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In this episode of the American Warrior Show, Rich Brown sits down with TC Fuller for a deep, uncomfortable, and necessary conversation about obedience, authority, and moral responsibility.
Using Stanley Milgram's famous obedience experiments and Christopher Browning's book Ordinary Men, Rich and TC break down how average, everyday people—not monsters—can be led to commit acts they never believed themselves capable of.
This episode explores:
Why people obey authority even when it violates their moral compass
How peer pressure and normalization override conscience
The concept of the "agentic state" and why responsibility gets outsourced
Why "just following orders" is one of the most dangerous phrases in history
What warriors, leaders, instructors, and armed citizens must do to resist blind compliance
This isn't a history lesson—it's a warning.
For warriors, protectors, and leaders, the takeaway is clear:
Character, moral courage, and independent thinking must be trained—deliberately—or they will fail under pressure.
If you carry responsibility—for a weapon, a badge, a team, or a family—this episode will challenge how you think about obedience, leadership, and your own decision-making under authority.
No transcript available for this episode.

American Warrior Show

American Warrior Show

American Warrior Show