• A Time For Choosing
    Jun 25 2026

    Today's broadcast of Good Morning, John Q. may be the most unsettling—and thought-provoking—episode in the series so far.

    In A Time for Choosing: When Blinking Is Not an Option, J.Q. asks listeners to do something almost no one in today's media is willing to do: step inside the historical memory of two nations and ask how that memory shapes the way each sees the future.

    This is not a discussion driven by headlines. It is driven by history.

    J.Q. argues that nations, like people, remember—and that those memories influence the choices governments make in moments of crisis. Moving between the legacy of ancient Persia and the modern State of Israel, the broadcast explores how different historical narratives can produce profoundly different understandings of the same geopolitical moment.

    Whether listeners ultimately agree with J.Q.'s conclusions or strongly disagree with them, the episode challenges them to wrestle with questions that are often absent from daily political debate: How do governments perceive risk? How does history shape national identity? What happens when diplomacy, memory, and military power collide?

    The broadcast does not offer easy answers. It invites listeners to think through the consequences of policy decisions, shifting war aims, and the unintended effects of international strategy.

    Like the best episodes of The United States of Amnesia, this is less a partisan commentary than an attempt to view current events through the long lens of history. It is provocative, deeply historical, and certain to spark discussion among supporters and critics alike.

    Whether you hear it as a warning, a challenge, or a thought experiment, one thing is certain:

    J.Q. refuses to let history remain safely in the past.

    https://www.buzzsprout.com/2618470/episodes/19404728

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    9 mins
  • ISRAEL -- To Be Or Not To Be
    Jun 24 2026

    Today's broadcast o Good Morning, John Q, is not a political podcast. It is a meditation on memory.

    It asks a question as old as civilization itself: What happens when two ancient peoples remember who they once were?

    One remembers Persia —a phoenix rising with visions of reclaiming its ancient throne.

    The other remembers Israel —a nation born from ashes, bound by a single oath: Never Again.

    This is not a debate about today's headlines. It is an exploration of the memories that shape nations, the wounds that survive generations, and the promises that leaders believe they cannot break.

    You may agree. You may disagree.

    But before judging the choices nations make, J.Q. asks you to step inside the memories that drive them.

    This is not a broadcast about politics.

    It is a broadcast about history, identity, survival—and what happens when two civilizations believe destiny has come calling.

    https://www.buzzsprout.com/2618470/episodes/19398998

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    7 mins
  • The Lion And The Sun
    Jun 23 2026

    In a media landscape obsessed with headlines, polling data, and twenty-four-hour news cycles, The Lion and the Sun dares to ask a more unsettling question:

    What happens when civilizations remember?

    Part history lesson, part geopolitical meditation, and part cautionary tale, this episode of The United States of Amnesia moves beyond the daily arguments over Iran and Israel and instead explores something far older and far more powerful—memory itself.

    JQ argues that nations do not think like individuals. They do not measure time in months, elections, or presidencies. They measure it in centuries. And civilizations, unlike politicians, never forget the moments when they stood at the center of the world.

    Without descending into partisanship or simple good-versus-evil narratives, The Lion and the Sun examines the enduring power of imperial memory, the dreams that rise from historical greatness, and the dangerous questions that emerge when nations begin looking backward in search of their future.

    What makes the episode particularly compelling is its refusal to remain trapped in the present. Instead, it invites listeners to view today's headlines through the eyes of empires, asking them to consider how history, identity, ambition, and survival shape decisions long before armies move or treaties are signed.

    The result is both provocative and unsettling. Not because it predicts the future, but because it reminds us that the future is often driven by stories civilizations tell themselves about their past.

    By the time the episode reaches its conclusion, listeners may find themselves looking at the Middle East—and perhaps history itself—through an entirely different lens.

    And just when the questions become most uncomfortable, JQ leaves the audience standing at the edge of a cliff, setting the stage for the next chapter in the series.

    A thoughtful, provocative exploration of memory, empire, and power that asks less about what is happening today than about what civilizations believe they are destined to become tomorrow.

    https://www.buzzsprout.com/2618470/episodes/19392585

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    11 mins
  • American Requiem
    Jun 20 2026

    In this episode of Good Morning, John Q., the conversation turns from battles and headlines to something far more enduring: how history remembers wars.

    Drawing on two and a half centuries of American military tradition, American Requiem explores the relationship between victory, sacrifice, memory, and national identity. What happens when a nation that has long defined itself through triumph begins asking different questions about the outcomes of war? What is the difference between success declared and success achieved? And who ultimately decides the verdict—politicians, historians, or time itself?

    Part reflection, part indictment, and part meditation on the cost of war, American Requiem examines the stories nations tell themselves, the symbols that survive long after the shooting stops, and the uneasy space between celebration and remembrance.

    Because history does not remember intentions.

    History remembers outcomes.

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    3 mins
  • The Handwriting On The Wall
    Jun 16 2026

    In this episode of Good Morning, John Q., the laughter gives way to something far more serious.

    Drawing on history, mythology, and the timeless principle that you reap what you sow, The Handwriting on the Wall explores the difference between events and consequences, between headlines and harvests, and between what is celebrated today and what may emerge tomorrow.

    Part warning, part meditation, and part intervention, the episode examines how nations, like individuals, must eventually live with the consequences of the choices they make.

    At its heart, this is not a story about personalities.

    It is a story about outcomes.

    Not about the spectacle.

    But about what escapes the box after the spectacle is over.

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    7 mins
  • You Reap What You Sow
    Jun 15 2026

    Today's Good Morning, John Q. is called "You Reap What You Sow."

    It begins with a birthday celebration.

    Or at least that's what it appears to be.

    But somewhere between a cage fight on the White House lawn, a gold-plated green card, and the growing confusion between entertainment and governance, the conversation takes an unexpected turn.

    Rather than offering my own opinion, I decided to seek advice from someone who spent a lifetime observing American politics with humor, common sense, and a healthy skepticism toward power.

    So today, I invited the spirit of Will Rogers to join us.

    What follows is less a political commentary than a meditation on spectacle, applause, memory, and the price nations eventually pay for the seeds they plant.

    Whether you agree with it or disagree with it is beside the point.

    The real question is whether we still recognize the difference between a performance and a presidency, between a crowd cheering and a country thinking.

    As always, the broadcast ends with a simple reminder:

    History keeps books.

    And eventually, every account comes due.

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    10 mins
  • I'll Cry If I Want To
    Jun 13 2026

    What happens when an eighty-four-year-old man wakes up on his birthday and decides not to spend the day looking forward—but looking back?

    In this episode of Good Morning, John Q., a simple birthday reflection becomes something far more unexpected.

    What begins with an old song, an old memory, and a little self-deprecating humor turns into a meditation on time, wealth, power, gratitude, and the strange distance between the America we remember and the America we see today.

    Part memoir.

    Part observation.

    Part warning.

    And occasionally very funny.

    Without preaching, the episode asks a deceptively simple question:

    What do we lose when we forget?

    And what might we recover if we remember?

    By the time it's over, you'll find yourself looking not only at where you've been, but where we're all headed.

    A thoughtful, provocative, and deeply personal episode from The United States of Amnesia.

    Listen carefully.

    The story isn't really about one birthday.

    It's about all of ours.

    https://www.buzzsprout.com/2618470/episodes/19341382

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    7 mins
  • WHEN IS ENOUGH, ENOUGH?
    Jun 12 2026

    If you've ever wondered whether America still knows how to ask uncomfortable questions, don't miss today's installment of Good Morning, John Q.

    What begins as a simple observation about wealth becomes something much larger—a meditation on ambition, capitalism, power, and the frontiers that define every generation. With humor, self-deprecation, and the storytelling style of a modern Will Rogers, John Q. takes listeners from King Midas to railroads, from Silicon Valley to the stars.

    This isn't a podcast about Elon Musk.

    It's a podcast about a question.

    A question so big that it forces us to rethink success, wealth, and what happens when the next frontier is no longer a continent, but the cosmos itself.

    You may agree with it.

    You may disagree with it.

    But by the end, you'll be thinking about it.

    And that's what good conversations are supposed to do.

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    6 mins