Feudal Future

Feudal Future

Joel Kotkin & Marshall Toplansky
Maa Yhdysvallat
Kieli EN-US
Jaksot 149
Viimeisin 22.06.2026

Feudal Future examines the emerging class structure reminiscent of medieval times, where opportunity is shrinking for small business owners, property owners, skilled workers, and private sector professionals. Hosts Joel Kotkin and Marshall Toplansky discuss how to liberate the global middle class, interviewing business, government, and citizen leaders to uncover trends and provide insights for a better future. The show is supported by the Chapman Center for Demographics and Policy.

Jaksot

  • Energy Shocks And Recessions 22.06.2026 35min
    Energy shocks don’t just raise prices, they can end expansions. We sit down with Tyler Goodspeed, Chief Economist at ExxonMobil and author of “Recession,” plus energy analyst Robert Bryce, to map how oil, natural gas, and geopolitics can turn into real-world recession risk. Along the way, we test a question we remember from the 1970s: are we watching another classic energy-driven downturn, or something structurally different because the United States is now a major oil and gas producer and a ...
  • The Housing Affordability Challenge 10.06.2026 28min
    The fastest way to spot a broken housing market is brutally simple: compare home prices to incomes. When that price-to-income ratio, often called the median multiple, shoots from a normal “3” to “11” or “12,” you are not looking at a minor housing shortage. You are looking at a system that no longer works for the middle class. We unpack what the latest Demographia housing affordability data says about the US and other high-cost countries, and why “impossibly unaffordable” has become the most ...
  • THE EVOLUTION OF THE IRANIAN AMERICAN COMMUNITY 26.05.2026 1t 19min
    A half-century is long enough for a community to transform, but not long enough for the origin story to stay intact without receipts. We walk through one of the first comprehensive efforts to measure Iranian Americans in the United States, then pressure-test the findings with sharp audience questions and personal reflections that put real faces behind the charts. We talk about how Iranian immigration stretches back further than most people assume, why the 1980s become the biggest decad...
  • The Future of the Democratic Party and California Politics 15.05.2026 32min
    The Democrats keep asking voters to choose them, but many people still can’t answer a basic question: what do Democrats stand for right now? We bring on public affairs consultant and UCLA lecturer David Gershwin and AEI senior fellow Ruy Teixeira to wrestle with the party’s direction, its internal incentives, and why “winning the next election” can mask deeper strategic failure. We talk about how the Democratic donor world and institutional ecosystem often reward coalition management over co...
  • How Liberalism Lost Its Edge And How It Can Find It Again 27.04.2026 44min
    Liberalism didn’t start as a comfortable status quo. It started as a revolt against feudal hierarchy and rigid orthodoxy, and it stayed alive by reinventing itself when capitalism and concentrated power threatened to rot the system from the inside. That’s the premise behind our conversation with Adrian Wooldridge, author of The Revolutionary Center, The Lost Genius of Liberalism, and it’s the thread that ties together everything we wrestle with here. We trace how earlier liberals confr...
  • Why Wealth Taxes Backfire And What Works Instead 17.04.2026 35min
    A state can look rich on paper while ordinary life gets harder fast and the bill comes due. We sit down with Hephestion Bolaris of Class Unity and Hank Adler, an accounting professor and former Deloitte tax partner, to ask the uncomfortable question behind every big promise: who pays, how, and what happens when the payers can leave? We pressure-test wealth taxes and “tax the rich” politics against real examples, from European welfare states that lean heavily on income taxes and VAT to France...
  • Career Launch in the Age of AI 26.03.2026 30min
    Entry-level hiring is getting squeezed, but the reasons aren’t as simple as “the economy is bad.” We sit down with David Brown, Americas CEO of Hays, and James Dusserre, assistant dean for placement and career services, to map what the 2026 job market actually looks like for new grads and early career professionals. The surprising part: GDP and unemployment can look okay while companies still pull back on junior openings, because the expectation of AI-driven productivity is changing how leade...
  • Is there a new Religious Revival? 12.03.2026 47min
    Religious belief is supposed to fade as societies get richer and more educated. So why do newer surveys show the opposite pattern in the United States, with college grads and post grads often *more* likely to attend church than people with only a high school education? We unpack what the data can and cannot prove, why earlier secularization theories missed key realities, and how a smaller but more committed religious share can still look like a “revival” in daily life. We also get into the d...
  • From Policy To Permits, Here’s How We Unlock Affordable Housing 23.02.2026 54min
    California’s housing crisis isn’t a riddle; it’s a chain reaction. We trace it from land policy and restrictive growth boundaries to code complexity, construction costs, and the quiet social fallout inside families, schools, synagogues, and neighborhoods. With demographers, advocates, and veteran builders around the table, we unpack why the median home price-to-income ratio ballooned, how the land share of a home soared past construction, and why four million people have left since 2000. We ...
  • Populism’s Pulse Today 06.02.2026 31min
    Populism gets blamed for everything from polarization to democratic decay—but what if the louder story is a search for voice and belonging? We sit down with sociologist Frank Furedi to unpack why so many voters are breaking with legacy parties and why the energy behind these movements is less about recession and more about culture. From national identity and neighborly trust to the norms families rely on, we explore the deeper drivers that explain why reform-minded parties are rising across t...
  • Censorship, Power, And The Internet 19.01.2026 41min
    What if the internet that promised liberation ended up centralizing control over what we see, share, and believe? We sit down with Jake Siegel—journalist, former Army intelligence officer, and author of The Information State—to trace how a tool built for openness became the backbone of a new information order. Starting with the Internet Freedom Agenda and moving through 9/11’s surveillance shift, we connect the dots between national security priorities, platform consolidation, and the collaps...
  • How Automation Is Reshaping Jobs, Education, And Opportunity 08.01.2026 56min
    Want a clear-eyed map of where AI is taking jobs, education, and leadership over the next five years? We dig past the headlines to examine why tech profits can soar while layoffs spread, why white-collar roles are suddenly vulnerable, and how students and mid-career professionals can protect their earnings in a market that rewards speed, strategy, and human touch. We unpack the difference between robots and cobots, showing how “human-in-the-loop” work changes which skills pay. Our guests lay...
  • 2025 in Review: A Decade of Demographics & Policy 22.12.2025 35min
    The headlines shout about winners and losers, but the real story this year is a quiet break in the social fabric: rising costs, collapsing civility, and a middle class pushed to the margins while trillion-dollar platforms set the rules. We take stock without the wishful thinking—where leadership fell short, why media trust eroded, and how populist energy devolved into a performance economy. Then we chart a path that doesn’t wait for national saviors: rebuild the basics at the scale where life...
  • Faith in Flux: Tracking America’s Religious Shift 08.12.2025 39min
    The ground beneath American religion is shifting, but not in a straight line. We dig into why the country’s casual middle is shrinking while conviction grows at the edges—among communities that ask more, not less. With Charles Murray and Terry Mattingley, we trace the data on mainline decline, the plateau of the “nones,” and the surprising surge in tradition-forward spaces where authority, discipline, and community still shape everyday life. We share stories of parishes packed with young fam...
  • Newsom’s Next Move: And Who’s Got Next for California 03.11.2025 46min
    A governor with national ambitions, a party tug‑of‑war, and a state wrestling with affordability—this conversation goes straight at the question on everyone’s mind: can Gavin Newsom sell hope to a country tired of anger without getting buried by California’s record? We bring together seasoned strategists to weigh why prediction markets love his chances, how a relentless work ethic and podcast‑first media game reshape reach, and whether a transactional political style beats an old‑school “visi...
  • Why Iranian American Immigrants Excel: Grit, Education, and the Fight for a Free Iran 28.10.2025 47min
    What explains the outsized success of Iranian Americans—and can that same resolve help tilt the future of Iran? We bring together two sharp voices to unpack a story that spans kitchen-table sacrifice, elite migration, and a culture where A’s are expected and grit is non-negotiable. From early professional cohorts in medicine and engineering to founders in Silicon Valley, we trace the “immigrant trifecta” of aspiration, constraint, and discipline that turned upheaval into momentum. The conver...
  • How Cities Really Work 15.10.2025 37min
    Tired of big talk that falls apart when the trash doesn’t get picked up? We bring together two insiders who’ve lived the fight from the council chamber to the mayor’s office to map how cities actually move: coalitions, budgets, police staffing, and the messy business of making streets feel safe. Houston’s recent pivot toward a centrist, basics-first agenda shows how bipartisan votes still form when leaders fix pensions, rebuild infrastructure, and keep patrol cars rolling. San Francisco’s sag...
  • The Future of Space Defense 22.09.2025 45min
    The landscape of American defense manufacturing has transformed dramatically since World War II—and not for the better. What happens when a nation with the world's most advanced military technology can't produce enough conventional artillery shells to supply Ukraine while maintaining its own reserves? This episode brings together three exceptional voices to examine America's critical vulnerability: our diminished industrial capacity. Arthur Herman, author of "Freedom's Forge," provides histo...
  • AI's Boardroom Revolution 17.09.2025 49min
    Support Our Work The Center for Demographics and Policy focuses on research and analysis of global, national, and regional demographic trends and explores policies that might produce favorable demographic results over time. It involves Chapman students in demographic research under the supervision of the Center’s senior staff. Students work with the Center’s director and engage in research that will serve them well as they look to develop their careers in business, the social sciences, and t...
  • Immigration Crossroads 17.09.2025 43min
    Is there a middle ground between open borders and immigration restriction? This thought-provoking discussion with GOP strategist Mike Madrid and Venezuelan immigrant Dr. Daniel DiMartino explores the complex realities of America's immigration debate beyond the partisan talking points. The experts delve into surprising data showing how education levels dramatically impact immigrant outcomes - college-educated immigrants are approximately 1,000 times less likely to commit crimes than those wit...

Suosittu maassa

Tämä podcast esiintyy myös näiden maiden podcast-listoilla.