Episode notes
In Day One of The Doctrine of Constitutional Time Integrity, Nicolin Decker establishes a foundational constitutional premise: time is not incidental to governance—time is part of the Constitution’s structure. The episode reframes delay not as institutional inefficiency, but as a deliberate constitutional instrument that preserves democratic legitimacy by requiring public will to endure scrutiny, disagreement, and repetition before coercive authority binds.
Day One opens the ten-day series by explaining that the Constitution distributes not only power across branches, but power across time—slowing, spacing, and sequencing authority so that law becomes durable rather than reactive. When modern governance is evaluated through metrics of speed, throughput, or media velocity, constitut ...