanted to cover its role shaping presidential behavior you'd have to do it on a case-by-case basis for each president (making the - I think - safe assumption that literally all presidents since Eisenhower haven't been fully corrupted by the influence of special interest money). - Ryan
@LouisGedo5 ай бұрын
👋
@UTubeSL5 ай бұрын
The legend is back. Good to see you.
@Vorgaloth5 ай бұрын
I really appreciate your work Ryan. Do you know James Lindsay? I think you and him should really have a conversation about our current situation in the West, what the future is looking like and how we best move forward. James is a defender is American/classical liberal values but he also understands its flaws. I really hope you will have him on. Many would value this. Thanks.
@greatkentuckian90325 ай бұрын
Great video as always.
@coltercrockett41005 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting more frequently, I love your content
@user-yg314155 ай бұрын
It seems the "best" people in America don't want to get into politics, while the less qualified people make a living (even get rich) in politics.
@zsomborszigeti67975 ай бұрын
You got the cause and effect the wrong way round. Politicians are seen as evil and selfish for the reasons outlined in the video, thus good people don't want to ruin their reputation by getting into politics.
@houseplant10165 ай бұрын
Tbh, I also think most good politicians stay in the local level of politics. Not because they aren't ambitious but because they think they can make the most difference that way and it's true for some aspects. Bad local governing has a worse impact tbh
@thegreatcollector45485 ай бұрын
It's costly to run in any position except maybe city council, and even getting your voice out there is difficult.
@artonio58875 ай бұрын
I never understood why americans don't just make more parties. No one likes the current options, if y'all don't like them, gather up, form a new political group, find some people to fund you. Like why does this work everywhere except in America? In my country, the third largest party was created in 2019 lol.
@itzawrap5 ай бұрын
Because they understand how to game the system because they are unscrupulous grifters.
@centurionzen10055 ай бұрын
"This country will not permanently be a good place for any of us to live in unless we make it a reasonably good place for all of us to live in."- Theodore "Teddy" roosevelt
@ajg87225 ай бұрын
One of the best to ever hold office.
@zonyae290475 ай бұрын
And instead of making it a better place, the collective opts to buy passports and fly away, leaving the nest to be left crumbled and divided.
@CharlieJ695 ай бұрын
be careful of Teddy, he was in favor of eugenics...
@The_Engineering_Fox5 ай бұрын
I miss that trust-buster.
@centurionzen10055 ай бұрын
@CharlieJ69 To be fair, that was considered the forefront of science at the time. Despite the disturbing results, people thought it was helpful. Not that's it's a get out of jail free card - but it's not totally condemning office character.
@amirmohamad22705 ай бұрын
I think a universal problem has always been that those who actually can and should do politics, either don't want to do it, or are not given the chance.
@BenIsFiguringitOut5 ай бұрын
Exactly!
@SA2004YG5 ай бұрын
Because there's a large disconnect between what politics actually are vs what people think they should be. They should be about serving the public good but in reality they're a balancing act between different groups who want different things
@SmileyEmoji425 ай бұрын
It doesn't help that becoming a president guarantees that half the country will hate and ridicule you. What sort of person would voluntarily subject themselves to that?
@coconut74905 ай бұрын
@@SmileyEmoji42 Not to mention the huge amount of stress and eyes on your every move. Smart people don't want the position because they realise it's not worth it compared to having a normal life working in the private sector. Campaigning and rising up the political ladder is no small task either and require almost your entire life.
@Bocsaphoto5 ай бұрын
@@SA2004YGis serving the public not about balancing the needs of different and opposing groups? Human populations are not homogenous. This is why representation and diversity matters, no?
@zzerxes5 ай бұрын
Remember how everyone in high school used to vote for Student Council President and we all pretended the person would make a difference, but really we knew the Principal and Staff were still in charge? That’s what American politics is like. We know the figurehead doesn’t matter, when the establishment around him stays the same.
@dexterjettster88755 ай бұрын
americas a technocracy now, noone who designed the system expected the state to have this much influence over all areas of life
@geoffok4 ай бұрын
@@dexterjettster8875 it's more of a plutocratic oligarchy
@niteshades_promise4 ай бұрын
in my high-school we proved elections are rigged. we had the majority of students sign a petition not to vote for person A. person A than won. we protested rioted n walked out. person A was stripped of title and a recount showed absolute corruption. 🍻
@niteshades_promise4 ай бұрын
@geoffok you get it! ive been saying these 2 words since the 90s. 🍻
@leandro62344 ай бұрын
anti-establishment nonsense.
@RicochetMayhem5 ай бұрын
Dude uploaded 1 day before the most embarrasing presidental debate in US history.
@kimlerner3894 ай бұрын
Yeah, it was embarrassing because one candidate lied every time he opened his mouth and is a fascist wanna-be (or maybe not so wanna-be) who doesn't give a damn about the American people.
@meddle004 ай бұрын
The most embarrassing one was 2020. This one was more mature overall but still not up to standard.
@firemarshal26294 ай бұрын
Embarrassing for who? The idiots that actually thought Biden was running things maybe.
@levizinser4 ай бұрын
That sad thing is, the world got to see that our POTUS is checked out….
@RoobieRhoo4 ай бұрын
You meant Biden's performance, Trump had a strong performance, but his substance was just as terrible.
@hydroac93875 ай бұрын
I was a small town mayor (population ~12,000) from 2013 to 2021 in a collar county in greater Chicagoland. I was a full time scientist that worked for a Fortune 500 engineering firm and a part time mayor. I was paid about ~$2500/year to serve as mayor, so it was a very minor part of my total compensation. It was a whole lot of work and I tried to be a good mayor, and voluntarily stepped down from my position after I had achieved all of my primary goals. I found that most people were happy with the village government - except for a handful of loud troublemakers that I could count on one hand, some of whom served with me as elected members of the board. In the end I served and took direction from the vast majority of those that were happy. I listened to but was not obligated to obey the few troublemakers. With a few exceptions, I have great respect for anyone who aspires to political office. It is a noble calling. And it is a hard job if you do it correctly.
@Noric.Morava5 ай бұрын
I have great respect for communal politicians - if you claim you want to make world a better place, you should start with your community.
@goosetown-475 ай бұрын
thank you for your service.
@spicyempanadas27385 ай бұрын
The most worthy government is the one nearest to you. But few (except the most radical) care about state and local elections; the media certainly isn't a help with its focus on the national elections (which is understandable -- more ad revenue or interest in content geared to the largest possible audience). I salute you for stepping up and involving yourself in local politics. I often see its a thankless job at times, so the fact that people with real lives beyond the office are participating in civic activity (whether in government or through community aid) however so small, gives me what little hope in the world that I have.
@theodorebear67145 ай бұрын
That's good to hear but by guess is that you wouldn't have gotten a lot of offers for *further compensation by special interests. At higher levels that *further compensation is offered to people who should be responsible and focused on their work but instead work for what compensates them. That's how you get career politicians. You said you had work in science and that's excellent but it also make your political work objective based like doing an experiment in a lab and recording the data- straightforward. For a career politician it's one big act that they have to keep up and if they do fix all the issues (kind of like how you addressed the issues you wanted to address) the result would be an end to their show even if they got high respect from the people. We shouldn't allow donations over $100 to any political figure. Especially not from billionaires or cooperations with reasons to try to mess with the law or the state (try to get away with pollution for example). You can change the number to $1,000 or $10,000 per contribution if you'd like but we know people paying millions of dollars to politicians are scratching the backs of politicians expecting to get their backs scratched in return.
@euphegenia5 ай бұрын
The problem is, way too many people who “aspire to political office” are simply in it for the power.
@Rain2H05 ай бұрын
We should not forget about American media as well. They're part of the problem too.
@harku1235 ай бұрын
Arguably the most impactful. With the last decade of being tribal "us vs them" being much worse because of the media. All propaganda in the US is now "our opposition does x bad thing, vote for us!" No mention of their own policy, just "other guys bad". I hate it
@quacksayssquawk28995 ай бұрын
It's kind of astounding how biased and one-sided news is in America. You turn on Fox News and its broadcasting propaganda right into your living room, and you switch to CNN or MNSBC and it's not much better. I really think that the US is lacking a neutral and publicly funded news channel or network.
@thecooljohn1005 ай бұрын
@@harku123Fox News is the biggest cable tv channel in the country, and that's all they do. They're the best at spinning narratives and brainwashing the ignorant. You can say that left leaning media does it too, but generally they're more fearful of their audience's pushback against manipulation.
@lars0me5 ай бұрын
@@harku123 In part that is a result of the voting system. People tend to vote for the most agreeable party with a chance to govern. If only one party gets that chance and you only have one vote, this effectively results in a two party system. If there are only two parties, demonizing the other is as effective and arguably easier than praising your own, especially when trust is already low.
@ivainyamutsamba85405 ай бұрын
That's what Putin said
@bobbyrobmaxey5 ай бұрын
Unfortunately the skill set it takes to get elected is completely different than the one it takes to govern effectively
@Red-Magic4 ай бұрын
True
@cosmicviewer4773 ай бұрын
So absolutely true!
@SusCalvin3 ай бұрын
Dan Carlin tried to describe it as two roles. Americans want both the figurehead representative "monarch" who inspires and motivates and the boring "prime minister/beancounter" who isn't very flashy but can sift through boring minutiae.
@fs57753 ай бұрын
True. That’s why I’m grateful that the constitution is above everyone. Safe country unlike China.
@bestofbothworldsagain399Ай бұрын
Very well said.
@keuche257527 күн бұрын
I really appreciate your commitment to just talking about issues without taking a side. I have no idea what your political offiliation is and I've watched a lot of your videos. Thanks for that bud
@tonysilke21 күн бұрын
The only American who won't acknowledge this Administration's failed economic policies is Joe Biden. "Shrink-flation' is the least of our worries compared to rising rents and stagnant wages, but it is an undeniable indicator of how bad our inflation has gotten. I have $100k that i like to invest in a non-retirement account, any advice on that?
@Nernst9621 күн бұрын
I would avoid index funds, mutual funds, and specific stocks for the time being. Right now, the best option is a fixed income of five percent. Put money aside for the times when the market really starts to bounce back.
@PatrickLloyd-21 күн бұрын
45% of Americans do not invest in the stock market because of lack of guidance. Every year you don't invest, you are falling behind. I’m hitting numbers in the stock market I used to dream of… Going from $50k to $600k in my portfolio is surreal all thanks to insights from my financial advisor.
@PhilipDunk21 күн бұрын
45% of Americans do not invest in the stock market because of lack of guidance. Every year you don't invest, you are falling behind. I’m hitting numbers in the stock market I used to dream of… Going from 50k to 600k in my portfolio is surreal all thanks to insights from my financial advisor.
@JefferyDuns21 күн бұрын
45% of Americans do not invest in the stock market because of lack of guidance. Every year you don't invest, you are falling behind, I’ve been using a financial market expert for two years now and I own a six-figure diversified portfolio from investing in stocks. I want to diversify more this year, though.
@PhilipDunk21 күн бұрын
Could you kindly elaborate on the advisor's background and qualifications?
@JeredtheShy5 ай бұрын
Our leadership problem is too much focus on the Presidency, as if we are trying to elect a king of some sort, and very little focus on the politics happening in your backyard, where the results are. A significant part of the job is yours, to know, and to vote, to involve yourself somehow, to do a little campaigning of your own for what matters to you, and doing that job brings relief from the feeling of impotence that plagues so many of us. It's worth it, even if you don't ultimately get your way. Something to consider.
@plantguyrama115 ай бұрын
You’re right and I think this idea should be more wide spread. Thanks for sharing
@CHIEF_4205 ай бұрын
Correcto
@renim29745 ай бұрын
When the President of the United States is allowed to bypass our entire system with Executive Orders, this is what you get. I didn’t vote for President Biden to take my money and hand it over for student loans. In fact, no one did. He just did it, and the Supreme Court tried to stop it, and he’s still doing it. Until we defang the Presidency, people are going to care who is President.
@shawnbottom47695 ай бұрын
The blame for that lies at the feet of our education system.
@carlvargas79114 ай бұрын
@shawnbottom4769 that among so many others. Hopefully, we figure it out before we collapse :/
@aletheiai5 ай бұрын
What competent person would seek exhausting, vilified impotence?
@JH-ji6cj5 ай бұрын
Why bring marriage into this? Jkjk
@aletheiai5 ай бұрын
@@JH-ji6cj You'll forever be single, then?
@hyperion31455 ай бұрын
@@aletheiai Yes 🗿
@roscaris65415 ай бұрын
Very well said
@WispFigment5 ай бұрын
Because it would be better that a competent person do it, then let an incompetent person do it and ruin everything for everyone else
@nostalgia_junkie5 ай бұрын
we lamenting the status of social cohesion wit this one 🗣
@JH-ji6cj5 ай бұрын
Yes, and English, bro
@wellthen41285 ай бұрын
😭😭😭
@Adam-ei4oj5 ай бұрын
@@JH-ji6cj I think he means having a leader americans are happy with is even harder because americans dont have a cohesive identity anymore, we are hyper segemented.
@JH-ji6cj5 ай бұрын
@Adam-ei4oj wit what u means, bro? You obviously missed my point. You want to discuss social cohesion and identity? Start with a recognition that a National Language is a good start. American Liberals are hilariously inclined to go abroad and learn 'other nationalities languages', yet fail to come back and see the need for English to be accepted as the dominant language of America and should be the spoken/written language. Edit: my original comment was in regards to how poor the OC language was constructed while commenting on the lack of social cohesion. Irony
@Power_to_the_people5675 ай бұрын
@@JH-ji6cj The lack of a national language is not a major issue regarding social cohesion. English is the de facto language of the United States, whether or not it is classified as a National language is not an issue that is of major consequence.
@biglimes2 ай бұрын
I absolutely love this channel. Just a sober, thorough, non-hysterical, literate take on events and historical topics. I'm telling all of my late night YT surfers about it.
@saphironkindris5 ай бұрын
2008: Hope and change! Yes we can! 2024: No matter who wins, we lose! Which candidate will fuck us the least?
@valalongtooth14 ай бұрын
Seems pretty obvious... The candidate who is not going to champion project 2025
@kimlerner3894 ай бұрын
@@valalongtooth1 💯
@calebcase804 ай бұрын
We got the change 😂
@thelookanchannel25604 ай бұрын
Kennedy 2024! Vote for Change!
@thelookanchannel25604 ай бұрын
@@valalongtooth1Kennedy 2024
@TheMalayLinguist5 ай бұрын
The best of us are the too silent. Meanwhile the lousiest are the loudest.
@TheMalayLinguist5 ай бұрын
It doesn't help that americans tend to self implode for the stupidest reason.
@tylerian46485 ай бұрын
I'd be concerned if the loudest weren't the loudest.
@don6115 ай бұрын
I think the lousy hugely outnumber the best, hence the silence
@RigelOrionBeta4 ай бұрын
It's not really about the best or lousiest. The people who should be in politics either don't have a voice (the poor) or are comfortable doing what they love. They don't have any interest in wielding power. The people who shouldn't have power, namely the rich and corporations who already have economic power and naturally seek to have more power, are in the best position to gain political power, either directly or indirectly. Over time, the extremes have gotten more extreme, including the types of people who could run for office. The only types of people who can really run for office are people who had a pretty good upbringing but have somehow managed to remove the rose tinted glasses from their face to see the enormous amount of problems going on in this world. There is a SEVERE lack of these people. And it's mostly because well off people are completely isolated from the poor. And the media certainly does a terrible job in highlighting problems due to inequality. They lean into the problems even, making them worse.
@soarinskies11054 ай бұрын
Amen brother
@xchazz865 ай бұрын
When the system is so corrupt and toxic the lead roles only attracts the worst of the worst. These are not leaders only petty predators, opportunists, puppets and con artists.
@dunerh5 ай бұрын
This seems like an overly cynical take. As was said in the video, induviduals can only be expected to act in their own best interest. Its the job of the system politicians work within and the electorate to restrict and align their range of action to align with public interest. I highly doubt modern politicians are worse people than those in pre-1940s America, and they are almost certainly more competent/informed. I think the difference today derives from the pressures modern media puts on elected officials and the forced transparency new media has wrought.
@xchazz865 ай бұрын
@@dunerh Disagree, people behave how they are conditioned to behave. When the incentives creates an environment where its all about self benefit and lack of accountability, you can always expect them to behave badly even with more information then their predecessors. This is a question of values and our value system have been completely turned on its head, hence all the bad outcomes we see today. The real challenge still unresolved by humanity is, what is society for? What kind of world and society do you want you and your children to live in? What is more important in life? We simply don’t have our priorities aligned towards the continuity of the species.
@LockheedMartinEnjoyer5 ай бұрын
@@xchazz86and do you have your priorities thought out? See this is a issue with the ideology of a democracy. It cannot operate because it's by designed to be fragmented i.e Churchill quote on democracy.
@oswarz5 ай бұрын
But it is we who elect them.
@oswarz5 ай бұрын
@@dunerh Hmm..."almost certainly more competent/informed"? I think not. If they were, we wouldn't be fighting endless wars. We (Uncle Sam) wouldn't be escalating this proxy war with Russia or goading China or allowing Israel's savagery. Or...or...
@chloe72885 ай бұрын
What I like about Ryan is that he seems to be one of the very few truly non-partisan people commenting on politics and public life.
@omg_wtf5 ай бұрын
Yeah for sure. He's great
@EyeGodZA5 ай бұрын
He’s also just exceptionally good at explaining really complex ideas in very simple terms that are easily digestible. A gift of the silver tongue.
@ThatMans-anAnimal5 ай бұрын
Meaning liberal and centrist.
@CalebDiT5 ай бұрын
I find his bias to be obvious, but bias isn't per se bad. An unbiased person has nothing to say.
@helvetesmakt15 ай бұрын
he's certainly no communist. I think it's clear he's somewhere between center left and center right, which really is the most prudent place to be. personally, I can't nail him down any farther than that based on his videos. am I missing something? @@CalebDiT
@Jtkelly105 ай бұрын
This might be the best-timed release of a KZbin video of all time
@jeremyt42923 ай бұрын
Especially now that Biden step down and Harris was chosen without anyone voting for her
@onsturn3 ай бұрын
Lobbying should be illegal.
@dommenator35993 ай бұрын
Problem is, the people profiting from it are the ones that are needed to ban it.
@landlubbber5 ай бұрын
Another interesting effect of this is what it does to other countries that are influenced by American culture. Here in Australia the Prime Minister doesn't have anything close to executive power but because Aussies are so plugged into American news, they end up voting based on the same types of promises that US presidents make (though admittedly at a smaller scale)
@Blaxton95 ай бұрын
You must win the Second Emu War, or you have failed as a leader
@DadyTomorrow-qi9bo5 ай бұрын
( Nixon shock 1971) will happen again in 2024 😎 But this time you won’t lose part of the value of your money, you will lose it all. US dollar ⤵️ BUY GOLD ✅
@mackenziebroadbent6825 ай бұрын
One thing I think is different is that Australian politicians are significantly less prone to overpromising and sensationalising (not saying they don’t do it, just that it happens less than America). If you check “promise trackers” on news websites for what this and past Governments have done you’ll see that they end up doing most of what they promised to do (although not all of it)
@chickenfishhybrid445 ай бұрын
I wouldn't automatically assume that's all attributable to the US. I think some of this is just what Democracies can eventually decay into. The founders and various other societies weren't just wary of it because they were evil and power hungry.
@newyorkernewjersey5 ай бұрын
Australia is essentially a pseudo colony of the USA. USA owns Australia's foreign and domestic politics. Sad
@anthonyewolf5 ай бұрын
I have students who say they are more okay with a dictatorship from the right to restore the traditional household; and other students who -- while not saying it explicitly -- seem to expect that their colleagues from that camp will just quietly disappear while they campaign and shame their way through the march of progress. This video clarifies a lot of this divide and it makes me appreciate the research you put into these videos.
@throwitatthewall62895 ай бұрын
I suspect that the ones who think they will quietly disappear truly think they will make them disappear. Thats the leftist way
@AK-cr5pe5 ай бұрын
Think of all the freedoms and privileges afforded to us, that previous generations fought and died for, that students today take for granted and yet are so easily willing to discard. They won't fully appreciate their freedoms until they're gone. Dictatorships are all fun and games until the oppression is turned on you. All to enforce some sort of backwards morality to dictate how people you will never meet live their lives. It's sick.
@t700e5 ай бұрын
It’s saddening to see increasing numbers of people embrace authoritarian action on behalf of the Executive.
@SA2004YG5 ай бұрын
@t700e desperate measures for desperate times. I don't think we're there yet but I can understand people who think we're close
@softdrink-05 ай бұрын
@@SA2004YG still, would that even be “America” anymore? Hell, you can say “America” disappeared long ago I guess.
@adamc79875 ай бұрын
"Once you've given up your independence you never get it back and one shouldn't underestimate what that does to people" That is applicable to so much more than just the Presidency.
@KarlMarcus84685 ай бұрын
like what?
@Jacob-qr8pl5 ай бұрын
@@KarlMarcus8468 like...life, man
@chozer15 ай бұрын
@@KarlMarcus8468like Ukraine russian war
@KarlMarcus84685 ай бұрын
@@Jacob-qr8pl I think I was more trying to ask what could people do that shouldn't be underestimated. What are your thoughts? edit: I reread the comment I was asking the first question to, it ends with "and that goes for much more than just the presidency" that's what I was responding to. I asked, like what, what else beside the presidency?
@KarlMarcus84685 ай бұрын
@@chozer1 are you saying that the Ukrainians' who defend their homeland are an example of the lengths people will go to and that shouldn't be under estimated? I think that's a good example. I think that's a good sign that the Palestinian people who are also having their freedom systematically taken away from them by a much larger force are also showing the world what humans do when you take that humanity from them.
@Carlo-zk2cy5 ай бұрын
The responsibilities of a US president have become so complex that they are no longer possible to be given to a single person. Being both the head of state and the head of government responsible for 50 states and foreign policies is just too much.
@louisalexandre334 ай бұрын
You should add that not many human on earth can approach easily complex phenomenons like mondialized economy, fast technological shifts, worldwide mass media or climate runaway, those non-linear phenomenons can be previsible (you know they somehow exist) but unpredictable (you can't anticipate when and how they will affect your society).
@vickmay38984 ай бұрын
so what do you think is a better way to go about it? (genuinely asking)
@Carlo-zk2cy4 ай бұрын
@@vickmay3898 I think a semi-presidential form wherein the President (head of state) have reserve powers while a Prime Minister (head of government) run the day-to-day duties of the executive.
@Ace-uc5cj4 ай бұрын
@@Carlo-zk2cy no thats so european and a waste of time
@d.w.w.sweetz30084 ай бұрын
@@Carlo-zk2cyhow about we shrink the federal government like the founding fathers said. Like we can cut all three letter agencies. FBI,CIA,IRS,ATF,NSA,etc. Then open fort Knox and federal res. do another count. Then rip up the Patriot act and sign in only American citizens can own land and only land owners can vote.
@TheElloatmatt5 ай бұрын
Absolutely everyone in America needs to watch this.
@xandr48705 ай бұрын
THIS is KZbin!
@DadyTomorrow-qi9bo5 ай бұрын
( Nixon shock 1971) will happen again in 2024 😎 But this time you won’t lose part of the value of your money, you will lose it all. US dollar ⤵️ BUY GOLD ✅
@ivainyamutsamba85405 ай бұрын
That's what she said
@GustavoPinho895 ай бұрын
Unfortunately not, but it should be. I'd download an app and pay a subscription fee just to watch Chapman
@jakestefano41185 ай бұрын
The Coming Caesars by Amaury de Riencourt is a good book on this. Basically shows the parallels between the growth of America to that of the Roman Republic and ultimately into the Roman Empire. That since WW2, the executive branch has become more powerful and more conditioned towards autocratic tendencies until eventually the people desire it due to lack of belief in the old institutions.
@JH-ji6cj5 ай бұрын
Looking it up, sounds intriguing *thanks
@LensForgotten5 ай бұрын
Take money and corporate interests out of politics. Problem solved.
@seanr.84994 ай бұрын
Money and corporate interests are not the only dangers. Any prudent government workers know that consolidation of power by anyone is harmful. Right now, the people have too much power in some ways where they’re pushing for and voting in really bad leaders - it’s the tumultuous act of the masses. The checks and balances are not working because the masses want the kind of change that only a bad government can make happen. The masses give into greed in all forms - they need a check, as well, and right now, there isn’t much - they’re being pandered to whether genuinely or deceptively. This is why the founding fathers were very internal in their governmental workings.
@emstiyeh4 ай бұрын
My undergrad poli-sci prof taught a senior level class called "the promise and problem of US democracy" and focused specifically on this video's topic. general public needs more education on it, 100%
@nicolaslatorre8103 ай бұрын
The deep state is real.
@JOGA_Wills5 ай бұрын
It is not a lack of good leaders, it is the lack of having the choice to choose good leaders
@olivergilpin5 ай бұрын
It’s both, what good leaders do you see that weren’t choosable?
@helloitsjay385 ай бұрын
Bernie comes to mind.@@olivergilpin
@I_like_Plants1305 ай бұрын
As well as other third party politicians
@stevensammons40625 ай бұрын
Seems to me nobody wants to give anyone outside of the big two a chance. Just to name one, Gary Johnson and Bill Weld were really good picts and not in the big two but only got a small percentage of the popular vote. So I'm going to have to disagree with you statement. And just to slum up this I'm a Bernie Sanders supporter.
@KhrisJenkins5 ай бұрын
Democracy 101
@FriscoDojenia5 ай бұрын
The presidency was such an inspiration growing up, both for the country and personally. The romanticized version of a president in the West Wing and the conniving Machiavellian work in House of Cards show the extremes of what the office is viewed as now. Nominally what we want the president to be and what we generally see the president as. Either someone who is working actively for the American people or serving themselves for the arbitrary goal of power. Such high expectations are never met, and as we perceive the president as failing we have higher expectations for the next one in order to fix the past mistakes too. It’s a cycle that seems to be unbreakable. Insiders perpetuate the system while outsiders either attempt to change the system without having the power or knowledge to get to the core problems of our democracy, or they use the chaos for their self gratification. And yet, democracy is the only known system of government that prevents the concentration of power to a small group of people. The Constitution was designed to ensure the distribution of state and federal power. But its inability to change and the abuse of those in power to maintain the status quo at the expense of a vast majority of Americans has disastrously eroded public confidence in our democracy. This was definitely a ramble, but this cycle of domestic cynicism is destroying our country from within. And the solution is optimism and actively working the make the system work for all of us. And that’s easier said than done, but again belief and being optimistic is what’s needed. The government will not change if people who still believe in its capacity to actually serve the public decide not to enter politics, even though it’s completely understandable. Thanks to whoever read this all the way!
@whynotmorewhisky5 ай бұрын
I think the root of the problem is addition of the extra-constitutional fourth branch of government: the administrative branch. An unknown number of agencies now report directly to the president, with little or no meaningful congressional oversight, usually run by political appointees plucked directly from donor lists and corporate boards.
@EmpReb5 ай бұрын
"And yet, democracy is the only known system of government that prevents the concentration of power to a small group of people." Lol you really don't know your history. It always ends in Caesarism because it can't get anything done and is mob rule in the end at late stage.
@theodorebear67145 ай бұрын
@@whynotmorewhisky See- if more people payed attention too the fine print like you I think u.s. and the entire world would be better off. That's actually why I look for people who read the fine print and give important nuanced statements on issues instead of "I'm gonna fix it because I'm a real go getter!" If it was just a broken road hard work would fix it but we deal with complicated and dangerous issues that require that wise nuance like yours where you can see where the problem is coming from and why.
@theodorebear67145 ай бұрын
When YOU imagine being the president you imagine making peace. Setting firm fair rules against n'er-do-wells and helping those who need your help most. When the career politicians who want to become president become president they think of the publisher they'll talk to so they can print their "what being the president is like" book or the corporations who will slip them a few million just to never investigate pollution. That's the difference. I believe in your dream. I don't believe in the greed of those who seek power for personal gain over their responsibility to the nation.
@SeanMendicino-n3d5 ай бұрын
"And yet, democracy is the only known system of government that prevents the concentration of power to a small group of people." Well that's a crock of sh1t
@PatricioINTP5 ай бұрын
I said this in the previous video yesterday and I will say it again with this reupload. You are the only one I know who can talk politics without being political. And I wish I can show every American this video.
@DadyTomorrow-qi9bo5 ай бұрын
( Nixon shock 1971) will happen again in 2024 😎 But this time you won’t lose part of the value of your money, you will lose it all. US dollar ⤵️ BUY GOLD ✅
@jvpd175 ай бұрын
Ryan, we’re blessed to have content creators like you. Thanks for the work you do!
@cosmicviewer4773 ай бұрын
Excellent video. This phenomenon trickles all the way down to even mayors, county and city commissioners, etc. There is an increasing (and unfair) expectation of what people in these roles are able to accomplish single-handedly. And, I agree, though, that some of this burden is of their own making at times.
@hayteren5 ай бұрын
I like how I read the title and clicked the video and then Biden popped up asking for donations
@clayrydick45615 ай бұрын
He popped up for me just near then end right when the video was at its most pessimistic portion, describing how broken the system is, and how the people running for office are hopelessly locked in a battle of trying to win support, only to have more than half the country pissed at them. That was the moment that Biden asked me for money….,
@acelm84375 ай бұрын
Holy cow, me too!
@Artemie-np3qu5 ай бұрын
Sameee
@omegablackzero5 ай бұрын
Vote RFK.
@Artemie-np3qu5 ай бұрын
@@omegablackzero The anti vaccine conspiracy nut?
@jimk85205 ай бұрын
Why? Example. The average senate candidate needs to raise 45k a day, 365 days a year, for 6 years straight in order to have the funds necessary to compete in just one race. Considering the average American can’t afford the disposable income necessary to donate anything remotely close to 10k a year (or more), it becomes blatantly obvious who the winning candidate is going to serve. The same is true for any of the other major (and a great many of the minor) political position races across the country. It’s not that we can’t have good leaders, the money players among us don’t want that. They want corporate serving yes men. With rare exception, the only times we get what we want from government is if and when those desires were already what money wanted in the first place.
@fieryrebirth5 ай бұрын
While there are many terms for it, imo what best describes the US government, when, including Congress and Senate, they answer only to their wealthy donors makes it a plutocracy. A government run by the wealthy few/oligarchs. Money doesn't care for morals/ethics, nor does it really care for country loyalty. Money also, is really good at sapping the humanity of those entranced by it. The US stopped becoming a "democracy" or even a representative republic the moment corporate bribery became legal. This was the intended road the US was ultimately going to end up in - a government controlled by greed: makes their governing jobs much easier, and leaves them with a wealthy retirement plan, but at the cost of their humanity - inviting people without humanity into politics as integrity and egalitarian values erodes further and further.
@lightfeather99535 ай бұрын
It's easy to make this rhetoric without giving specific evidence in favor of it. Spending on campaigns is far less effective than you suggest. Remember Bloomberg for example?
@jimk85205 ай бұрын
@@lightfeather9953 Taking Bloomberg as an example - the person does have to be charismatic in at least some peculiar way in order for the spending to be effective but, effective or not, it is the spending that puts them in front of the public.
@ookami53294 ай бұрын
@@lightfeather9953 you absolutely need a lot of money to campaign. This is pretty much accepted fact. That does not mean you only need money--which is what Bloomberg was banking on
@camelopardalis844 ай бұрын
Your maths add up to almost 100 million dollars. Are you sure about what you've written?
@jer-bear485 ай бұрын
Few things will interrupt my day more than a Ryan Chapman video!!!!
@DadyTomorrow-qi9bo5 ай бұрын
( Nixon shock 1971) will happen again in 2024 😎 But this time you won’t lose part of the value of your money, you will lose it all. US dollar ⤵️ BUY GOLD ✅
@justadildeau4 ай бұрын
Low bar
@jer-bear484 ай бұрын
@@justadildeau possibly
@Me_Caveman5 ай бұрын
The people with no desire for power or politics are the ones that should be in office. The ones we get are those who want to be there.
@metricstormtrooper4 ай бұрын
I'm reminded of the excellent film Dave, or is that just something an Australian would say.
@gerryboudreaultboudreault26084 ай бұрын
The ancient Greeks chose short-term leaders, who often did not want the job..
@EvolutionIX2194 ай бұрын
I appreciate your calm demeanor. Most youtubers nowadays tend to shout into the mic the entire video
@auntbarbara55762 ай бұрын
great comment and observation, thank you! Agree 💯
@TGTR-066605 ай бұрын
You don’t post videos that often but when you do, it’s an almost certain masterclass. Thanks for your work and please keep it up!
@Brambrew5 ай бұрын
A good candidate needs to have a comprehensive plan to solve the nation's present problems. A great candidate needs a clear vision of the future of the nation, even if they never get to experience that bright future themselves.
@oswarz5 ай бұрын
May I quote you? So many need to internalize this before they go headlong electing their tribal favorite.
@Brambrew5 ай бұрын
@@oswarz sure 👍
@ReportsOnChina5 ай бұрын
Impossible with liberal democracies.
@gambers200015 ай бұрын
The Greek proverb, "A society grows great when old men plant trees whose shade they know they shall never sit in,"
@georgebrantley7765 ай бұрын
Even your requirement to define a good candidate is a pipe dream. Having a comprehensive plan that solves even one present problem is Nobel worthy. The truth is, these problems aren't actually solvable. There are too many people with too many competing interests that the best you can do is find the least bad (most acceptable) compromise for everyone. And this optimum will be changing constantly as people and their opinions change constantly.
@spicyempanadas27385 ай бұрын
Thank you for articulating so well what I've tried to make my friends and family see. Keep up the hard work, though the future so often seems bleak. There is always hope until there's no tomorrow.
@neaquehatami1045Ай бұрын
Just discovered your channel this morning, immediately subscribed after the first video and now am on a streak. Your objectivity and clarity while reporting the history of change makes for wonderful and fascinating content! Thank you and please continue to make such fantastic journalism pieces!
@80neptuneАй бұрын
Such an intelligent video. Makes one realize the genius of the founders of this country. We are very fortunate to have had such insight in our leadership at that time.
@colgategilbert80675 ай бұрын
Considering the amount of vitriol there has been in American Politics since the 70's, its hardly surprising some of the best don't get into US politics. Most candidates are compromise candidates until necessity pushes forward someone outstanding.
@GroverSpellshartVI5 ай бұрын
I don’t know what to say. I just wanna compliment you on the amazing work you do. I always look forward to seeing your uploads. You bring a sense of clarity to the noise. Thank you.
@LaneVermilion5 ай бұрын
Last time I was this early, America still trusted their government 🇺🇸😂😁🙂🙃😭
@xvx48485 ай бұрын
About 250 years too early it seems.
@DadyTomorrow-qi9bo5 ай бұрын
( Nixon shock 1971) will happen again in 2024 😎 But this time you won’t lose part of the value of your money, you will lose it all. US dollar ⤵️ BUY GOLD ✅
@hamzamahmood95655 ай бұрын
We really went downhill after 9/11. The worst tragedy in American history was exploited by our government to mislead us, and we've never regained the same level of trust in our institutions again
@Red-Magic4 ай бұрын
You're over 50 years old?
@Dystopia30303 ай бұрын
Thank you for creating such interesting videos. I feel like what you're doing is constructive to educating ppl by discussing history, philosophy, and the intersection between the two. I like that I can watch these videos to educate myself while not being able to always pay for college, at least full time. And educating people is so important right now.
@jtempleton14655 ай бұрын
Thank you, Ryan. This is a vital issue, particularly after the recent Trump/Biden debate.
@Ikbeneengeit5 ай бұрын
Your videos are uniquely unbiased yet pull no punches. Thank you.
@gyaviratuz20295 ай бұрын
Iam a Kenyan and i cant be happier for this video today
@dawsongooch41945 ай бұрын
Best of luck with the popular unrest in your country. I don't have the political knowledge to understand who is right or wrong, but either way I wish you a positive outcome that lowers corruption while maintaining the sanctity of government and the rule of law.
@theodorebear67145 ай бұрын
Bless Kenya 🇰🇪 Definitely one of the most beautiful nations in the world. I hope your political system becomes as beautiful and graceful as your countryside. ❤️
@baoquoc37104 ай бұрын
Thank you, and your country, for the best President of the modern age America and the world had ever seen. God bless you 🙏
@Dragonite435 ай бұрын
Another problem is that there has been a shift from insider Presidents to outsider Presidents. However, outsider Presidents struggle to get anything done, because they lack any personal connections with those in office.
@SusCalvin3 ай бұрын
In theory, you should be able to change out congress though? Here in Europe we tend to focus on the presidential election because that will be the outward face of the USA who will Iran-Contra or drone strike.
@PurplePaperPrius5 ай бұрын
It's not in decline. It's operating exactly as intended: to enrich a small group of super-rich billionaires and corporations. Blackrock, Vanguard, Boeing, Lockheed M, etc...
@Afriggindingbat5 ай бұрын
Yep. If you aren’t in on the nationwide money laundering scheme, you don’t get in office.
@talaverajr3915 ай бұрын
Their jobs are so hard that they come out multi-millionaires after only four years. While also only making 250k which never ads up 😒.
@albertgrant10175 ай бұрын
Well stated !
@SeamusCameron4 ай бұрын
Speaking engagements and book deals are incredibly lucrative for an ex pres. Alongside the networking and investment potential all while making money and having every need or want comped by the government. The accounting ain't that difficult if you're inclined towards it.
@gallaugal90994 ай бұрын
that money is for losing 4-8 years of their life and a life long hatred with half of americans
@broken-promiseland3 ай бұрын
Anyone. I repeat anyone can do their job. The problem is the trickery in words. Once deception is caught any contracts involved in deception should be made void. Anyone involved should have all money and assets seized.
@randomuruguayan5 ай бұрын
This has got to be the most thought provoking video in your channel. I don't live in the USA, but I can extrapolate all of what you exposed here on the leaders of my country. I don't think it's just a problem in the USA, this is a worldwide problem. Regardless of you what views you express and defend, what you are making here, is a beacon of thought.
@JH-ji6cj5 ай бұрын
It's what makes idolatry a thing to be vilified. We all make mistakes and it's the distillation process that counts. I'm not about destroying and defacing statues, but I do find them kind of stupid and religious at the point that they are on public display. Socrates took dumps too, the level of intrusion and transparency will only get worse before we figure out ways to either accept or make better our reactions to foibles by leaders and icons.
@mb429775 ай бұрын
Excellent analysis
@shuura5 ай бұрын
this should be broadcast across all local news channels and promoted across social media! People have forgotten!
@stevesmith54345 ай бұрын
Thank you for the level of thought and detail you put into the subjects you cover.
@BenIsraelSeatriz5 ай бұрын
Thank you! Your channel is worth subscribing to. Please do a comparative analysis of various contemporary approaches of governance around the world.
@crawkn5 ай бұрын
It's certainly possible that instabilities owing to polarization could cause the whole thing to derail, but it's not likely imminent. People tend to romanticize the past as more stable and less polarized than it was. The U.S. has always been a chaotic mess, with brief interludes of cohesion, often only due to very unfortunate challenges, or the rare emergence of broadly likeable leaders. Polarization waxes and wanes, but never goes away.
@rshua5 ай бұрын
The chart at 19:31 seems to disagree, although I haven't looked into the source and its methods. Polarization is certainly a factor in derailing our democracy and effectiveness of government, and though it's not an immediate threat it should be taken seriously as it doesn't seem to be waning anytime soon. I'd argue because of polarization, there's a much smaller room for a challenge like 9/11 to unite us and an even smaller, nigh impossible space for a broadly likeable leader to emerge.
@crawkn5 ай бұрын
@@rshua I agree that the chart requires some background information to properly assess, but I'm not saying polarization isn't high. It is, and it has been caused very deliberately by those who have made an industry of it. But it's obvious that it isn't worse now than when the nation was literally at war with itself, and that didn't end us, so there's no certainty that today's comparatively civil divisions will either. It is neither impossible, nor certain, but I deem it unlikely.
@rshua5 ай бұрын
@@crawkn I agree it's unlikely polarization alone will end us, but it's an important factor in today's geopolitical situation. We hold significantly more geopolitical weight today than the US of the 1860s, and the world has changed dramatically since then. China and Russia today are the Britain and France of the Civil War, and the world's eyes are on us. Although we aren't at an issue as fundamental and divisive as slavery was, I don't think we have been this divided since the Civil War, mainly through the argument of a broadly likeable leader being impossible. In today's polarized political climate, there can be no Eisenhower, no FDR, and no Teddy. The biggest issue is that the trend is only getting worse, with no such leader existing in the future either. The exceptions I see is a leader who is able to improve the economy for EVERYONE, which also seems nigh impossible(this video pretty much explains why), or a leader that unites everyone against a common enemy, and considering the fact it'll probably be China, that would have unthinkable consequences. My point is even if we survive a political climate similar to the antebellum period, it would have extreme consequences for both us and the world at large. Though we lack a fundamental driving force such as slavery, we nonetheless seem to be heading there.
@crawkn5 ай бұрын
@@rshua I agree that the stakes are higher now, and a rebound from the current degree of division more difficult, but I don't agree that the emergence of a broadly popular leader is impossible. Broadly popular doesn't mean universally popular, and nobody expects those with the most extreme political positions to be satisfied with a centrist, but the reality is that there are more centrists among voters than extremists. They simply must settle for someone further right or further left than they would ideally prefer. What will likely move the dynamics of elections significantly is the trend toward ranked choice voting, allowing people to vote their centrist first choice, without rendering their vote ineffective in the event that the main contest is between more polarizing candidates. Even though most elections may still be won by two-party candidates, a growing number of votes for moderates will not go unnoticed, and will influence the platforms of the currently more extreme parties. It is also the case that the current climate of extreme polarization is largely due to an individual populist having an unprecedented influence on one of the parties. It seems clear from recent election outcomes that Trump's support doesn't actually transfer well to other candidates, and he won't be around forever.
@rshua5 ай бұрын
@@crawkn You've convinced me a broadly popular leader is possible since I think a "silent majority of centrists" exists, and Trump and Biden both realize this and try to cater to them in different ways. Trump feeds on their cynicism and disillusionment of politics and government, while Biden has a mix of moderate politics and American exceptionalism. Though ranked choice voting would be in the right direction, I don't see the trend moving there, whether at the primary or national level. I might be wrong and the hope would be I am. Plus as you mentioned, there are people who've made an industry out of polarization, and I'm sure those interests would slow this progress. The main issue keeping us from rebounding from division might be the (justified?) cynicism and disillusionment, as that'll make people less likely to settle for a moderate. It's why Trump, or at least populism might be around for longer than we think even if they're just perpetuating that same disillusionment.
@dougdraper58325 ай бұрын
I love your calm and reasoned explanations. You do a wonderful job.
@DadyTomorrow-qi9bo5 ай бұрын
( Nixon shock 1971) will happen again in 2024 😎 But this time you won’t lose part of the value of your money, you will lose it all. US dollar ⤵️ BUY GOLD ✅
@CarlosIowa5 ай бұрын
Beautiful. Great research. Great presentation. Great accuracy. Thank You. Thank you for changing my mind about a few things I misunderstood. And for advancing my knowledge to a better understanding.
@ricksturdevant29013 ай бұрын
Mr. Chapman --- I really enjoyed your perspective 👍. I subscribed
@bitnev5 ай бұрын
Still the best essayist on KZbin. I applaude you.
@jacobcooney17155 ай бұрын
Genuinely great video. Something I can send to my friends on both ends of the spectrum, in the tiny hope we can move back towards normalcy.
@edpistemic5 ай бұрын
I always appreciate hearing your thoughtful musings.
@saltyapostle445 ай бұрын
This was fantastic Ryan.
@stickit2theman14 ай бұрын
I was hesitant to click on this video because i didnt know your channel existed, but im glad I did. Thank you for being a voice of reason in this increasingly divided American culture.
@hud865 ай бұрын
It takes a certain type of psychopath to want to control and tell others how to live
@X.I_AMM3 ай бұрын
✡️🫣
@RonaldPetrin5 ай бұрын
“With leaders like this how can you not get high”. Access is severely limited. Educated truly informed citizens electorate is required along with checks and balances to keep their selected voted in leaders, for a purer democracy and crucial unfettered election process are key. The vulnerability of our Commander n Chief” factor ever increasing Id not considered. It’s a complex world where anything can happen anytime.? This was an eye opener thank you.
@bigplant79015 ай бұрын
Maybe you missed the part of a video where he presented this quote: "had every Athenian citizen been a Socrates, every Athenian assembly would still have been a mob" I take that to mean that the intelligence and education level of a citizenry becomes increasingly irrelevant as you make democracy more universal, transparent, and direct. The founders knew this, so they restricted who could vote, and they restricted who could be voted for (such as the states appointing their own senators, instead of subjecting it to a popular vote). But we no longer practice democracy in the way that it was practiced after the nation's founding. We practice mob democracy, and we do so in a multi-ethnic, multi-cultural society, which we were warned against by Aristotle. He thought democracy could only exist within a "philia", a flesh-and-blood fraternity of citizens, and lacking that, democracy would devolve into ethnic rivalries, and tyrants would take advantage of these divisions to assume power.
@JH-ji6cj5 ай бұрын
When you put something in quotes, it implies it is a quote from the content you consumed. Please provide a timestamp as I sincerely did not hear that in the video and expect you mean it as 'you saying it'? Also, excusing drug use out of social frustration is just extremely lame and lacks character (if by high, you mean escapism through substance/drug abuse). Don't play a victim.
@DadyTomorrow-qi9bo5 ай бұрын
( Nixon shock 1971) will happen again in 2024 😎 But this time you won’t lose part of the value of your money, you will lose it all. US dollar ⤵️ BUY GOLD ✅
@doogeearchive80874 ай бұрын
@@bigplant7901 This!
@hayteren5 ай бұрын
The most controversial thing one can say during election fever is "If your candidate loses, you will be ok".
@theodorebear67145 ай бұрын
That's true mostly. I think things are getting worse so people think they need a quick solution but more than the presidency needs to kick in for things to get better. Corrupt business, media, and law enforcement have all led to what we have now.
@omegablackzero5 ай бұрын
I didn't vote for Trump or Clinton in 2016. When Trump was elected, I literally laughed my ass off, just knowing how many people were wailing and moaning that Clinton had lost. Funny thing, same thing when Biden won vs Trump, another chuckle thinking of those people who were so invested in Trump were doing the same thing. These people have more in common than they realize.
@KonglomeratYT5 ай бұрын
@@omegablackzero I don't remember 2020 trump loss having anything close to the reaction 2016 Hillary loss had. There were videos of crying, democrat teachers taking the day off, and etc. When Trump lost everything just sort of...went as normal. I hardly saw any conversation at all.
@3ggser5 ай бұрын
@@KonglomeratYTthere was an entire riot on the capitol because trump lost, what do u mean?
@peterirvin71215 ай бұрын
@@KonglomeratYT That is objectively not true, as there were insurrectionists live streaming their assault on Congress.
@k0129575 ай бұрын
I was in high school in the early 1970s. Between the Vietnam war, the incipient drug culture, and the anti-establishment pressure brought about by the left, it was drummed into our heads that the people of the USA could not trust their government. Since then, both political parties use this distrust as a hammer against their political foes. Thus, the distrust of government in general, and the lack of enthusiasm for the office of the president, are also a product of sixty years of an incessant drumbeat of that anti-establishment pressure.
@carlosserra15884 ай бұрын
Robert Chapman's analysis of America's leadership problem resonates with Oswald Spengler's seminal work, "The Decline of the West." Spengler's cyclical theory of civilizations suggests that cultures, like organisms, have a natural lifespan: they are born, mature, decline, and eventually die. Spengler argued that Western civilization, having reached its peak, was entering a period of irreversible decline, characterized by decadence, cultural exhaustion, and the rise of Caesarism-a form of autocratic rule led by charismatic figures who promised to restore order and stability. Chapman's observations about the increasing centralization of power in the American presidency, the growing political polarization, and the unrealistic expectations placed on the president can be interpreted through Spengler's lens as symptoms of this broader civilizational decline. The expansion of presidential power, driven by crises and the desire for solid leadership, mirrors Spengler's concept of Caesarism. The polarization of politics reflects the fragmentation and internal conflict that Spengler saw as characteristic of a declining civilization. The disillusionment with the presidency and the yearning for a saviour figure resonates with Spengler's notion of cultural exhaustion and the search for a new source of authority. While Spengler's thesis is not without its critics, his ideas offer a thought-provoking framework for understanding American leadership's challenges and the broader trajectory of Western civilization. Whether or not one agrees with Spengler's deterministic view of history, his work serves as a reminder that even the most influential civilizations are not immune to the forces of decline and decay.
@pierren___Ай бұрын
Centralisation iis thhe conséquence of decentralisation. Nothing can be done with everyone fighting for his little interest.
@SongvilayFilms5 ай бұрын
This was a fantastic video. Can’t wait for the next one.
@mattcy65915 ай бұрын
Everyone's too preoccupied with "my guy is better than your guy" and fail to see that ALL the guys are awful for the country.
@throwitatthewall62895 ай бұрын
The problem is one of them is going to win. So it has to be which one is going to do the least bad.
@stephenleaf38485 ай бұрын
That said. Even if they both went to jail (might be ok with this one :)) and someone else entirely got nominated and won. Would it actually change anything? Or would it just direct our hatred towards a fresh target?
@mitonaarea58565 ай бұрын
Nah I think for the most part most Americans can tell that every presidential candidate sucks.
@Ehh.....5 ай бұрын
Appearantly not cause they keep voting these same shit lords in. @@mitonaarea5856
@mattcy65915 ай бұрын
@@mitonaarea5856 I hope you're right. It's hard to judge if it's a loud small minority or if it's actually a larger one
@antonfriberg8815 ай бұрын
Commenting for the algorithm to push the video! A very important video!
@calvin_the_hee45545 ай бұрын
Another great video by Ryan Chapman.
@jamesricker39974 ай бұрын
It started in 1975 when the supreme court let corporate money into politics. It has been all downhill from there
@tw84642 ай бұрын
You're absolutely right
@stenyethanmathews945Ай бұрын
Yes I think so too. Corporate money has completely polluted modern political process.
@Lenny1773 ай бұрын
I just discovered you man. Your content is priceless. Thank you so much.
@jonseilim43215 ай бұрын
特别喜欢您频道!等了好久啊 Love your channel, been waiting for the new video 👍
@reddixiecrat5 ай бұрын
My diagnosis is that technology has changed how the election process works. Ever since FDR and the radio, presidential candidates have relied on a certain degree of charisma to sway elections. No longer were people just voting on the issues. With the coming of TV and the Internet, this increased the need to wear makeup, show off, and make grand speeches. Voting for a politician now is like voting for American Idol, personality and entertainment is at the center of the election. Populism is growing, because we’re voting for cult leaders not representatives.
@MM229665 ай бұрын
It went further back than that. Look at political cartoons or newspapers, especially from the 1800s-1860s. Candidates made speeches, wild promises, did their opponent dirty, made populist appeals, claimed to be an average guy. All the stuff we see today. It's just it is a lot MORE of it now, thanks to the tech/media.
@tanler79532 ай бұрын
I'd say some presidents in the past have been elected because of charisma. Washington, Jackson, Grant were all war heroes. However, I agree the change in media has had a dramatic impact.
@MM229662 ай бұрын
@@tanler7953 "TIPPECANOE AND TYLER TOO!" Who doesn't love canoes?!
@gulapula5 ай бұрын
I think it mostly has to do with the degree of gatekeeping in running for office. Say what you will about RFK Jr. or even Pierre before him in Bush Senior’s bid for reelection, but he is a testament to how difficult it is to run for president without support from a given party. What really shocked me was the cognitive dissonance in the law around political parties. As the system is now, the Republicans and Democrats are integral to our legislature, a part of the government, public organizations, however, under the law they are treated as private companies. In the case of Bernie Sanders and RFK Jr’s attempts at the Democratic Nomination, the party arbitrarily rigged the primary against them. Votes for either candidate in the primary weren’t counted if said candidate had held events ( ralleys, etc.) in that state. This blatant rigging of internal party elections is allowed as political parties are supposed to be private entities separated from the government, this is not the case, the Republican and Democrat parties are the government, and they uphold that monopoly through policies that disadvantage independent and third party candidates. Each state has vastly different requirements to appear on the ballot, ranging from a few thousand signatures to hundreds of thousands. Why don’t we lessen the boundaries to run for office, and let candidates compete amongst themselves until we find the best candidates among them? Although we decide who will become president, we do not choose our options. In much more trivial matters we have hundreds of times more options to choose from. Nobody struggles with deciding a brand of cereal despite there usually being a dozen different choices. Should it really take millions of votes to merely get on the ballot as an alternative to political party nominees that don’t need any?
@TheLostscott4 ай бұрын
Very smart perspective. Thank you for a great video!
@thjbird2 ай бұрын
The corrosive effect of greed
@BetaBuxDelux5 ай бұрын
They get richer and we get poorer. They’re mostly all talk. They tax tax tax and things like homelessness only get worse. 😢
@donaldspaulding69733 ай бұрын
Now it's a crime to be homeless. How can a society with such priorities survive?
@broken-promiseland3 ай бұрын
Wanna change it. I'm not joking do this...All candidates are in the same secret societies. All candidates are in cahoots. This election try something different. Want real freedom, real end to slavery, real truth's. Vote outside the box put my name on the ballot. Im what America needs. It's not a far fetched idea. It's more far fetched nobody's tried yet. Eventually ppl will get to where I'm at. Stop stalling. Stop being scared. You know as well as I one way or another we need a revolution. If we keep just riding it out our kids will have it worse. Then their kids will have it even worse. Eventually our descendants will hate us. I'm already ashamed of my ancestors. Look around you. This isn't right. It isn't working. When you leave work just sit in your car (if you're fortunate enough to have one) watch your coworkers leaving. Cattle exhausted, heading back to the barn. Drained and depressed because deep down you all know, we are slaves. Doomed. Gotta try something. Vote outside the box. Put my name on the ballot
@broken-promiseland3 ай бұрын
@@donaldspaulding6973it can't. Vote outside the box. Put my name on the ballot. I know they'd take me out. But just keep the secret societies out of power. Never choose from the ones being pushed on you. All candidates are in the same secret societies. All candidates are in cahoots. This election try something different. Want real freedom, real end to slavery, real truth's. Vote outside the box put my name on the ballot. Im what America needs. It's not a far fetched idea. It's more far fetched nobody's tried yet. Eventually ppl will get to where I'm at. Stop stalling. Stop being scared. You know as well as I one way or another we need a revolution. If we keep just riding it out our kids will have it worse. Then their kids will have it even worse. Eventually our descendants will hate us. I'm already ashamed of my ancestors. Look around you. This isn't right. It isn't working. When you leave work just sit in your car (if you're fortunate enough to have one) watch your coworkers leaving. Cattle exhausted, heading back to the barn. Drained and depressed because deep down you all know, we are slaves. Doomed. Gotta try something. Vote outside the box. Put my name on the ballot
@SmokeandSpirit5 ай бұрын
I do think our ever increasing involvement with and pressure put on politicians certainly doesn't help make anything better. To think how many actually think the economy's state is a result of the presidency too is pretty nuts.
@MissFangs5 ай бұрын
I want freakbob in office NOW
@iamnotagoose5 ай бұрын
What if instead of President, they were called the Freakident
@ChineseGlobalism5 ай бұрын
Freakbob 2024 😩😩😩😏😏😏
@soarinskies11054 ай бұрын
Thank you for posting this video. You have perfectly captured how I currently feel about the current situation of our country.
@ErnieMcGinnisКүн бұрын
As a public high school government teacher, I really appreciate your neutral stances and very informative and well put together videos. I use them often and value the hard work and fairness you put into your work. Thank you!
@harpsw33905 ай бұрын
This should be required media for all Americans
@mutantryeff5 ай бұрын
Politicians should study the US Army's Leadership Principles Manual and abide by the 10 (or 11) leadership principles.
@johnschmidt12625 ай бұрын
The solution appears to be small government, not as a moral issue but as a practical limit of actual control.
@melissawilliams72384 ай бұрын
Solid content, really great job! Sound insights, unbiased information, educational, fantastic delivery in narration!!! New subscriber! 🏅
@Saritabanana3 ай бұрын
We need a part 2! Bravo 👏
@GiRR0074 ай бұрын
The idea that people should even care that much about who the president is has been a big problem for the country.
@LydiaSings5 ай бұрын
The culprit: Citizens United, SCOTUS, 2010.
@mapsdot92235 ай бұрын
If you're going to treat corporations like people for the sake of punishment, you don't get to then not treat them like people for the sake of political donations. You can thank the environmentalists for that one
@randomdude4624 ай бұрын
@@mapsdot9223 Corporations are not people, they are corporations. End of story.
@synupps8774 ай бұрын
@@mapsdot9223 Fairly old comment I'm replying to, but: You blamed Citizens United on environmentalists. Can you support that claim with credible evidence and good reasoning? How did environmentalists treat corporations like people? From what little I know about Citizens United, its biggest function/trait is allowing lots of dark money into politics. Is that untrue? Can individuals do the same? I think not.
@mapsdot92234 ай бұрын
@@synupps877 the CWA, CAA, RCRA, CERLA and TSCA all changed the regulatory framework for punitive remedies against corporations which allowed them to be sued as an entity and even made up the RCO doctrine as a means of accountability regardless of that person having knowledge of any wrongdoing. That's straight up shady.
@synupps8774 ай бұрын
@@mapsdot9223 Thanks for the good reply. Corporations being "sued as an entity" as opposed to not being able to be sued? Is this what your argument (that environmentalists are culpable for Citizens United) is based on? I'll have to look up the acronyms.
@carlosbanderas42385 ай бұрын
My question is: Why did we let Presidents get so much power over the public? The whole concept of the presidency was to be limited. But at some point presidents tried to make promises they weren't supposed to make (like FDR, JFK etc.).
@zm17864 ай бұрын
Because people are disinterested in the political process as a whole and is largely rigged one way ot another. A truly honest and open society would make election day a national holiday and only use paper ballots that can't be deleted or changed.
@mrcapybara357920 күн бұрын
Same thing's happening here in Kenya. I've started losing faith in liberal democracy.
@drewjones13464 ай бұрын
Amazing and well crafted video. Every word was crucial.