The Top 6 Most Underrated Events in American History
Update: 2025-09-03
Description
On this episode, we talk with Dr. Jesse Turiel to count down six quietly pivotal moments that reshaped American life and politics—events we rarely headline as “turning points,” but probably should. From the horse-trading that produced the Bill of Rights to the bare-knuckle tactics that rewired Congress in the 1990s, we trace how rules, institutions, and narratives get built—and rebuilt.
Jesse’s “6 Most Underrated Events in American History”
- Adoption of the Bill of Rights (1789–1791): Why Madison’s amendments were a political bargain that legitimized the new Constitution—and still frame our liberties today.
- Marbury v. Madison (1803): The case that said the quiet part out loud—courts can strike down laws—and how judicial review became the judiciary’s superpower.
- End of Reconstruction (1876–1877): The Compromise that traded a presidency for “home rule,” paving the way for Jim Crow and the long civil-rights backlash.
- Ida Tarbell vs. Standard Oil (1904): Investigative journalism that shifted public opinion and helped crack a monopoly—an origin story for modern antitrust.
- The Presidential Election of 1968: Realignment in real time—Wallace, the Southern Strategy, law-and-order politics, and media-savvy campaigning that still echoes.
- The Rise of Newt Gingrich (1994–1995): Contract with America, message discipline, and made-for-TV confrontation that transformed Congress and normalized permanent campaign warfare.
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