Host Joy Gilfilen brings you an extraordinary, âlocal-to-globalâ high-stakes conversation with a dynamic trio of leaders: Mel Hoover, James Addington, and William Gardiner. These three men offer a rare "Birdâs Eye View" from the epicenters of social change, possessing direct, real-world lived experience with intentional change over time. Past cross-generational issues of habits of slavery, structural imprisonment, religious caste, and economic class are 2026 issues for tomorrowâs children.
In this episode, we explore the ripples of the Civil Rights movement specifically as it gained steam and shifted from the Atlantic Seaboard and the deep South toward the West. Our guests reveal the waves of change through time, how theyâve seen the "logic" of these bioregions travel, shaping the civic systems we inhabit in 2026.
The "Practical Historian" Framework
James Addington challenges us to move beyond academic history and become âPractical Historiansâ. This means developing the comfort to look at the "complexity and ambiguity" of our past so we can understand exactly how we got here. As James notes, citing theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer and academic Olufemi Taiwo, we must learn to âthink and feel like ancestorsâ to ensure the options we deliver to future generations are rooted in shared humanity.
Inside this Episode:
The Invention of "Race" for Power: James Addington explains why "race" is an artificial fabricationâa system of classification created solely to determine social value, access, and participation.
From Indentured to Enslaved: Mel Hoover breaks down the turning point in American law where white and black indentured servants began to organize together. To break that power, the wealthy elite created a new category: lifelong chattel slavery, intentionally stripping humanity from African-heritage people to protect property and wealth.
The Global Blueprint: Discover the sobering truth that the American âIndian reservationâ system and legal segregation served as the functional engineers for South African Apartheid and were even admired by the Nazi regime.
The "Asterisk" of Whiteness: Bill Gardiner and James Addington discuss growing up in "American Apartheid" and the "asterisk" of whitenessâhow many white families have forgotten their own immigrant histories of discrimination (Irish, Polish, Italian) and their own complex heritages (including Choctaw and enslaved ancestors).
Bioregional Logic: We parse the differences between the political and religious structures of the East and South, and how those cultural "logics" of dominance were exported across the nation.
Mel Hoover, James Addington, and Bill Gardiner demonstrate how becoming practical historians reveals and can promote productive community changes. We cannot remove the "foot on the neck" of the present until we understand the biased structure of the law that placed it there.
Join us for this "Major League" conversation on rehumanizing the human race.