#84 John von Heyking: America is great! Civics, Constitutions & Liberalism episode artwork

EPISODE · Mar 3, 2026 · 1H 3M

#84 John von Heyking: America is great! Civics, Constitutions & Liberalism

from Concepts with Shawn Whatley · host Shawn Whatley

Professor von Heyking just left Lethbridge Alberta and moved to Arizona to help lead the Civics program at ASU. Our discussion pivoted around differences between USA and Canada, civics education, and how constitutions differ on each side of the border. This episode ran more like a visit between friends. We jumped between topics too much, laughed too much, and were probably too open about our opinions.  In my opinion, this is precisely when magic happens.   Check out the ASU homepage. And here's a piece John wrote for The Hub: Canada’s universities are failing to provide proper civic education. Here’s how Alberta can correct course Thanks again for listening! Shawn   Chapters and AI summary Host Shawn Whatley interviews Professor John von Heyking, now associate director and professor at Arizona State University’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership, about its legislature-initiated mission to address America’s civic literacy and viewpoint-diversity gaps through teaching classics (Plato, Aristotle), constitutionalism, and political history while maintaining academic freedom. They discuss differences between American and Canadian political systems, including Westminster party government, responsible government, confidence, and Bagehot’s “dignified” vs “efficient” constitution, contrasting with U.S. separation of powers and elections as key “venting points” for civic efficacy. The conversation ranges over written vs unwritten constitutional “preludes,” the Declaration’s “self-evident” truths, the moral warrant for dignity, and debates over liberalism’s meaning and origins. Von Heyking argues CBC portrayals are misleading and that America is not a fascist state, noting more Canadians move to the U.S. than vice versa. 00:00 Is America Great? 00:57 Meet John von Heyking 04:17 Inside ASU Civics School 07:50 Funding and Legislature Support 10:14 Academic Freedom and Curriculum 11:35 Student Demand and Recruiting 14:36 Wokeness and Civics Funding 19:32 Patriotism and Civic Efficacy 24:29 Bagehot and Parliament Debate 30:05 Cabinet Government Metaphors 33:18 Responsible Government Touching Power 35:57 Westminster Boot Versus Impeachment 38:14 Written and Unwritten Constitutions 43:18 Self Evident Truths and Equality 48:29 Warrant Dignity and Christian Roots 54:19 Walsh Liberalism and Its Origins 01:00:52 Media Myths and Closing Thoughts

Professor von Heyking just left Lethbridge Alberta and moved to Arizona to help lead the Civics program at ASU. Our discussion pivoted around differences between USA and Canada, civics education, and how constitutions differ on each side of the border. This episode ran more like a visit between friends. We jumped between topics too much, laughed too much, and were probably too open about our opinions.  In my opinion, this is precisely when magic happens.   Check out the ASU homepage. And here's a piece John wrote for The Hub: Canada’s universities are failing to provide proper civic education. Here’s how Alberta can correct course Thanks again for listening! Shawn   Chapters and AI summary Host Shawn Whatley interviews Professor John von Heyking, now associate director and professor at Arizona State University’s School of Civic and Economic Thought and Leadership, about its legislature-initiated mission to address America’s civic literacy and viewpoint-diversity gaps through teaching classics (Plato, Aristotle), constitutionalism, and political history while maintaining academic freedom. They discuss differences between American and Canadian political systems, including Westminster party government, responsible government, confidence, and Bagehot’s “dignified” vs “efficient” constitution, contrasting with U.S. separation of powers and elections as key “venting points” for civic efficacy. The conversation ranges over written vs unwritten constitutional “preludes,” the Declaration’s “self-evident” truths, the moral warrant for dignity, and debates over liberalism’s meaning and origins. Von Heyking argues CBC portrayals are misleading and that America is not a fascist state, noting more Canadians move to the U.S. than vice versa. 00:00 Is America Great? 00:57 Meet John von Heyking 04:17 Inside ASU Civics School 07:50 Funding and Legislature Support 10:14 Academic Freedom and Curriculum 11:35 Student Demand and Recruiting 14:36 Wokeness and Civics Funding 19:32 Patriotism and Civic Efficacy 24:29 Bagehot and Parliament Debate 30:05 Cabinet Government Metaphors 33:18 Responsible Government Touching Power 35:57 Westminster Boot Versus Impeachment 38:14 Written and Unwritten Constitutions 43:18 Self Evident Truths and Equality 48:29 Warrant Dignity and Christian Roots 54:19 Walsh Liberalism and Its Origins 01:00:52 Media Myths and Closing Thoughts

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#84 John von Heyking: America is great! Civics, Constitutions & Liberalism

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This episode was published on March 3, 2026.

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Professor von Heyking just left Lethbridge Alberta and moved to Arizona to help lead the Civics program at ASU. Our discussion pivoted around differences between USA and Canada, civics education, and how constitutions differ on each side of the...

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