
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
When it comes to prosecuting Jan. 6 cases, maybe we should take a top-down approach and not bottom up. Linda Kinstler is a visiting researcher at Georgetown University and a junior fellow at Harvard. She joins host Krys Boyd to discuss the idea of “oblivion,” allowing society to forgive low-level offenders in order to heal a fractured society. Her recent essay in The New York Times is “Jan. 6, America’s Rupture and the Strange, Forgotten Power of Oblivion.”
4.7
874874 ratings
When it comes to prosecuting Jan. 6 cases, maybe we should take a top-down approach and not bottom up. Linda Kinstler is a visiting researcher at Georgetown University and a junior fellow at Harvard. She joins host Krys Boyd to discuss the idea of “oblivion,” allowing society to forgive low-level offenders in order to heal a fractured society. Her recent essay in The New York Times is “Jan. 6, America’s Rupture and the Strange, Forgotten Power of Oblivion.”
6,175 Listeners
9,171 Listeners
3,918 Listeners
37,886 Listeners
32,081 Listeners
1,013 Listeners
927 Listeners
330 Listeners
8,243 Listeners
43,347 Listeners
6,666 Listeners
4,632 Listeners
110,802 Listeners
16,102 Listeners
15,374 Listeners