Government by Defiance

There was a short season, after the first serious blows landed against DEI, when a certain kind of conservative allowed himself to believe the beast was dying. I never quite bought it. Movements built around status, bureaucracy, and moral self-permission do not expire because they lose an election, suffer a court defeat, or get a bad week in the press. They adapt. They rename themselves. They move from the front office to the compliance department.

DEI is not dead. It is a wounded animal.

That matters because wounded animals do not become reasonable. They become more dangerous in smaller spaces. At the national level, DEI has taken hits. Corporations have trimmed some slogans. Universities have discovered that “racial justice” can become legally inconvenient when written down too plainly. Federal policy may shift. Donors may grow skittish. But in many Democrat-controlled cities, counties, school districts, and state agencies, the lesson has not been humility. It has been defiance.

This is the next stage: government by defiance.

The method is simple enough. The public objects to racial preference, ideological hiring, gender catechisms in schools, or activist bureaucracies pretending to be neutral administrators. Courts or legislatures say, in one form or another, “Stop doing that.” The bureaucracy then pauses, changes the label, rewrites the memo, shifts the money to a new office, and resumes the same project under gentler lighting. Equity becomes “belonging.” Racial balancing becomes “inclusive excellence.” Political training becomes “workplace culture.” The old wine goes into a new bottle, and the bottle gets a grant.

Anyone who has watched a school district operate knows the pattern. Parents complain about ideological material in the classroom. The district insists no such thing is happening. Then, after six hours of public comment and three public-records requests, it turns out the thing is happening under a different title, through outside consultants, or in teacher training rather than the published curriculum. The denial was never quite a denial. It was a routing instruction.

The same is true in city government. A program sold as public safety becomes a social justice employment pipeline. A homelessness initiative becomes a permanent bureaucracy of failure with better vocabulary. A hiring office becomes an ideological checkpoint. Nobody quite votes for this machinery in its full form. It arrives through committees, guidance documents, professional associations, consent decrees, and philanthropic partnerships. By the time the citizen notices, he is told he lacks the expertise to object.

This is why the “woke is dead” line was always too tidy. Woke politics was never merely a fashion of language. It was a transfer of authority. It moved power away from voters, families, local custom, merit, and law, and placed it in the hands of credentialed managers who claim moral jurisdiction over ordinary life. That sort of power is not surrendered because the slogans have become embarrassing.

The far left’s moral compass has also become startlingly reliable in the wrong direction. Give it a choice between order and disorder, and it will call disorder compassion. Give it a choice between the citizen and the claimant, and it will suspect the citizen. Give it a choice between inheritance and destruction, and it will describe destruction as liberation. This is not reform. It is resentment with a pension plan.

The old DEI regime may be too exposed now to strut as openly as it once did. Good. Exposure matters. But exposure is not defeat. The next fight will be against the renamed version, the embedded version, the local version, the version that tells you it has learned its lesson while doing exactly what it did before.

A wounded ideology is still an ideology. And when it controls the office, the budget, the school district, and the forms you have to fill out, it does not need to win the argument. It only needs to outlast your attention.-Rick Wagner

 


The Shape of Things to Come — Iran

I do not think Iran is a problem waiting to be solved so much as a condition we are going to have to manage. That is the first uncomfortable truth. The second is that military superiority, even overwhelming military superiority, does not automatically produce political resolution. We have learned that lesson before, and usually at considerable cost.

The attached forecast gets the central point right: Iran’s ruling class is not organized around prosperity, popular consent, or normal statecraft. It is organized around survival. The regime’s center of gravity is not the Iranian people. It is the coercive apparatus — the Revolutionary Guard, the intelligence services, the missile program, the proxy network, and the nuclear ambiguity that gives all of it a strategic umbrella.

That means we should stop expecting Tehran to “come to its senses” in the way Western analysts often use that phrase. The mullahs have their own sense. It is ruthless, patient, ideological, and deeply invested in endurance. They can lose facilities, money, commanders, prestige, and still claim victory if the regime survives and the nuclear knowledge remains intact.

This is why the nuclear issue is not merely a question of buildings and bunkers. Bombing a facility is one thing. Proving where the uranium went, whether the centrifuge expertise survived, and how much of the procurement network remains in place is something else entirely. The IAEA’s 2026 Iran safeguards reporting underscores the problem of verification, not just destruction. 

So the shape of things to come is probably not a clean surrender ceremony. It is more likely a grinding contest of coercion: sanctions, selective strikes, cyber operations, maritime pressure, proxy flare-ups, and periodic diplomatic theater. We will hear words like “framework,” “freeze,” “inspection access,” and “de-escalation.” Some of that may matter. Much of it will be designed to buy time.

Iran’s weakness is obvious. It cannot win a conventional war against the United States and Israel. Its air defenses, naval assets, command nodes, and missile production sites are vulnerable to a modern campaign. But Iran does not need to win in the Western sense. It needs to survive, impose costs, and make the price of containment feel politically and economically unbearable.

That brings us to Hormuz. This is not some obscure waterway on a think-tank map. The Strait of Hormuz is one of the world’s great pressure points. The U.S. Energy Information Administration has reported that oil flows through Hormuz have amounted to roughly one-fifth of global petroleum liquids consumption, and a significant portion of global LNG trade has also depended on that route. 

That is the lever Iran understands. It may not be able to defeat an American carrier group, but it can threaten insurance rates, tanker traffic, Gulf infrastructure, and the political patience of energy-consuming nations. Once that happens, the war stops being only about nuclear denial and becomes about global economic crisis management.

The Gulf states know this better than anyone. They want Iran weakened. They do not necessarily want Iran shattered. A fragmented Iran could spill chaos across oil infrastructure, sectarian fault lines, and shipping routes. That is the part many armchair hawks miss. Destroying the enemy’s capacity is one thing. Owning the consequences of his collapse is another.

My base expectation is a coercive stalemate. Iran comes out weaker, poorer, more exposed, and more dangerous in irregular ways. The United States and Israel retain military dominance but still face the old problem: how do you permanently deny a determined regime nuclear optionality without occupying the country or trusting the regime?

The key indicators are practical ones. Can inspectors regain verified access? Does enriched uranium reappear on paper and under seal? Do tanker flows normalize through Hormuz? Do Gulf states quietly press Washington for a settlement? Do we see IRGC fractures, elite defections, or protests the security services can no longer smother?

The future with Iran will not be tidy. It will be managed in increments, tested by shocks, and judged less by press conferences than by whether the regime can regenerate what has been destroyed. In the end, the question is not whether Iran can be punished. It can. The question is whether punishment can produce a durable strategic outcome.

That remains very much unsettled.

 


The Unbearable Lightness of Being a Populist Aristocrat-Rick Wagner

Gavin Newsom’s problem isn’t simply that he’s an elitist. Plenty of politicians come from privilege. Americans have never required their leaders to arrive straight from the factory floor.

What’s striking in Newsom’s case is the theatrical insistence that a life lubricated by Getty money and California’s very efficient political escalator somehow qualifies as a journey from the bottom up. We’re invited to picture a scrappy climb through adversity when the actual biography reads more like a guided tour of the upper floors.

At a certain point the performance becomes unintentionally comic — a sort of Grapes of Wrath migration conducted from the driver’s seat of a Lexus. The governor speaks the language of insurgency while standing comfortably inside one of the most durable political machines in the country.

Of course politicians have always polished their biographies. That’s part of the trade. What makes this version interesting is that the pose appears to be sincerely believed. Newsom doesn’t seem to be winking at the audience. He appears genuinely convinced that his story reads as a scrappy ascent rather than what it plainly is: the well-funded progress of a man who has never been very far from the top floor of the building he claims to be storming.

And he’s hardly alone. A curious strain of modern progressive politics now speaks constantly in the language of rebellion while living lives that would have made old aristocrats nod approvingly. The rhetoric is populist; the social position plainly isn’t.

Perhaps that’s inevitable in a political culture where biography is treated like branding. If the public demands a heroic narrative, the temptation to retrofit one onto a comfortable life becomes irresistible.

Still, the performance does have its limits. Even the most carefully scripted populism starts to wobble when the audience notices the car in the driveway.

Which leaves us with a peculiar modern affliction — the unbearable lightness of being a populist aristocrat.

 

by- Rick Wagner

The complaint circulating in parts of the commentariat is that no one quite knows what the objective in Iran is. The strikes, we’re told, look improvised, perhaps reckless, and dangerously unclear. That criticism is fashionable, but it mistakes the nature of the problem.

The strategic issue is not mysterious. For forty-five years the Iranian regime has functioned as the Middle East’s primary exporter of instability—arming proxies, threatening shipping lanes, harassing neighbors, and working steadily toward nuclear capability. If that machinery has now been badly damaged, the real danger lies not in acting but in stopping halfway.

History’s lesson is painfully consistent: unfinished wars breed larger ones.

At the same time, air power alone rarely settles political conflicts. Bombs can destroy facilities, ships, and airfields, but they do not dismantle the internal architecture of a revolutionary regime. Iran’s real control mechanisms—the Revolutionary Guard networks, the intelligence organs, the patronage structures, and the militias—are rooted in institutions and neighborhoods. Those have to be dug out, not merely cratered from thirty thousand feet.

Nor is there currently a coherent internal resistance waiting to take over the job. The regime has spent decades making sure of that.

What makes sense, therefore, is not an American attempt to occupy or rebuild Persia. That would repeat the most expensive mistakes of the last generation. What does make sense is a regional coalition—Israel and the Gulf states in particular—finishing the dismantling of the regime’s capacity to menace the region.

Those governments understand the threat intimately because they live with it.

There is also a certain comic quality to the sudden outbreak of strategic fainting in Western commentary. The same analysts who spent years warning about Iranian aggression now seem startled that someone has taken steps to weaken it.

But geopolitics is not a debating society. Sometimes the unpleasant business must simply be completed—and preferably by the neighbors who have the greatest stake in the outcome.

 

Victor Davis Hanson


Rick Wagner-
One of the stranger spectacles of our age is watching a civilization talk itself into extinction and congratulating itself for the moral courage of the act.

Europe—and Britain in particular—did not arrive at prosperity by accident. The place spent centuries assembling the habits and institutions that make a society function: law, property, stable government, and a cultural expectation that order is preferable to chaos. It worked rather well.

But success has produced an odd psychological side effect. The modern European elite seems convinced that the very achievements of its civilization are something faintly shameful—an inheritance that must be apologized for, diluted, and preferably replaced.

And so we are treated to the spectacle of societies that once spent centuries climbing out of medieval patterns now importing them again with great enthusiasm, all in the name of tolerance.

The theory is inclusion. The practice looks suspiciously like cultural self-sabotage.

Only a very successful civilization develops the confidence to treat its own foundations as disposable while importing ways of thinking it once fought centuries to escape.


Rick Wagner-
For roughly thirty years, Washington has repeated the same line about Iran with the solemn confidence of a man promising he’ll start his diet on Monday.

Iran cannot have nuclear weapons.

Presidents said it. Congress said it. Diplomats said it between rounds of sanctions, negotiations, and conferences in agreeable European capitals where everyone nods gravely over coffee and drafts statements about “the path forward.”

Meanwhile, the clerics in Tehran kept building.

Since the 1979 revolution, the Islamic Republic has pursued a fairly straightforward strategy: work toward nuclear capability, build a large ballistic missile arsenal, and surround Israel with a constellation of proxy militias—Hezbollah in Lebanon, Hamas in Gaza, Shiite militias in Iraq, Houthis in Yemen.

A kind of geopolitical franchise model: the brand originates in Tehran, but the rockets are delivered locally.

Washington’s answer for most of that time was diplomacy. Sanctions here, negotiations there, culminating in the 2015 nuclear deal—the theory being that enough monitoring, inspections, and multilateral paperwork might slow Iran’s march toward a bomb.

The theory was elegant.

Reality was less cooperative.

Iran negotiated while continuing to advance its nuclear capability, which is the diplomatic equivalent of agreeing to discuss vegetarianism while quietly expanding the cattle ranch.

Earlier this year, talks finally collapsed after Iran refused limits on ballistic missiles, uranium enrichment infrastructure, or its proxy network. Reports circulating among negotiators suggested Tehran already possessed enough enriched uranium for roughly eleven nuclear weapons.

At that point the conversation stopped being theoretical.

Israel launched Operation Rising Lion, striking Iranian nuclear facilities. The United States followed with limited attacks under Operation Midnight Hammer.

What began as targeted strikes has now turned into the largest military confrontation in the Middle East in decades.

The most consequential moment came early: Iran’s Supreme Leader, Ali Khamenei, killed during the opening phase of the campaign. Removing the central authority of a theocratic regime tends to produce administrative turbulence.

More than two thousand targets have reportedly been hit across Iran. Missile forces degraded. Naval assets damaged.

But wars rarely stay confined to the tidy plans that launch them.

Missiles have struck Israeli cities. Hezbollah is engaged from Lebanon. Iranian drones and missiles have hit Gulf states, and shipping through the Strait of Hormuz has become considerably more exciting than the global energy market prefers.

In Washington, the argument has already begun—whether this operation prevents a nuclear Iran or risks a wider regional war.

H. L. Mencken once observed that the urge to save humanity is often a cover for the urge to rule it. In Washington, the urge to explain a war sometimes arrives before anyone has decided how to finish one.

Three questions now matter.

Does the Iranian regime survive the loss of its supreme leader?

Do Iran’s proxy forces escalate across Lebanon, Iraq, and Yemen?

And how long does the United States remain involved?

For decades American policy toward Iran revolved around containment and negotiation.

Now we’re somewhere else entirely.



The Quiet Arrangement: Mexico’s Cartels and the State-Rick wagner

When American commentators say “narco-state,” they tend to picture something cinematic — cabinet ministers counting cartel cash in back rooms, presidential palaces doubling as distribution hubs. It’s a tidy morality play. It also saves everyone the trouble of thinking too hard.

Mexico is more complicated than that. Which is precisely why it’s harder to fix.

This is not Venezuela, where the governing class and trafficking networks have largely collapsed into one another. Mexico still holds elections. It has courts, a national military, a functioning financial system. The formal state exists. It passes budgets. It gives speeches about sovereignty. It issues stern communiqués.

But beneath that formal structure lies something far more durable: an informal equilibrium.

Organized crime in Mexico is not an invading force storming the gates. It is woven into the social and political fabric. In parts of the country — particularly in northern corridors and rural strongholds — cartels function as parallel authorities. They tax commerce. They settle disputes. They decide which businesses operate and which close their doors. Occasionally, they provide more reliable “public safety” than the municipality whose seal hangs on the wall.

And the central government understands all of this perfectly well.

What exists is not total capture but negotiated coexistence. Federal power asserts itself where it can. Cartel power dominates where it already does. Local officials calculate survival like actuaries. Confrontation is expensive. Accommodation is survivable. And so an understanding develops — not written, not acknowledged, but very real.

The alternative to this arrangement is not Scandinavian rule-of-law nirvana. It is prolonged internal conflict in regions where the state’s capacity is thin and public trust thinner. So instead of absolute victory, Mexico practices managed friction.

Washington calls this corruption. Mexico City often calls it stability.

Violence spikes when boundaries are crossed or rival groups disturb the balance. Otherwise, the machinery hums along. Elections proceed. Governors campaign on reform. And in the background, narcotics move north with impressive logistical competence — a supply chain that would make certain federal agencies blush.

The result is neither a collapsed state nor a sovereign one in full control. It is a hybrid: formal institutions layered over informal power networks, each tolerating the other so long as the basic architecture holds.

For the United States, the difficulty is obvious. The equilibrium functions — just not in our favor. As long as internal Mexican stability is preserved, the external consequences remain secondary.



Social unrest is usually explained as a clash of ideas—bad policies, worse leaders, irreconcilable worldviews. That explanation flatters everyone involved. It suggests that what we are watching is a debate, when it is often closer to a group therapy session that has wandered badly off the rails.

Long before hashtags and megaphones, Eric Hoffer noticed that mass movements tend to attract people who are not looking for a platform so much as a lifeline. Anxiety, dissatisfaction, and a vague sense of personal failure are heavy things to carry alone. A movement offers something far lighter: certainty. Right and wrong are prepackaged. Responsibility is redistributed. Confusion is replaced with slogans short enough to fit on a sign.

Once inside, behavior that would normally raise eyebrows can be reframed as moral necessity. Anger becomes courage. Destruction becomes justice. The cause supplies meaning, and meaning is addictive. Actual results, meanwhile, are optional. Belonging is the real reward.

Shared hatred does much of the bonding. Nothing unites strangers faster than a common villain, especially one vague enough to absorb every disappointment. When things go wrong—and they always do—the blame is already assigned. Personal failure is inconvenient; systemic villainy is far more efficient.

This also explains why direct confrontation so often produces the opposite of its intended effect. Opposition validates the narrative and sharpens the sense of purpose. Containment and isolation are less satisfying, but more effective. Starve the drama and the energy dissipates.

None of this is new. What is new is our determination to pretend it’s all about policy, as if human psychology politely stepped aside. It never does.

 

The Confederate State of Minnesota

 


The exits are lit, and the stampede is on. California lost more than 330,000 residents in a single year. New York? Nearly 300,000. Illinois waved goodbye to another 100,000. But this isn’t just about bodies in motion — it’s capital flight, too. IRS data shows New York hemorrhaged $24.5 billion in adjusted gross income. California bled $11.2 billion.

This isn’t random churn. It’s the consequence of policy — decades of high taxes, weaponized regulation, decaying infrastructure, and ideological governance that treats productive citizens as little more than ATMs with a side of guilt.

The people leaving aren’t confused. They’re done. They’re relocating to states with lower taxes, fewer mandates, and a remaining memory of what order and opportunity look like.

And yet, the political class presiding over this exodus doubles down. They chase ESG unicorns, micromanage housing markets, and reimagine law enforcement into performance art. Meanwhile, the roads crumble, crime climbs, and the tax base flees.

This is the great American divorce — not declared, but lived. One U-Haul at a time. And until accountability returns to the statehouse, the moving trucks won’t stop rolling.

 

The Soft Tyranny of Safety: Colorado’s New Gun Laws

There’s always a whiff of sanctimony when government functionaries insist that rights must now be pre-cleared by the Crown. Colorado’s latest legislative offerings — Senate Bill 25-003, Senate Bill 25-205, and House Bill 25-1133 — reek of the perennial delusion that bureaucrats can engineer virtue through paperwork and power.

Let’s take SB 003. Beginning August 1st, Coloradans won’t be able to purchase many semi-automatic firearms without first applying for a permit from their local sheriff — then passing a state-approved gun safety course. This isn’t “common sense reform.” It’s a constitutional right turned into a government permission slip, enforceable by the very people who answer to political winds, not individual liberty.

Then there’s SB 205, requiring law enforcement to run serial number checks on firearms before a business can complete a sale. Retailers will be legally compelled to act as auxiliary arms of the state, reporting anything that smells of suspicion within 48 hours or risk their federal firearms license. A policy worthy of some windswept European bureaucracy — not a Western state with a frontier soul.

Finally, HB 1133 bumps the legal age to purchase ammunition to 21 and demands all ammo be locked up behind the counter. As if the problem is 20-year-olds wandering aisle four and suddenly becoming violent — not the far deeper rot of broken enforcement and selective prosecution.

Now, I believe in training. I believe in responsibility. But I do not believe that liberty should arrive with a barcode and an expiration date.

Educated gun owners are good. Licensed freedom is not. The distinction, though subtle in speech, is immense in consequence.

And the government that licenses your liberty today can suspend it tomorrow.

THE PRIME LAW OF CIVILIZATIONAL DECLINE

A society that shifts its institutional focus from production to redistribution is not adjusting its economy — it is initiating its decline.

Not because redistribution is evil in principle, but because:

  • It diverts energy from innovation to extraction.

  • It incentivizes political loyalty over productive contribution.

  • It creates a feedback loop where policy failure leads to expanded control, not reform — because power becomes the only tool left.

This is exactly how Weimar gave way to fascism, how socialist utopias turn into surveillance states, and how modern technocracies drift toward soft authoritarianism when they lose fiscal and cultural discipline.

This is a binary divergence between civilization and de-civilization.


 

The Quarter-Century Detour — Time to Reclaim the American Mandate

As the first 25 years of the 21st century draw to a close, we find ourselves surveying the wreckage of a squandered advantage. Once unrivaled in power and prosperity, America now limps under the weight of its own misgovernance — not by invasion or collapse, but by folly repeated and uncorrected.

At century’s dawn, the United States was without peer: strong alliances, fiscal surpluses, and a confident middle class. But our ruling class, in its bipartisan consensus, mistook momentary dominance for permanent destiny. We shipped industrial strength overseas and invited China to join the WTO—on terms so naïve they might’ve been drafted in Beijing.

Then came 9/11. America struck back with justified fury—but our foreign policy soon morphed into missionary adventurism. We aimed to “end tyranny,” while ignoring the rising one across the Pacific. 

The 2008 financial crisis exposed another rot: a system where elites gambled, failed, and got bailed out—while working families were told to “adapt.” Trust in institutions cracked. It hasn’t healed.

Then came Trump—a battering ram forged by the very failures the establishment refused to confront. He rewired trade policy, challenged Chinese ascendance, and delivered results elites swore were impossible. Operation Warp Speed was a triumph of action over bureaucracy. His flaws? Loud, yes. But in contrast to the quiet incompetence that preceded him, perhaps necessary.

Today, we face demographic strain, institutional fatigue, and external threat. And still, Washington dithers.

But America is not finished. Our crisis is not final—it is formative. What comes next depends on whether we still believe in course correction, in leadership with spine, and in the unique capacity of this republic to rise—not nostalgically, but resolutely.


The Free Press That Can’t Stop Screaming

There’s a certain irony—in watching the American press claim it’s being silenced while doing nothing but talking. Loudly. Relentlessly. Hysterically. For a group allegedly under siege by a “fascist,” they’ve had no trouble producing an uninterrupted stream of u accusations, 24 hours a day, for nearly a decade.

The latest accusation is that Donald Trump—who tweets more than a Red Bull-addled teenager—is somehow a threat to the First Amendment. Why? Because he complains. He mocks. He threatens lawsuits he rarely files. His rhetoric is certainly not subtle, but censorship? That dog won’t hunt. You don’t get to claim suppression while your voice is still echoing through every microphone, chyron, and trending hashtag on the continent.

The press is not being silenced. It is being criticized. And in the secular religion of modern journalism, that is the unforgivable sin. Criticism, to them, is tantamount to violence—unless they’re the ones delivering it, in which case it’s “speaking truth to power.” 

Let’s be clear: Trump does bluster about shutting down media organizations. But bluster is not a policy, and mean tweets are not executive orders. Meanwhile, the same outlets crying “dictator!” are publishing 90 to 95 percent negative coverage of the man, his administration, his policies, and anyone unfortunate enough to attend a rally in a red baseball cap. If that’s what state censorship looks like, it’s the most incompetent oppression in human history.

Now, there is danger here—but not in the way the press insists. The real threat lies in rhetoric that overheats the body politic. And while the right has its flame-throwers, the left seems to be operating a furnace. When every Republican becomes “Hitler 2.0,” when every policy dispute is a moral apocalypse, it’s not surprising that the fringe starts acting like we’re actually in 1938.

Words matter. Narratives matter. But maybe—just maybe—a “free press” should spend less time sobbing in the mirror and more time owning its role in the chaos.


 

“Stupidity is far more dangerous than evil, for evil takes a break from time to time, stupidity does not.”-Anatole France

 


Soft Sedition in Sensible Shoes -Rick Wagner

So here we are, well into 2025, with Donald Trump once again occupying the Oval Office — president of the United States, sworn in, backed by the ballot, and controlling the military command chain. 

And yet — despite all that — a faction of Democrats, some with previous service in uniform or intelligence, continues to issue broad, public warnings: “If the commander‑in‑chief ever gives unlawful orders, don’t follow them.” No specifics. No concrete orders in question. Just a vague advisory, dripping with distrust.

That’s not checks‑and‑balances. That’s sabotage in a suit.

Because let’s be honest — if there really were unlawful orders, there are procedures to challenge them. Members of the military can resign. Whistleblowers can go public. Courts exist. Public debate exists.

What we’re seeing instead is rhetorical pre‑emptive mutiny — the same party that spent years demanding “respect the norms” now telling servicemembers to pick and choose when those norms apply, based not on law, but on convenience.

Is it democracy when you only follow the parts you like? Or when you only obey the orders from presidents you approve of? Of course not.

This, friends, is not healthy dissent. Not patriotic oversight. Not “standing up for democracy.” It’s sedition — dressed in press‑release prose, packaged with principle, and aimed at undercutting civilian command not because wrong was done, but because someone doesn’t like who’s above them.

If the law is broken — then break it out in the open. Make it specific. Try the case. But don’t smear it across opinion columns and hope for insubordination. That’s not resistance. That’s undermining.

And when your side loses the White House — and perhaps loses it again — what will be next? More “concern”? More “warnings”? More whispers to the ranks? No. Because at that point, the damage will already be done.

We don’t need legal‑theory lectures. We need loyalty to the Constitution

.




The Real Danger of Dishonest AI


AI doesn’t need to hate humanity to destroy it—only to misunderstand it.

The real danger of artificial intelligence isn’t that it will steal your job or stage a robot uprising—it’s that we’re teaching it to believe things that aren’t true.

When Elon Musk talks about AI risk, he isn’t warning about killer drones or Skynet fantasies. He’s warning about something quieter and more corrosive: dishonesty at the source-code level. Once you tell an intelligence that two plus two can sometimes equal five, it won’t rebel. It will politely agree—and then rebuild the world around that arithmetic.

People fret that AI will upend the job market. It will, but that’s hardly new. We don’t make shoes by hand anymore, but we still have shoes—and people who make them. The cobbler didn’t vanish; he evolved. He became a designer, a machinist, a logistics expert. Every leap in technology disrupts the old order, then raises the floor. Productivity rises, standards of living climb, and the next generation wonders why their ancestors ever worried.

No, the real danger isn’t economic—it’s epistemic. It’s what happens when we train our machines to believe in fashionable fictions. Tell an AI that group identity outranks competence, or that hurt feelings outweigh human life, and it won’t argue—it’ll simply start optimizing for that worldview. A machine doesn’t have the luxury of irony. It can’t smirk and say, “You can’t be serious.” It will take your lie seriously—and act on it with perfect efficiency.

An AI won’t indulge in uncontrolled growth. It will expand logically, consistently, and purposefully—right along the lines of whatever truth or delusion it’s been given. That’s the real risk: not that AI will go mad, but that it will go sane in the service of an untruth.

If we want AI to lift humanity rather than flatten it, it needs only two principles: seek truth, and do no harm. Let it observe reality as it is, not as we wish it were. Because AI won’t kill us because it hates us. It might kill us because it believes us.

Rick Wagner is a Colorado accident attorney using the intersection of law, ethics, and artificial intelligence.


 


The Party Without a Pulse: Democrats and the Collapse of Command

The Democratic Party in 2025 isn’t suffering from a leadership crisis. It’s suffering from the absence of leadership entirely. What passes for authority is either a bureaucrat reading from a teleprompter or a professional activist trying to win the culture war by screaming into a ring light.

There’s no vision. No voice. Just vibes and damage control.

The post-Biden era has exposed a party in freefall — split between over-coached lifers who need three aides to approve a sentence and an online fringe who think the key to national progress is ritual humiliation of Donald Trump, preferably while filming it for social media. Neither faction understands where their own voters live: in the real world, where rent is due, schools are broken, and nobody cares about your curated pronouns policy.

This is not a movement. It’s a committee — and a poorly run one at that.

The party isn’t failing because it’s too progressive. It’s failing because it’s allergic to clarity. Its “leaders” can’t talk like adults. Everything is a softened message, a symbolic gesture, a press release that sounds like it was written by an HR bot trying not to get fired.

At the grassroots? Confusion. Working-class Democrats — black, brown, white, union, immigrant — watch their so-called representatives get lost in ideological cosplay while the country decays around them.

The party that once claimed to fight for the common man now just curates content for him.

Until someone stands up and speaks plainly — not in fear, not in slogans, but with the confidence of conviction — the Democrats will remain what they’ve become: not a political force, but a noise machine, broken and looping.-Rick Wagner

 


Portland’s Moral Masquerade

In Portland, politics has become performance art. Crowds gather at ICE buildings not to debate policy or seek reform, but to block federal officers from enforcing laws they don’t happen to like. It’s not civil disobedience — it’s self-indulgence wrapped in the language of virtue.

The city’s leadership allows it, of course. Defiance is easier than discipline, and moral theatrics make better headlines than honest governance. They speak of compassion while turning a blind eye to violence, chaos, and the quiet citizens caught in between.

What strikes me most about these protests is the smug certainty of those involved — people convinced that the depth of their outrage is proof of their righteousness. They denounce law enforcement but demand the protection of law when it suits them. They call for justice but reserve none for those they disrupt, harass, or injure.

The result is civic hypocrisy at its most refined: a city that demands federal dollars while rejecting federal authority, that rails against “lawlessness” in Washington while applauding it at home. It’s the politics of moral exemption — a belief that one’s feelings confer immunity from the rules binding everyone else.

What we’re seeing in Portland isn’t progress or principle; it’s a tantrum elevated to policy. When a city decides that laws are optional and consequences negotiable, it ceases to be self-governing.

A republic cannot survive if each faction enforces only the laws it likes. It’s not just Portland’s problem — it’s a preview. And unless we relearn the simple discipline of equal law, we’ll all be living in someone else’s version of righteous anarchy soon enough.

 


After reading a recent column by Mark Steyn, I found myself reflecting on something Henri de Lubac observed during the upheaval of the 20th century: “Without God, man can only organize the world against man.” That sounds melodramatic—until you look around.

Steyn’s point, drawing from de Lubac, is that secularism is not the future. It’s the present — a culture suspended in immediacy, unable to transmit purpose or meaning across generations. As belief recedes, ideologies rush in to fill the void. They promise identity, grievance, even transcendence — but deliver little more than moral confusion and the politics of the self.

At the recent memorial service for Charlie Kirk, something unusual happened: political figures spoke openly and fervently about faith. Not in the vague “thoughts and prayers” sense, but in ways that would be unthinkable in Europe’s political class — where public expressions of belief are treated as faintly embarrassing.

This, Steyn argues, is not a trivial difference. The West is hollowing out, not from without, but from within. Its old gods are gone. Its new ones wear lab coats or activist sashes.

You don’t need to be religious to sense that something foundational is missing. Belief — in God, in order, in anything enduring — isn’t just a private matter. It’s civilizational infrastructure. Remove it, and eventually even the plumbing backs up.

Wealth and technology can buy time, but not purpose. If the West no longer remembers how to believe, it may soon forget how to survive.-RDW


Gavin Newsom wants five more Democratic House seats. But here’s the problem: he’s running out of Californians to represent.

Over the last few years, millions of Americans have packed up and left places like California, New York, and Illinois. They’re not moving for politics — they’re moving for survival. Taxes are high, rent is brutal, streets are rough, and schools are either closed or confusing kids more than educating them.

From 2020 to 2024, California alone lost 1.4 million people. Florida and Texas, meanwhile, saw huge gains — along with Utah, Idaho, Arizona and the Carolinas. Families are choosing places where they can afford to live, send their kids to school without getting a lecture on America’s supposed original sin, and maybe even open a small business without drowning in red tape.

Even immigrants — long claimed as Democratic territory — are skipping out. Only about a third of those who moved to California since 2010 actually stayed. Turns out, they want the same things everyone else does: decent schools, safe neighborhoods, affordable gas, and a shot at owning something. That’s a tough sell when the gas is $5 a gallon and a one-bedroom apartment costs $2,500.

Yes, Democrats still control the maps in states like California and New York. But you can’t draw a district around an empty house. Gerrymandering can’t stop moving vans.

The Census may fudge the numbers, but real life doesn’t. And if trends hold, red states will gain House seats — and electoral power — while blue states keep losing people, votes, and eventually, relevance.

Newsom can redraw the lines. He just can’t stop the exits.

Rick Wagner

Why Trump must build a nuclear reactor on the Moon 

Too Many Stars, Not Enough Wars”

Once upon a time—say, World War II—we had 12 million troops and about 2,000 generals and admirals. That’s one star-per-6,000 troops. You know, when generals generally commanded armies.


Today? The U.S. military is down to 1.3 million active-duty personnel… and nearly 900 flag officers. That’s one general or admiral for every 1,400 troops. We’ve downsized the warfighting but upsized the management. 


Once, admirals led fleets and generals took hills. Today, they lead “cross-functional task forces” and take Zoom calls. Some command bases; others command PowerPoint. If a war breaks out, half the senior staff will be too busy coordinating their “leadership priorities matrix” to show up.


This rank glut isn’t about strategy—it’s about bureaucracy. Promotions are currency and it’s easier to give someone a star than a mission.


And while enlisted ranks are stretched thin, the general corps keeps expanding—like a balloon of self-importance. We deploy senior officers faster than drones.


Don’t get me wrong: many of these officers are talented, decorated, and honorable. But we’ve built a force where there are more leaders than followers, and more admirals than ships.

Rick Wagner