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Podcast Episodes
All Podcast Episodes from Consequential Actions


The Digital Cage: CBDCs, ESG, and the End of Economic Privacy
This episode examines what is being built—the infrastructure of digital control that will define the next generation’s relationship with government and commerce, tracing the convergence of financial surveillance, digital identity, and social scoring into a unified system.
Dec 29, 20251 min read


The COVID State: Technocracy, Lockdowns, and the Politics of Fear
COVID-19 would ultimately kill more than one million Americans. The elderly. The immunocompromised. There is no questioning the reality of the toll this virus inflicted on people with pain, suffering, and grief. Rather, this episode asks a different question—not whether the virus was dangerous, but whether the response was proportionate. Not whether government should have acted, but whether the actions taken were consistent with constitutional governance. Not whether emergenc
Dec 27, 20251 min read


The Welfare-Security Fusion: Managing Citizens Instead of Governing Them
What happens when welfare and security fuse—when the databases designed to track benefits become interoperable with those designed to track threats. When the citizen who was once a recipient becomes a credential. When the bureaucracy that once served becomes the bureaucracy that manages.
Dec 23, 20251 min read


Monetary Alchemy: The Federal Reserve and the Age of Perpetual Crisis
A secret cabal flaunted in its own history pages of its website. A hybrid entity private in form, public in function.
The evolution of the power to create money—to determine the value of every dollar in every pocket— from the halls of congress (elected representatives of the people) to the hands of unelected experts.
A fiat money system, where there is no constraint, where the quantity of money is limited only by the decisions of those who control its creation. A system t
Dec 21, 20251 min read


The Surveillance Economy: From Data Collection to Digital Control
After September 11, the national security apparatus discovered that Silicon Valley had already built something it could never have constructed on its own: a commercial surveillance infrastructure of unprecedented scope. The partnership that emerged—formalized through Section 702, PRISM, and informal coordination channels—erased the boundary between corporate database and government intelligence.
Dec 13, 20251 min read


The End of Normal: 9/11 and the Rebirth of the National Security State
The New Leviathan: From 9/11 to COVID and the Return of Emergency Power - Ep. 01
What happens when emergency becomes permanent? When the logic of exception becomes the logic of governance? When the state designed to manage poverty discovers it can also manage fear?
That is the story of the New Leviathan.
And it begins on a clear blue morning in September.
Dec 7, 20251 min read


Prologue: From General Welfare to Emergency Power
This episode serves as a bridge connecting our last series on the evolution of the General Welfare clause into the Administrative State and the New Leviathan where governance finds continued expansion via emergency power. We will reflect on how we got here and preview the arc from 9/11 thru COVID and look ahead to future choices.
Dec 6, 20251 min read


Epilogue: From General Welfare to the Great Society—The Arc of Administrative Power
In this final entry, we reflect on how this series has traced the transformation from Madison’s enumerated republic to Hamilton’s administrative state. From restraint to capacity. From structure to procedure. From limited government to what we have today.
Nov 30, 20251 min read


The Conservative Counterrevolution: Reagan and the Limits of Rolling Back the State
The Conservative Counterrevolution. Intellectual dominance. Rhetorical victory. Electoral success. But the administrative state survived intact. Spending grew. Agencies remained. Entitlements were untouched. Debt exploded.
Why? Because institutions are more durable than ideas. Because constituencies defend their interests. Because path dependency creates irreversibility.
The administrative welfare state, once built, proved nearly impossible to dismantle
Nov 29, 20251 min read


The New Property: Welfare Rights, Goldberg v. Kelly, and Proceduralization of Dependence
This episode shows how legislative programs became constitutional rights—the final step in making the welfare state permanent. How Hamilton’s vision of general welfare through Roosevelt’s revolution of 1937 through to Johnson’s Great Society became entrenched and immune to rollback.
Nov 22, 20251 min read


The Great Society: How LBJ Perfected the Welfare State Hamilton Built and Roosevelt Normalized
This episode shows LBJ wielding the constitutional and administrative machinery built by Hamilton (1787), validated by the Supreme Court (1937), and institutionalized through the APA (1946)—deploying it all with moral fervor for the Great Society.
Nov 15, 20251 min read


From Dual to Cooperative Federalism—How the Administrative State Replaced the Republic
The Founders built a republic of separated powers and enumerated limits. By 1946, America lived under an administrative state of consolidated power and procedural formalities.
And most people didn’t even notice it happening.
In Episode 5 of the series we show how 1937’s dramatic constitutional revolution became the mundane bureaucratic routine—the “quiet revolution after the revolution.
Nov 8, 20251 min read


The Constitutional Revolution of 1937—Helvering and Wickard
One year. 1937. A handful of Supreme Court decisions. And the entire structure of American federalism—limits on spending, boundaries between federal and state authority, judicial protection of economic liberty—all of it swept away.
This is Episode 4, this is the constitutional revolution. The moment Hamilton’s vision finally, completely, and irreversibly triumphs over Madison’s restraint.
Nov 2, 20251 min read


Reconstruction, Industrialization, and the Rise of the New Constitution: A Second Founding
See how the Civil War and Reconstruction shattered the original constitutional order. In this episode, we’ll explore the Fourteenth Amendment—how it transformed the Constitution from a pact among states into a charter of individual rights enforceable by the federal government. We’ll examine how industrialization and national markets created pressures that dual federalism couldn’t contain. And we’ll meet the Lochner Court—the judges who tried to protect economic liberty while
Oct 25, 20251 min read


Enumerated Powers and the Early Republic: Federalism Before the Fracture
From 1789 to 1860, the United States actually lived under the system of enumerated powers James Madison designed. The federal government really was limited. States really did dominate most policy. And somehow—imperfectly, with glaring contradictions we’ll address—it worked.
Oct 19, 20251 min read


The Forgotten Debate: Madison vs. Hamilton on General Welfare
Every modern debate about federal power — from Social Security and Medicare to student loan forgiveness and pandemic bailouts — traces back to a fight most Americans have never heard of. It wasn’t about guns or abortion or the culture wars. It was about a single phrase in Article I of the Constitution
Oct 18, 20251 min read
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