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A country can post great numbers and still feel like it’s falling apart. We start with a flashpoint: Trump’s inflammatory rhetoric about immigrants and political opponents, and how quickly it turns a policy conversation into a moral reckoning. The real tension isn’t just tone, it’s whether public cruelty gets treated as background noise as long as the stock market looks good.
From there, we unpack the core clash between hard-nosed capitalism and moral accountability. One view says the American economy is powered by entrepreneurship and “executional excellence,” not where you’re from. The counterpoint is sharper: no capitalist economy survives without trust, integrity, honesty, and the rule of law, and wealth means little if a huge share of people still live in poverty. That’s the contradiction at the center of economic inequality, and it forces a question many leaders dodge: working for whom?
Then we pivot to the kitchen-table reality of inflation and the cost of living. We talk through how policy choices, tariffs, and foreign conflict can show up as higher prices, wages that lag behind, and voters who feel ignored. We also examine the corruption-shaped optics of ballooning budgets, pet projects, and no-bid contracts, and why those stories matter even when they seem small next to bigger crises.
We close with a hopeful, practical frame: economic populism aimed at corporate power. Farmers trapped by locked equipment and right to repair fights, and immigrant ride-share drivers squeezed by fees and lockouts, reveal the same problem from different angles. If you got something from this, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, then tell us what you think: what would make the economy work for you?
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By Darrell McClain5
1010 ratings
Send us Fan Mail
A country can post great numbers and still feel like it’s falling apart. We start with a flashpoint: Trump’s inflammatory rhetoric about immigrants and political opponents, and how quickly it turns a policy conversation into a moral reckoning. The real tension isn’t just tone, it’s whether public cruelty gets treated as background noise as long as the stock market looks good.
From there, we unpack the core clash between hard-nosed capitalism and moral accountability. One view says the American economy is powered by entrepreneurship and “executional excellence,” not where you’re from. The counterpoint is sharper: no capitalist economy survives without trust, integrity, honesty, and the rule of law, and wealth means little if a huge share of people still live in poverty. That’s the contradiction at the center of economic inequality, and it forces a question many leaders dodge: working for whom?
Then we pivot to the kitchen-table reality of inflation and the cost of living. We talk through how policy choices, tariffs, and foreign conflict can show up as higher prices, wages that lag behind, and voters who feel ignored. We also examine the corruption-shaped optics of ballooning budgets, pet projects, and no-bid contracts, and why those stories matter even when they seem small next to bigger crises.
We close with a hopeful, practical frame: economic populism aimed at corporate power. Farmers trapped by locked equipment and right to repair fights, and immigrant ride-share drivers squeezed by fees and lockouts, reveal the same problem from different angles. If you got something from this, subscribe, share the episode, and leave a review, then tell us what you think: what would make the economy work for you?
Support the show

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