Normally trivia tends to terrify me.
This is no exception.
Most of the chapters in this book are okay, no problems at all and everything is an interesting fact I didn't know until I read it (unless I've seen a little of it on Real Life Lore, the author's youtube channel). Things that seem sort of essential even if they're not necessary: Why was currency on a gold standard? What is on the opposite side of earth from myself? What do you absolutely need to know about every President of the United States? And these are interesting and I feel like knowing the answers to these questions at least helps me understand why things work the way they do a little better.
Then there's the section about the nuclear football.
If you don't understand what this refers to, it's a little breifcase being carried around by someone near the President at all times. Should the President decide, it would take minutes for him (or her) to give a command, the Secretary of Defense would have to confirm the order came from the President (and has no power to veto this, only to confirm the order came from the President himself) and the football would open, there would be a set of nuclear strike plans and how to initiate them, and presumably it would be a few minutes from there to the actual deployment of America's nuclear arsenal. There are almost no checks for this, the President has the football and if he (or she) puts it into play there's very little anybody can do to stop him (or her) legally, except probably declare him (or her) unfit for duty which literally could take hours to days. If he (or she) gets killed, don't worry, the VP has a football as well, but it only activates if the President is confirmed out of action. The list of who gets the football from there is essentially the same as succession for the Presidency.
Even if the POTUS is someone you agree with on most issues, it's up there for terrifying in my opinion.
Good work Mr. Pisenti, trivia again makes it a little harder to sleep at night.