How The Right To Petition Shapes Government Responses

How The Right To Petition Shapes Government Responses

What if the most underrated line of the First Amendment is the one that asks for a reply? We sit down with Dr. Daniel Carpenter of Harvard to explore the right to petition—what it is, where it came from, and why it still shapes how power listens. From a Roman subject pressing Emperor Hadrian for attention to the barons who forced Magna Carta, petitioning has long been the channel that turns private grievance into public business. We walk through the pivotal moments that cemented this right: ...

Episoder(190)

Field Trip Friday: Inside America 250 On The National Mall

Field Trip Friday: Inside America 250 On The National Mall

Step onto the nation’s front yard as we unpack how the National Mall is preparing for America’s 250th—through bold infrastructure upgrades, inclusive programming, and a reimagined visitor experience t...

27 Feb 14min

Jackson’s First Inaugural, Explained

Jackson’s First Inaugural, Explained

A soft-spoken inaugural, a roaring political realignment. We unpack Andrew Jackson’s first days as president to reveal how a short address helped usher in a long era of mass democracy, constitutional ...

26 Feb 19min

John Quincy Adams, The Monroe Doctrine, And The Perils Of Power

John Quincy Adams, The Monroe Doctrine, And The Perils Of Power

We trace John Quincy Adams’s 1821 address from its famous “monsters to destroy” line to its deeper call for principled strength and measured engagement. We connect it to Washington’s Farewell and the ...

25 Feb 21min

Monroe Doctrine

Monroe Doctrine

We trace the Monroe Doctrine from a daring 1823 warning to a living rulebook that still shapes how America defines security, principle, and power. From John Quincy Adams to modern strategy, we test wh...

24 Feb 22min

Missouri Compromise

Missouri Compromise

We trace how the Missouri Compromise tried to hold a fragile Union together by pairing Missouri and Maine, drawing a line across the map, and postponing a moral decision. The story connects founding-e...

23 Feb 20min

Field Trip Friday: How New Monuments Happen

Field Trip Friday: How New Monuments Happen

Memory does not arrive fully formed in stone; it’s argued into place. We pull back the curtain on how a new memorial takes shape on the National Mall, from the first spark of a citizens’ group to the ...

20 Feb 17min

Madison’s Veto And Monroe’s Pivot

Madison’s Veto And Monroe’s Pivot

What if the road to American nation-building ran straight through a constitutional crossroads? We dig into James Madison’s veto of the Bonus Bill and James Monroe’s later twist on internal improvement...

19 Feb 14min

The Louisiana Purchase

The Louisiana Purchase

We trace how a bid for New Orleans became a continental purchase while we test Jefferson’s strict constitutional views against Madison’s steadier reading of treaty and territorial powers. Europe’s war...

18 Feb 13min

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