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Digital progress and American systemic collapse

Episode 5454 Published 3 weeks ago
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In this episode, we explore digital progress and american systemic collapse. Imagine you're holding the very first iPhone in your hand. It's 2007. You're holding access to the entire globe, like right there in your pocket. Right, the world at your fingertips. Exactly. It feels like the absolute peak of human engineering. But now imagine looking up from that screen. On the evening news, the massive I -35W Mississippi River Bridge in Minneapolis has just suffered this catastrophic structural failure. It's literally collapsing directly into the water. And that paradox, right? Holding this pristine, world -changing digital technology in one hand. While watching the physical architecture of the country just crumble in front of your eyes. Yes. That exact paradox is the era we are diving into today. It really is a profound contradiction. And honestly, it perfectly encapsulates the two decades of history you've asked us to analyze today. Welcome to The Deep Dive, everyone. Our mission today is to and eventual acquittal in the Senate. In those events, they are the exact mechanism that birthed the 247 sensationalist media culture we have now. Because everyone was just glued to their TVs. Exactly. Before this, news was largely a scheduled, compartmentalized part of the day. You watch the evening news, and that's it. Right. But the OJ trial. and the Clinton impeachment proved that if you blur the lines between hard news, legal drama, and reality television, you can completely consume the national consciousness around the clock. Plus, we haven't even mentioned nature's toll during the so -called boom decade. Yeah, the natural disasters were severe. Hurricane Andrew in 1992 causes $26 billion in damage. The 1993 storm of the century kills 300 people, bringing massive Midwest River floods. And the Chicago heat wave. Right. In 1995, it kills 739 people. And that heat wave wasn't just a weather event.
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