so with that in mind, it s the worth remembering that one hundred years ago, memphis a boom was one of the richest, best organized cities in the country. it ha hadd a booming economy. it had beautiful municipalhan parks, a lot of them more than a hundred. it had one of the most modern te sanitation systems in worle take something w for granted now. but when yellow fever was real, no one took it for granted. memphis was such a bigwas th deal that in fact, was the mis the informal capital of an entire american region. the mississippi deltanot an,t not anymore. in fact, by last year, i f b you went to memphis, it was hard to believe that any of that had ever been true at any point. because by that point and nowa memphis had become a husk and a highly threatening one in 2020si one , according to federal, statistics, memphis, tennessee, was the most dangerous city in the united states . talast year.w much it recorded a total of three hundred and forty two murders. no?w, how
all right. great to see you tonight. congrats on the movie. tuk you . appreciate it. so charles haywood had a longd e and very successful business career and he kind retired thinn and started reading a lot and then writing reviews ofply the books for amazonanis. g bo and then he started thinkingn en more deeply.ti and then he turned his hobby, reviewing books intorepolitica e political philosophy, which we found really interesting. it sd foundational ism and isre focused on moving politics to a future past, huh? it was interesting. so we spoke to charles haywooden at great length about it for m hour because we wanted to learn more . we thought you would want to. as well. here s part of the conversatione . so foundational ism is what i like to call the politics of future past, which is the subhead of the of the website. and by that i mean that foundational ism isn t meant to be an ideology as i am. i m not coming up.- i well, i m not karl marx that i have discovered new loss of