Navigated to Episode 497: Electoral Nonsense

Episode 497: Electoral Nonsense

February 12
40 mins

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Episode Description

In this episode, we discuss Ireland’s decision to make its basic income program for artists permanent and what that means for government-funded creativity, cultural value, and incentives. We examine the politics of the Super Bowl halftime show, rising ticket prices, and what cultural events reveal about tribal identity and public signaling. We then explore Texas redistricting, California’s response, and the Supreme Court’s potential role, along with broader debates over federal control of elections, absentee voting, voter ID laws, and lingering claims about the 2020 election. We also consider what legitimacy means in a constitutional republic, why “not my president” rhetoric cuts both ways, and whether secession talk solves anything. We close with a nearly catastrophic public restroom fiasco in Rome.


00:00 Introduction and Overview

00:42 Happy Bro Day!

01:57 Ireland’s Basic Income for Artists Becomes Permanent

03:21 Do Art Subsidies Create Culture or Dependency?

05:16 Super Bowl Halftime Politics: Bad Bunny vs. Kid Rock

09:40 Super Bowl Ticket Prices and Trump’s Absence

12:28 Texas Redistricting and the Razor-Thin House Majority

16:58 California Pushback and Supreme Court Implications

19:14 Trump Floats Federal Control of Elections

21:49 Absentee Voting and Constitutional Authority

23:44 Was the 2020 Election Stolen? Claims vs Evidence

27:24 Voter ID Laws and Election Integrity Debates

29:12 “Not My President” and Legitimacy in Democracy

30:51 Secession Talk and the Limits of Political Division

32:26 Compromise, Constitutional Norms, and Closing Reflections

33:46 Rome Public Restroom Fiasco

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