The boys drink and review a cream ale from Jailbreak Brewery, then discuss the dramatic decline in trust in our institutions.
Trust in institutions used to be the default. Today, it’s the exception.
From corruption and abuse of power to ideological capture and growing economic inequality, many people feel that the institutions that once anchored society — government, media, academia, and public health — have become distant, opaque, and unaccountable. When ordinary citizens see elites displaying obscene wealth, when justice appears unevenly applied, or when powerful organizations seem staffed by insiders and relatives, skepticism becomes inevitable.
But there’s a deeper problem: institutions are not people.
When trust breaks between individuals, you can repair it through conversation and accountability. With large bureaucracies that kind of repair is much harder.
The discussion also examines how ideological conflict fuels distrust. Some argue that skepticism toward institutions reflects a rejection of facts. Others counter that trust was damaged when institutions themselves misled the public on major issues — from shifting COVID narratives to the media’s failure to understand the political forces that produced Donald Trump’s rise in 2016.
So what happens when institutions lose credibility?
Can trust be rebuilt—or are we entering a new era where citizens simply stop believing the organizations that once guided public life?
Pigweed and Crowhill dig into the causes, the consequences, and the uncomfortable questions we can’t ignore.
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