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Description

In this episode, we examine the growing disconnect between education theory and classroom reality, as academic research drifts toward identity themes while teachers confront daily behavioral and practical challenges. We discuss the BBC’s misleading edits of Trump’s January 6 remarks and what the scandal reveals about media trust, then turn to a “foolishness of the week” on claims about podcasting’s diversity problem. We analyze new polling that shows Trump losing ground with Republicans and independents, rising economic frustration, and how political pressure is driving shifts on tariffs, immigration, and labor policy. We also touch on the Epstein files debate and the constitutional limits on congressional speech, considering how these controversies reflect changing public opinion and the incentives that push policymakers back toward the center.

00:00 Introduction and Overview

00:34 Academia’s Incentive Problem

07:47 BBC Scandal and Leadership Failures

11:13 The “Podcast Diversity” Study

13:01 Social Media Algorithms and Reel Addiction

16:36 Trump’s Approval Slide and Voter Frustration

22:00 What Off-Year Elections Reveal

23:20 Inflation, Consumer Sentiment, and Economic Strain

25:29 Trump’s Tariffs and Mercantilist Policies

29:24 Immigration Shifts and Labor Shortages

35:09 Government Limits

37:50 Epstein Files and Foreign Influence Concerns

43:48 Shutdown Fallout and The Republican Midterm Strategy

49:49 Hope for the Future
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