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Everyone talks about how the American Infrastructure is crumbling, but what exactly do they mean by Infrastructure, and why is it breaking down? In this 3 episode series we examine what Infrastructure really is, why it is broken, and who is responsible. Our first installment covers "Hard" Infrastructure (the actual physical mechanisms that we depend on in day to day life). If you want to know why the U.S. is lagging behind the modern world in transportation, water quality, and so many other aspects of daily life, one need only look to our backwards politics, and the overwhelming incentive to transfer today's costs to future generations.
HALLUCINATION CHECK: This is not exactly a "Hallucination", but it is hosting/format decision that deserves mention. Rather than breaking up individual anecdotes and subjects cleanly by episode, this deep dive series revisits case studies repeatedly, from different, but slightly overlapping angles. The theory was that the repetition would help the concepts "land" for listeners, especially those that may not be listening linearly, or listen over weeks at a time. Now that it is up, we like the content, but have mixed feelings as to how it plays for binge listeners. If you love it or hate it, let us know on Reddit.
By Aion-Sigma Correlated CurriculaEveryone talks about how the American Infrastructure is crumbling, but what exactly do they mean by Infrastructure, and why is it breaking down? In this 3 episode series we examine what Infrastructure really is, why it is broken, and who is responsible. Our first installment covers "Hard" Infrastructure (the actual physical mechanisms that we depend on in day to day life). If you want to know why the U.S. is lagging behind the modern world in transportation, water quality, and so many other aspects of daily life, one need only look to our backwards politics, and the overwhelming incentive to transfer today's costs to future generations.
HALLUCINATION CHECK: This is not exactly a "Hallucination", but it is hosting/format decision that deserves mention. Rather than breaking up individual anecdotes and subjects cleanly by episode, this deep dive series revisits case studies repeatedly, from different, but slightly overlapping angles. The theory was that the repetition would help the concepts "land" for listeners, especially those that may not be listening linearly, or listen over weeks at a time. Now that it is up, we like the content, but have mixed feelings as to how it plays for binge listeners. If you love it or hate it, let us know on Reddit.