Why I Revised The Art of the Compromise (And a Free Sneak Peek)
Some books age like wine. Others age like yogurt. When I first published The Art of the Compromise, I was […]
Why I Revised The Art of the Compromise (And a Free Sneak Peek) Read More »
Some books age like wine. Others age like yogurt. When I first published The Art of the Compromise, I was […]
Why I Revised The Art of the Compromise (And a Free Sneak Peek) Read More »
Politicians love to preach about “the rule of law.” But funny thing—nobody seems to mean it when it applies to
Eulogy — First Voice They say he died in his sleep. Peacefully, they said, as if he were a child
The Mirror Jury – An AI-Generated Short Story (Revised) Read More »
Executive Summary This whitepaper advocates for integrating Approval Voting (AV) into closed primary systems as a necessary reform to improve
Majority Rules: Why Party Primaries Need Smarter Voting, Not Just Closed Doors Read More »
In Tennessee, “sunshine” isn’t just a weather report—it’s a legal regime. The Open Meetings Act demands that elected officials do
When Sunshine Blinds: The Hidden Costs of Tennessee’s Transparency Laws Read More »
In Peter Baker and Susan Glasser’s masterful biography The Man Who Ran Washington, we meet James A. Baker III—not through
The Man Who Ran Knox County: Chris Caldwell’s Quiet Grip on Power Read More »
Well folks, the final donut has been devoured, the last coffee poured, and the inaugural Donuts for Democracy discussion series
The Last Donut (for Now): Reflections from the First Democracy-Fueled Discussion Series Read More »
Late one night, after everyone else had gone to bed, I sat alone listening to a video someone sent me—Dr.
How a shared language lets democracy scale Before the Internet became the Internet, it was a patchwork of isolated networks.
Late in the summer of 1787, as the Constitutional Convention strained toward consensus, one thing united even its most fractious
Too Many to Represent: A Structural Fix for a Cognitive Crisis Read More »