America Unbound Episode 4: Governing in a Polarized America
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The chokehold has been lifted. America breathes again! I mean we narrowly avoided complete, self-inflicted disaster. After harrowing days of the most long-drawn-out government shutdown in U.S. history—a marathon of political brinkmanship—Congress somehow reached a makeshift deal to get off the people's back. Federal workers will return to their offices, airports will return to normal, and there will be food on the table for millions living paycheck-to-paycheck. The "glass is half-full" optimists would say this deal is simply the lesser of two evils. And, frankly, that’s about as good as it gets these days. We like to think of polarization as the Damocles Sword hanging perpetually over our heads. But history speaks otherwise. From the Marshall Plan to the Civil Rights Act to Medicare, America can build consensus across class, race, and party lines. The problem is not that cooperation is impossible. Rather, we’ve simply forgotten how to expect it. We’ve become so used to the partisan food fight that we're surprised when someone actually tries to cook dinner.