United States

When Two Branches Overreach: Rethinking the Balance of Power in the WilmerHale Decision (900 words)

When Two Branches Overreach: Rethinking the Balance of Power in the WilmerHale Decision by Michael Stevens Sometimes, the Constitution doesn’t give us clean winners—it demands discipline. The recent legal standoff between the Executive Branch and the Judiciary over Executive Order 14250 is one of those moments. At stake was not…

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Biden and Fitness for Office – Some thoughts on the incompetence that lingers (900 words)

Rule of Law or Rule of Convenience? Ah, the Constitution—remember that relic? The one requiring laws to be followed, funds to be properly appropriated, and the executive to actually execute? Cute idea. Too bad Democrats treat it as a speed bump while scrambling like arsonists fighting over a fire extinguisher…

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Gaslighting a Nation: Without Virtue We Become Puppets to the Powerful, Without Education We Don’t Even Know It! (850 words)

Gaslighting a Nation: How the Virtueless Fall for Lies John Adams warned, “Our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people. It is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.” He understood that self-governance depends on self-discipline. Without virtue, freedom rots from within. James Madison echoed this…

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The Great Remote Work Swindle: Taxpayer Dollars at Work (Or Not)

If you’ve ever wondered what government waste looks like, imagine this: billions of your tax dollars being spent on federal office space that’s emptier than a congressional promise. Only 6% of federal employees are showing up full-time in person, and nearly a third are permanently remote. Meanwhile, federal buildings in…

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