Why January 1 Became America’s Civic Reset
Civics In A Year31 Des 2025

Why January 1 Became America’s Civic Reset

Midnight sparks joy, but the deeper story begins when the noise fades. We explore how January 1 became one of America’s earliest federal holidays and why this date has long served as a civic reset—an annual reminder that renewal is something we do together, not alone. From the quiet power of colonial-era visits and reconciliations to the thunderclap of January 1, 1863, we connect personal resolutions to public purpose and trace the living tradition of watch night as a testament to freedom ren...

Episoder(190)

Why Engel v. Vitale Redefined Faith And Public Schools

Why Engel v. Vitale Redefined Faith And Public Schools

A 22-word morning prayer, written by New York’s Board of Regents, ignited one of the most significant constitutional rulings of the last century. We sit down with Professor Katskee to unpack Engel v. ...

15 Des 202517min

How Tinker v. Des Moines Empowered Student Speech

How Tinker v. Des Moines Empowered Student Speech

A simple black armband became a turning point for student rights. We sit down with Mary Beth Tinker to revisit the 1965 protest that led to Tinker v. Des Moines and the Supreme Court’s declaration tha...

12 Des 202550min

How The Pentagon Papers Redefined Free Speech And Government Accountability

How The Pentagon Papers Redefined Free Speech And Government Accountability

We trace the 15-day showdown over the Pentagon Papers and how the Supreme Court drew a bright line against prior restraint. The story moves from Ellsberg’s leak to the Court’s ruling that the press se...

11 Des 202510min

New York Times v. Sullivan

New York Times v. Sullivan

Professor Samantha Barbas traces how New York Times v. Sullivan reshaped libel law, empowered investigative reporting, and protected the civil rights movement, then tests the standard against today’s ...

10 Des 202510min

Baker v. Carr Explained: From Unequal Districts To One Person, One Vote

Baker v. Carr Explained: From Unequal Districts To One Person, One Vote

Imagine sharing a district with nine times as many people as the voters next door and getting the same single representative. That stark imbalance was common before Baker v. Carr, and it’s the startin...

9 Des 202516min

How Brown v. Board Ended Legal School Segregation

How Brown v. Board Ended Legal School Segregation

A nine-page Supreme Court opinion changed the course of American education—and it wasn’t an accident. We walk through the legal strategy that chipped away at Plessy, the political maneuvering that ele...

8 Des 202512min

From Schenck To Social Media: How Free Speech Law Evolved

From Schenck To Social Media: How Free Speech Law Evolved

Free speech law didn’t spring fully formed; it was hammered out case by case, crisis by crisis. We unpack how Schenck v. United States, a 1919 wartime case that actually upheld a conviction, planted t...

5 Des 202523min

Dred Scott, America’s Breaking Point

Dred Scott, America’s Breaking Point

A Supreme Court tried to settle the slavery question and instead set the country ablaze. We unpack Dred Scott v. Sandford with Dr. Beinberg, tracing how a case about one man’s claim to freedom morphed...

4 Des 202515min

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