
The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show
About
The Jeremy Ryan Slate Show is a bi-weekly investigation into how power really works—across history, empires, and the modern world. Each episode draws on two core lenses: Hidden forces behind history —royal murders, lost colonies, financial systems, modern elites, NGOs, propaganda, and the quiet mechanisms that shape events long before they reach the headlines. And the Roman pattern —the idea that today’s crises aren’t new. Currency collapse, political division, border chaos, military overreach—Rome faced them all first. The Roman Empire spent centuries making every mistake a civilization can make, and left behind a playbook we’re following again, page by page. Through expert conversations with historians, researchers, and serious thinkers—and deep dives into primary sources, documents, and records—this show connects ancient history to modern power with evidence, not opinion. You’ll learn to: • Recognize collapse signals before they’re obvious • Understand modern crises through ancient parallels • See how empires actually rise, decay, and fall • Spot the patterns shaping what comes next From medieval conspiracies to modern cover-ups, from Augustus to Constantine, from ancient Rome to today’s global order—this is history as investigation. No spin. No narratives. Just receipts. New episodes twice a week.
Creator
Jeremy Ryan Slate
host
Reviews
Episodes(3)
The Murder That Started Rome’s 50-Year Free Fall
In March of 235 AD, the murder of Emperor Severus Alexander sparked the Crisis of the Third Century—a 50-year free fall that nearly destroyed the Roman Empire. It wasn't just an assassination; it was the moment the Roman army realized its true power: if they could make an emperor, they could unmake
The Rothschild Blueprint: How Private Debt Captured the World
If you search the Rothschild name online, you’ll find a cartoon villain. A secret cabal. A shadow government. A family that supposedly controls the weather. That story is fiction. The real story is more unsettling — because it doesn’t rely on magic. It relies on systems. In this episode, we trace ho
Rome's Fatal Mistake: The Emperor Who Broke the Economy
Rome didn’t collapse overnight. It made a decision. In 211 AD, Emperor Septimius Severus gave his sons a final piece of advice: “Enrich the soldiers and despise all others.” That sentence rewired the Roman economy. Military pay exploded. Silver coins were quietly debased. Taxes strained. Inflation s