The Republic's Conscience — Edition 13. Part II.: The Doctrine of Constitutional Time Integrity

The Whitepaper por Nicolin Decker

Notas del episodio

In Day Two of The Doctrine of Constitutional Time Integrity, Nicolin Decker turns to history to explain why constitutional delay was once neither controversial nor misunderstood—but expected.

Building on Day One’s establishment of time as constitutional infrastructure, this episode examines the historical alignment between the pace of civic life and the pace of constitutional governance. For much of American history, information moved slowly, judgment matured over time, and institutions were expected to deliberate rather than respond in real time. Delay was not perceived as dysfunction; it was the normal condition under which democratic legitimacy formed.

Day Two traces this alignment across three eras: pre-digital print culture, industrial-era communication technologies, and the early internet. In each case, ... 

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The United States Congress, Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS), RAND Corporation The Brookings Institution, Georgetown University, Yale Law School, Harvard Law School, National Archives and Records Administration (NARA), Congressional R