Episodes

  • The Preamble, Parsed: What "We the People" Was Answering
    Jul 1 2026

    The Constitution opens with a single sentence of about fifty words, often memorized and just as often skimmed past. Read slowly, phrase by phrase, the Preamble turns out to be one of the most useful paragraphs in American civic life: a statement of who is acting, what the union is for, and who all of it is ultimately for.

    Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

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    8 mins
  • The Pentagon Papers and the Fifteen Days
    Jun 30 2026

    Between June 13 and June 30, 1971, the country compressed a fundamental argument about the freedom of the press into fifteen days. This is the story of those days, told as they happened, from the first New York Times installment to a Supreme Court that interrupted its own recess to rule. A companion to the prior-restraint essay, told as narrative.

    Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

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    10 mins
  • Election Day, an Essay About the Day Itself
    Jun 30 2026

    Americans vote on the Tuesday after the first Monday in November, an oddly precise formula, and every piece of it was a deliberate answer to the conditions of 1845. This is an essay about the day itself: why November, why Tuesday, why the strange wrinkle, and why a date built to make voting easy for a rural nation now often makes it harder.

    Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

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    8 mins
  • The Case for a Living Constitution
    Jun 30 2026

    This is the second of a pair. Having made the case for reading the Constitution narrowly, the series now gives the living-constitution view its full strength: that the framers wrote broad moral language on purpose, and that honest interpretation brings each generation's understanding to the document's open words. The aim is not to declare a winner, but to make sure a citizen knows what is actually being defended.

    Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

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    10 mins
  • Gerrymander, the 1812 Salamander District
    Jun 29 2026

    Elbridge Gerry signed the Declaration and served as Vice President, and almost none of that is what his name means today. To gerrymander is to rig the map. The story of the 1812 salamander district is a compact lesson in one of the quieter ways a vote can be drained of its power, long before anyone reaches the ballot box.

    Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

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    8 mins
  • Seneca Falls, and a Declaration Written in an Old Form
    Jun 29 2026

    In July 1848, a few hundred people gathered in a chapel at Seneca Falls and produced the Declaration of Sentiments, which borrowed the most famous American sentence there was and changed five words. The form was the argument. A look at why Elizabeth Cady Stanton poured women's rights into the mold of the Declaration of Independence, and at the seventy-two year horizon the demand would take to reach.

    Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

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    9 mins
  • Boycott, the Land Agent Whose Name Became a Tactic
    Jun 26 2026

    Captain Charles Boycott has the particular fame of having his name turned into a word for the thing that was done to him. The story of County Mayo in 1880 is also the story of what the tactic is, and why a collective, nonviolent withdrawal of cooperation works, the same machinery that would later carry Montgomery.

    Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

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    9 mins
  • The Case Against Judicial Review
    Jun 25 2026

    An earlier essay treated judicial review as a cornerstone. This one makes the case against it, the real argument, anchored in Alexander Bickel's counter-majoritarian difficulty: that unelected, life-tenured judges overruling elected legislatures is not obviously compatible with self-government. A citizen is better off knowing the strongest case against a power, even one they support.

    Field Notes on the Republic was written and read by Michael Fowler. It was produced for Quorum (Supply Co.), an American civic purveyor. Music is "When Johnny Comes Marching Home," performed by the U.S. Military Academy Band, West Point.

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    9 mins