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A sharp political monologue cuts through the outrage cycle and challenges viewers to stop scoring vibes and start stress-testing real-world execution: what can actually be signed, funded, defended, and implemented fast. It reframes modern campaign theater as an attention economy game, then gives a practical filter that instantly separates governing reality from performative branding.
By Madge Weinstein5
11 ratings
A sharp political monologue cuts through the outrage cycle and challenges viewers to stop scoring vibes and start stress-testing real-world execution: what can actually be signed, funded, defended, and implemented fast. It reframes modern campaign theater as an attention economy game, then gives a practical filter that instantly separates governing reality from performative branding.