Every revolution promises freedom. That’s the lie that gets people into the streets.
What comes after victory is not freedom at all. It’s control. Control of institutions. Control of speech. Control of memory. Control of what is allowed to be said out loud without consequences.
Once the old order collapses, the new regime faces its first unsolvable problem:
Who gets to define reality now?
That question decides everything. It decides who gets rewarded, who gets disciplined, and who quietly disappears once the cheering stops… and history shows something deeply ironic: the people most confident they’ll be safe after a communist revolution are usually the first to discover they’re not. Not because they opposed the revolution, but because they helped it win. Continue reading →
History doesn’t always repeat itself, but it often rhymes. When fighting erupted in Europe in 1914, it wasn’t initially considered to be that big of a deal. Many dismissed the conflict as yet another minor European war, and at first most of the rest of the world stayed out of it. It was only later that it came to be known as World War I.
Today, there is lots of speculation that World War III “could be coming”, but of course the truth is that we are already in the middle of it. Just like during the early days of World War I, most people won’t fully understand the significance of what they are currently experiencing until later. Interestingly, it turns out that the 2026 calendar is precisely identical to the 1914 calendar… Continue reading →
“Alice tells the Cat that she doesn’t want to go among ‘mad people.’”
“Oh, you can’t help that… We’re all mad here,”said the Cheshire Cat… ~ From Lewis Carroll’s 1865 novel “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland.”
I’ve used Einstein’s definition of insanity in my past articles because it’s a simple way to describe how we approach our lives, especially in the administration of this republic. If you have any questions about Einstein’s definition, look it up.
We must be insane…
Here’s my case, my assertion, my allegation, and my defense.,, Continue reading →
This old world didn’t send out invitations, for you young men and women — no fancy cards with gilt edges, no polite “RSVP” for the grand show of existence. Most of us tumbled into this big, roaring, wonderful room we call the earth by pure mischance, like a prospector stumbling on a claim he never filed. We didn’t ask for the ticket, nor the rough ride that brought us here. For me, it was a near thing from the start – kicking and screaming down the birth canal, fighting the dark tunnel like a wild mustang bucking a blizzard, half sure I’d never see the light of day. The doctor later said it was touch and go, but touch I did, and go I didn’t. I came bawling into a world brimming with hope and promise, only to find shadows waiting, the old evil that prowls every path, sniffing at every soul like a wolf at a campfire.
Yet here’s the queer part, the part that makes a man stop and scratch his head in wonder: so many of us, battered and bruised by the trail, still manage to turn our faces to the light. We don’t just endure – we spit in the eye of despair and keep marching. There’s a music in it all, you know, a deep, thundering song that vibrates from every atom, every grain of dust, every frozen peak and roaring river. We may not hear it with our ears — Lord knows the wind howls too loud sometimes — but we feel it in our bones, that cosmic tune that started playing the moment we drew our first breath. It’s the spirit singing within the breast, filling every pore with the wild harmony of the universe, the same music that set the stars to wheeling and the tides to racing. Continue reading →
from our Archives… You will note the original date of publication.
Ain’t life just ducky, you mammy jammers? Another week of life goes by for 28,000 unborn babies and tens of thousands more from starvation, ‘war’ and other depravations perpetrated by uncaring governments. And here we go again….
POINT BLANK debuted this week on The Federal Observer to rave reviews and commentary by the viewing audience. It just goes to show you, that with provocative titles and titillating front page commentary – even so-called Christians, Patriots and conservative readers are tempted by National Enquirer tactics. Sex still sells! Continue reading →
Drivers Are Noticing Higher Gas Prices in Colorado: “$4 to $5 a gallon? Yeah, that’s not good!“
As National Debt Nears $39 Trillion and Trump Promises to Balance Budget, Americans Spend More on Interest Payments Than on Defense
As of Friday, the national debt had surpassed $38.7 trillion, according to the Treasury Department – or more than $113,000 per American. It has grown at a pace of nearly $77,000 per second over the past year, according to a tracker maintained by Republicans on Congress’s Joint Economic Committee.
“We’re $39 trillion in debt,” Rep. Michael Baumgartner said in an interview Feb. 18. “We’re running annual 20% budget deficits.”
Since the day Trump took office in 2017, the national debt has nearly doubled from just under $20 trillion to more than $38.7 trillion… (Continue to full article)
Gas Jumps 26.8 Cents In A Week, Trump Says, If They Rise, They Rise!
The national average price for a gallon of gasoline has soared to $3.251, up from $2.997 on Monday. Look a little further back, and the jump is even more noticeable. Prices have risen 26.8 cents over the past week.
That’s an increase of 9 percent and AAA implied this is the largest increase since the war in Ukraine began in March of 2022. This comes as even more price increases are expected as the war in Iran rages on and refineries will begin switching over to more expensive summer-blend gasoline.
Dow Plunges More Than 1,000 Points Amid Concerns About Surging Oil
Stocks tumbled Thursday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average shedding almost 800 points as oil prices jumped amid the war with Iran. Higher energy prices are sparking concerns on Wall Street that they could reignite U.S. inflation.
The Dow tumbled 785 points, or 1.6%, on Thursday, after briefly dropping more than 1,000 points. The broad-based S&P 500 shed 0.6%, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq composite declined 0.3%.
Oil prices rose after Iran launched a new wave of attacks against Israel, American bases and countries around the region. The war’s escalations are raising worries about how long disruptions to the production and transport of oil and natural gas in the region could last.
A barrel of Brent crude, the international standard, rose 4.2% to $84.75. That’s up from close to $70 late last week. A barrel of benchmark U.S. crude climbed 6.9% to $79.80… (Continue to full article)
Nobel Economist Paul Krugman Says the Iran War Could Be the ‘Straw That Breaks the Camel’s Back‘ for a Fragile US Economy
The Iran war upended markets this week, and economist Paul Krugman thinks the effects could ultimately be much more far-reaching.
The Nobel Prize winner hasn’t been too optimistic about the US economy recently, largely due to the impacts he sees from President Donald Trump’s tariffs. Yet, as the military conflict escalates, he sees severe consequences looming for the US economy.
Krugman highlighted several pressing factors that have kept uncertainty high in a recent Substack post, but also laid out why the war may be accelerating the economy’s decline.
“There are many stresses on our economy, and this could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back — a straw that becomes heavier the longer the war goes on… (Continue to full article)
Trump’s Loss of $1.7 Trillion in Tariff Revenue Will Send the National Debt to $58 Trillion by 2036
A landmark Supreme Court ruling against President Trump’s tariffs has cost the federal government an estimated $1.7 trillion in projected revenue through 2036, according to a new analysis by the Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget (CRFB), setting the United States on a course toward a national debt of $58 trillion within the next decade if the country continues its current rate of spending.
The nonpartisan fiscal watchdog, which released its findings on Tuesday, found that the court’s decision striking down tariffs imposed under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) has altered the country’s fiscal trajectory in the direction of larger debts and deficits.
Without that revenue, CRFB projects the national debt will climb to 125% of GDP—or roughly $58 trillion—by fiscal year 2036, compared to a baseline projection of $56 trillion, or 120% of GDP, that assumed the IEEPA tariffs would remain in force. “Deficits in that scenario will rise to 7.1% of GDP, or $3.3 trillion,” CRFB warned, versus $3.1 trillion under the original baseline… (Continue to full article)
A new Gallup poll finds that 29% of Americans now say government itself is the country’s biggest problem.
That’s a higher percentage than people who think America’s biggest problem is the economy. Or immigration. Or inflation.
Think about that for a moment. The institution whose entire job is to solve problems has become, in the eyes of the public, the single biggest problem of all.
Joseph Tainter described exactly this phenomenon in his 1988 book, The Collapse of Complex Societies. Tainter studied empires from Rome to the Maya and found the same pattern every time: as societies grow, they create layers of bureaucracy and complexity to solve problems. Continue reading →
“From the least to the greatest, all are greedy for gain; prophets and priests alike, all practice deceit. They dress the wound of my people as though it were not serious. ‘Peace, peace,’ they say, when there is no peace.” – Jeremiah 6:13–14
“This is insane. Regime change will result in a bloody civil war… Resist this!” – Charlie Kirk (2025)
The military-industrial complex and the American police state have joined forces.
War abroad and war at home are no longer separate enterprises. They have fused.
This did not happen overnight.
Every modern president has stretched the limits of war-making power. Some have shredded those limits altogether.
Each time that boundary is breached, the Constitution recedes a little further.
When the Rule of Man replaces the Rule of Law, the constitutional order that once secured American liberty becomes poisoned and discarded, leaving only a path toward tyranny, decay, and the eventual destruction of liberty…
The Founding Fathers feared judicial tyranny. They had watched British judges operate as little more than a rubber stamp for the Crown and Parliament, enforcing political will rather than the law. That experience shaped the debates at the Constitutional Convention, where some delegates even argued against creating a federal judiciary at all. A federal court system ultimately prevailed only because disputes between states, maritime cases, and controversies involving the federal government required it.
Even then, the Framers rejected the idea that the courts should be the final arbiters of the law or the Constitution. Judicial review, as we now know it, was not granted in the Constitution. The concept was discussed, and rejected on the floor of debate. However, it was later asserted by Chief Justice John Marshall in his judicial opinion regarding Marbury v. Madison (1803). Over time, political elites and the legal class accepted that assertion, and the judiciary gradually elevated itself above the other branches. Continue reading →
We are all exhausted by modern politics. But a 3,000-year-old story in Judges 9 perfectly explains why the worst people often end up in power.
In Jotham’s fable, the trees are looking for a king. They ask the olive, fig, and vine trees to rule, but these productive trees refuse because they are too busy bearing good fruit. Finally, they ask the thornbush. Having nothing useful to offer and only producing pain, the arrogant thornbush eagerly grabs the power. The Bible knew thousands of years ago that truly good, productive people often avoid the toxic pursuit of political power, leaving the door wide open for useless, prideful “thornbushes” to rule over us. Continue reading →
APC President Tom DeWeese with the late UNITA VP Jeremias Chitunda.
The world-wide battle against the tyrannical Left and its drive for the destruction of free societies never ends. Their goals and tactics rarely change — rob, lie, cheat, steal elections, and destroy the forces of freedom.
“Blind obedience to authority is the greatest enemy of truth.” ~ Albert Einstein
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I learned this fact about the schools. Years ago I was helping my niece with her math homework. They wanted her to solve a problem using their methods I couldn’t figure out the problem using their methods. So I created my own methods to solve the math problems. When she was at school they said she got every problem correct. They asked her how she got them right she told them the methods I used they said she got it wrong because she didn’t use their methods. Instantly I knew that that they weren’t teaching how to solve problems but they were teaching how to follow blindly and not think on your own. ~ Jon Bender
The Paul Simon song Kodachrome. “When I think back on all the crap I learned in high school, it’s a wonder I can think at all!”
…and you wonder why we recommend getting your children out of the Public system and take the responsibility ofHomeschooling. ~ Jeffrey Bennett, Editor
Gen Z students are struggling to read and comprehend a sentence, one Pepperdine University professor recently said.
“It’s not even an inability to critically think,” Humanities Professor Jessica Wilson told Fortune. “It’s an inability to read sentences.”
“I feel like I am tap dancing and having to read things aloud because there’s no way that anyone read it the night before,” the professor said. Continue reading →
In a single afternoon, a technological announcement triggered a financial tremor, erasing an astounding $30 billion from the market capitalization of IBM [1]. The catalyst? An announcement from the AI firm Anthropic regarding its AI model’s newfound proficiency in understanding and potentially automating legacy COBOL programming code. This event is not an anomaly but a harbinger, demonstrating how a single AI advancement can instantly vaporize entire legacy revenue models and threaten established corporate giants that have built fortunes on outdated, proprietary systems.
Welcome to the era of ‘tech wipeouts,’ where AI announcements function like sector-specific economic earthquakes. Continue reading →
Thank you, Mr. Bennett, for the idea… by the way, in the movie it was 50 eggs…
Perhaps you’ll recognize the title line from the movie ‘Cool Hand Luke’. It became a defining line and ‘catch-phrase’ for the ‘Captain’, Strother Martin’s character. The subtitle is a little more obscure; it’s part of the film’s subplot, but I use it to refer to the thousands of headlines we see each day. The number is estimated at 4,000 to 10,000. It’s often called brand messaging, but it’s still advertising.
It is essential that everyone understands these basics of communication because, without them, everything we hear is just noise, nothing good or beneficial can come from the encounter, and if you’re not mindful, you’ll become a casualty. Communication is intercourse; the truest sense of the business definition is the give-and-take, or the exchange of information, which is the purpose of communication. Continue reading →
We are entering a new period where we will find ourselves facing an incredibly dangerous asymmetrical warfare mission conducted by Islamic terrorists of all stripes, aligned with homegrown domestic terrorists, and our response must be a hard, determined resolve to stop it dead in its tracks before it takes off and takes more innocent American lives. The law enforcement agents cannot be everywhere at once and often are not present in the first moments of a terrorist attack, and so, that leaves it to the good, decent, solid, and courageous Americans to fill the void by way of their own armed interventions in order to thwart evil wherever it rears its ugly head.
Empirically, ALERRT data shows civilians halted 73 active shooter incidents between 2000 and 2021, many with firearms. Cases like the 2022 Indiana mall hero and the 2007 Colorado church defender illustrate this. But politically, Marxist-Maoist anti-American states’ gun controls – championed by fools like Gavin Newsom – disarm the virtuous, favoring criminals and terrorists, which represents a partisan inversion of justice. As a liberty-loving, life-defending American, I decry these “laws” as antithetical to the Second Amendment and our rights to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness, as I have always sought to empower my fellow countrymen against tyranny, foreign and domestic. Continue reading →
The self-proclaimed “Peace President” just started his seventh war, this time lighting the whole Middle East on fire.
Clearly the war in Iraq, while it is not ostensibly about oil, is all about oil. It’s all about oil in the sense that the oil market blew up today. While the spike in oil prices reached an extreme 13% launch in the price of Brent crude in one day, settling back to about 10%, it was, according to one chart in the headlines below, only the 38th highest spike since 1990.
We saw worse prior to that from the OPEC oil embargo that gave the United States some of the worst inflation in its history. However, the first spikes back in 1990 and prior were smaller than the initial spike today, and it only took a few days for them to go above today’s level. We are currently only at Day One of this crisis because this was the first day US markets were opened since the president and Israel started the war on Saturday. So, there may be larger spikes soon to come. Continue reading →