Black History Month Isn’t Nostalgia—It’s a Rights Stress Test
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Jesse reframes Black History Month as something more than names and dates: it’s a recurring test of whether rights apply evenly or selectively. This episode is built around one unforgettable question, when power knocks, do rights show up?—and it uses that question to connect today’s reported enforcement posture to a longer arc of American history where the home has often been where “law” becomes personal. Jesse doesn’t argue that every official is evil; he argues that systems without guardrails predictably drift into overreach. The episode’s strength is its balance: no panic, no denial, just clarity, memory, and a call to stay awake. He offers grounded takeaways: learn the warrant distinction, understand the home’s place in constitutional design, and watch what courts do next because today’s “immigration” rule becomes tomorrow’s general rule. This is the kind of episode you send to family group chats, because it’s not meant to trend, it’s meant to protect. Listen and share.