American Angst Podcast By Michael Bailey with Dale McConkey cover art

American Angst

American Angst

By: Michael Bailey with Dale McConkey
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American Angst is a podcast where political scientist Dr. Michael Bailey unpacks the founding ideals and present tensions of American democracy with clarity, depth, and concern. Hosted and produced by his longtime friend Dale McConkey, the show blends serious civic reflection with honest, good-humored conversation for anyone trying to make sense of this American moment.

© 2026 American Angst
Political Science Politics & Government
Episodes
  • Is This War Different? Putting the Iran Conflict in Context
    Mar 16 2026

    After a break, American Angst returns with Dr. Michael Bailey bringing his sharp, historically grounded perspective to one of the biggest questions in political culture right now: how unusual is this latest American war footing, really? Rather than offering hot takes, Bailey carefully sorts through what feels familiar, what feels troublingly new, and what may signal a deeper shift in the way the United States talks about power, war, and presidential authority.

    With his trademark mix of intellectual seriousness, dry wit, and wide-ranging historical context, Bailey explores whether today’s rhetoric around conflict is simply more of the same—or something far more unsettling. If you want political commentary that is thoughtful, probing, and more interested in perspective than panic, this episode is worth your time.

    The views expressed on American Angst are solely those of the participants and do not represent any organization.

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    1 hr
  • Kitchen-Table Congressman? A Conversation with Candidate Shawn Harris
    Feb 23 2026

    In this return appearance on American Angst, congressional candidate Shawn Harris joins Michael Bailey and host Dale McConkey for a candid, unscripted conversation about politics grounded in lived experience rather than partisan theater. Drawing on decades of military service as a brigadier general and his current life as a cattle rancher, Harris frames leadership as humility, responsibility, and a relentless focus on people over personality.

    The discussion moves from Northwest Georgia’s “kitchen-table” struggles—affordability, rural healthcare and mental health gaps, and PFAS contamination—to bigger questions about voter laws, institutional trust, and the risks of sliding into another “forever war.” Harris critiques celebrity politics and fear-driven narratives, arguing that real representation means showing up, listening, reading the fine print, and working with anyone—Democrat, Republican, or Independent—who’s serious about solving problems.

    What emerges is more than a campaign interview: it’s a reminder of what public service can look like when compromise is treated as progress, not weakness. The episode feels less like spin and more like a neighbor pulling up a chair, telling you what he’s seen, and inviting you to hold him accountable.

    The views expressed on American Angst are solely those of the participants and do not represent any organization.

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    1 hr and 2 mins
  • Protesting in God's Name: Faith, Immigration, and Public Witness
    Jan 30 2026

    This week on American Angst, Mike shares a crossover episode with host Dale McConkey Church Potluck. They are joined by United Methodist pastors Rev. Ash McEuen and Rev. Karen Kagiyama for a timely and poignant conversation exploring immigration, protest, and the uneasy intersection of faith and public life in the United States.

    The episode begins with the real-world impact of current immigration policies. Ash McEuen, whose ministry is deeply rooted in immigrant and Latino communities, describes the daily fear many families face—detention uncertainty, deportation confusion, and the emotional toll of accompaniment. Karen Kagiyama provides theological grounding, framing clergy-led protest not as partisan politics but as Christian witness, solidarity, and lament shaped by prayer and Jesus’ confrontation with injustice.

    Bringing a political science lens, Michael Bailey examines when protest actually works, why nonviolent movements have historically driven change, and how public action raises moral urgency within democratic systems. Together, the group wrestles with Scripture—including Romans 13, Jesus turning over the tables in the temple, and the United Methodist baptismal vow to “resist evil, injustice, and oppression in whatever forms they present themselves.”

    Blending seriousness with warmth and humor, the conversation reflects the heart of American Angst: a thoughtful exploration of power, policy, morality, and the human cost of political decisions. The episode insists that immigration is not abstract, protest is not simple, and the questions facing the nation are inseparable from the lives—and suffering—of real people.

    The views expressed on American Angst are solely those of the participants and do not represent any organization.

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    1 hr and 11 mins
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