• Inside the Mind of a Bureaucrat
    Jun 11 2026

    In this episode of The Rational Nationalist, Lee Ellis examines how personal incentives influence decision-making inside institutions.

    Although individuals are expected to act in the best interests of the organizations they serve, competing pressures—including career advancement, ideology, comfort, relationships, and ego—often shape decisions in ways that diverge from an institution's stated purpose.

    Topics include:

    • Fiduciary duty and organizational purpose • Career incentives and high-profile prosecutions • The Asch conformity experiments • Bureaucratic inertia and institutional culture • Ideology, ego, and self-image • Why organizations often drift from their original mission

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    20 mins
  • Can Government Be Efficient?
    Jun 4 2026

    In this episode of The Rational Nationalist, Lee Ellis examines why governments often appear less efficient than other organizations and explores whether that outcome is inevitable.

    Using socialism, bureaucracy, and institutional incentives as a case study, the episode examines how organizations develop interests of their own, how bureaucratic structures expand over time, and why the goals of institutions, offices, and individuals often diverge from their original mission.

    Topics include:

    • Government efficiency and public trust • Organizational interests vs. stated intent • Bureaucratic growth and mission drift • Personal incentives within institutions • Why voters often feel they aren't getting value for their tax dollars • Whether effective government is possible

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    23 mins
  • Forecasting Chaos
    May 28 2026

    In this episode of The Rational Nationalist, Lee Ellis examines forecasting, probability, and the challenges of political prediction through the lens of game theory, chaos theory, and mass psychology.

    Using the 2028 election as a case study, the episode explores deterministic vs. probabilistic thinking, why simple models often outperform complex ones, the psychology of certainty, and how incentives shape political forecasting and political behavior.

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    27 mins
  • The Global Chessboard
    May 21 2026

    In this episode of The Rational Nationalist, Lee Ellis expands the discussion of mass politics from the national to the global level, examining how ideological coalitions, institutional power, and competing political systems shape the emerging world order.

    The episode explores how the ideological divisions of the global populace correspond to the institutions shaping the current geopolitical order.

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    29 mins
  • The Free Right and the Authoritarian Right
    May 14 2026

    In this episode of The Rational Nationalist, Lee Ellis examines the internal divisions within the modern political Right, distinguishing between the Free Right and the Authoritarian Right.

    Building on previous discussions of the Marxist Left and the Institutional Center, this episode explores nationalism, constitutionalism, political coalitions, and the growing tension between individual liberty and centralized power in modern politics.

    The episode also introduces the “political megaphone” framework for understanding the relationship between government control, ideological extremism, and competing political movements in the modern world.

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    26 mins
  • Cold War 2.0 - Global Civil War
    May 7 2026

    A look at how the global population had divided itself into transnational camps of Right, Left, and Center. We'll take a look at the Marxist Left and the Institutional Center, breaking down the transnational Right in our next episode.

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    19 mins
  • Ideals vs. Ideology
    Apr 30 2026

    We'll talk about how America never really won the Cold War - the enemy just transformed. We'll also distinguish between ideals and ideologies, and how the world's first capitalist Communist country is led by a honey-loving bear.

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    24 mins
  • Mass Politics and Mongols
    Apr 24 2026

    Throughout history, most people's level of political awareness was hoping that they would not get their crops burned and their families murdered by marauders.

    During the Enlightenment, people learned to start thinking for themselves; during the Internet Era, they promptly stopped doing so. We'll examine the development of mass political awareness and activism that we see today.

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    22 mins