The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show

Jeremy Ryan Slate

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.

  1. 1066: England Wasn't Conquered at Hastings. It Was Conquered in the 20 Years After.

    1d ago

    1066: England Wasn't Conquered at Hastings. It Was Conquered in the 20 Years After.

    History tells us England was conquered at Hastings. That's the cover story. What happened on October 14, 1066 was a single afternoon of fighting that ended with Harold Godwinson dead in the dirt and William the Conqueror in possession of a battlefield. But conquest is not what happens on a battlefield. It's what happens in the 20 years afterward. In those 20 years, roughly 10,000 Normans replaced the ruling class of an entire kingdom of 2 million people. The old aristocracy. The old church hierarchy. The old landowners. All of them gone — not gradually over centuries, but in a single generation. By 1086, only 8% of England was still in Anglo-Saxon hands. The Domesday Book documented the new order in 800 pages and 2 million words, in a single year of administrative work that has no parallel in pre-industrial European history. This isn't conspiracy. It isn't ideology. It's architecture — and the architecture the Normans installed underneath the battle became the blueprint every successful conquering elite has read since. In this conversation with David Mainayar of the @Empire-Builders  podcast: → Anglo-Saxon England in 1065: the most centralized, monetized state in northwestern Europe — and why three rulers genuinely believed they had a claim to it → The three weeks in September and October 1066 that contained the most jam-packed military sequence in medieval history — Stamford Bridge, the forced march south, then Hastings → The Harrying of the North (1069-1070): William's near-genocidal three-month campaign that depopulated up to 75% of the region and ended Anglo-Saxon resistance → The 500 castles built by the end of William's reign — and why the castle-and-knight system was the actual mechanism of the conquest → The Domesday Book: William's 800-page survey of England, what it actually documented, and why it tells you everything about how the Normans understood power → The biggest misconception about 1066, according to David: William the Conqueror wasn't actually the first Norman king of England Subscribe to Hidden Forces in History for civilizational autopsies of the empires, institutions, and patterns shaping the world we live in now. *Support David:* https://x.com/EmpiresPod https://www.youtube.com/@Empire-Builders https://lex-books.com/ CHAPTERS: 00:00 The Conquest That Wasn't a Battle 01:46 Welcome and Why 1066 Matters 02:47 Anglo-Saxon England Before the Conquest 05:06 The Three Claimants to the Throne 13:36 Stamford Bridge and the Forced March South 19:13 Hastings: Myth vs Reality 24:42 William's Position at Nightfall 27:06 The Real Conquest: The 20 Years After 35:05 How 10,000 Normans Replaced 5,000 Landholders 38:04 The Harrying of the North 40:11 Castles, Knights, and the Norman System 44:16 The Domesday Book 47:44 The Norman Legacy: Stone, Language, Law 50:17 Was 1066 a True Regime Change? 54:38 The Biggest Misconception About 1066 1:02:41 Same Playbook, Different Century

    1h 4m
  2. Slaves Opened the Gates of Rome (Not Barbarians)

    3d ago

    Slaves Opened the Gates of Rome (Not Barbarians)

    On August 24, 410 AD, the Visigoths walked into Rome. They didn't break down the gates. They didn't storm the walls. The gates were opened from the inside — by slaves, by people who had been living under the Empire for years and had quietly stopped believing in it. The conventional story of the Sack of Rome is barbarian invasion. Fire and screaming. Civilization ending in a single night. That's the Hollywood version. The reality is quieter and worse. Rome wasn't murdered. It was hollowed out over more than two centuries by three forces that had nothing to do with barbarians. The first was money. The silver denarius had been debased so consistently that by 410 the coins were essentially worthless metal stamped with the emperor's face — a promise nobody believed anymore. Soldiers stopped showing up because they were being paid with garbage. Tax collectors demanded payment in gold and silver because the state's own currency wasn't worth taking. The second was borders. On the last day of 406, the Rhine froze and tens of thousands of Vandals, Suebi, and Alans walked across into Roman Gaul. The forts along the river were empty or close to it. The garrisons had been pulled back, stripped to fight civil wars in Italy, or simply never replaced. The frontier wasn't overrun. It was abandoned. The third was power. The Emperor Honorius was hiding in Ravenna — a swamp city with marsh walls — issuing laws that nobody enforced. When they told him Rome had fallen, he thought they meant his pet chicken, a bird he had named Roma. He had become emperor at eight years old. He had never led an army, never governed a province, never made a decision that wasn't filtered through palace bureaucrats more interested in their own survival than the Empire's. When Alaric's Visigoths arrived at the gates of Rome in August 410, the city's own slaves opened them. Rome didn't fall that day. Not really. The Visigoths left after three days. Honorius stayed in Ravenna. The Empire limped on for another 66 years. But everyone who mattered understood what 410 meant. The machine had been failing for centuries. The sack was just the paperwork catching up. Empires don't fall. They hollow out. And hollowing is worse than falling — because from the outside, everything still looks intact. 00:00 — Rome Wasn't Murdered, It Was Hollowed Out 01:54 — Welcome to The Roman Pattern 02:19 — Rome in 410: A Theater Set 03:06 — Two Centuries of Debasement 05:15 — December 406: When the Rhine Froze 06:53 — Alaric: The Visigoth Who Wanted to Be Roman 08:16 — Honorius and His Chicken Named Roma 09:10 — August 24, 410: The Gates Open From Inside 10:29 — Saint Jerome Wept in Bethlehem 11:50 — Why Rome Didn't Fall (Yet) 12:44 — The Three-Link Chain: Money, Borders, Power 14:02 — Hollowing Is Worse Than Falling 14:53 — The Universal Pattern 15:55 — Same Playbook, Different Century

    1h 4m
  3. Yellow Journalism: The Architecture of Modern Manipulation

    Jun 3

    Yellow Journalism: The Architecture of Modern Manipulation

    They'll tell you Hearst was a newspaperman — a rich boy who sold headlines. That's the myth. And the myth is doing exactly what it was built to do, which is keep you from looking any closer. Because the truth is faster than that. And darker. And a lot more precise. In 1898, two men in New York — William Randolph Hearst and Joseph Pulitzer — were fighting a circulation war that had crossed the line from exaggeration into fabrication. They invented atrocities. They bribed sources. They ran illustrations of events that never happened. They funded their own publicity stunts and then covered them as news. And when the USS Maine exploded in Havana harbor on February 15, 1898, killing 266 American sailors, they had the story they had been waiting for. Within weeks, they had pushed a reluctant president and a divided Congress into a war that turned the United States into an imperial power for the first time in its history. This isn't conspiracy. It isn't ideology. It's architecture — and the architecture they built in 1898 is still operating right now. In this video: → Joseph Pulitzer arrives in America at 17 with no money, no English, and no connections — and ends up owning the tallest building in New York → William Randolph Hearst inherits his father's mining fortune and uses it to wage a circulation war Pulitzer couldn't possibly win → The Yellow Kid: the cartoon strip whose name became the term for an entire era of American journalism → The Olivette, the Cisneros rescue, and the USS Maine — three case studies in how to fabricate, escalate, and weaponize a story → The newsboys strike of 1899: the only group of people who ever forced Hearst and Pulitzer to back down → Why the playbook they invented in 1897 is now running through every social media algorithm in the world Subscribe to Hidden Forces in History for civilizational autopsies of the empires, institutions, and patterns shaping the world we live in now. 00:00 The Myth and What Actually Happened 01:17 Two Men Built This Machine 01:38 Joseph Pulitzer: The Immigrant Who Bought The World 04:42 William Randolph Hearst: Unlimited Money, No Patience 06:13 Park Row: The Circulation War Begins 08:14 The Yellow Kid and the Birth of Yellow Journalism 09:46 The Olivette: The Playbook Goes Live 11:35 The Evangelina Cisneros Rescue 13:09 The USS Maine 14:20 "You Furnish the Pictures, I'll Furnish the War" 15:27 1898: America Becomes an Empire 17:35 The Newsboys Strike 18:45 Same Playbook, Different Century

    22 min
  4. Rome Killed the Man Who Was Saving It

    Jun 1

    Rome Killed the Man Who Was Saving It

    On August 22, 408 AD, the Western Roman Emperor Honorius signed an execution order. The man being executed was Flavius Stilicho — half Vandal, half Roman, the general who had defeated Alaric three times, held the Rhine frontier together for 13 years, and kept a collapsing political structure functioning through sheer competence. For more than a decade he had been the only thing standing between the Western Empire and total disintegration. The Senate hated him. The court whispered against him. They said he was conspiring with the Goths. They said he wanted to put his son on the throne. They said his barbarian blood made him untrustworthy. None of it was true. But systems like this eventually stop needing truth. They just need targets. Stilicho walked out of a church in Ravenna and accepted his fate. He could have resisted — 10,000 federate troops were personally loyal to him, and he could have seized power and likely won. He chose not to. He still believed in something larger than himself. The system that executed him no longer did. Within months, 10,000 federate soldiers marched directly to Alaric's camp. The Rhine frontier collapsed. The borders dissolved. The army Stilicho had built to defend Italy became the army that destroyed it. Two years later, on August 24, 410 AD, Alaric walked into Rome — undefended, unresisted — and sacked it for three days. The man most capable of preventing it had already been killed by his own government. This is the autopsy of how empires actually die. Not from the outside in. They destroy their own immune system first and call it patriotism. 00:00 — Rome Killed the Man Who Was Saving It 02:24 — Welcome to The Roman Pattern 02:45 — What Rome Had Become by 395 AD 03:06 — Who Was Flavius Stilicho? 04:05 — The Three Fault Lines: Money, Borders, Power 06:23 — Stilicho's Rise Through Competence 07:38 — Theodosius Dies, Stilicho Inherits an Empire 08:03 — Alaric and the Eastern Court's Sabotage 09:43 — The Battle of Pollentia (402 AD) 10:55 — The Deal That Sealed His Fate 11:43 — The Rhine Freezes (December 406) 12:31 — Honorius the Chicken Farmer 13:21 — Olympius and the Whispered Accusations 14:07 — August 22, 408 AD: The Execution 15:07 — The Federate Defection and the Sack of Rome 18:13 — When Systems Can't Tell Threat from Solution 21:06 — The Last Roman

    22 min
  5. The Okhrana: How Tsarist Russia Invented the Surveillance State the KGB Inherited

    May 27

    The Okhrana: How Tsarist Russia Invented the Surveillance State the KGB Inherited

    They tell you the modern surveillance state began in Moscow in 1917 — that Lenin invented it, that the KGB built the entire thing from scratch. That's too small of a story. The real surveillance state was built thirty-six years earlier, by a Russian son who watched his father die in the snow. He created an institution called the Okhrana — the Department for the Protection of Public Safety and Order — and operated it out of an ordinary-looking building on a canal in St. Petersburg called Fontanka 16. Over the next thirty-six years, his secret police invented every technique that would later define the Cheka, the NKVD, the KGB, the Stasi, and almost every modern intelligence service. Mail interception. Agent provocateurs. Police-controlled unions. Forged documents for narrative management. Double agents inside revolutionary movements who reported back to the state. This isn't conspiracy. It isn't ideology. It's architecture — and the architecture survives the regime that built it. In this video: → Why Alexander III's response to his father's assassination created the prototype for every modern police state → How the Okhrana intercepted the entire Russian mail system before wiretaps existed → The agent provocateur invention — and the moment the state realized infiltration was more powerful than arrest → Zubatovshchina: police-run unions, the original "controlled opposition" architecture → The two greatest double agents in the history of political infiltration — Yevno Azef and Roman Malinovsky → How the Bolsheviks studied the Okhrana files and built every Soviet intelligence service on the same blueprint Subscribe to Hidden Forces in History for civilizational autopsies of the empires, institutions, and patterns shaping the world we live in now. CHAPTERS: 00:00 The Surveillance State Begins With a Bomb 01:21 March 1881: Alexander III's Decision 02:43 Fontanka 16 03:35 Perlustration: The Mail Was the First Internet 06:08 The Invention of the Agent Provocateur 08:36 Zubatovshchina: When the Police Built the Unions 10:38 Bloody Sunday: The System Creates the Revolution 11:30 The Paris Office: From Surveillance to Narrative Management 13:12 Azef and Malinovsky: The Provocateur System at Scale 15:22 1917: The Bolsheviks Inherit the Blueprint 17:19 Same Playbook, Different Century

    19 min
  6. How Rome's Last Emperor Gave Up the Border (Theodosius)

    May 25

    How Rome's Last Emperor Gave Up the Border (Theodosius)

    We picture Rome falling to barbarians — warriors crashing through marble gates, fire in the streets, civilization ending in a single dramatic moment. That's the myth. The reality is quieter and worse. In 378 AD, an emperor named Valens rode into a valley outside Adrianople with two-thirds of the Eastern Roman army. By sunset he was dead, his army was destroyed, and Rome's ability to defend its own territory was gone. The man who inherited what was left — a Spanish general named Theodosius — made a decision no Roman emperor had ever made before. He didn't rebuild the border. He dissolved it. In 382 AD, Theodosius signed a treaty that settled the Goths inside Roman territory as a semi-autonomous, armed, self-governing nation. Not outside the empire anymore. Inside it. The Danube stopped being the hard edge of Roman civilization. It became an administrative line that people crossed under negotiated terms. Then in 380, the Edict of Thessalonica made Nicene Christianity the sole legal religion of the empire. Every other form of worship became illegal. The pagan temples were closed, their assets confiscated, and that wealth moved — most of it to the Christian Church, which suddenly became one of the largest institutional landowners in Rome. The currency kept failing. The treasury kept hemorrhaging. The army kept becoming more dependent on Gothic mercenaries. Theodosius held it together for sixteen years through personal competence — and when he died in 395, the empire split in two and never reunified. This is the autopsy of how Rome's last unified emperor turned military defeat into managed surrender. Theodosius didn't destroy Rome. He was probably the last person capable of slowing its collapse at all. But the choices he made guaranteed that when he was gone, the cracks he had managed would become the fault lines along which the empire permanently split apart. Collapse doesn't begin when systems stop functioning. Collapse begins when systems stop solving problems and start managing them instead. 00:00 — Rome Didn't Fall to Barbarians 02:16 — Welcome to The Roman Pattern 02:41 — Adrianople: The Autopsy 04:06 — The Refugee Crisis Rome Broke 06:51 — Why Valens Couldn't Wait 08:28 — Theodosius Takes Power 09:57 — The Treaty That Dissolved the Border 12:21 — The Edict of Thessalonica 15:55 — The Monetary Spiral 18:58 — Two Civil Wars with Gothic Armies 21:06 — 395: The Empire Splits 23:14 — The Pattern Closes 25:43 — When Management Replaces Restoration

    27 min
  7. The Reign of Terror: 18 Months From the King's Execution to Robespierre's

    May 20

    The Reign of Terror: 18 Months From the King's Execution to Robespierre's

    They'll tell you the Terror was born from ideology, from fanaticism, from Robespierre's madness. That's too small. Much too small. The real engine wasn't fervor. It was a machine — a legal apparatus the Committee of Public Safety built piece by piece. The Law of Suspects in September 1793 made suspicion itself sufficient evidence. The Law of 22 Prairial in June 1794 stripped revolutionary tribunals of defense counsel, witnesses, and meaningful cross-examination. In 47 days, that machine consumed 1,376 lives in Paris alone. And in the end, it consumed the men who built it. This isn't conspiracy. It isn't ideology. It's architecture. In this video: → Why Louis XVI's execution detonated rather than stabilized the revolution → The Girondins, the Hébertistes, and the Dantonists — three factions consumed in eight months → 9 Thermidor: how Robespierre's own machine ended Robespierre → The same architecture under Stalin, Mao, and the Khmer Rouge — same playbook, different century CHAPTERS: 00:00 The Machine, Not the Madness 01:08 January 1793: Paris on the Edge 02:08 Robespierre and the Definition of Virtue 03:04 The Law of Suspects 05:01 Three Factions Fall: Girondins, Hébertistes, Dantonists 08:38 The Law of 22 Prairial 10:36 Positional, Not Behavioral 13:07 9 Thermidor: Robespierre Falls 14:59 The Same Architecture: Stalin, Mao, Pol Pot 18:01 The Architecture, Not the Ideology Subscribe to Hidden Forces in History for civilizational autopsies of the empires, institutions, and patterns shaping the world we live in now.

    21 min
  8. Adrianople: The Day Rome Actually Fell

    May 18

    Adrianople: The Day Rome Actually Fell

    On August 9, 378 AD, a Roman emperor rode into a valley outside Adrianople with two-thirds of the Eastern Roman army. By sunset he was dead. His body was never recovered. The army was destroyed in a single afternoon — and Rome's ability to defend its own territory was gone forever. But Adrianople wasn't really a military defeat. It was an institutional autopsy. The Gothic cavalry didn't kill Rome that day. What killed Rome was a currency so debased the empire could barely pay its own legions, a border so hollow that Rome had settled armed outsiders inside it and then starved them, and an emperor who marched into a valley without reconnaissance because waiting for reinforcements looked weaker than gambling everything. By 378, none of the warning signs were abstract anymore. They were physical. Coins that literally flaked silver in your hand. Armed refugees sitting on Roman soil after being betrayed by the governors who invited them in. Frontier forts that still existed on paper, laws still written, walls still standing — but nobody left to defend any of it. Valens didn't lose a battle that afternoon. He lost a civilization's last illusion. Empires usually aren't destroyed from the outside. They hollow themselves out first. The last group through the gates just gives the final push. This is the full historical autopsy — the three institutional fault lines that had already failed before the first sword was drawn at Adrianople, and the pattern that keeps repeating, century after century, civilization after civilization. If you saw the thread on X last week, this is the long-form version. Once you see what actually happened in 378, you start noticing the same march happening now. 00:00 — The Autopsy Begins 01:44 — August 9, 378 AD: Valens Rides Into the Valley 02:47 — Fault Line One: A Currency That Couldn't Pay the Army 05:48 — Same Pattern, Different Century 06:14 — Fault Line Two: When the Border Becomes a Membrane 09:26 — Same Pattern, Different Century 09:55 — Fault Line Three: Why Valens Couldn't Afford to Wait 12:35 — Cannae Replayed 14:49 — The Emperor Dies. The Army Dies With Him. 15:53 — 98 Years of Managed Decline 17:22 — The Autopsy Findings 18:10 — Same Mechanisms, Different Labels 19:12 — Rome Is Falling Right Now

    20 min
4.9
out of 5
312 Ratings

About

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.

You Might Also Like