America is turning 250—but how has the breakup with Britain worked out?
Bright and Duds revisit some of the lesser-known history behind American independence, including why July 2, July 4 and August 2 all matter, how long the Revolutionary War actually lasted and why the Founders’ first attempt at a national government failed.
They examine the design that followed: the House, Senate, presidency, courts, federalism and a system deliberately built to prevent any single person or political faction from quickly taking control.
Then the conversation turns to the modern scoreboard. America has maintained the same constitutional framework since 1789, while Britain is preparing for yet another prime minister. Is Britain’s ability to quickly replace leaders a democratic advantage—or evidence of political instability? Is America’s slow and frustrating system still its greatest protection?
The Posse also reacts to the widening partisan divide over national pride and July Fourth, including Joy Reid’s controversial comments about Black Americans and Independence Day.
Elsewhere in the episode:
• The legends, beers and wartime wishbones of McSorley’s Old Ale House
• Bright’s new Wrexham travel blog post
• A preview of next week’s bail-reform and true-crime guest
• Four 1st round draft picks & roster decisions for the St. Louis Blues
• Jordan Kyrou, Jordan Binnington and the future of the franchise
• Keith Tkachuk’s Hall of Fame honor
• A dealership accidentally running the wrong woman’s credit
• Homeowners-insurance sticker shock
• The horrifying Brazilian rope-jump accident
• Why reputable adventure-tourism operators matter
Pour a drink, join the Posse and decide for yourself: Two hundred fifty years later, who won the breakup?



