How Ordinary People Reclaim Power In A Strained Democracy
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We’ve been trained to point at three branches of government and ask, “Why won’t they fix it?” I’m flipping that question around. If we want a healthier democracy, we have to face the uncomfortable truth that the biggest failure might be us: our attention, our participation, and our willingness to act with self-integrity instead of outsourcing responsibility to institutions.
I share why I wrote my book, The Fourth Branch, and what I think we were never taught in civics class. The “fourth branch” isn’t a building or a bureaucracy, it’s the people as a living force. When we stay informed, engaged, discerning, and willing to hold power accountable, the whole system changes. When we become spectators, institutions turn into performers, and agency drifts away without anyone needing to “steal” it.
We also talk about technology panic and why blaming blockchain or AI misses the point. Blockchain and artificial intelligence are tools, and the real question is who controls the incentives, the data, and the information pipelines. If you care about civic engagement, accountability, digital rights, and rebuilding community trust, this conversation gives you a framework for reclaiming power at a human scale.
If this hits a nerve, subscribe, share this with a friend who feels stuck, and leave a review so more people can find the series. What’s one concrete step you’ll take this week to stop spectating and start participating?
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