America the Beautiful, America the Invaded

As many as 15-20 million illiterate and unskilled migrants invaded our nation during the horrendous four years of the Biden administration. Hundreds of thousands—possibly millions—of them were violent criminals, slackers looking for a welfare check, or extremists here to set up terrorist cells.

Is the new “Restore Britain” movement in the U.K. a blueprint for America?

We are squandering our country’s wealth to accommodate 10-15 million unskilled, unvetted, third-world intruders who were invited to surge America’s open borders by Joe Biden and his duplicitous Democrat underlings.

The Road to Communism Part 2 Weaponized Media

We live in a time of massive media weaponization. It is all too easy to manipulate information. With the internet, social media, TV, cable and streaming services, Hollywood, and academia, even the most degenerate voices have access to a microphone or computer keyboard. The spreading of false information or rumors is not new. It has …

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Uniforms Matter: Why the Constitution Draws a Hard Line Between Warriors and Police

Uniforms are not decoration. They are language. Long before an officer speaks a word or a citizen weighs compliance, the uniform announces intent, authority, and the rules that govern the encounter. In a free society—especially one built on constitutional limits—this signaling is not cosmetic. It is foundational.

Evil Without Horns: Jeffrey Epstein, Steve Bannon, and a Calm Conversation With the Unrepentant

Epstein sits before the camera not as a man crushed by exposure, but as one still convinced the rules apply differently to him. He speaks in abstractions. He talks about systems, reputation, philanthropy, misunderstanding. The victims are nowhere to be found—not as people, not as faces, not as lives interrupted. They exist only as legal problems, public-relations complications, inconvenient footnotes to an otherwise impressive résumé. This is not the language of remorse. It is the language of a man who believes morality is negotiable if one is clever enough.

The Subscription Losses at The Washington Post Say More About the Subscribers Than the Newspaper Itself

As would be expected, the whole of the professional media have been reacting to the significant layoffs at The Washington Post. I do not normally read Frank Luntz, but, lazing in bed this frosty morning, and scrolling through Twitter — I still refuse to call it 𝕏 — I clicked on the linked article from …

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Minneapolis: Watching a Color Revolution Come Home (Live, Local, and “Mostly Peaceful”)

Minneapolis isn’t “going through a moment.” Minneapolis is running a script.

And not the kind of script where everybody just hugs it out at the end and the credits roll over a lake with a canoe and a golden retriever. This is the other kind—the kind you used to see overseas, the kind cable news used to narrate like a nature documentary: Observe the fascinating uprising in its natural habitat. Note the coordinated chants. The symbolic signage. The sudden appearance of professionally printed banners that definitely came from someone’s garage printer.