Episode 493: Principles and Preferences

January 29
45 mins

Episode Description

In this episode, we examine proposals that would restrict or revoke U.S. citizenship, including the constitutional limits on forced renunciation, dual citizenship, and the government’s authority to define who belongs. We discuss population policy, free movement in Europe, and Supreme Court precedents that constrain state power over individual status. We also break down a sharp drop in the dollar, revisit the failures of mercantilism, and touch on the cultural politics surrounding Bill Belichick and the Hall of Fame. We then turn to firearms, protest, and political hypocrisy, looking closely at gun violence data, international bans, and the selective application of constitutional principles. We close by exploring free speech, due process, religious freedom, and what happens when rights give way to raw power, from domestic politics to authoritarian regimes abroad.


00:00 Introduction and Overview

00:32 The Exclusive Citizenship Act Explained

01:16 Forced Renunciation and Dual Citizenship Risks

02:30 Could the Government Strip Citizenship?

03:47 Population Reduction and the “100 Million Americans” Idea

05:20 European Passports, Borders, and Free Movement

06:57 Supreme Court Limits on Revoking Citizenship

08:32 Compelled Speech and Constitutional Conflicts

09:46 The Dollar’s Worst Day and Weak Currency Politics

11:17 Mercantilism and Why Economists Rejected It

12:51 Bill Belichick and the Politics of the Hall of Fame

15:34 Minnesota Shooting and the Second Amendment Flip

16:46 When and Why People Carry Guns

18:32 What the Data Really Says About Gun Violence

21:01 International Gun Bans and Substitution Effects

22:11 Protests, Firearms, and Political Hypocrisy

24:12 Republicans, Democrats, and Reversed Principles

27:39 Principles vs Preferences in Constitutional Rights

30:11 Do People Actually Believe in Free Speech?

31:35 Rights as a Defense Against Totalitarianism

32:14 Religion, the First Amendment, and Equal Treatment

33:58 The Taliban, Education, and Religious Absolutism

37:09 Why the Second Amendment Became Politically Unique

39:03 Political Violence and State Power

41:16 Due Process, Federal Force, and Law Enforcement Norms

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

See all episodes

Never lose your place, on any device

Create a free account to sync, back up, and get personal recommendations.