
The David Frum Show What It Means to Be American
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Apr 8, 2026 Fareed Zakaria, journalist and bestselling author known for his work on international affairs and Fareed Zakaria GPS, reflects on immigration, American ideals, and whether the country still feels like the one he moved to. They discuss the rise of populism, cultural revolt against elites, the erosion of alliances, and how immigrants assimilate and reshape national identity.
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Economic Shockwaves Fueled Populism
- Economic shocks since 2007 shattered younger generations' faith in institutions and helped fuel global populism.
- David Frum ties two severe recessions, high inflation, and repeated crises to the rise of Brexit, Trump, and anti-expert sentiment.
A Quarter Century Of Economic Stability Shaped Confidence
- David Frum contrasts 1982–2007's quarter-century of low inflation and steady growth with the volatility after 2008.
- He argues that the earlier era's stability shaped his generation's confidence in long-term planning and institutions.
Still Believing While Warning About Democratic Decay
- Fareed Zakaria affirms he still believes in America but notes democratic erosion and a meaner populist tone.
- He cites erosion of rule-of-law norms and surprising nastiness in contemporary politics compared with Reagan-era optimism.




