Something feels off.
Not catastrophic. Not undeniable. But persistent enough that it’s hard to ignore.
In
Authoritarian Drift in the United States, G. Scott Graham examines what happens before a crisis becomes obvious, when institutions are still functioning, daily life continues, and yet something fundamental is shifting beneath the surface.
Blending political science with psychological insight, this book explores how democratic erosion is experienced in real time, not through dramatic collapse, but through gradual normalization, uncertainty, and fatigue. Drawing on the work of historians and political theorists, Graham translates large-scale political patterns into something more immediate and personal: how people perceive, adapt to, and sometimes miss early warning signs.
This is not a book about predicting outcomes. It is a book about staying oriented while things are still unclear.
Inside, you’ll learn:
- Why harmful systems rarely feel obvious while they are forming
- How normalization happens without conscious agreement
- Why clarity almost always arrives too late
- How exhaustion quietly reduces attention and resistance
- How to recognize patterns without collapsing into fear or denial
At the center of the book is a practical Early Warning Checklist, designed to help readers distinguish between private anxiety and shared reality, and to determine when attention, oversight, or action becomes necessary.
This book does not tell you what to think.
It helps you decide when watching is no longer enough.