The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show Podcast By Jeremy Ryan Slate cover art

The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show

The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show

By: Jeremy Ryan Slate
Listen for free

The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show is a bi-weekly investigation into how power really works—across history, empires, and the modern world.


Each episode draws on two core lenses:


Hidden forces behind history—royal murders, lost colonies, financial systems, modern elites, NGOs, propaganda, and the quiet mechanisms that shape events long before they reach the headlines.


And the Roman pattern—the idea that today’s crises aren’t new. Currency collapse, political division, border chaos, military overreach—Rome faced them all first. The Roman Empire spent centuries making every mistake a civilization can make, and left behind a playbook we’re following again, page by page.


Through expert conversations with historians, researchers, and serious thinkers—and deep dives into primary sources, documents, and records—this show connects ancient history to modern power with evidence, not opinion.


You’ll learn to:

• Recognize collapse signals before they’re obvious

• Understand modern crises through ancient parallels

• See how empires actually rise, decay, and fall

• Spot the patterns shaping what comes next


From medieval conspiracies to modern cover-ups, from Augustus to Constantine, from ancient


Rome to today’s global order—this is history as investigation.


No spin. No narratives. Just receipts.


New episodes twice a week.

Jeremy Ryan Slate
Biographies & Memoirs Social Sciences World
Episodes
  • The Pattern: How American Assassinations Reshape Policy
    May 13 2026

    You were taught that elections change policy. Cast the ballot. Flip the seat. Redirect the nation. And that's true — to a point.


    Elections usually move individuals inside an existing framework. Assassinations tend to reset the framework itself. McKinley dies and Roosevelt remakes the American empire almost overnight. Lincoln falls and Reconstruction quietly disappears before it ever takes shape. Kennedy's motorcade enters Dealey Plaza and the Vietnam briefing rooms change hands.


    If you actually look at the last century of major American policy reversals, most of them don't follow a ballot. They follow a body. And the important thing is this: they don't just change the players. They change the board underneath the players.


    This isn't about who fired the shots. This video isn't a whodunit. It's an autopsy of what changed afterward — the contracts, the budgets, the financial architecture, the institutional infrastructure that consolidated each time a particular figure was removed.


    The pattern isn't ideological. Lincoln, McKinley, Kennedy, RFK, Reagan — different parties, different beliefs, different eras. What matters isn't ideology. It's threat level to deep institutional structure. The pattern doesn't require a secret council to explain it. Institutional self-preservation operates at continental scale across generations.


    This is the ledger.


    00:00 — Elections vs. Assassinations

    01:17 — Welcome and Sources Note

    01:44 — What Policy Frameworks Actually Are

    03:21 — Lincoln 1865: Reconstruction and the Collateral System

    06:29 — McKinley 1901: Roosevelt and Imperial Architecture

    09:51 — Kennedy 1963: NSAM 263 to NSAM 273 in Four Days

    12:32 — RFK 1968: The Coalition That Died with Him

    14:40 — Reagan 1981: The Shooting and the Framework Acceleration

    16:55 — Why the Pattern Keeps Repeating

    19:35 — The Pattern Operating Today

    21:13 — The Ledger Is Still Open

    23:24 — Reading the Ledger Forward

    Show more Show less
    25 mins
  • Julian the Apostate: The Reversal That Couldn't Happen
    May 11 2026

    We picture him as a romantic tragedy. The last pagan emperor. Philosopher, soldier, true believer. Pouring wine at the old altars while the Christian empire watches in silence.


    That's the myth. This is the autopsy.


    By 361 AD, the Christian church wasn't just a religion anymore. It had become the infrastructure. Bishops were running grain networks. The officer corps had been baptized for a generation. The state's administrative spine had been quietly rewired around Christian institutions across fifty years of Constantine's policy.


    Julian didn't fail because he chose the wrong gods. He failed because once a transformation reaches a certain depth, it stops being policy and starts becoming architecture. You can argue with a belief system. You can outlaw a ritual. You can even remove the people at the top. But once the thing is load-bearing — once the system itself depends on it — reversing it becomes something else entirely.


    This is the story of why the ratchet only moves in one direction, and why every reform movement eventually faces the same wall Julian hit.


    00:00 — The Autopsy Begins

    01:36 — Welcome to The Roman Pattern

    01:50 — Constantine's 50-Year Wiring

    03:26 — Julian Inherits a Load-Bearing Church

    04:19 — Julian's Hidden Paganism

    05:16 — First Fault Line: Money

    07:08 — Once Load-Bearing, Always Load-Bearing

    08:08 — Second Fault Line: Power

    09:35 — Julian Reforms Paganism Using Christian Logic

    10:35 — Antioch and the Death of Memory

    12:36 — Third Fault Line: Borders and Persia

    13:36 — The Persian Campaign Collapse

    14:39 — Julian Dies in the Field

    15:32 — Jovian's Christian Reversal

    16:55 — The Ratchet: One Direction Only

    21:21 — Why This Isn't Only About Rome

    23:14 — Same Pattern, Different Century

    25:28 — The Spear Arrives

    Show more Show less
    26 mins
  • The Augustus System: How to Replace a Republic Without Anyone Noticing
    May 6 2026

    The myth says Caesar died and Rome was saved. That's the cover story. Brutus killed a man — he didn't kill the machine. The machine passed to Octavian.


    This is the story of how Augustus took the most powerful position in Rome and made it look like restoration rather than takeover. The Senate kept meeting. Consuls kept being elected. The fasces still stood on the rostrum. All the forms were preserved. Underneath, something else entirely was being built — and the system Augustus designed lasted nearly 500 years after his death.


    The pattern at the heart of this story repeats across history: successful transitions don't announce themselves. They resemble continuity. They keep the visible forms while the underlying function shifts. By the time anyone notices, the change is already locked in.


    This is part of an ongoing series on patterns of power transformation across history. For the deep dive on Constantine and a similar shift two centuries later, watch the companion piece on @TheRomanPattern (link in description).


    00:00 — The Machine Didn't Stop

    01:13 — Welcome to Hidden Forces in History

    01:23 — Caesar's Will Was the Real Weapon

    03:11 — The Proscriptions: Clearing the Field

    05:14 — Manufacturing Cleopatra as the Enemy

    06:27 — The 27 BC "Restoration"

    08:00 — Three Channels of Power: Literature, History, Currency

    09:13 — When Opposition Starts Believing

    11:00 — The Succession Problem

    12:20 — 500 Years of the Same Pattern

    13:00 — Same Playbook, Different Century


    🏛️ The Roman Pattern (collaborator on this episode): https://www.youtube.com/@TheRomanPattern

    📺 More on patterns of power transformation: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLf4_V8GU0R1XnFIUSToMj_N48-iVVpFYA


    #augustus #romanempire #romanhistory #fallofromanrepublic #ancientrome

    Show more Show less
    14 mins
adbl_web_anon_alc_button_suppression_c
No reviews yet