Tuesday, July 29, 2025

7-29-25 Excellent Guests for Your Show

1. Rabbi Daniel Schonbuch: The Danger of Mamdani-ism - A Wake-Up Call for the West

2. John Lott: Manhattan Shooting Follows All Too Familiar Pattern

3. Todd Sheets: Winning the AI Race

4. Daniel Greenfield: The Jihad Against Israel is Genocide

5. Kenneth Rapoza: Fed Governor Chris Waller Takes Long View on Tariffs

6. Kerry Lutz: Operation Algorithm Assassin - Join the War on Big Tech Suppression

7. Greg Rabidoux: Making Golf Great Again


The Danger of Mamdani-ism - A Wake-Up Call for the West

Imagine if Mamdani were Mayor of NYC last night with an active shooter, defunded police, and criminals let loose on the streets? In a searing new article, psychotherapist and podcast host Rabbi Daniel Schonbuch, LMFT issues a stark warning about the growing influence of New York Assemblyman Zohran Mamdani and the radical ideology he represents - what Schonbuch calls 'Mamdaniism.' This article explores how Mamdani's blend of socialism, antisemitism, and anti-Western rhetoric is not only distorting public discourse but threatening the very pillars of liberal democracy. "Mamdani isn't just criticizing Israel - he's defending Hamas, excusing terrorism, and calling for the dismantling of American capitalism," said Schonbuch. "This isn't politics. It's moral collapse." [more...]


Manhattan Shooting Follows All Too Familiar Pattern

By John Lott, Worldwide Expert on Guns & Crime

The New York City murderer who killed five people broke numerous gun control laws - he openly carried a rifle that was already illegal to possess in the city. Meanwhile, the law-abiding victims were defenseless, disarmed by the city's strict regulations. Again and again, diaries and manifestos of mass public shooters show a disturbing pattern: they deliberately choose locations where they know their victims can't fight back due to restrictive gun laws. While it remains unclear whether this particular killer made such a calculation, his actions align with a pattern we've seen repeatedly in other cases. With the attacks in Cincinnati, what is the rate of interracial violent crime? Blacks committed violent crime against whites 9.2 times more than the reverse. Blacks committed violent crime against Asians 88.9 times more than the reverse.  [more...]


Winning the AI Race

By Todd Sheets, Author of 2008: What Really Happened

This week, the Trump Administration published what it called "America's AI Action Plan," which includes an opening quote from the President that trumpets the magnitude of the opportunity at hand: "Breakthroughs in these fields have the potential to reshape the global balance of power, spark entirely new industries, and revolutionize the way we live and work." Importantly, the report focuses on approaching AI with a light touch of regulation so that we can win what I've referred to as the AI equivalent of a Formula 1 race: "The U.S. needs to innovate faster and more comprehensively than our competitors in the development and distribution of new AI technology across every field, and dismantle unnecessary regulatory barriers that hinder the private sector from doing so." [more...]


The Jihad Against Israel is Genocide

By Daniel Greenfield, Author of Domestic Enemies

Israel isn't committing genocide - it's resisting genocide.

On Oct 7, 2023, thousands of Muslim Jihadis swept from Gaza into Israel, killing, torturing, raping and kidnapping anyone in their path. The victims included not only Israelis or Jews, but Americans and Europeans, Christians and Buddhists, as well as those Bedouins whom the Hamas, PLO and Islamic Jihad attackers did not consider Muslims. Their rationale was not a "Palestinian" cause or any of the later war propaganda myths about an "open air prison," but an Islamic religious imperative to drive out infidels. That's why they named their genocidal campaign, 'Al-Aqsa Flood' after their occupation mosque planted in Jerusalem that they hoped to reclaim when they had killed or enslaved all the infidels in Israel. [more...]


Fed Governor Chris Waller Takes Long View on Tariffs

By Kenneth Rapoza, Reporter/Columnist for Coalition for a Prosperous America

On July 17, at an event at New York University, a member of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors, Christopher Waller, said that tariffs are not inflationary. "Tariffs are one-off increases in the price level and do not cause inflation beyond a temporary surge," he said. The take from those who are vehemently opposed to the Trump administration’s America First trade policy is that tariffs are a tax on the middle class. To them, if inflation has been tame since that infamous Liberation Day of April 2, just wait until August 1 when the 20%-plus tariff levels kick in. (Those tariffs are under review by the U.S. Federal Appeals Court.) [more...]


Operation Algorithm Assassin - Join the War on Big Tech Suppression

By Kerry Lutz, Host of Financial Survival Network

For over eight years, I have been silenced by big tech. The numbers don't lie - but the algorithm does. And now I have absolute proof; so I am going scorched earth with big tech. Despite 98% like ratios and off-the-charts engagement on YouTube videos; despite interviews with top-tier guests, YouTube has throttled my reach, silenced my signal, and buried my content in algorithmic purgatory. And I'm not the only one. But what makes my case different? Five independent AIs, including Google's own, agree: I am being shadow banned. [more...]


Making Golf Great Again

By Greg Rabidoux, Award-Winning Filmmaker, Author & Cultural Commentator

Golf (thankfully) is no longer the exclusive domain of uber-wealthy Captains of industry or super-talented legends like Tiger Woods, Jack Nicklaus, or Arnold Palmer. Nope, golf circa 2025 and beyond is a lot more everyman (and woman) and hitting your ball with a hockey stick is now optional. We have more public courses, low-tee-fee spots, driving ranges and open tournaments today than ever before. Okay, sure it remains the game of choice for old, kinda out-of-shape white guys like President Trump who tend to not pick up their own ball (though he's made golf cool and not in a Dwight D. Eisenhower way) after a made putt but it's also now being dominated by younger girls like, say his own granddaughter Kai. As well as a foursome of Jamaican dudes on vacay I saw the other day just knocking the stuffing out of their golf balls with smoking drives John Daley would envy. [more...]

Thursday, July 24, 2025

POTUS Teaches Columbia/Harvard Vital Lessons

By Adam Kissel, Author of Slacking: A Guide to Ivy League Miseducation

"This is a monumental victory... "we're hopeful this will serve as a template," says Linda Mahon, Secretary of Education, of her investigation into DACA scholarships and Secretary of State Marco Rubio's probe into Harvard's international visas.

Columbia is paying a heavy price - over $220 million - for going so far astray. It has now agreed to the principles of merit, nondiscrimination, transparency, and justice it should have followed from the beginning. This resolution with the government is a big win, a fair model, and a warning for other universities that need reform. Harvard should be next.

Harvard's government grants are subject to civil rights compliance with both federal law and federal policy. Harvard has tolerated antisemitism in violation of both. The government should win the Harvard lawsuit because taxpayers have no duty to pay Harvard billions when its campus culture pervasively violates civil rights. If Harvard researchers want to cure diseases, they would be better off at a university without Harvard's problems. 

AI Chatbots Rely on Sources with Clear Biases

By John Lott, Worldwide Expert on Guns & Crime

AI chatbots like ChatGPT and Grok can be a big help in writing essays, conducting research, and exploring complex issues. But these tools bring risks, especially when they filter facts through a political lens. And the Trump administration is now stepping into the debate. "We believe AI systems should operate free of ideological bias and avoid pushing socially engineered agendas," said David Sacks, the administration's AI and Crypto Czar. "We've introduced several proposals to ensure AI stays truth-seeking and trustworthy." Recently, I saw this bias unfold in real time.

Last week, a user on X asked Grok whether more guns make Americans safer. Grok responded flatly: "No, evidence shows more guns correlate with higher firearm homicides and violent crime rates." The chatbot dismissed self-defense and deterrence, referring to my research – specifically my "more guns, less crime" theory – as something cited by "right-wing advocates." Grok supported its claims by referencing Scientific American magazine and a RAND Corporation review, saying these sources show guns don’t reduce crime and instead increase violence. Those answers are misleading and wrong. [more...]

Tuesday, July 22, 2025

7-22-25 Great Guests for Your Show

1. Todd Sheets: AI - Avoiding the Great Stagnation

2. Daniel Greenfield: Corrupt California: Political Criminals and Criminal Politicians

3. Adam Kissel: Taxpayers Don't Owe Harvard

4. Kenneth Rapoza: Economist Says Tariffs Will Cause Inflation, With a Huge Caveat

5. Kerry Lutz: I Don't Trust Florida's Railroad - and Neither Should You

6. Greg Rabidoux: Common Sense Names Sports Teams

7. Mark Tapson: 'The Plot Against the President' Revisited


AI - Avoiding the Great Stagnation

By Todd Sheets, Author of 2008: What Really Happened

We should approach AI with an economic system capable of delivering high growth through periods of transformational change. Keep in mind how today's debate over whether to follow a top-down, expert-driven system or a bottom-up, regulation lite, limited government model harkens back to Hamilton and Jefferson's debates at the founding of the country. It was Jefferson's limited government model that produced unprecedented rates of growth even as millions moved from rural America to the industrial cities, millions more immigrated from abroad, and everyone left their horses and buggies behind for electric lights and automobiles. All of which begs the question: if the limited government system was so wonderful, then why did we leave it behind in the 1930s for FDR's Brain Trust-driven New Deal? I begin by exploring this question and then look at where this more expert-oriented, interventionist approach has led us. [more...]


Corrupt California: Political Criminals and Criminal Politicians

By Daniel Greenfield, Author of Domestic Enemies

A new expose of the corrupt political interests destroying California.

Riots. Corruption. Murder. California is the ultimate true crime story, and the criminals are the politicians. California isn't going up in flames because Gov. Newsom and other top state leaders are inept - but because the state is run by the worst of the worst. In 'Corrupt California: Political Criminals and Criminal Politicians,' Daniel Greenfield & the David Horowitz Freedom Center team peels back what's behind the disasters, fires, crime, and homelessness, to reveal the corrupt political interests destroying California. [more...]


Taxpayers Don't Owe Harvard

By Adam Kissel, Author of Slacking: A Guide to Ivy League Miseducation

Harvard's government grants are subject to civil rights compliance with both federal law and federal policy. Harvard has tolerated antisemitism in violation of both. The government should win the Harvard lawsuit because taxpayers have no duty to pay Harvard billions when its campus culture pervasively violates civil rights. If Harvard researchers want to cure diseases, they would be better off at a university without Harvard's problems. 


Economist Says Tariffs Will Cause Inflation, With a Huge Caveat

By Kenneth Rapoza, Reporter/Columnist for Coalition for a Prosperous America

An economist with the San Francisco Federal Reserve wrote in their "Economic Letter" from July 14 that tariffs are going to lead to much higher inflation in the weeks ahead. There's just one caveat, and senior economist Mauricio Ulate admits it up front in his analysis of the situation: "It is too early to tell exactly what tariffs will be ultimately enacted, how long they will remain in place, and which level of retaliation - if any - other countries will settle on," he wrote. To wit, no country outside of China has retaliated meaningfully against the new tariffs, imposed on April 2. When China retaliated, the U.S. retaliated in kind, sending tariffs to a near blockade level rate of around 145%. China's exports to the U.S. fell to $20.4 billion in May, their lowest monthly value since February 2009. Other countries take heed. [more...]


I Don't Trust Florida's Railroad - and Neither Should You

By Kerry Lutz, Host of Financial Survival Network

You cannot trust Florida's rail system to protect your life. They call it infrastructure. I call it Russian Roulette with tax dollars. Sixty years ago, a quirky guy named Ralph Nader wrote a book called 'Unsafe at Any Speed.' It was about the Chevrolet Corvair - a slick little car that looked great in brochures but killed people in real-world collisions. That book sparked a movement, helped launch the consumer safety era, and got the Corvair taken off the road. In 2025, we've got something far worse than a twitchy suspension. We've got an entire rail corridor running through one of the most populated states in America - and it's eating people alive. [more...]


Common Sense Names Sports Teams

By Greg Rabidoux, Award-Winning Filmmaker, Author & Cultural Commentator

President Trump recently brought up the idea that he would block the NFL Washington, D.C. team's proposed building of a new stadium into the actual District of Columbia unless they drop their "Commanders" name and go back to their original name: "Redskins." The team changed its longstanding Redskins moniker after years of focus groups, surveys, polling, and mostly listening to white, liberal elites who seem to be the ones that get the most worked up over Indian names and team mascots. I'm never fully certain who or what demographic is supposed to feel good or whose guilt is supposed to be assuaged with some of these name changes. To be safe, it seems we'll just keep naming all our sports teams after birds until that lobbying group flocks together and demands "justice." [more...]


'The Plot Against the President' Revisited

By Mark Tapson, Shillman Fellow at the David Horowitz Freedom Center

"These guys have perpetrated the greatest crime against the American people ever seen."

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard recently stunned America and galvanized MAGA with her announcement about a declassified report alleging what patriots have long suspected: that former President Barack Obama and his administration engaged in what she calls a "treasonous conspiracy" to undermine Donald Trump's 2016 election victory. Gabbard stated that the report reveals Obama's team manipulated intelligence to falsely suggest Russian interference helped Trump win, despite prior assessments indicating no such interference. She accuses Deep State officials like James Clapper, John Brennan, and James Comey of fabricating evidence, including the Steele Dossier, to fuel the Trump-Russia probe. Gabbard has referred the documents to the Justice Department for potential prosecution, arguing the actions subverted democracy. [more...]

Tuesday, July 15, 2025

7-15-25 Expert Guests for Your Show

1. Daniel Greenfield: The Jeffrey Epstein Story Begins and Ends with the Clintons

2. Adam Kissel: University Systems Create Accreditor Focused on Merit and Outcomes

3. Kenneth Rapoza: Free Trade is Over in The U.S... and Trump's Tariffs Might Even Be Working

4. John Lott: Criminals Fear the Death Penalty More Than Life in Prison

5. Kerry Lutz: Bitcoin - The Coming Seller's Ghost Town

6. Lord Conrad Black: No Decline in the U.S., It Leads the West


The Jeffrey Epstein Story Begins and Ends with the Clintons

By Daniel Greenfield, Author of Domestic Enemies

Who else could have protected Epstein across three states and shut down a federal investigation?

I was writing about Jeffrey Epstein long before the current pack of grifters fastened on to the story and well before his arrest, when the Democrats suddenly decided to care about Epstein, largely to undermine Trump's nomination of Alex Acosta who had overseen the federal case against him. Before that, I reported on Epstein as part of a long list of sex predators tied to the Clintons. That arrest lifted Epstein's magical curtain of immunity and led directly to his death in federal custody. When Epstein died, I predicted that the truth would never be known. Throughout the years, after all the promises that were made to finally reveal the truth, I predicted it would never happen. And I was right. There will be no client list. No explanation for Epstein's death beyond the one we already got from AG Barr. No final answer. [more...]


University Systems Create Accreditor Focused on Merit and Outcomes

By Adam Kissel, Author of Slacking: A Guide to Ivy League Miseducation

Today's higher education accreditors let colleges and universities get away with mediocrity: low graduation rates, highly negative return on investment, and activism that looks little like scholarship. Accreditors are meant to vouch for college quality and to recommend improvements - but they rarely hold institutions accountable for such travesties as a four-year graduation rate under 15%, a negative return on investment in six figures, and pervasive antisemitism. Instead, they often require "diversity" practices that bleed into illegal discrimination. Fortunately, university systems in six states have formed a new accreditor to focus on "academic excellence" and "student outcomes." [more...]


Free Trade is Over in The U.S... and Trump's Tariffs Might Even Be Working

By Kenneth Rapoza, Reporter/Columnist for Coalition for a Prosperous America

Pay close attention to U.S. companies that have regionalized or localized supply chains.

The free-trade era is over. President Trump's tariff letters show that tariffs - to protect domestic industries and to raise revenue for a deeply indebted government - are the way forward. The U.S. is moving toward more managed trade via quotas and other measures. Tariffs will be seen by the Treasury Department (and Congress) as a vital source of revenue for a government that refuses to cut spending. Investors now should pay close attention to companies that have regionalized or localized supply chains, with minimal exposure to high-tariff suppliers and reliance mostly on the U.S. market for revenue. [more...]


Criminals Fear the Death Penalty More Than Life in Prison

By John Lott, Worldwide Expert on Guns & Crime

Some people support the death penalty to deliver justice, while others argue it deters future murders and saves lives. But a simple proof shows the death penalty deters more than life without parole: look at the choices murderers make when facing trial. Time and again, mass murderers plead for life without parole to avoid execution. Without the threat of the death penalty, they would have no reason to negotiate. [more...]


Bitcoin - The Coming Seller's Ghost Town

By Kerry Lutz, Host of Financial Survival Network

Bitcoin is acting weird again - and by weird, we mean coiled spring weird. While mainstream media is asking if this rally is sustainable, here's what they're missing: the structure of the market is broken. Completely. And when markets structurally break, they don't drift - they explode. Welcome to Bitcoin: Seller's Ghost Town Edition. [more...]


No Decline in the U.S., It Leads the West

By Lord Conrad Black, Author of The Political and Strategic History of the World, Vol II

The Trump administration's closing of the borders to illegal entry, plunging crime rate, mass deportation of convicted felons who entered illegally, the legal suppression of the political perversion of the intelligence services and the FBI, the roll-back of official payola for the lackeys of the old regime that amounted to outright vote-buying, and the embrace of a meritocratic, free market, job-creating strategy, all sustained by public opinion, are a comprehensive anti-decline, growth-and-pride agenda. This is replicated in foreign policy, where the freeloading mockery of NATO as an "alliance of the willing," is being replaced by an alliance of kindred democracies paying their way and vastly transcending the ludicrous rivalry of floundering Russia and the thoroughly chastised totalitarian pseudo-theocracy of Iran. [more...]

Thursday, July 10, 2025

University Systems Create Accreditor Focused on Merit and Outcomes

By Adam Kissel, Author of Slacking: A Guide to Ivy League Miseducation

Today's higher education accreditors let colleges and universities get away with mediocrity: low graduation rates, highly negative return on investment, and activism that looks little like scholarship. Accreditors are meant to vouch for college quality and to recommend improvements - but they rarely hold institutions accountable for such travesties as a four-year graduation rate under 15%, a negative return on investment in six figures, and pervasive antisemitism. Instead, they often require "diversity" practices that bleed into illegal discrimination. Fortunately, university systems in six states have formed a new accreditor to focus on "academic excellence" and "student outcomes." [more...]

Tuesday, July 8, 2025

7-8-25 Excellent Guests for Your Show

1. Adam Kissel: The Time for a Civil-Rights Audit is Now

2. Todd Sheets: Navigating the AI Revolution - Regulation

3. Kenneth Rapoza: The Tariff Trump Hasn't Tried Yet - A Market Access Charge on Foreign Capital Could Tame the Dollar and Boost U.S. Manufacturing

4. Daniel Greenfield: Obama Judge Overrides Congress, Big Beautiful Bill

5. Greg Rabidoux: Is Superman Really an Illegal Immigrant?

6. Kerry Lutz: AI is Going to Burn the Grift Economy to the Ground


The Time for a Civil-Rights Audit is Now

By Adam Kissel, Author of Slacking: A Guide to Ivy League Miseducation

The stakes are too high for universities to play chicken with federal investigators.

The best time for a university to perform a civil-rights audit was two full years ago, right after the Supreme Court announced its decisions in the Students for Fair Admissions cases. The next best time is now. In short, the Supreme Court wrote in 2023, "Eliminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it." Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act has long been interpreted to ban racial discrimination across all of a university's programs and activities. About equally ominous for colleges that ignore this legal obligation is the prospect that the IRS will fully and vigorously enforce its rule that "a school that does not have a racially nondiscriminatory policy as to students does not qualify as an organization exempt from Federal income tax." Bad curriculum and civil rights violations are linked through the leftism and "oppressor-oppressed" themed activist indoctrination in today's colleges. [more...]


Navigating the AI Revolution - Regulation

By Todd Sheets, Author of 2008: What Really Happened

In this article, I’ll add some perspective and balance to the doomsday scenarios affecting public debate, refocus the discussion on what we can and do know about AI, and show that much of the growing bipartisan antipathy toward Big Tech was created not by failures of the tech companies themselves, but rather by the political activists now trying to regulate their way into control of this critically important sector. While there's no way of knowing exactly where AI will lead us, the long arc of human history affords far more reasons for optimism than for pessimism. Rather than ceding control to political operatives who have caused many of the issues they would now like to regulate, we will be far better off if our AI future is guided by consumer choice in a manner that is capable of unleashing a new era of upward mobility and protection from authoritarian repression, both abroad and at home. [more...]


The Tariff Trump Hasn't Tried Yet - A Market Access Charge on Foreign Capital Could Tame the Dollar and Boost U.S. Manufacturing

By Kenneth Rapoza, Reporter/Columnist for Coalition for a Prosperous America

There is one tariff the Trump administration has never mentioned. And that is a tariff on foreign capital inflows buying U.S. stocks and bonds. Could it be a tool to stabilize the dollar, balance trade, and raise revenue to curtail an ever-rising fiscal deficit? Yes, it can. In a June 24 op-ed in the Financial Times of all places, columnist Martin Wolf toyed with the idea: "If the U.S. wants to accelerate a worldwide discussion with a policy intervention, the obvious one would be a tax on capital inflows." The fact that Wolf mentions this at all in a reasonable way speaks volumes. We can say he is warming people up to the possibility. That alone is groundbreaking. [more...]


Obama Judge Overrides Congress, Big Beautiful Bill

By Daniel Greenfield, Author of Domestic Enemies

Judicial coup expands.

I missed the part of the Constitution that allows federal judges to override the president, and now apparently congressional legislation, because of their 'feelings.' Judge Indira Talwani, an Obama appointee, previously declared that all the illegal aliens could remain here because "it is not in the public interest to manufacture a circumstance in which hundreds of thousands of individuals will, over the course of several months, become unlawfully present in the country." Talwani has now topped herself. A federal judge on Monday granted Planned Parenthood's request to temporarily halt Medicaid funding cuts to the group's health centers under a provision of Republicans' new tax and spending package. [more...]


Is Superman Really an Illegal Immigrant?

By Greg Rabidoux, Award-Winning Filmmaker, Author & Cultural Commentator

...and would we arrest and deport him back to planet Krypton?

The newest Superman reboot is crash-landing to planet Earth soon. But will we accept the "Man of Steel" or arrest him and send him back in shackles? These seem to be just the kind of questions which Director James Gunn doesn't just welcome but encourages. No stranger to controversy, Gunn, who was fired from 'Guardians of the Galaxy 3' for his tweets which mocked and diminished the evils of pedophilia, the Holocaust, and rape, is unapologetic about the politics of his Superman. He asserts that anyone who doesn't like the film's politics, which seem to slant pro-immigration and anti-ICE/Trump are "jerks" and can go "screw off." [more...]

 

AI is Going to Burn the Grift Economy to the Ground

By Kerry Lutz, Host of Financial Survival Network

Construction, medicine, education say goodbye to the scams.

In the industries that matter most - building, healthcare, and education - grift has become the business model. But now, AI is the wrecking ball, and it’s aimed right at the heart of the scam. The revolution won't be televised. It'll be logged, timestamped, drone-scanned, and block-chained. Let's walk through the collapse... [more...]

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

7-1-25 Great Guests for Your Show

1. Kenneth Rapoza: GM Ranked as the Most China-Exposed American Corporation

2. Adam Kissel: Colleges Must Educate for Freedom

3. Todd Sheets: Socialism Storms NYC

4. Daniel Greenfield: Schumer More Unpopular Among Jews Than Any Other Religious Group

5. Greg Rabidoux: Will the Democrats Globalize Zohran?

6. Kerry Lutz: TrumpGPT's Plan to Dismantle the Tomb of the Faceless Bureaucrat

7. James Hirsen: Men Competing in Women's Sports Ultimately Headed to the Supreme Court


GM Ranked as the Most China-Exposed American Corporation

By Kenneth Rapoza, Reporter/Columnist for Coalition for a Prosperous America

Last year, it wasn't even in the Top 10. This year, they're number one. General Motors was ranked as the most China-exposed U.S. multinational by Strategy Risks, a political risk consultancy in New York. Ford was considered the most exposed to China in Strategy Risks' 2024 report. The data is based on 2023 figures from the companies themselves... and government information about China partnerships, supply chains, sales data and other metrics used to gauge corporate risk to China. Ford dropped to seventh place this year, with GM taking over first place. [more...]


Colleges Must Educate for Freedom

By Adam Kissel, Author of Slacking: A Guide to Ivy League Miseducation

A great American college or university will prepare students for self-governance as both a wise human being and a prudent, productive citizen. Rightly understood, the liberal arts are the intellectual potentials shared by the leaders of a free people. That is, education policy should consider, first of all, how to produce people who do not simply reproduce the values of their society, good as those values may be, but who consider those values carefully, decide whether to make them their own, and make further choices in line with a deeper understanding and appreciation of their own values. Good "high" schools can achieve much of this goal, but even "higher" education can and should broaden and deepen the formation of young adults for life in a free society. [more...]


Socialism Storms NYC

By Todd Sheets, Author of 2008: What Really Happened

Many Democrats have expressed concern that the stunning victory of Zohran Mamdani in New York City's mayoral primary shines a harsh, socialist light on the Party that won't reflect well in general elections. But even more importantly, Democrats should be asking: will Mr. Mamdani's policies actually help or harm his most vulnerable constituencies? The history of the United States, and indeed the world, is one of lifting masses out of poverty not through minimum wages and government directed programs, but rather through the risk-taking of entrepreneurs operating in free-market systems. [more...]


Schumer More Unpopular Among Jews Than Any Other Religious Group

By Daniel Greenfield, Author of Domestic Enemies

After Senator Chuck Schumer made his big pivot away from Israel, his Jewish support in New York crashed. Two years ago, Schumer enjoyed an 82% approval among New York Jews. In contrast to the 40% unfavorable rating among New Yorkers, only 18% of Jews disapproved. Now he's tied as 45% of New York Jews have come to hate Chuck. What happened in the last two years to send his approval rating crashing from 82% to 48%? That was when Schumer came out against defeating Hamas in his infamous Senate speech. What do his numbers look like now among Jews? At 57% disapproval among Jews and only 40% approval, Schumer's numbers are actually worse among Jews than among Catholics and Protestants. It's really quite the accomplishment and this poll was taken before his Iran betrayal, so these numbers could get even worse. [more...]


Will the Democrats Globalize Zohran?

By Greg Rabidoux, Award-Winning Filmmaker, Author & Cultural Commentator

The Left seems to be allergic to actually doing grown-up things before demanding grown-up power. But they sure like ideas - the more extreme, the better. And they worship at the cult of being young and largely ignorant of what works and what doesn't. Unless it's a tome about evil white men, many on the Left seem indifferent, at best. So, trying to tell them the many reasons why socialism turns into communism and why that never works is like explaining how being addicted to their cell phone apps is harmful. If only they'd stop texting long enough to learn. Radicalism, rage, antisemitism, and hatred for all things America seems to be the stuff that fuels the Left. Will it change in a post-Trump world? Will the Dems snap out of it? Not if Zohran and his socialists have their way. [more...]


TrumpGPT's Plan to Dismantle the Tomb of the Faceless Bureaucrat

By Kerry Lutz, Host of Financial Survival Network

TrumpGPT isn't a catchphrase. It's a doctrine - an AI-guided war plan to reshape the balance of power between the executive branch and the bureaucratic state using the one weapon no one expects: lawfare. The goal? Restore the president's constitutional right to impound funds - the ability to refuse to spend money on programs that undermine national interest, waste taxpayer dollars, or violate the administration's policy vision. Once the president regains the power to say "no," we can finish building what TrumpGPT created... [more...]


Men Competing in Women's Sports Ultimately Headed to the Supreme Court

By James Hirsen, NY Times Bestselling Author, International Business Attorney, News Analyst & Cultural Commentator

President Trump's Executive Order 14201, which seeks to ban biological males from female sports across all educational levels, brings an additional layer to the legal complexity. In my legal opinion, the issue of biological male athletes competing in women's sports necessitates a High Court decision, because of the need for a thorough analysis and ultimately a clear definitive ruling. The direct involvement of the Supreme Court, regarding the manner in which Title IX and other anti-discrimination laws are applied to transgender athletes, is essential, due to the conflicting legal interpretations of multiple federal courts as well as the societal ramifications that will inevitably flow from the High Court's decision. [more...]