
The American Lyceum Podcasts
By OG Podcasts

The American Lyceum PodcastsFeb 27, 2023

Lyceum Debate #3: What Economic Reforms Can Save U.S. Democracy?
The third Lyceum debate with Allison Schrager, Bob Litan and Tim Kane. Each offers three ideas on the best ways to boost entrepreneurship. They use The American Lyceum debate format - three ideas in three minutes aimed at one issue.
VOTE for the three ideas you like best.
The American Lyceum is a think tank that is rebuilding civil society through innovative research and hosting solution-focused debates.
DONATE (tax-deductible).
Your host is Tim Kane, President and Founder of The American Lyceum.

France Hoang: From Vietnamese Refugee To The White House (Why America)
In this episode, Tim Kane chats to France Hoang, a former United States veteran and entrepreneur. We hear how after arriving in the United States as a child refugee from Vietnam, France went on to serve in the US Army, work for the White House, and founded several companies that have generated millions of dollars. France celebrates his passion for America and immigration. Plus, he calls on Congress to act quickly to support Afghan allies who are awaiting passage out of Afghanistan.
Your host is Tim Kane, President and Founder of The American Lyceum.

Lyceum Debate #2: What Are The Best Ways To Boost Entrepreneurship?
The second Lyceum debate with Joni Cobb, Carl Schramm and Bob Litan. Each offers three ideas on the best ways to boost entrepreneurship. They use The American Lyceum debate format - three ideas in three minutes aimed at one issue.
VOTE for the three ideas you like best.
The American Lyceum is a think tank that is rebuilding civil society through innovative research and hosting solution-focused debates.
DONATE (tax-deductible).
Your host is Tim Kane, President and Founder of The American Lyceum.

Garett Jones: We Should Be Inviting Folks Who Are Going To Make Us Better (Why America)
In this episode, Tim Kane chats to American economist and author Garett Jones. We hear about Garett’s most recent book, The Culture Transplant: How Migrants Make the Economies They Move To a Lot Like the Ones They Left. We also hear why he believes America should open its borders to anyone from China. Plus, why ethnic diversity isn’t necessarily the answer to a booming economy.
Your host is Tim Kane, President and Founder of The American Lyceum.

Lyceum Debate #1: What Reforms Can Protect US Democracy?
The first Lyceum debate with Shikha Dalmia, Robert Litan, and Tim Kane. Each offers three ideas on what reforms can protect US democracy. They use The American Lyceum debate format - three ideas in three minutes aimed at one issue.
VOTE for the three ideas you like best.
The American Lyceum is a think tank that is rebuilding civil society through innovative research and hosting solution-focused debates.
DONATE (tax-deductible).
Your host is Tim Kane, President and Founder of The American Lyceum.

Dave Urban on the sensationalism of presidential debates
This week we’re joined by Dave Urban, an American lobbyist, political operative and political commentator for CNN who’s been credited as helping Donald Trump win the 2016 General Election.
In this episode we find out why Dave believes Americans have lost trust in the media due to sensationalist reporting. He explains why he believes presidential primary debates have turned into “scripted theater” and how to bring back more authentic debate. Plus, we hear how he believes the 2024 general election in the US could play out.
The American Lyceum is a think tank that is rebuilding civil society through innovative research and hosting solution-focused debates.
Your host is Tim Kane, President and Founder of The American Lyceum.

Bob Litan on debate and the birth of The American Lyceum (The Lyceum Podcast)
The American Lyceum is a think tank that is rebuilding civil society through innovative research and hosting solution-focused debates.
As part of our mission to create a true marketplace of ideas, we’ve launched The Lyceum Podcast - a brand new series of interviews which explores issues of debate and democracy.
The first guest in this new series is Robert Litan, co-founder of The American Lyceum, and author of ‘Resolved: Debate Can Revolutionize Education and Help Save Our Democracy’. In this episode we find out how debate had a truly transformational effect on Bob during his teenage years. He explains what’s gone wrong with presidential debates in recent years and how to fix them. And he discusses the birth and vision of The American Lyceum.
Your host is Tim Kane, President and Founder of The American Lyceum.

Vivek Wadhwa: The Greatest Country In The World (Why America)
In this episode, Tim Kane chats to American technology entrepreneur and academic, Vivek Wadhwa. After living in the US as a child, Vivek says he was determined to move back to what he calls “the greatest country in the world”. Vivek has founded numerous successful tech companies, is the author of several books and has lectured at some of the top Universities in America. Now, he says he’s on a mission to cure cancer. This episode isn’t short of controversy as Vivek shares his thoughts on how America could do better at keeping skilled immigrants.

Ilya Somin: Voting With Your Feet (Why America)
Ilya Somin, law professor at George Mason University, joins Tim Kane to talk about his book Free to Move: Foot Voting, Migration, and Political Freedom, which is about to be updated and republished. In this interview he explains why foot voting is more powerful than heading to the ballot box, and outlines the many benefits. As well as writing about immigration, Ilya is an immigrant himself, and in this conversation explains why he and his parents left the Soviet Union.

Parag Khanna: A changing world (Why America)
Join Tim Kane and his special guest, Parag Khanna, one of the world’s best known political thinkers and activists on how the changes impacting work, war, and laws are also transforming where and how people are living. Why do immigrants move? Are we facing the biggest migration of all time? And is that a bad thing? Listen to find out more.

Masih Alinejad: Escaping Terror For Freedom (Why America)
Masih Alinejad, the globally famous feminist and human rights activist, joins Tim Kane to discuss her journey to the US after having to escape Iran. In this powerful interview, she discusses the harrowing experiences her family faced until a religious dictatorship where even leaving the house with her hair uncovered was illegal, and how it felt to live free from theocratic laws for the first time.

Roya Hakakian: Falling In Love With America (Why America)
Roya Hakakian grew up in the oppressive shadows of totalitarianism in Iran, a Jewish teenager navigating her identity in a world with strict ideas about who she should be. Arriving in the US, she came to love the freedoms, opportunities, and hopes of her new home, becoming one of America's greatest poets, human rights activists, and public speakers, being awarded with the Guggenheim Prize and appearing in the Wall Street Journal and The New York Times. Join her as she discusses her profoundly moving new book, A Beginners Guide To America, with Tim Kane.

David Henderson: The Immigrant Who Worked For Reagan (Why America)
Economist and author David R. Henderson moved to the United States in 1972 and became a U.S. citizen in 1986, serving on President Ronald Reagan's Council of Economic Advisers, becoming one of the world's foremost economic experts and professors across his extensive career. In this episode, he discusses immigration, the draw of the USA, and what it was like serving as an immigrant under Reagan.

Jose Sarduy: From Cuba, with Laughter (Why America)
Born into a Cuban family and deported because of his father’s political prisoner status, Jose Sarduy came to the U.S. at a young age, growing up with a hard working family brought loads of funny moments everyday. For Jose, what they did best was teach him to work hard for his dreams, and not forget how to laugh at life and himself. As a former officer in the Air Force, Jose is an accomplished aviator and veteran, having served in Enduring Freedom and Iraqi Freedom. He’s been all over the world and has even been shot at in two countries. This and more he brings to the stage believing that, “if you can’t laugh at a hard time in your life, you ain’t over it yet.” In this episode, he discusses what he loves - and what makes him laugh - about America and American identity.

David Harsanyi: From Communist Hungary to the Heart of Capitalism (Why America)
David Harsanyi is a conservative writer, opinion columnist, and author. After his family left communist Hungary for a new life in the US, he developed a strong love for the country that gave him a chance at a life with 'real freedom'. Harsanyi is a senior writer at National Review, and a columnist at the New York Post. His writings on politics and culture have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, Weekly Standard, The Washington Post, USA Today, Reason, The Jerusalem Post, The Globe and Mail, and other publications.

Chantal Da Silva: Challenging Fiction with Truth (Why America)
Chantal Da Silva is a freelance journalist focusing on covering immigration, human rights and politics. Having written for international and national publications across the US, Canada and the UK, including Forbes, CBC, Newsweek and many more, Chantal is committed to challenging misinformation, hysteria and myth-making around one of the USA's most pressing debates: immigration.

Tunku Varadarajan: A Freedom of Press Unlike Any Other (Why America)
Tunku Varadarajan is an Indian writer and journalist, formerly editor of Newsweek Global and Newsweek International. Born in India, he has become one of the foremost minds on academic journalism in the western world, performing research and lecturing for New York University, Columbia, and serving as the Virginia Hobbs Carpenter Research Fellow in Journalism at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.

Ayaan Hirsi Ali: A Homeland to Believe in? (Why America)
Ayaan Hirsi Ali is a Somali-born Dutch-American activist, feminist, author, scholar and former politician. She received international attention as an advocate for the rights and self-determination of Muslim women, actively opposing forced marriage, honor violence, child marriage and female genital mutilation. She founded the AHA Foundation and currently works for the Hoover Institution and the American Enterprise Institute. In this episode, she discusses what drew her to the USA, and why it represents a freedom that is both hoped for and feared around the globe.

Faisal Al Mutar: From War-torn Iraq to Texas (Why America)
Dr Tim Kane speaks to Faisal Saeed Al Mutar, recipient of the Gold President's Volunteer Service Award and Iraqi-born American human-rights activist, writer, and satirist who was admitted to the United States as a refugee in 2013. After surviving three kidnapping attempts from Al Qaeda and enduring severe persecution for his secular views, Faisal came to America and established Global Conversations and Ideas Beyond Borders, assisting dissidents in closed societies worldwide and translating news and progressive materials into Arabic.

Trailer
Every year, more than a million immigrants arrive in America, many choosing to take an oath of citizenship. This podcast finds out why, with in-depth guest interviews, introducing you to some of the incredible people who've settled in the United States. Your host is Tim Kane, the JP Conte Research Fellow in Immigration Studies at the Hoover Institution at Stanford University.