
Making sense instead of making noise
Subscribe & Listen OnTo defend democracy, one has to believe in it. To believe in democracy, one has to understand it. Where it came from. How it works. What’s true. What’s not. What others did before you. How it could be better. How to make a difference.
Each week,The David Frum Showdigs deep into the big questions people have about our society, explains the progress Americans have made together, and reminds us that the American idea is worth defending.
Sam Tanenhaus on William F. Buckley Jr., his legacy, and his impact on the modern American conservative movement. Plus: David on the end of DOGE and the novel Alice Adams by Booth Tarkington.
The historian Margaret MacMillan on the impact of the Trump-led American withdrawal from world leadership. Plus: David on the corrupting effects of lavish foreign gifts to President Trump and Charles Dickens’s “The Old Curiosity Shop.”
Sarah Longwell on the growing voting divide between the sexes, the 2025 elections, and how Donald Trump remade electoral politics. Plus: David discusses the deal to end the government shutdown and “The Emergency,” by The Atlantic’s George Packer.
Quico Toro on the Trump administration’s dangerous game of brinksmanship with Venezuela and why a conflict in the Caribbean could be a disaster for everyone involved. Plus: Trump’s newest attempt at a constitutional coup and a discussion of The Oppermanns by Lion Feuchtwanger.
Tom Nichols on Trump, the military, and what happens when loyalty replaces law. Plus: The Trump administration’s “politicized stupidity” and a discussion of Eugène Ionesco’s play “Rhinoceros.”
Ken Burns joins David Frum to discuss how his new documentary series captures both the triumphs and tragedies of the nation’s founding. Plus: Donald Trump’s TikTok giveaway and Benjamin Nathans’s “To the Success of Our Hopeless Cause.”
The biographer Charles Moore on Margaret Thatcher’s legacy, the soul of conservatism, and what today’s right has forgotten. Plus: David Frum on the current government shutdown and Stefan Zweig’s The World of Yesterday.
Former Education Secretary Margaret Spellings on testing, accountability, and how to reverse the decade-long decline in U.S. student achievement. Plus: David Frum on Donald Trump’s cult of sycophancy.
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