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Welcome to Crisis in Perception.In this Deep Dive, we examine The Fifth Risk by Michael Lewis — an investigation into the often-invisible machinery of the U.S. federal government and the dangers that arise when expertise, preparation, and institutional knowledge are ignored.Lewis documents the chaotic presidential transition of 2016–2017, focusing on how critical agencies were left understaffed or misunderstood despite detailed handoff materials prepared by outgoing officials. Through stories from career civil servants, the book reveals how much of government’s most important work happens quietly — managing nuclear materials, safeguarding food systems, tracking weather, and protecting public safety.Topics explored in this episode include:What the “fifth risk” actually refers toHow complex government systems quietly protect societyThe role of expertise and institutional memoryWhy some risks are invisible until they failThe Department of Energy beyond nuclear weaponsThe importance of data, science, and continuityThe mismatch between mission-driven service and profit-driven thinkingHow neglect creates long-term national vulnerabilityThis episode is not a partisan argument.It is a systems-level analysis of risk, governance, and expertise.▶ MINI EXPLAINER VERSIONPrefer a shorter visual overview?Watch the Mini Explainer here:👉 https://youtu.be/07UPbrERdds📚 CREDITSBased on ideas from The Fifth Risk by Michael Lewis.This episode is a transformative educational analysis, not a substitute for the original work.❤️ SUPPORT THE PROJECTSupport Crisis in Perception on Patreon:👉 https://patreon.com/CrisisInPerception
By Crisis in PerceptionWelcome to Crisis in Perception.In this Deep Dive, we examine The Fifth Risk by Michael Lewis — an investigation into the often-invisible machinery of the U.S. federal government and the dangers that arise when expertise, preparation, and institutional knowledge are ignored.Lewis documents the chaotic presidential transition of 2016–2017, focusing on how critical agencies were left understaffed or misunderstood despite detailed handoff materials prepared by outgoing officials. Through stories from career civil servants, the book reveals how much of government’s most important work happens quietly — managing nuclear materials, safeguarding food systems, tracking weather, and protecting public safety.Topics explored in this episode include:What the “fifth risk” actually refers toHow complex government systems quietly protect societyThe role of expertise and institutional memoryWhy some risks are invisible until they failThe Department of Energy beyond nuclear weaponsThe importance of data, science, and continuityThe mismatch between mission-driven service and profit-driven thinkingHow neglect creates long-term national vulnerabilityThis episode is not a partisan argument.It is a systems-level analysis of risk, governance, and expertise.▶ MINI EXPLAINER VERSIONPrefer a shorter visual overview?Watch the Mini Explainer here:👉 https://youtu.be/07UPbrERdds📚 CREDITSBased on ideas from The Fifth Risk by Michael Lewis.This episode is a transformative educational analysis, not a substitute for the original work.❤️ SUPPORT THE PROJECTSupport Crisis in Perception on Patreon:👉 https://patreon.com/CrisisInPerception