Episode
Space Revolution Ep. 18: Technology in History Doesn't Repeat Itself, but it Sure Does Rhyme - Pt 2
- Podcast
- Badlands Media
- Published
- May 14, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 4359
- Processing state
not_requested
Actions
POST https://stenobird.com/v1/public/podcasts/badlands-media-6674661/episodes/space-revolution-ep-18-technology-in-history-doesn-t-repeat-itself-but-it-sure-does-rhyme-pt-2/transcription-requests
Idempotently request low-priority transcript generation for this episode.GET https://stenobird.com/podcast/badlands-media-6674661/space-revolution-ep-18-technology-in-history-doesn-t-repeat-itself-but-it-sure-does-rhyme-pt-2.md
Read the agent-friendly Markdown representation of this episode resource.
Summary
Cohost Matt Trump finally makes it on the mic after last week's traffic detour, and the wait was worth it. He brings a giant lens: humanity over millennia, with Johan Huizenga's The Autumn of the Middle Ages as the anchor. Lt Gen (Ret.) Steven L. Kwast riffs alongside him. The framing is unforgettable. Matt calls our current moment the return of the future. In the 1960s, with Apollo and Star Trek, humanity was thinking in millennia. Then we pulled in the sails. Under Trump and Musk, we are unfurling them again. The deep-dive walks through the Portuguese caravel breakthrough that opened the New World, why it took a century of violence and printing presses and reformations before things matured, and why our space era follows the same pattern at vastly higher speed. Along the way: why globalism became a Pandora's box, why nations and families are the structures we cannot skip past, why Ming dynasty politics destroyed their own 600 year naval head start, and why young engineers raised on the internet are turning hundred year timelines into hundred day ones. Build with the right moral compass, then full speed ahead.