Pardon the Politics

Democracy Does Not Protect Itself

Season 3 Episode 18

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Season 3, Episode 18 opens where it needed to: with North Carolina's teachers. This past week, thousands marched on Raleigh in the biggest public education demonstration in state history, and the reason is simple. North Carolina is the only state in the country where teacher pay is projected to go down in 2025-26. Not hold steady. Down. While the state sits on a $951 million surplus. While the Republican-led legislature cannot pass a budget. And while the NC Supreme Court just vacated the 32-year-old Leandro school-funding case, the last constitutional protection for majority-Black, low-wealth districts like Halifax, Vance, and Robeson. Jeezy, Manny, and Chuck don't just cover the numbers they bring the receipts: the county supplement gap (Chapel Hill teachers make $10,650 more per year than teachers in Caswell County for the same credentials), the teacher who waits tables at Chili's on weekends just to survive, and the moment Jeezy drops the line of the episode: "With the way these kids are coming out, somebody's kitchen is gonna be on fire."

Then SCOTUS handed down Louisiana v. Callais on April 29, a 6-3 ruling that Jeezy calls "one of the toughest ones" of the entire season. Section 2 of the Voting Rights Act is now functionally dead. Gone is the 40-year-old "results test" that let plaintiffs prove discrimination by showing it happened. Now you have to prove intent, which is almost impossible by design, especially when the Supreme Court already ruled in Rucho that partisan gerrymandering can't be challenged in federal court at all. Alabama and Tennessee called special redistricting sessions within 48 hours. The Trump DOJ confirmed it will target majority-minority districts nationwide. And North Carolina's federal voter-ID law,  upheld by a judge who personally believed it discriminated, is now locked in. Chuck names the pattern, Manny names the legal trap, and Jeezy names the stakes: "Democracy does not protect itself."

Manny's Spotlight covers Walmart's rollout of electronic shelf labels to all 5,200+ U.S. stores by the end of 2026, the largest retail tech deployment in history. The technology itself isn't the problem. The problem is what it enables: surge pricing, surveillance pricing, and discriminatory pricing-by-proxy for Black and low-income shoppers who depend on Walmart as their only grocery option. Manny walks through the FTC study, the 23% Instacart price-variation finding, Walmart's $1 billion contract with VusionGroup, and why 12 states are already moving to ban the technology.

The episode closes with Jeezy's Spotlight on King Charles's address to Congress a moment that looked ceremonial and hit like a sermon. A king standing before a republic to remind it that checks and balances don't enforce themselves, that freedom doesn't survive if you only defend it when it benefits your team, and that political loyalty becoming stronger than constitutional loyalty is how democracies die quietly. "It's sad," Jeezy says, "that that mirror has to be held by a king." Chuck replies: "And not the fake king."

Pickle of the Week: James Comey and the DOJ. Jeezy makes the case that Todd Blanch and the Justice Department are the real pickles this week, not Come, because if 11 months of investigation can't hold up a "threatening the president's life" charge, the DOJ's last shred of credibility goes with it.

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