Catching More Than Passes From Bobby: Stephen Schlesinger on what RFK Can Still Teach America
What kind of leadership can hold a fractured democracy together?
About the Guest
Stephen Schlesinger is an American historian, author, and foreign policy analyst. The son of Arthur Schlesinger Jr.—Pulitzer Prize–winning historian and special assistant to President John F. Kennedy—and grandson of Arthur Schlesinger Sr., he grew up at the centre of one of America's most distinguished intellectual families. Schlesinger is the author of Act of Creation: The Founding of the United Nations, and has written widely on American foreign policy and international institutions. He knew both John and Robert Kennedy personally, and brings a rare insider perspective to the history of American liberalism.
About This Episode
"He went around the table asking us, 'Do you still believe in God?' — this was 1967, he was already being considered for the presidency. Why would a man of this intensity and ambition be talking about these issues?" - Stephen Schlesinger
After two days exploring the surveillance state and the ethics of unmasking—with Andrew Guthrie Ferguson on how your data will be used against you and Christopher Mathias on the fight to expose the radical right—Andrew Keen steps back to ask a larger question: What kind of leadership can hold a fractured democracy together?
Stephen Schlesinger joins the show from the Upper West Side of New York to offer a historian's perspective—and a personal one. From his father's role in Camelot to his own memories of playing touch football with Bobby Kennedy at Hickory Hill, Schlesinger reflects on what made the Kennedy brothers effective leaders in a divided country, and what lessons their example holds for progressives today. The conversation moves from the founding of the republic (one-third pro-British) through the Civil War to the present fracture, and asks whether elections remain democracy's "great solver"—or whether something has fundamentally changed.
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction
On the road in New York, beside Columbia University
01:10 What Has Happened to America?
Schlesinger’s 250-year view of national fracture
03:40 The One-Third Fracture
Why a leader with minority support cannot impose ideology on 330 million
05:15 Elections as the Great Solver
Except for the Civil War, the ballot box has resolved every American crisis
07:30 An Intellectual Aristocracy
Harvard, the Schlesinger legacy, and the view from inside the American elite
10:45 The Romance of Camelot
Meeting JFK, the magnetism of youth, and the television presidency
14:20 Bobby’s Vulnerability
The dinner where RFK asked, “Do you still believe in God?”
17:45 Touch Football at Hickory Hill
Bobby’s toughness and the bullet pass Schlesinger had to catch
20:30 Jackie vs. Hickory Hill
Two styles of Kennedy parenting
22:15 Composed Jack, Emotional Bobby
Arthur Schlesinger Jr.’s perspective on the two brothers
24:40 The Assassinations
The White House, Lyndon Johnson’s motorcade, and the bar exam Schlesinger failed
28:15 Could Bobby Have Won?
Humphrey, the nomination, and what might have been
30:30 The Kennedys and Internationalism
From Joe Kennedy’s isolationism to JFK’s UN vision and RFK during the Cuban Missile Crisis
34:00 Chris Matthews and the Bobby Kennedy Cenentary
Lessons for Today
36:30 The Perpetual Civic Duty
Why each generation must defend constitutional freedoms anew
38:45 Closing
Advice to grandchildren and the enduring fight for democracy
Links & References
Mentioned in this episode:
- Act of Creation: The Founding of the United Nations by Stephen Schlesinger
- A Thousand Days: John F. Kennedy in the White House by Arthur Schlesinger Jr.
- Robert Kennedy: His Life by Evan Thomas
- Bobby Kennedy: A Raging Spirit by Chris Matthews
- The Power and the Glory by Graham Greene — the novel Bobby Kennedy mentioned reading at a 1967 dinner Schlesinger attended
- Why England Slept by John F. Kennedy (1940)
- Previous episode: Andrew Guthrie Ferguson on Your Data Will Be Used Against You (Episode 2794)
About Keen On America
Nobody asks more impertinent questions than the Anglo-American writer, filmmaker and Silicon
Valley entrepreneur Andrew Keen. In Keen On America , Andrew brings his sharp Transatlantic
wit to the forces reshaping the United States — hosting daily interviews with leading thinkers
and writers about American history, politics, technology, culture, and business. With nearly
2,800 episodes since the show launched on TechCrunch in 2010, Keen On America is the most
prolific intellectual interview show in the history of podcasting.
Website | Substack | YouTube
Episode 2162: Bethanne Patrick on the Hypocrite, Hitler's People and Hum
Episode 2061: Mimi Casteel explains the how to fix America, one sip of wine at a time
Episode 2160: Steve Benen on how the Republicans have become the Orwellian Party of Big Brother
Episode 2159: Richard J. Evans on how leading Nazis were, in some ways, just ordinary middle class Germans
Episode 2158: Robin Bernstein on the Marriage of American Capitalism with the American Prison System
Episode 2157: Lindsey Cormack on How to Raise a Citizen
Episode 2156: James Muldoon exposes the hidden human labor powering the AI revolution
Episode 2155: David Daley Gets Inside the Far Right's 50-Year Plot to Control American Elections
Episode 2154: Shad White on Brett Favre's Mississippi Swindle
Episode 2153: Lola Milholland on Group Living and Other Deliciously Polyamorous Recipes
Episode 2152: Peter Wehner on the Fate of "His" Republican Party
Episode 2151: Edmund Fawcett compares the Futures of Liberalism and Conservatism
Episode 2150: Jonathan Taplin on why American Exceptionalism lies in its Powers of Creativity