Michael Leppert
Think About It with Michael Leppert
The purpose of this podcast is to convince you to think about it. What exactly is "it?" "It" will be something that is happening today in our cultural, community, or political space. And "It" will also be how we communicate with, relate to, or exist around each other. All in just FIVE MINUTES. That's right, every episode is just FIVE MINUTES.
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Episodes
It's time for a new beat, but one last thing before I go 20.08.2025 4:52
I started writing my column in the spring of 2014, and oh how things have changed since then! Barack Obama was president, and Mike Pence was the governor of Indiana. There were already Republican supermajorities in both chambers of the Indiana General Assembly, and those legislative maps have since been updated and fortified to protect that offensive imbalance for the foreseeable future here. Of c...
Crime in America is down, but please don't tell anyone 13.08.2025 4:42
It was a lovely September morning in Indianapolis in 2018. We had been living in our new townhouse downtown for about a year, relocating from a house just two blocks up the street. I was still a consultant back then and this was still my offseason. So, I had casually risen and slow-walked my way through my morning routine, making my way to the shower around 10:30 am. When I got out, the crime rate...
The 'Ministry of Truth' shoots its highest ranking messenger 06.08.2025 5:11
To me, "1984" was originally a rock album, the last studio collection of songs by the original members of Van Halen. It was July 7, 1984, when the 16-year-old version of me earned his way to a spot right in front of Eddie Van Halen's place on the stage at Roberts Stadium in Evansville for the biggest tour of the year. Back then, we fought for those spots on the arena floor. The album was named aft...
Reading might make you cry; Not reading definitely will 30.07.2025 5:01
On Monday night, I sat in my recliner writing my third novel. I'm about halfway done with it, and my editor is expecting that first half by the end of the week so she can do a midpoint "assessment" of the story. She worked on my last book, and I know how she operates. The first question she will contemplate is whether or not the story is grabbing the audience quickly. That's on my mind this week,...
Dignity and reality force Stutzman to cross the MAGA line on immigration 23.07.2025 5:11
Last week, GOP U.S. Rep. Maria Salazar of Florida, filed "The Dignity Act of 2025," a bipartisan immigration reform package that would provide legal status for certain undocumented immigrants. She filed similar legislation in 2023, but the political climate has changed wildly since way back then. Unsurprisingly, the economic demand for migrant labor has not. Donald Trump is now in the White House...
Why the new lie about the old lie is rattling the loyal believers of lies 16.07.2025 5:03
Last week, U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced there will be no release of the "Jeffrey Epstein files." It's hard to predict when people will have finally had enough. The tolerance level of undesirable traits and behaviors from other humans will vary from person to person of course. And in today's world of unexplainable group think, a rational understanding of group tolerance is often fleeti...
Teaching fewer things leads to a population that thinks less 09.07.2025 5:08
Oh, to have existed in a period of time named the "Renaissance," a French word that means "rebirth." As explained by Brittanica , "it was primarily a time of the revival of Classical learning and wisdom after a long period of cultural decline and stagnation." The recently enacted biennial budget crafted by the Indiana General Assembly is hostile toward learning in favor of stagnation. The Commissi...
People will feel the one big, beautiful bill, and it will be ugly 02.07.2025 5:19
Every semester, the students in my business writing class are divided up into teams and are assigned a real-life challenge from a company looking to elevate its performance in any number of ways. It's an opportunity to research the complexities of a market, to create an entrepreneurial solution and to effectively communicate all of it to the company looking to grow. And it's an opportunity for me....
Maybe sexual harassment by elected officials shouldn't end happily for them 25.06.2025 4:55
I spent last weekend in New York, as I try to do once a year, for the primary purpose of seeing the latest hot show or two on Broadway. I'd love to say I am expert at picking the best shows, but the truth is, if a show has gotten my attention in the heartland, it's a safe bet. "Maybe Happy Ending" first caught my eye with its list of Tony nominations, so I bought the tickets. After my purchase, th...
Three days of shock and awe illustrate an American culture in turmoil 18.06.2025 5:13
A quarter century ago, as a young bureaucrat, I had a disagreement with my bosses. Energy commodities markets were going through an historic price spike, and my agency set the final rates customers would pay. I wanted rates to mirror the market to send "price signals" to consumers and provoke a reduction in consumption. The bosses wanted to spread costs over a long period to mitigate "rate shock."...
Purdue's breakup with its student paper feels like a gun shot 11.06.2025 5:27
I am working on publishing a new book this year. So, I'm spending time with other writers, readers, editors and consultants to make sure the finished product is as good as it can be. While online the other day, an editor wrote: "The purpose of fiction is to ask the audience questions to consider; the purpose of non-fiction, is to give them answers." I assumed that was a famous quote, because it's...
Lt. Gov. Beckwith's nasty warnings about Pride Month are exactly why Pride is needed 04.06.2025 5:05
I love June in Indianapolis. School's out for me. The gardens, flowers and lawns around town are blooming and greening with optimism. And the city is quiet as it recovers from its traditionally hectic month of May. As my favorite performer, David Ryan Harris, sang in concert many years ago, this time of year transforms "slow like the breezes of springtime melt into summer's grace." As a dad, I am...
When knowledge is the enemy, greatness is impossible 28.05.2025 5:28
In the 1983 classic film, "Trading Places," Louis Winthorpe III and Billy Ray Valentine are victims of a scientific experiment that is thrust upon them by the elite bosses of a Philadelphia commodities brokerage. Winthorpe is a young, snobby broker at the firm, with all the right credentials and upbringing. He is comprehensively replaced by Valentine, a streetwise but uneducated nobody. The amateu...
Braun fails Indiana's hungry, and the buck stops somewhere else 21.05.2025 5:28
Bureaucracy is a word that is often used as an excuse. It is the bogeyman that serves as the source of mysterious and insurmountable odds preventing government from delivering the obvious good and right things to its people. Why are the streets in Indianapolis so horrible? Why is school funding seemingly always distributed unfairly? Eventually, the answers to those questions lead to the faceless p...
'The Talk' won't get us through the evil of ICE's mask-wearing 14.05.2025 5:12
In the opening scene of the film, "The Hate U Give," a father is having The Talk with his two young children. It is a common discussion Black families have in America to prepare for the inevitable contact with law enforcement they will face, and how to stay safe in those situations. It is a sad necessity, but a necessity all the same. The movie was based on the 2017 award-winning novel by Angie Th...
Graduation comes so fast we don't have time for pretending 07.05.2025 4:24
In "Mother Night," Kurt Vonnegut wrote: "We are what we pretend to be, so we must be careful about what we pretend to be." I might add: "And for how long." I was invited to join a small group of students last week to celebrate the completion of their undergraduate degrees. We first met four years ago, and I remember the moment vividly. It was my first day as a full-time instructor at an elite busi...
Stories endangering women and civil rights are like ships passing in the night 30.04.2025 5:08
Since the measure was first coined by President Franklin Roosevelt in 1933, the "First 100 Days" is the standard we exclusively give new presidents "as a symbolic window to set the tone" of their administration. "It represents a kind of political version of a first impression," according to History.com . In 2025 though, the new president isn't really new, the first impression isn't actually the fi...
Tariff madness is hanging Indiana, no matter how Braun spins it 23.04.2025 5:01
I have often wondered where the phrase "spinning a yarn" came from, and what differentiates the descriptive from the blunter, "making stuff up." This week's absurd spin, courtesy of Indiana Gov. Mike Braun, finally inspired me to do a little search for it. Merriam-Webster theorizes that "it may be connected to the sailor's task of rope making," because of the path of the term's traceable usage thr...
Nobody is safe in America, not from America, not anymore 16.04.2025 5:01
"Bridge of Spies" is a 2015 movie about an insurance attorney, James Donovan, who finds himself representing a Soviet spy, Rudolph Abel, in a highly publicized espionage trial in 1957. Yes, it's directed by Steven Spielberg, and Tom Hanks stars in it, so, of course, there are Academy Awards involved. And yes, there were dramatic embellishments in the storytelling sprinkled throughout the film with...
Jim Banks' mad handing is no coincidence; it's a modern, political aspiration 09.04.2025 5:02
The term "glad handing" appeared in the American vernacular at the beginning of the 20 th century, through the phrase, "to give the glad hand," or extend a welcome. But that type of welcome has generally come with a twist, an intention, or an agenda. Merriam-Webster defines the term as "a warm welcome or greeting often prompted by ulterior reasons." It makes sense that the practice is most often a...
Liberals' 'abundance agenda' takes time to absorb, but it's worth it 02.04.2025 5:01
A friend sent me a link to an episode of "Pod Save America" on Sunday with the short message, "This is worth your time." The podcast is a favorite among the left, hosted by a small group of former Obama advisers who describe the show as being for people "who are not ready to give up or go insane." I have occasionally listened to it, but frankly, I didn't want to give it an entire, torturous hour o...
John Green's 'Everything is Tuberculosis' is a tragic story of injustice 26.03.2025 4:58
Henry Reider is a young man from Sierra Leone who recently and miraculously survived tuberculosis. Using the words "recently" and "miraculously" to describe his recovery from a disease that has had a preventive vaccine since 1921 and a cure since 1943 is reason enough to become obsessed with the question: why? "Everything is Tuberculosis: The History and Persistence of Our Deadliest Infection" is...
With America at war with itself, Democrats should revisit the art of it 19.03.2025 4:51
Sun Tzu, the former Chinese general, military strategist and philosopher, is known for his treatise, "The Art of War." It's remarkable how valuable the writings, believed to have been written in the 5 th century BC, continue to be today. Forget the arguments about whether he is the one who wrote it and when. It doesn't matter. The lessons are simple, and they still work. I cannot recall a legislat...
Jason Isbell and Amanda Zurawski both declare 'it's time to be brave' 12.03.2025 4:50
I teach storytelling, though the official titles of the classes are things like presentations, writing or speech for business. But on the first day of school in all of my classes, I put a slide on the screen with this quote from the late Steve Jobs: "The most powerful person in the world is the storyteller." Then I ask my new students if they believe that or not Jason Isbell is one of America's gr...
Ending the public service ethic is an abhorrent part of the new GOP 05.03.2025 5:02
I left public service in 2002. The experiences of the thirteen years I spent as an employee of the State of Indiana help define me. On paper, my career path wouldn't make immediate sense to most people today. But it makes perfect sense to me. Why? Primarily because I enjoyed serving the public, and importantly, I was good at it. People thanked me for my service when I left. In less than two months...
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