by Brandon Burley and The Redemption Project
One line from 1941 has been sitting with me this week:
“We are only at the beginning…”
It was written during a time when democracy wasn’t assumed — it was being tested.
What stands out is not just the warning, but the assumption behind it: that ordinary citizens should understand change before it becomes obvious.
Today, we often imagine democratic decline as something dramatic. A moment. A breaking point. Something everyone recognizes at once.
But history rarely works like that.
Public habits usually shift first.
Expectations change quietly.
People begin accepting less clarity and more emotion in public life.
Institutions can still look stable while something underneath them is already moving.
That’s one reason I continue to emphasize something simple with my students:
Clear answers matter early.
Not because disagreement is dangerous — it isn’t. Disagreement is part of democracy.
But because understanding matters more than reaction.
So here’s the question I asked my students this week:
Do democracies usually weaken suddenly… or do people notice the warning signs late?

