How Epstein Went From Trump’s Populist Weapon to a Political Problem

Trump Truth Social posts December 26 2025 Jeffrey Epstein

When the Epstein Files Stopped Being Useful

Donald Trump’s irritation with the Jeffrey Epstein case would be easier to take seriously if he hadn’t made it a campaign promise in 2024. At the time, Epstein wasn’t an afterthought or an outdated scandal; he was a dangling reward. Trump repeatedly suggested a second term would unseal records, expose a corrupt elite, and prove only he was brave enough. Epstein functioned as a campaign IOU—cashable only after victory. Continue reading “How Epstein Went From Trump’s Populist Weapon to a Political Problem”

Trump’s Pardon Economy: When Fraud Isn’t a Crime and Corruption Is Presidential Policy

Two Explanations, One Outcome: Why Trump Keeps Pardoning White-Collar Criminals

Trump’s Pardon Economy: When Fraud Isn’t a Crime and Corruption Is Presidential Policy

Donald Trump’s second-term pardon spree is not merely an abuse of the clemency power; it is a worldview made manifest. Taken as a whole, his pardons advance one of two conclusions — and possibly both. Either Trump does not believe white-collar crime is real crime at all, viewing fraud as a personal failing of the victim rather than a criminal act by the perpetrator. Or he is deliberately normalizing elite corruption because it mirrors his own conduct, insulating himself and his family by turning presidential pardon power into a preemptive laundering mechanism for financial crime. In either case, the result is the same: a transactional justice system where wealth and loyalty override law, and accountability is reserved exclusively for those without power. Continue reading “Trump’s Pardon Economy: When Fraud Isn’t a Crime and Corruption Is Presidential Policy”

A Christmas Strike, Wrapped in Scripture: Is Trump Using Religion to Justify War in Nigeria?

A Military Announcement Framed as a Holy Reckoning

A Christmas Strike, Wrapped in Scripture: Is Trump Using Religion to Justify War in Nigeria?

Donald Trump’s Christmas-night announcement of a U.S. strike in northwest Nigeria was framed less like a standard counterterrorism briefing and more like a sermon delivered from the Situation Room. By centering the attack almost entirely on the claim that ISIS militants were “slaughtering Christians,” Trump transformed a complex security operation into a stark religious morality play. The choice of language—“hell to pay,” “deadly strike,” “MERRY CHRISTMAS”—was not incidental. It positioned U.S. military force as divine retribution, conveniently aligning with Trump’s long-standing political narrative that casts global conflict as a civilizational struggle between Christianity and “Radical Islamic Terrorism.” Continue reading “A Christmas Strike, Wrapped in Scripture: Is Trump Using Religion to Justify War in Nigeria?”

Bari Weiss, 60 Minutes, and the Quiet Erosion of Press Freedom

Pulling a Vetted Investigation Undermines the First Amendment

Bari Weiss’s decision to pull a fully vetted 60 Minutes investigation under the banner of “fairness” is not an act of journalistic rigor; it is a quiet capitulation that undermines the very press freedom the First Amendment exists to protect. The amendment does not guarantee the government a right of reply, nor does it condition publication on official permission slips. When a story has been fact-checked, legally cleared, and approved by standards—five times, no less—spiking it because the administration refuses to go on the record transforms government silence into an editorial veto. That is not balance; it is prior restraint by proxy. The First Amendment’s core purpose is to ensure the press can publish uncomfortable truths precisely when power prefers quiet, not to teach journalists to wait politely until the subjects of scrutiny feel cooperative. Continue reading “Bari Weiss, 60 Minutes, and the Quiet Erosion of Press Freedom”

Supreme Court Blocks Trump’s National Guard Move on Chicago, Reining In Domestic Troop Deployments

High Court Reins In Trump’s Domestic Troop Power Grab

The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday refused to allow President Donald Trump to deploy National Guard troops to the Chicago area, dealing a setback to his expanding use of military forces for domestic purposes. The justices denied the Justice Department’s request to lift a lower-court order that blocked the deployment while litigation continues, keeping hundreds of Guard members from being sent into Illinois for now. Continue reading “Supreme Court Blocks Trump’s National Guard Move on Chicago, Reining In Domestic Troop Deployments”

Enemy of the Headlines: Trump Declares War on the Newspaper That Prints Words He Doesn’t Like

A Midnight Post, a Morning Crisis—for Journalism

Donald Trump midnight meltdownIn the latest episode of Democracy, but Make It a Tantrum, President Donald Trump has once again taken to Truth Social—America’s most secure location for unverified rage—to declare that The New York Times is not merely wrong, biased, or annoying, but a full-blown “serious threat to the National Security of our Nation.” This revelation, delivered in all caps at an hour typically reserved for insomnia and poor decisions, comes without evidence, specifics, or even the courtesy of naming an offending article. But why burden a national security claim with facts when vibes will do? Continue reading “Enemy of the Headlines: Trump Declares War on the Newspaper That Prints Words He Doesn’t Like”

How Trump Is Trading Regulatory Power for Media Control

Trump Takes over American Media

What’s being sold here as a series of discrete corporate decisions is, in reality, a slow-motion liquidation of journalistic independence, with Donald Trump acting less like a president than a feudal lord dispensing favors. The merger fights surrounding CBS, CNN, and Warner Bros. Discovery are no longer about market efficiency or shareholder value; they are loyalty tests. Media conglomerates, suffocating under debt and desperate for scale, have discovered that the fastest route to regulatory approval is not innovation or public trust, but submission—preferably televised. Trump doesn’t need to nationalize the press when he can simply dangle merger approval like a scepter and let executives volunteer their own newsrooms for sacrifice. Continue reading “How Trump Is Trading Regulatory Power for Media Control”

JD Vance’s AmericaFest Speech Wasn’t About Unity — It Was About White Grievance

JD Vance’s AmericaFest Speech Wasn’t About Unity — It Was About White Grievance

Vice President JD Vance looks upward while speaking on stage, wearing a navy suit and light blue tie against a dark background.JD Vance’s AmericaFest speech presented itself as inclusive rhetoric, but it quickly delivered a message rooted in exclusion. Speaking at Turning Point USA’s annual gathering, Vance claimed that “everyone is welcome” in America, then immediately defined who truly belongs. The speech relied on grievance politics, not unity, and aimed to reassure a specific audience that the country still belongs to them. Continue reading “JD Vance’s AmericaFest Speech Wasn’t About Unity — It Was About White Grievance”

DEI Under Attack From Inside The EEOC

EEOC Chair Andrea Lucas Wants White Men To Sue For “Discrimination”

Let’s be very clear about what just happened here—because the spin is doing a lot of heavy lifting.

Andrea R. Lucas

The chair of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, the federal agency tasked with enforcing civil rights law, went on social media to personally urge white men to come forward and file discrimination claims—framing DEI not as a tool for equal opportunity, but as a widespread, “systemic” assault on them. This wasn’t a neutral reminder that Title VII protects everyone. It was a targeted political message, dropped in near-perfect synchronization with a vice-presidential attack on DEI, and wrapped in the language of grievance.

That alone should set off alarms.

Continue reading “DEI Under Attack From Inside The EEOC”

Trump Paused The Visa Lottery But The Facts Don’t Add Up

Trump Exploits Brown University Shooting to Target Diversity Visa Lottery, Reviving Hardline Immigration Agenda

The Trump administration has once again perfected its signature move: take an unspeakable tragedy, flatten every inconvenient fact, and weaponize it into a blunt policy cudgel it has wanted to swing for years. Within hours of the Brown University shooting, the White House and DHS rushed to suspend the diversity visa lottery—a congressionally created program—despite the awkward detail that the suspect, Portuguese national Claudio Neves Valente, entered the U.S. legally on a student visa in 2000, vanished from public records for more than a decade, and only later obtained a green card in 2017, during the first Trump administration, after extensive vetting. But why let timelines, laws, or logic get in the way of a good moral panic? In Trump-world, causation is optional, correlation is negotiable, and tragedy is merely an accelerant for long-standing ideological grudges. Continue reading “Trump Paused The Visa Lottery But The Facts Don’t Add Up”