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How the Homeland Became a Combat Zone

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

During a dinner at the annual gathering of the Ciceronian Society on March 19, a glance at my phone profoundly changed the rest of the evening. It had been an intellectually stimulating day with fellow Christian thinkers, for which my wife and I were grateful to be part of. Something familiar caught my eye: the photo of a man I instantly recognized, Brandon Shah. We were part of the same staff group section within the larger U.S. Army Command and General Staff College class of 2019. Brandon never used X, so I was immediately curious why he was showing up so prominently on my feed. Immediately, the following words accosted me: “The victim of the terrorist attack at Old Dominion has been identified as Lt. Col. Brandon Shah.”

My pulse raced, followed moments later by sudden rage. My anger over how the political class has betrayed veterans of the so-called Global War on Terrorism rekindled. My wife could tell something was bothering me. “Are you okay?” she asked. I wasn’t. My focus on the planned presentation I was to deliver later broke, my mind hijacked by a kind of mourning I had avoided throughout 20 years in the military due to learning that a man I served with died in combat on home soil.

Trump Has No Soul

 — Author: Chris Hedges — 

Why Israel Wants a War with Iran (w/ Gideon Levy) | Chris Hedges Report

 — Author: Chris Hedges — 

This interview is also available on podcast platforms and Rumble.

As the war between the United States, Israel, and Iran intensifies, the justifications for its outbreak grow increasingly murky, shifting between nuclear fears, regime change, and regional security concerns. In this interview, Israeli journalist Gideon Levy joins Chris Hedges to cut through the official narratives and examine the deeper ideological forces driving Israel’s long-standing push toward confrontation with Iran under Benjamin Netanyahu.

Fuel price gouging is…legal?!

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

On this episode of Dollars & Sense, Matt and Elinor discuss how profits are driving inflation, why the Australian Competition and Consumer Commission doesn’t have the power to take on price gouging properly, and why migration is not causing Australia’s housing crisis. Then, the wheels come off talking about the meat industry.

This discussion was recorded on Thursday 26 March 2026.

What we owe the water: It’s time for a fossil fuel treaty by Kumi Naidoo, is available now for just $19.95. Use the code ‘PODVP’ at checkout to get free shipping.

You can also subscribe to the Vantage Point series to get four essays a year on some of the most pressing issues facing Australia and the world.

Host: Matt Grudnoff, Senior Economist, the Australia Institute // @mattgrudnoff

Host: Elinor Johnston-Leek, Senior Content Producer, the Australia Institute // @elinorjohnstonleek

Show notes:

D.C. Media Blob Beclowned by SAVE Act Debate

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

When the United States Senate actually deliberates, it remains undefeated.

Last Tuesday, mere hours after Senate Republican Leader John Thune finally acquiesced to conservative calls for an open-ended floor debate on national voter ID legislation, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer—who for months condemned the SAVE America Act as “Jim Crow 2.0”—told reporters that, lo and behold, Democrats are fine with requiring voters to show a photo ID. Days earlier, Senator Dick Durbin, the Democratic Whip, also admitted as much.

If you followed the debate over floor strategy for the SAVE Act over the last six weeks, you know that Schumer’s admission was supposed to be impossible. With Olympian certainty, leadership aides and former ones-turned-corporate-lobbyists dismissed conservatives’ proposal for an open floor process. After all, everyone knew that the Democrats’ opposition to voter ID was absolute; that debating the SAVE Act was a waste of time and a threat to the sanctity of the filibuster; and that voter ID was dead on arrival in the Senate.

It turns out that all of the things “everyone knows”…are false.

From Alaska to Antarctica: The Next Great American Expansion

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

While many eyes are focused on Iran, the Trump Administration’s policies suggest that reasserting the Monroe Doctrine in the Western Hemisphere could rank among its highest geopolitical priorities. As laid out in the 2025 National Security Strategy, the Trump Corollary “is a common-sense and potent restoration of American power and priorities, consistent with American security interests.” What if America could project its dominance quickly, dramatically, and without firing a single shot? With one bold stroke, President Trump could expand America’s sovereign territory by nearly 20% and recover the largest unclaimed tract of land left on the planet.

Marie Byrd Land is the name for 620,000 square miles of Antarctica, a territory roughly the size of Alaska. It belongs to no nation and is governed by no sovereign power. It is desolate, largely uninhabited, and of enormous strategic importance. Claiming it would be the largest expansion of American sovereign territory since William Henry Seward’s purchase of Alaska in 1867.

The moment is right. The case is overwhelming. And the window is closing.

Slavery is the Gravest Crime against Humanity

 — Author: Fadhel Kaboub — 

Today marks the International Day of Remembrance of the Victims of Slavery and the Transatlantic Slave Trade, and on this March 25, 2026, Ghana’s President John Mahama will be at the United Nations Headquarters in New York to support The UN General Assembly vote on a resolution designating the transatlantic African slave trade as “the gravest crime against humanity.” This important recognition sets the stage for structural reparations and structural transformation for Africa and the rest of the Global South. That is the next frontier of the struggle for justice.

[update: The UN resolution passed with 123 votes. Three countries voted against it (the US, Israel and Argentina), while 52 countries abstained.]

If we want to understand how the modern world economy was built, we have to stop treating the trafficking and chattel enslavement of Africans as a tragic “labor system” sitting on the sidelines of industrialization. It was an engineered architecture of extraction, designed to do three things at once:

  1. transfer people at a continental scale,

  2. convert human beings into capital assets, and

  3. organize global trade and production around coerced commodity frontiers.

Speech: Reassessing Australian Financial Conditions

 — Organisation: Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) — 
Speech by Christopher Kent, Assistant Governor (Financial Markets), to KangaNews Debt Capital Market Summit

The 10 Best Public Plazas In the U.S.

 — Publication: CityNerd — 

Sports Betting Is Everywhere, Especially on Credit Reports

 — Organisation: Federal Reserve Bank of New York — Publication: Liberty Street Economics — 

Editor’s Note: The chart notes for the first chart have been updated to correct errors in how we labeled the trend line colors. (March 25, 2026)

What’s On Mar 23-29 2026

 — Organisation: Free Palestine Melbourne — 
What’s On around Naarm/Melbourne & regional Victoria: Mar 23-29, 2026

The American Mind Podcast: The Roundtable Episode 310

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

The American Mind’s ‘Editorial Roundtable’ podcast is a weekly conversation with Ryan Williams, Spencer Klavan, and Mike Sabo devoted to uncovering the ideas and principles that drive American political life. Stream here or download from your favorite podcast host.

Trump: A World-Historic Figure? | The Roundtable Ep. 310

After another tense week of Iran-US operations, Trump is reportedly looking to broker a deal and snuff out the Middle East conflict. Meanwhile, amid rumors that the Right is tearing at the seams, polling now reveals that young conservatives are the least divided on the recent intervention—overwhelmingly in its favor. Reports of a deep divide between old and young may, as so often, be more media hype than reality. Those running in 2028: take notes.

How a gas export tax could transform Australia

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

On this episode of Follow the Money, Rod Campbell and Ebony Bennett discuss the case for a 25% gas export tax and the New South Wales government’s ban on new coal mines.

This episode was recorded on Tuesday 24 March.

You can sign the Australia Institute’s petition calling on the federal government to make gas exporters pay their fair share.

Guest: Rod Campbell, Research Director, the Australia Institute // @rodcampbell

Host: Ebony Bennett, Deputy Director, the Australia Institute // @ebonybennett

Show notes:

The case for a gas export tax, explained by Richard Denniss, The Point (March 2026)

Tax gas exports, invest in health/aged care – new polls, the Australia Institute (March 2026)

Speech: After Acacia: The Next Era of Financial System Innovation?

 — Organisation: Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) — 
Remarks by Brad Jones, Assistant Governor (Financial System), at the Australian Payments Plus 'Beyond Tomorrow' Forum

Art attack: Australian artists should be properly funded, not forced to beg

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

An Australia Institute submission to the inquiry has found that asking artists to beg for more money from donors ignores the much bigger issue of chronic underfunding of the arts.

The arts sector was devastated by the COVID pandemic and has never truly recovered. Once-iconic music festivals have been cancelled. Venues have closed. Artists are living in poverty.

The long-running cost-of-living crisis has left Australian consumers with very little money to spend on artistic pleasures like a trip to a gallery, buying a book, watching a movie or seeing a band.

The submission concludes that “this is a critical time for supporting Australian arts and culture”.

Key points:

  • In real terms, arts funding is at its lowest point since 2017/18
  • Australia has the 7th-lowest arts spending in the OECD
  • Despite the cost of living crisis, arts spending has been cut by more than half a billion dollars a year
  • While Australia-wide employment has grown by 13% since the end of the COVID pandemic, the arts sector has only just returned to pre-pandemic levels

“Artists, authors, musicians and other creatives have a huge impact on Australian culture, how Australians see themselves, and how the world sees Australians,” said Skye Predavec, Researcher at The Australia Institute.

“Australia’s arts and culture cannot be produced overseas, and cannot be moved offshore. It must be made here.

The World According to Gaza - Read by Eunice Wong

 — Author: Chris Hedges — 

This article is read by Eunice Wong. You can find her work at www.eunicewong.actor.

Text originally published January 19, 2026.


The Chris Hedges Report is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

I Need Your Support

 — Author: Thomas Zimmer — 

Men Abusing Power, Women and Girls Will Never Come as a Surprise

 — Author: Betsy Phillips — 
The New York Times last week issued a story detailing allegations of sexual impropriety against civil rights icon Cesar Chavez

The Age of America

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

At 73 years old, Francis Fukuyama has become a meme. He is the victim of a title too good to be true. “The End of History?” was the name of a landmark essay published in The National Interest and later expanded into his career-making 1992 bestseller, The End of History and the Last Man. So now, when this urbane philosopher posts pictures of himself at conferences on Instagram, his comment section is flooded with plaintive young people saying things like “mr fukuyama please end history again” and “francis history keeps happening what do I do.”

History would appear to be rolling on undeterred, however. It’s far too soon to say how Operation Epic Fury, Donald Trump’s sudden all-out assault on Iran, will affect the course of world events. But it’s safe to say at this point that even his well-wishers sure hope he knows what he’s doing. This dramatic act by the commander-in-chief of America’s titanic army is the latest of several fresh reminders that sometimes things really do happen. Others include the removal of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro, the calamities in Ukraine and Afghanistan, and Trump’s own election—both times. Cumulatively, these sorts of upsets have created the distinct impression that history might be starting up again. At the very least, it’s been an eventful millennium so far.

03/23/2026 Market Update

 — Organisation: Applied MMT — 

Capitalism at a Crossroads

 — Organisation: The Equality Trust — 

The war in Iran is a human catastrophe. It may also be the moment Britain finally asks which economic future it wants. Before anything else it is worth pausing on what is actually happening. People are dying. Families are being torn apart. A civilian population is living through something most people cannot begin to imagine. […]

The post Capitalism at a Crossroads appeared first on Equality Trust.

The Case Against Federal Reserve Independence

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

The independence of the Federal Reserve System has become a major source of public controversy. As political leaders signal dissatisfaction with monetary policy, officials and commentators rush to defend the central bank’s insulation from democratic pressure. We are told, as if it were self-evident, that central bank independence is a pillar of sound economic governance.

But this confidence is misplaced. The economic case for central bank independence is far weaker than its defenders suggest. And the constitutional case is weaker still.

Trump nixes Xi summit as Iran war escalates

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

On this episode of After America, Dr Emma Shortis and Angus Blackman discuss the war on Iran and how American sanctions are creating a humanitarian crisis in Cuba, before Professor James Laurenceson joins the show to talk about the impact of the conflict on China and the postponed Trump-Xi summit.

This episode was recorded on Friday 20 and Monday 23 March.

Guest: James Laurenceson, Professor and Director, Australia-China Relations Institute, University of Technology Sydney // @j-laurenceson

Host: Emma Shortis, Director, International & Security Affairs, the Australia Institute // @emmashortis

Host: Angus Blackman, Executive Producer, Podcasts, the Australia Institute //  @angusrb

Show notes:

Shorter America This Week: History sighs, repeats itself; Surprise: Trump doesn’t need allies; A bloodthirsty White House by Emma Shortis, The Point (March 2026)

The attacks on Iran hurt us all by Allan Behm, The Point (March 2026)

Pre-Order "Data Are Made, Not Found"!

 — Author: danah boyd — 
Pre-Order "Data Are Made, Not Found"!

There's something uniquely demoralizing about editing and editing and editing a book manuscript. The words all start to blur together and you start thinking that every sentence is crap, no one will ever want to read this, why bother completing the book. I was definitely in this state. And then... my publisher sent me the book cover and I squealed for joy at just how lovely it is. And it gave me hope. Check out this beauty!

And yes... that's a wobbly Jenga tower comprised of pieces made from census documentation cuz one of the core arguments in the book is that we're living in a world of "Jenga Politics" where different actors are pulling out pieces of our administrative infrastructure and putting pressure on top. Civil servants are exhausted, but they're trying to keep the tower from falling.

And now that I've seen the beautiful cover, I can't wait for you to read this book! And to come celebrate with me! I am starting to build a book tour so hopefully I will come to a city near you. But, in the meantime, here are some of the fun things I get to share:

Dissecting the Polycrisis, Charting the Conceptual Terrain of Enquiry

 — Publication: Progress in Political Economy — 

Polycrisis has become a widely used concept. Politicians, public intellectuals and academics alike are drawing on it when describing our current global situation. In my article ‘Dissecting the Polycrisis, Charting the Conceptual Terrain of Enquiry’ [open access], recently published in the Journal of Balkan and Near Eastern Studies, I explore how we can distinguish between fundamental crises on one hand, and crises, which are simply the concrete manifestations of those deeper, structural crises on the other. In this blog post, I summarise the main conceptual and empirical findings of the article.

Board Blog: My Experience as a Trustee

 — Organisation: The Equality Trust — 

This blog post is from long-time Trustee Gerry Boyle, who is hugely appreciated for the six years he has given to helping the Equality Trust operate. I have just stood down as a Trustee of the Equality Trust, having served two terms of three years each, the maximum allowed under our constitution. It has certainly […]

The post Board Blog: My Experience as a Trustee appeared first on Equality Trust.

How to Fix Canada’s Underrepresentation Problem – Without Creating a New One

 — Publication: Perspectives Journal — 

2026 marks 30 years since the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action was a adopted as a UN resolution; a landmark global commitment to achieving equal representation for women in political life. Canada, however, is still behind on reaching that goal. Today, women and gender diverse people hold only 36 percent of elected offices in provincial and federal legislatures, and far behind other countries.

The contrast with Mexico, a country that shares Canada’s gender equality commitments, is striking. At the federal and state-levels, Mexico maintains legislated gender quotas, and women hold 50 percent of the seats in the federal Chamber of Deputies. Canada, on the other hand, relies only on voluntary party quotas for increased office-holding by women. As a result, while more than half of the deputies in Mexico are women, in Canada, women comprise less than one-third of the MPs in the House of Commons. Overall, Mexico ranks fourth in the world for women’s representation in national parliaments while Canada ranks 72nd.

Luxembourg is Really Pretty #daypass

 — Publication: Not Just Bikes — 

Tax gas exports, invest in health/aged care – new polls

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

A national poll of 1502 voters, conducted by YouGov, found more than three in five Australians support a flat 25% tax on gas exports.

Separate polls in the seats of Kooyong, Mackellar, Wentworth and Farrer, conducted by uComms, found that more than two out of three voters support a flat 25% tax on gas exports.

Voters were told such a tax could raise around $17 billion a year. An overwhelming majority said that money should be spent improving health and aged care services.

In the national poll, a gas export tax was most popular among One Nation and Greens voters.

Key points:

  • In the national poll, 61% of voters agreed gas export companies should pay a 25% gas export tax. 5% disagreed.
  • In the seats of Kooyong, Mackellar, Wentworth and Farrer, between 68% and 75% of voters agree gas export corporations should pay a 25% gas export tax. Between 7% and 16% disagree.
  • In all polls, the most popular choice for where revenue from a gas export tax should be spent was health/aged care.

“It’s clear Australians think that making foreign owned gas companies pay for our gas isn’t an issue of left or right, but a simple issue of fairness,” said Dr Richard Denniss, co-CEO of The Australia Institute.

“As petrol and electricity prices rise, the idea that gas export companies will make enormous windfall profits while Australians struggle with higher energy prices and interest rates is as untenable as it is unnecessary.

China’s Electric Trade

 — Organisation: Federal Reserve Bank of New York — Publication: Liberty Street Economics — 

Africa's Giant Leap: Decolonize to Transition

 — Author: Fadhel Kaboub — 

I am happy to share my latest contribution, a new deep-dive paper published by the Earth4All Initiative of the Club of Rome. The paper, titled “Africa’s Just Transition Opportunity: Decolonising Economic Transformation for Climate Resilience,” explores one of the most urgent questions of our time: how can Africa pursue climate action while simultaneously undoing the colonial economic structures that continue to restrain its development trajectory. You can read the full paper here. We will also discuss the key findings during the Earth4All deep-dive launch webinar on Monday March 23, 2026 at 10am EDT or 5pm EAT. You can RSVP for the webinar here. I hope many of you will join the conversation. I will highlight some of the paper’s main messages and will add a few points about the importance of Pan-Africanism, joint-industrial policies, and geopolitical strategies.

Should Public Transit be Free? #daypass #luxembourg

 — Publication: Not Just Bikes — 

The New York Fed DSGE Model Forecast—March 2026

 — Organisation: Federal Reserve Bank of New York — Publication: Liberty Street Economics — 

Don't Get Around Much Anymore

 — Author: Julia Doubleday — 

March 15, this past Sunday, was Long COVID Awareness Day.

I’d like to have published an article that day, or gone to a protest, or joined fellow patients at one of the various events taking place in honor of the occasion (shoutout as always to the excellent Sick Times). But I was too ill, as I often am.

I am homebound, only occasionally leaving my apartment with difficulty for medical appointments, and my welfare at home varies. On good days, I can read and write and spend time with friends. On bad days, I “crash,” am beset with migraines, I wait for the storm to pass. I take my medications. I am a reluctant convert to audiobooks. I cover my eyes with satin and silk. Little luxuries. I cry.

How to raise awareness for this disease that makes us so tired, so weak, and so small? I have tried so long to be loud, but who can hear me here, alone in this apartment?

On Long COVID Awareness Day, I posted a few tweets about my life, my experiences, yet felt so far away from the world. It felt perfunctory, hopeless. Is it possible to speak about Long COVID without having others speak over you? Without having people flood in to insist you are not ill, or that you are ill from the vaccines, or that your experiences haven’t happened, or that your suffering is unfortunate, but necessary?

The LGBTQ Tidal Wave Was Never About a Social Contagion

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

Opponents of surgically mutilating healthy adolescents are currently relishing a moment of vindication. This month, the Supreme Court delivered a blow to California laws that obligate schools to aid and abet minors’ “gender transitions,” keeping them secret from parents. Back east, a New York court awarded two million dollars in damages to a woman on whom doctors performed a double mastectomy at age 16. Given this turn in the cultural tide, it’s understandable why conservatives would be fighting the urge to spike the football and offer much-deserved “I told you sos.”

And there’s more good news. A few months ago, researcher Erik Kaufmann noted a precipitous decline in the number of young people who identify as “non-binary” after 2023. More recently, Jean Twenge, a scholar who charts generational divides and characteristics, confirmed that Kaufmann’s findings are likely true and can be extended to include transgender identity specifically and LGBTQ identity in general.

The Madness of The Donald (MOATS w/ George Galloway)

 — Author: Chris Hedges — 

The Chris Hedges Report is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

Gaslit politics | Between the Lines

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

The Wrap with Louise Morris

There’s a shift happening in Australian politics right now.

And it runs straight through the gas industry.

For years, the idea of properly taxing gas exports has been treated as politically untenable – something governments approached dismissively, if at all. But as global conflict pushes up energy prices and gas company profits surge, that dismissiveness is starting to look like negligence.

Image: AAP/Rebecca Le May

Keep reading

— Louise Morris is an Advocate at The Australia Institute.


The Big Stories

The PM requests modelling on a potential new gas tax

In breaking news on Friday 20 March, the prime minister’s department has asked for modelling on a potential new gas tax.

New Australia Institute research shows that, if a 25% gas export tax was introduced in 2022, it would have raised more than $63 billion by now.

The Origins of Public Transit #daypass

 — Publication: Not Just Bikes — 

The Second Sex and the Radicalism of Modern Feminism

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

Feminism is sometimes presented by its proponents as something with which only an inveterate misogynist could disagree. “It’s just about fairness for women, allowing them the same freedoms to pursue their heart’s desire that we allow men,” it is claimed. “How can you be against that?!”

Some perhaps genuinely believe this. But it is nothing more than a rhetorical strategy to put critics on the defensive and to deflect attention from the radical core of virtually all contemporary feminist thought, at least of the kind one encounters among the cultural elite. The contemporary feminist worldview can be concisely summarized: men as a class oppose women as a class, and the only way to advance the cause of women in the face of collective patriarchal repression is to reduce or ignore the differences between the sexes altogether.

Where did such ideas come from? Some would have it that the basic ideas of feminism consist of the simple liberal principles articulated in the opening claim about freedom, and more radical divagations are of recent origin. Not true. You can find the extremism in the foundational sources of modern feminist thought. A consideration of Simone de Beauvoir’s 1949 book, The Second Sex, which is widely acknowledged as an essential early inspiration of what would become modern feminism, proves the point.

Progress on the 1A front in Santa Fe

 — Author: Heidi Li Feldman — 
Progress on the 1A front in Santa Fe

If you are in Santa Fe on March 28, 2026, No Kings 3 day, you can now join a city march in the streets, free of vehicle traffic. Though the City of Santa Fe has yet to conform its policies and practices to the New Mexico and United States constitutions, months of work paid off yesterday morning. I received this email from the City Manager:

Release of Financial Stability Review – March 2026

 — Organisation: Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) — 
Media release number 2026-09: The RBA today published its March 2026 Financial Stability Review.

How Israel Convinced Trump to Wage War Against Iran (w/ Max Blumenthal) | The Chris Hedges Report

 — Author: Chris Hedges — 

This interview is also available on podcast platforms and Rumble.

As the chaos and destruction of the war in Iran escalates by the day, a lesser known element of the conflict remains ensconced in the shadows of statespeak and bureaucracy. Max Blumenthal, editor-in-chief of The Grayzone, joins Chris Hedges to explain how an Israeli psychological warfare campaign worked to exploit Donald Trump’s imbecilic intelligence and increasing paranoia with the ultimate goal of luring the President into a war with Iran.

Blumenthal says the Israelis and their allies convinced President Trump that Iran was trying to assassinate him – a fear first stoked when Trump began a vicious cycle of violence with the regime after he assassinated Iranian General Qasem Soleimani during his first term.

Double pain for Australians as interest rate and oil price hikes bite

 — Organisation: The Australia Institute — 

On this episode of Dollars & Sense, Greg and Elinor discuss the economic impact of the US and Israel’s war on Iran, the Reserve Bank’s decision to raise interest rates, and why changes to the capital gains tax discount might finally be on the way.

This discussion was recorded on Thursday 19 March 2026.

What we owe the water: It’s time for a fossil fuel treaty by Kumi Naidoo, is available now for just $19.95. Use the code ‘PODVP’ at checkout to get free shipping.

You can also subscribe to the Vantage Point series to get four essays a year on some of the most pressing issues facing Australia and the world.

Host: Greg Jericho, Chief Economist, the Australia Institute // @grogsgamut

Host: Elinor Johnston-Leek, Senior Content Producer, the Australia Institute // @elinorjohnstonleek

Show notes:

An Urban Planning Marvel Hidden In Plain Sight

 — Publication: CityNerd — 

Playing the Wrong Game

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

The Democrats are currently on track to take the House of Representatives in the 2026 midterms. If this happens, they will empower resistance bureaucrats to slow down all Trump Administration initiatives. Of course, they’ll not only impeach Trump, but will also pursue impeachment proceedings against many Trump officials. This will substantially drain momentum from the administration and increase momentum for the Democrats heading into the crucial 2028 presidential election.

The Democrats are already putting together plans, formulating a narrative, and accumulating evidence, which they will use against Republicans should they retake power. We’ve seen this movie before.

The Marxist machine has had time to learn from its mistakes during 2020-2024. The Democrats will likely pursue criminal prosecution against key targets in the MAGA orbit, including big donors like Elon Musk, the DOGE bros, and even junior Trump staffers. We’ve already seen in Arctic Frost an effort to spy on sitting Republican United States senators—they’ll be on the target list, too.

This is power. Force is power. Politics is the management of force. For his tech-oriented publication Pirate Wires, Mike Solana recently published “Theory of Power,” which outlines how the Left will replicate California’s wealth tax to target billionaires on a nationwide scale. He believes that the Left is targeting billionaires because wealth is power. He’s half right.

The Case Against “Principled Conservatism”

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

Frank Meyer’s fusionism combined free-market libertarianism and religion-friendly traditionalism to create the modern conservative movement. As a political alliance against the threat of Communism, the movement served its purpose. But the principles that undergirded Meyer’s synthesis were not an adequate basis for attaining and sustaining national power.

The difference between the defeated Goldwater faction and the victorious Reagan coalition was the vote of white Catholic Democrats alienated from their former party by its anti-anti-Communism and embrace of the three A’s: amnesty (for draft evaders), acid, and abortion. Those former Democrats did not want smaller government, so Reagan preserved, for them and the country, Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, along with generating ever-larger deficits.

Norms and narratives: uncovering men’s hidden resistance to gender-sensitive parliaments in Fiji

 — Publication: Advancing Learning and Innovation on Gender Norms (ALIGN) — 
Norms and narratives: uncovering men’s hidden resistance to gender-sensitive parliaments in Fiji ESubden Blog Sonia Palmieri ALIGN Fiji 1118

The American Mind Podcast: The Roundtable Episode 309

 — Organisation: The Claremont Institute — 

The American Mind’s ‘Editorial Roundtable’ podcast is a weekly conversation with Ryan Williams, Spencer Klavan, and Mike Sabo devoted to uncovering the ideas and principles that drive American political life. Stream here or download from your favorite podcast host.

Does the Right Have a Woman Problem? | The Roundtable Ep. 309