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  • The Long Struggle for Freedom in America: From Colonial Beginnings to the Civil War (Part I)
    2026/06/07

    The Long Struggle for Freedom in America: From Colonial Beginnings to the Civil War (Part I) This is part I of a three part series, taking a deeper look into American history...How was American slavery built into the life of the nation? This episode explores its colonial foundations and follows its expansion through law, commerce, labor, and political power, showing how slavery became a national system rather than a regional footnote. It is a deep look at the machinery America constructed, normalized, and defended for generations.

    **Editorial note: This series examines difficult and often painful parts of American history with the aim of understanding them more fully, carefully, and in their full historical context.

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    58 分
  • The Long Struggle for Freedom in America: From Emancipation to the Voting Rights Act (Part II)
    2026/06/07

    The Long Struggle for Freedom in America: From Emancipation to the Voting Rights Act (Part II). This is part III of a three part series, taking a deeper look into American history...What changed when slavery ended, and what remained unresolved? This episode follows the long arc from emancipation through Reconstruction, Jim Crow, and the civil rights movement, exploring the struggle to turn legal freedom into real political and social power. It is the story of how democracy was contested after the Civil War and why the fight for equal citizenship lasted another century.

    **Editorial note: This series examines difficult and often painful parts of American history with the aim of understanding them more fully, carefully, and in their full historical context.

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    1 時間 1 分
  • "Work Worth Doing": The Character in Building a Career
    2026/06/01

    "Work Worth Doing": The Character in Building a Career...explores work as more than a paycheck, a title, or a ladder of advancement. It asks what a career does to the person building it. Through questions of learning, preparation, collaboration, judgment, honesty, discipline, and service, this episode examines work as one of the main places where character is tested and formed. Drawing on Woodrow Wilson’s view of work as contribution, John Wooden’s warning about preparation, Ivy Lee’s discipline of ordered attention, and voices such as Theodore Roosevelt, John Maxwell, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Stephen Covey, and George Eliot, the episode argues that the real measure of a career is not only what was earned or achieved, but what kind of person emerged from the years of labor.

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    56 分
  • Rare Earths: The Hidden Materials Behind Modern Power
    2026/05/25

    Rare Earths: The Hidden Materials Behind Modern Power...In this deep dive, we investigate rare earth materials from the ground up: what they are, which elements matter most, where they are found, and why they sit at the center of modern technology, defense, clean energy, and industrial power. From electric vehicles and wind turbines to drones, missiles, smartphones, and high-performance motors, rare earths reveal a hard truth about the modern economy: the most advanced systems still depend on mining, chemistry, processing, metallurgy, and manufacturing capacity. This episode looks beyond the headlines about China’s dominance and asks a practical U.S. question: what does America actually have, what is it missing, and how long would it realistically take to build a secure rare earth supply chain of its own?

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    58 分
  • The Business of Higher Education Debt, Prestige, Tuition, and the Long Reckoning
    2026/05/19

    The Business of Higher Education Debt, Prestige, Tuition, and the Long Reckoning...A deep dive into the business of American higher education: why college became so expensive, how student debt helped finance the modern university, what students actually received for the rising price, and whether the labor market still delivers enough value to justify the cost. This episode follows the money from tuition and federal loans to campus expansion, graduate degrees, prestige competition, administrative growth, and borrower stress. The argument is not that college is worthless. It is that the old bargain — borrow now because education will pay later — has become far more complicated, uneven, and expensive than families were led to believe.

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    46 分
  • The Man in the Arena: Courage, Criticism, Responsibility, and the Discipline to Keep Going
    2026/05/15

    The Man in the Arena: Courage, Criticism, Responsibility, and the Discipline to Keep Going...In this episode, The Never Stop Learning Podcast takes a deep nonfiction dive into Theodore Roosevelt’s “Man in the Arena” and the enduring question of what it means to live a life of consequence rather than commentary. Beginning with Roosevelt’s 1910 Sorbonne speech, the episode explores the moral difference between the critic and the doer, then moves through the psychological cost of courage with Rollo May, the daily structure of endurance with William H. McRaven and Jocko Willink, the burden of leadership and public responsibility with Ben Horowitz, and the final distinction between dramatic effort and sustained greatness with Jim Collins. The result is a serious meditation on courage, criticism, discipline, responsibility, and the long work of staying in the arena after the romance of the first brave act has passed.

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    43 分
  • Household Debt: The Paycheck Is Already Spoken For
    2026/05/11

    Household Debt: The Paycheck Is Already Spoken For

    Why does it feel like Americans are earning more, spending more, and still falling behind?

    In this episode, we examine the post-COVID household debt machine through four pressure points: mortgages, auto loans, student loans, and credit cards. Starting from the last clean pre-pandemic baseline in late 2019, we trace how emergency money, a historic expansion in the money supply, inflation, and higher interest rates reshaped the American balance sheet.

    The story is not that every household collapsed. It is that the margin disappeared. Homeowners with low-rate mortgages were protected, while new buyers faced a brutal housing market. Car borrowers became trapped by inflated pandemic prices and negative equity. Student-loan payments returned to budgets already filled by higher costs. Credit cards became the final shock absorber, with revolving debt carried at roughly twenty-one percent interest.

    This is a deep dive into why aggregate spending can look strong while many households are quietly losing financial flexibility. The paycheck still arrives. But for millions of families, it is already spoken for.

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    49 分
  • Success: What Does it Mean "To Have Succeeded"?
    2026/05/01

    Success: What Does it Mean "To Have Succeeded"?...What does it really mean “to have succeeded”? In this deep dive, we begin with Bessie A. Stanley’s 1905 definition of success and follow it clause by clause into a richer and more demanding philosophy of a life well lived. Through the voices of Stephen R. Covey, Parker J. Palmer, Henri J. M. Nouwen, Dale Carnegie, Edith Eger, Don Miguel Ruiz, and Richard Stearns, this episode explores joy, character, suffering, beauty, contempt, service, and the moral weight of making even one life breathe easier because you have lived. This is "to have succeeded".

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    35 分