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How Rapid Expansion Fractured the United States

Episode 5501 Published 3 weeks, 1 day ago
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In this episode, we explore how rapid expansion fractured the united states. Imagine checking your newsfeed today, right? And you see this breaking alert. One United States senator just walked across the Senate floor and he beats a fellow lawmaker half to death with a walking stick. Wow. I mean, literal blood on the floor of the Capitol. Which sounds, you know, completely made up. Right. Not a movie script, not some dystopian novel. That actually happened in America in 1856. Yeah. And it's it is a moment that completely shatters the illusion of a civilized functioning government yeah I mean when the people making the laws abandoned debate for actual physical violence they're just beating each other exactly you know the entire system is in a state of catastrophic failure and what's wild is just how quickly they got to that point so welcome to today's deep dive glad to be here I want you, the listener, to essentially step into sources we are unpacking cover some of the darkest, most highly charged political and moral content in American history, specifically regarding the forced displacement of Native populations and the institution of slavery. Our role today isn't to editorialize or take sides or endorse any political viewpoints from the left or the right. We are just here to neutrally and impartially report the historical facts and mechanics of how this happened exactly as the timeline lays it out. And that is an essential framework for this deep dive, because the 1830s, it forces us to look at two completely different realities that are happening simultaneously. It really is a split screen. Yeah. On one hand, you have these massive leaps forward in innovation and society. Huge leaks. I mean, in 1831, Cyrus McCormick invents the mechanical reaper. Right. Before this, harvesting wheat was backbreaking work with a scythe. You could only
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