In this episode of The TRM Podcast, we speak with Mila Atmos, creator and host of Future Hindsight, about what it really takes to revitalize American democracy from the ground up.
Drawing on eight years of interviewing civic leaders, reformers, and everyday doers, Mila explains why local and state engagement—not national spectacle—is where citizens have the most real-world power. She shares how she began her podcast in the aftermath of 2016, driven by a simple question: What can ordinary people do beyond voting?The conversation dives into:
1 - Why civic engagement works best locally—and why showing up to a city council meeting can have outsized impact.
2- The myth of a deeply divided America and how media incentives manufacture polarization despite broad public agreement on core issues.
3 - Lessons from 2016, 2020, and 2024, and why repeated “change elections” keep producing disappointment.
4 - How special interests and structural barriers—from the Electoral College to Senate malapportionment—sabotage majority rule.
5 - The crisis-as-opportunity moment we’re living through, and what it will take to channel it into genuine democratic renewal.
6 - The power of ordinary citizens solving tangible problems, from transit issues to food insecurity among seniors, and how real wins can spark broader political participation.
7 - New models for representation, including representatives who pledge to vote exactly as their constituents instruct—issue by issue.
Mila also shares the mission behind Future Hindsight: to give listeners the insight, energy, and confidence to act—to think differently about citizenship so they can act differently in their communities.
It’s a wide-ranging, hopeful, and deeply practical conversation between two people committed to rebuilding democracy not through theory, but through doing.