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6/1/26

Daylight Saving Time vs. Standard Time: What the Switch Means for Your Health, Agriculture, and Daily Life

 


Daylight Saving Time vs. Standard Time: What the Switch Means for Your Health, Agriculture, and Daily Life


Every year, millions of Americans engage in the biannual ritual of resetting their clocks springing forward an hour in March and falling back in November. Yet few of us stop to think about what we are actually switching between: Daylight Saving Time (DST) and Standard Time. While the change may feel like a minor annoyance or a welcome extra hour of sleep, the debate over which system should be permanent touches on everything from heart health and car accidents to farm schedules and kids’ safety. This article unpacks the mechanics, benefits, and drawbacks of each time system, explains the serious health implications of moving the clock, and looks at how agriculture and geography shape the conversation across the United States.




When Do the Clocks Switch?


In the United States, clocks spring forward to Daylight Saving Time at 2:00 a.m. on the second Sunday in March. At that moment, 2:00 a.m. becomes 3:00 a.m., instantly stealing an hour of sleep but gifting longer evening sunlight. The return to Standard Time happens at 2:00 a.m. on the first Sunday in November. This “fall back” gives us an extra hour that night and shifts sunrise and sunset to earlier times, brightening mornings but plunging evenings into darkness earlier.






These dates have been standardized since the Energy Policy Act of 2005, which extended DST by about four weeks starting in 2007. Before that, clocks moved on the first Sunday in April and the last Sunday in October. Internationally, start and end dates vary, but the principle is the same: a seasonal time shift intended to align waking hours with daylight.




The Logic of Daylight Saving Time: Brighter Evenings


The core idea behind DST is to transfer an hour of morning light to the evening, when more people are awake and active. Benjamin Franklin famously satirized the notion in 1784, suggesting Parisians could save candles by waking earlier, but DST was first seriously implemented during World War I and II to conserve fuel. In peacetime, advocates argue it boosts the economy, promotes outdoor exercise, and reduces crime.




Benefits of DST:

More usable daylight after work and school.

Longer evenings encourage people to shop, dine out, and participate in sports and recreation, providing a measurable boost to retail, tourism, and the leisure industry. The golf industry, for example, has long lobbied for extended DST because more evening tee times generate significant revenue.

Reduced traffic fatalities.

Some studies suggest DST decreases pedestrian and vehicle accidents during the evening rush hour because drivers and pedestrians are more visible in daylight. A 2004 study in the American Journal of Public Health estimated that year-round DST could reduce pedestrian deaths by about 170 per year, while a Rutgers University study found a decline in fatal crashes when DST was extended in 2007.




Potential energy savings.

The original rationale was fuel conservation, as less artificial light would be needed in the evenings. While modern research shows mixed results savings on lighting are often offset by increased air conditioning and gasoline consumption some regions still see small net reductions in electricity use.

Reduced crime rates.

Criminologists have found that street crime drops during DST because robbery and assault are more common in darkness. A 2015 study in The Review of Economics and Statistics reported a 7 percent decrease in robberies when DST caused an extra hour of evening light, with a 27 percent drop during the sunset hour itself.


Drawbacks of DST:

Disruption of sleep and circadian rhythms.

The sudden shift in March is associated with a spike in heart attacks, strokes, and workplace injuries. The loss of one hour of sleep, combined with a misalignment between the body clock and the sun, puts measurable stress on the cardiovascular system.

Dark mornings in winter.

If DST were made permanent, many Americans would not see sunrise until after 8:00 a.m., and in northern cities well past 9:00 a.m., in the depths of winter. This would force millions of children to travel to school in pitch darkness, raising serious safety concerns.




Questionable energy impact.

Modern analyses suggest DST does little to reduce overall energy demand. A 2008 Department of Energy report found a mere 0.5 percent daily reduction in electricity use, while a study in Indiana after statewide adoption actually showed a 1 percent increase, likely due to additional heating in the morning and cooling in the evening.


The Case for Permanent Standard Time: Healthier, Sunnier Mornings


Standard Time is the “natural” time, roughly aligned with solar noon when the sun is at its highest point in the sky. Proponents argue that morning light is crucial for human health and safety, and that abandoning the clock change in favor of permanent Standard Time would save lives and improve mental well-being.


Benefits of Standard Time:

Sunlight that matches our biology.

Morning light is the most powerful signal for resetting our internal circadian clocks each day. It suppresses melatonin, boosts cortisol, and sharpens alertness. Standard Time delivers that critical morning brightness during the months when days are short, reducing the chronic “social jet lag” that occurs when our body clocks drift later relative to the sun.

Lower risk of heart disease, depression, and cancer.

The alignment of clock Daylight Saving Time vs. Standard Time: What the Switch Means for Your Health, Agriculture, and Daily Life with solar time under Standard Time is associated with better cardiovascular health and lower rates of seasonal affective disorder. Some epidemiological studies even suggest that living on the western edge of a time zone where sunrise comes later increases cancer risk, likely due to chronic circadian disruption.

Safer mornings for schoolchildren.

In winter, Standard Time ensures that most students travel to school after sunrise, reducing pedestrian accidents in the dark.

Better sleep for adolescents.

Teenagers naturally develop a delayed sleep phase, and morning sunlight helps keep that shift from becoming extreme. Permanent Standard Time, with its earlier sunrises, supports healthier sleep timing in teens, a group already struggling with widespread sleep deprivation.


Drawbacks of Standard Time:

Very early sunsets in summer.

Under permanent Standard Time, a city like Chicago would see a 7:18 p.m. sunset on the summer solstice instead of 8:18 p.m., cutting off an hour of after-work daylight. Many people would lose the ability to enjoy evening walks, community sports, and backyard gatherings in natural light.

Economic impact on outdoor industries.

The leisure and hospitality sectors strongly oppose permanent Standard Time, fearing that earlier darkness would translate into fewer customers. The shift could reduce revenue for golf courses, theme parks, and restaurants with outdoor seating.

Potential increase in evening crime.

Because violent crime often rises under cover of darkness, the earlier onset of nightfall during the summer months could reverse some of the gains seen during DST.


Health Beneath the Surface: The Toll of Twice-Yearly Transitions


Beyond the debate over which system is better, public health experts increasingly agree that the act of switching itself is harmful. The transition to DST in March is the most dangerous.


Immediately after the spring-forward, researchers have documented:

- A 24% spike in heart attacks on the following Monday, according to a 2014 University of Michigan study. The fall-back transition in November, by contrast, shows a 21% reduction in heart attacks that day, likely due to the extra hour of sleep.

- A rise in strokes. A Finnish study found an 8% increase in ischemic stroke hospitalizations during the two days after the DST transition.

- More workplace injuries and traffic accidents. The loss of sleep leads to microsleeps, impaired judgment, and slower reaction times. Fatal car crashes increase by about 6% in the week following the spring shift.

- Mood disturbances and an increase in depressive episodes, particularly among those already vulnerable. The circadian jolt can destabilize people with bipolar disorder and trigger cluster headaches.


The fall transition to Standard Time is generally gentler the extra hour of sleep reduces accidents on the immediate Monday but it is not without consequence. The sudden darkening of evenings can trigger seasonal affective disorder in susceptible individuals, and adjusting to an earlier sunset can disrupt evening routines and social rhythms.


Taken together, the data make a powerful case that switching clocks twice a year imposes an avoidable public health burden. That is why organizations such as the American Academy of Sleep Medicine have issued position statements calling for the abolition of seasonal time changes and the adoption of permanent Standard Time, which they argue best aligns with human circadian biology.


What About Agriculture?


A persistent myth holds that Daylight Saving Time was created for farmers. In reality, the agricultural community has historically been one of DST’s fiercest opponents. When the United States first adopted DST during World War I, farm lobbies fought it aggressively and successfully lobbied for its repeal in 1919.


Farmers’ work is governed by the sun, not the clock. Cows expect to be milked at the same solar time each day; disrupting that schedule by shifting the clock forces farmers to begin chores in darkness, waiting for livestock to be ready or for dew to dry on crops. When the clocks change, a 5:00 a.m. milking shifts abruptly relative to the animals’ internal rhythms, causing stress and temporarily reducing milk production. Similarly, field hands who need daylight to operate machinery safely are forced to wait in the dark morning hours, compressing the workday and complicating coordination with markets, transporters, and processors that operate on clock time.


Permanent Standard Time would provide the most consistent daylight calendar for agricultural work, as sunrise and sunset would gently shift throughout the year without the sudden one-hour jerk. However, some small-scale operations that sell directly to consumers at evening farmers’ markets might appreciate the extra hour of sunlight after regular business hours under DST. On balance, though, large agricultural organizations have consistently supported ending time changes and often advocate for sticking with Standard Time.


Parts of the US That Keep the Same Time All Year


Not every corner of the United States participates in the clock-changing ritual. Federal law allows states to exempt themselves from DST and remain on Standard Time year-round, but it does not currently permit any state to adopt permanent DST without congressional approval.


Arizona is the most prominent holdout in the contiguous United States. The state, with the exception of the Navajo Nation, stays on Mountain Standard Time (MST) all year. The reasoning is straightforward: in the scorching desert summer, an extra hour of daylight in the evening would mean more air conditioning, more energy consumption, and more suffering. Arizona’s decision effectively puts it on the same clock as California during summer (MST equals Pacific Daylight Time). Within Arizona, the Navajo Nation which spans three states does observe DST to keep a unified time across its territory. The Hopi Reservation, entirely surrounded by the Navajo Nation, does not, creating a patchwork of time zones.



Hawaii also opts out. Because of its tropical latitude, sunrise and sunset times vary little throughout the year, so there is minimal benefit to shifting the clock. The state remains on Hawaii-Aleutian Standard Time year-round.


All five permanently inhabited US territories Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and the Northern Mariana Islands do not observe DST, staying on their respective standard times for similar tropical-latitude reasons.


In recent years, more than a dozen states have passed legislation or resolutions calling for permanent DST, including Florida, Washington, California, and Oregon. All such laws remain symbolic until Congress authorizes states to make the change. The federal Sunshine Protection Act, which would enact year-round DST nationwide, has repeatedly been introduced in the Senate even passing unanimously in 2022 but has stalled in the House of Representatives over disagreements about whether permanent DST or permanent Standard Time is the better choice.




A Question That Moves With the Sun


The debate between Daylight Saving Time and Standard Time is ultimately a debate about how we want to live relative to the sun. DST gifts long, light-filled summer evenings that fuel recreation and commerce but at the cost of dark winter mornings and a jarring biological disruption each spring. Standard Time anchors our days more closely to solar reality, offering crucial morning light that protects heart health, mental well-being, and childhood safety, while sacrificing the extended twilight that has become synonymous with summer in America. Farmers, biologists, and a growing chorus of health eHealthxperts are pushing to stop the semiannual switch, but the country remains divided on which direction the clock should permanently face. For now, the twice-a-year time change remains one of the few events that, no matter where you stand, unites Americans in a groggy, collective reset.

#DST #DaylightSavingsTime #StandardTime #Health #Agriculture 

5/31/26

The Crying Indian

 


THE CRYING INDIAN


Trivia:

Remember the Native American that was in the pollution commercial in the 70's with tear running down his face? He wasn't Native American. He was Italian American. He had played over 80 roles as a Native American.




The Tear That Wasn’t His: Iron Eyes Cody, the “Crying Indian,” and the Unsettling Truth Behind an Environmental Icon


If you grew up in the 1970s or have ever watched a retrospective of classic television advertisements, you almost certainly remember the image: a weathered Native American man in braids and buckskin paddles a birchbark canoe through increasingly foul waters. He pulls his craft onto a trash-strewn shore and walks toward a busy highway, where a passing motorist hurls a bag of fast-food garbage out the window. The bag bursts at his feet. The camera pushes in tight on his face as a single, perfect tear rolls down his cheek. The voiceover intones, “People start pollution. People can stop it.”




That 1971 public service announcement, produced by the Ad Council for the nonprofit Keep America Beautiful, became one of the most famous and emotionally potent commercials in American history. It won two Clio Awards, was named one of the top 100 advertising campaigns of the 20th century by Ad Age, and seared the “Crying Indian” into the collective conscience as an enduring symbol of environmental stewardship. For decades, viewers accepted the man in the ad as a genuine Native American elder, a silent witness mourning the desecration of a land his ancestors had cherished. But a piece of trivia that has resurfaced regularly in the internet age, often framed as a kind of stunning gotcha post, pierces that belief: the man wasn’t Native American. He was an Italian-American from Louisiana who built an entire life and career pretending to be one, playing more than 80 Native American roles across nearly seven decades in Hollywood. His name was Iron Eyes Cody, and his story is far more than a curious footnote it’s a disorienting parable about identity, representation, corporate messaging, and a nation’s willingness to be moved by a beautiful, manufactured lie.


The Birth of a Tear


The Keep America Beautiful campaign was not the grassroots environmental crusade it appeared to be. The organization had been founded in 1953 by a consortium of beverage and packaging giants companies like American Can, Owens-Illinois Glass, and the Dixie Cup Company who were increasingly alarmed by mounting public pressure to regulate disposable containers. Rather than accept mandatory deposit schemes or bans on single-use items, they championed a different narrative: pollution was not a problem created by industry’s design choices, but by individual litterbugs. The “Crying Indian” commercial, which debuted on Earth Day 1971, was the emotional apex of this strategy.


The ad was crafted with immense care. It was shot on location on the Santa Ana Freeway and in a polluted channel of the Los Angeles River, both far from any pristine wilderness. The director, Charles Little, knew he needed a face that would convey wounded nobility without a single word of dialogue. He found it in Iron Eyes Cody, an actor who had already spent decades in Hollywood westerns, usually playing stoic chiefs or fierce warriors. Cody, then in his late sixties, had a deeply creased face and dark, expressive eyes. The tear reportedly accomplished with a glycerin drop, though Cody sometimes claimed it was real sealed the illusion. America wept with him.




The ad’s resonance was immediate and staggering. Within a year, surveys reported a sharp drop in self-reported littering, and the Crying Indian became an instantly recognizable figure of moral authority. For many suburban families, that one minute of television may have been their most concentrated exposure to any image of Native America. The man in the ad was understood to be the real thing, a living repository of ancient wisdom. And Iron Eyes Cody did everything he could to reinforce that belief.


The Life of Espera Oscar de Corti


He was born on April 3, 1904, in the small town of Kaplan, Louisiana, the son of Sicilian immigrants Francesca Salpietra and Antonio de Corti. His birth name was Espera Oscar de Corti. The family eventually moved to Texas, and by the early 1920s, the young Espera had set out for Hollywood, where he began working as a stuntman and extra in the burgeoning western genre. At some point the exact timeline is murky he stopped being a southern Italian kid and started becoming Iron Eyes Cody.


He claimed he was born on a reservation in Oklahoma, the son of a Cherokee father and a Cree mother. He spun tales of a childhood steeped in tribal traditions, of learning sign language from elders, of a deep spiritual connection to the land. It was a persona he maintained not merely on screen but in every corner of his life. In 1936, he married Bertha “Birdie” Parker, an archaeologist of Abenaki and Seneca descent and the daughter of a prominent Native American performer, which added a layer of credibility to his claims. The couple adopted two sons of Native heritage, and Cody presented himself in Hollywood and beyond as an ambassador for Native cultures, even publishing a book on Indian sign language and consulting on film productions to ensure “authenticity.”


His filmography was staggering. He appeared in over 200 films and television shows The Paleface, Sitting Bull, A Man Called Horse, The Lone Ranger, Bonanza almost invariably playing Native American parts. He was a towering figure of mid-century pop culture iconography, the Indian chief Hollywood could count on. For his long service, he received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in 1983, forever enshrined under the name Iron Eyes Cody. He died in 1999, a beloved if somewhat obscure figure by then, with obituaries nationwide reciting his claimed Cherokee-Cree heritage as fact.




The Unraveling


The truth had actually begun to slip out a few years before his death. In 1996, a dogged investigation by The Times-Picayune of New Orleans, led by journalist Rhonda J. Miller, methodically dismantled the myth. Reporters tracked down baptismal records in Kaplan, Louisiana, that plainly recorded Espera Oscar de Corti’s birth to Italian parents. They interviewed his half-sister, who confirmed the family’s Sicilian lineage and said she had no idea why Espera had begun calling himself a Native American. Other relatives corroborated the story. The paper also unearthed documentation showing that Cody’s father had immigrated from Sicily in the late 19th century and never had any connection to any tribal nation.


Cody, then in his early nineties, refused to go quietly. He denied the revelations with fierce indignation, threatening a lawsuit and insisting that the Times-Picayune story was a fabrication designed to smear him. His adopted children backed him, asserting his Native identity as they knew it. But the genealogical paper trail was irrefutable. Iron Eyes Cody was Italian-American, one of the most successful and committed ethnic impersonators in American entertainment history. The man who wept for the land in that iconic PSA had no ancestral claim to the history it evoked.




Redface and the Noble Savage


The revelation landed with a mix of surprise, amusement, and bitter vindication, depending on who was listening. For many Native Americans, the unmasking of Iron Eyes Cody was simply the most egregious example of a centuries-old tradition: the white performer in redface. Hollywood had long preferred to cast white actors from Burt Lancaster to Rock Hudson in Native roles, erasing real Native performers and controlling Indigenous representation through a non-Native lens. Cody’s particular twist was that he had so thoroughly inhabited the lie that he lived it even when the cameras were off, effectively erasing himself into a racial fantasy.


His tear, in retrospect, becomes an eerie masterclass in cultural ventriloquism. The power of that PSA relied on a deeply ingrained American trope: the “Noble Savage,” a pure, pre-modern soul whose silent suffering indicts corrupt civilization. The ad works because viewers are primed to see a real Indian chief, an authentic voice of the earth. The fact that it was an Italian man in a braided wig and faux buckskin, deploying a glycerin tear on cue, doesn’t just feel like trivia it feels like a con. And in a larger sense, it was. The corporation-backed Keep America Beautiful campaign used that image to deflect responsibility for a throwaway packaging crisis they had themselves engineered, dressing up a lobbying agenda in the sacred raiment of a race they had simultaneously marginalized.


A Complicated Legacy


Yet the story resists complete condemnation. Iron Eyes Cody’s performance, however fraudulent, was persuasive enough to move millions of people toward a genuine environmental ethic. Littering did decline in the wake of the ad, and a generation of children internalized the message that throwing trash on the ground was a violation of something sacred. Some Native activists have noted that, while the actor was a pretender, the symbol he represented resonated in positive ways, sparking early conversations about pollution and respect for the earth. And in a strange twist of history, the commercial’s very artifice has become a teaching tool, a way to demonstrate how media constructs and manipulates identity for emotional and political ends.




The modern internet finds the Iron Eyes Cody anecdote irresistible precisely because it shreds a cherished collective memory. The post that circulates “Remember the Native American in the pollution commercial? He wasn’t Native American. He was Italian American.” delivers a neat shock, a piece of cultural jenga that pulls out a foundational block. It forces us to examine what we thought we knew, and why a weeping man we assumed was an authentic Indian could hold such sway over our environmental conscience.




Cody’s life and the commercial’s afterlife together form a tangled knot of sincerity and fraudulence. He may have genuinely believed he was honoring Native cultures, even as he appropriated them. The ad may have encouraged a generation to recycle and not litter, even as it served as a sophisticated piece of corporate propaganda. And America may have felt a genuine pang of sorrow for a ravaged earth, even as the face of that sorrow was a mask.


What endures, perhaps, is the unsettling question the whole affair raises: if an image moves you deeply and moves you toward good, does its authenticity matter? Iron Eyes Cody’s tear was not shed by a Cherokee elder surveying his spoiled homeland. It was shed by a skilled actor of Sicilian stock, working for an industry consortium on a freeway embankment. But the pollution was real, the apathy was real, and the planet’s need was real. The tear, in the end, might be the most honest thing about the whole fractured story not because of where it came from, but because of where it pointed. It just took the wrong man to cry it.

#NATIVEAMERICAN #Pollution #TheCryingIndian #IronEyesCody


5/30/26

American citizens Who Were Killed Or Raped By Individuals Believed To Be In The U.S. Illegally.

 


DEMOCRATS, Where are the bad people "That don't exist" you say??? Tell That To The Victims Families: [STUPID]



American citizens Who Were Killed Or Raped By Individuals Believed To Be In The U.S. Illegally.

Based on media reports from the past 4–5 years (approximately 2021–2026), here are 12 American citizens who were killed or raped by individuals believed to be in the U.S. illegally.


Kayla Hamilton (2022): The 20-year-old, who had autism, was raped and strangled to death by Walter Javier Martinez, an illegal immigrant from El Salvador. He pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 70 years in prison.




Rachel Morin (2023): The mother of five was brutally raped and murdered while on a jogging trail. Victor Martinez-Hernandez, an illegal immigrant from El Salvador, was found guilty of her murder.


Laken Riley (2024): The 22-year-old nursing student was murdered by Jose Ibarra, a Venezuelan migrant who entered the U.S. illegally. Ibarra was convicted and sentenced to life in prison without parole.


Jocelyn Nungaray (2024): The 12-year-old girl was found strangled to death in a creek in Houston. Two illegal Venezuelan immigrants, reputed gang members, were charged with her murder.



Moussa Fofana (2021): The 18-year-old high school soccer player was shot to death during an altercation in New Jersey. Yohan Hernandez, an illegal alien, was accused of the murder.


Deputy Ned Byrd (2022): The North Carolina K9 deputy was shot and killed while patrolling a neighborhood. Two Mexican nationals, Alder Alfonso Marin Sotelo and Arturo Marin Sotelo, were charged.


America Mafalda Thayer (2021): The 55-year-old woman was allegedly beheaded by her boyfriend, Alexis Saborit-Viltres, an illegal alien from Cuba.


Corbin Wagner (2021): The 26-year-old died in a DUI manslaughter incident caused by Orlando Gonzales-Beato, an illegal alien from the Dominican Republic.


Gretchen Gross (2021): The 76-year-old philanthropist was killed in a drunk driving crash caused by Jose Javier Reyes-Escobar, a 21-year-old illegal alien.



Conor Holcomb (2021): The 22-year-old was killed in a crash that Cecilio Eliut Camacho Montoya, an illegal alien from Mexico, was charged with.


Nazareth Tamer-Claure (2021): The young mother was hacked to death by three illegal alien MS-13 gang members.


Married Couple (2022): A married couple was stabbed to death while riding their bikes in Florida. Jean Robert Macean, a Haitian illegal immigrant, was arrested.



Get Real and Stop Hating Your President  ... STUPID!!!

#Illegals #Crime #Rape #Murder #Immigration

5/29/26

Echoes of a Failed Revolution: U.S.-Cuba Relations and the Imperative for Principled Realism

  


Echoes of a Failed Revolution: U.S.-Cuba Relations and the Imperative for Principled Realism


For over six decades, the island nation of Cuba has occupied an outsized place in the American conservative imagination. Located a mere 90 miles from Key West, this Caribbean nation transformed from a strategic neighbor into a Soviet beachhead in the Western Hemisphere, and today remains a cautionary tale of socialist economics and authoritarian governance. Understanding this history—and charting a path forward—requires conservatives to balance a principled rejection of tyranny with a pragmatic assessment of American national interests.

The Pre-Revolutionary Landscape and Castro's Rise

To comprehend how Fidel Castro came to power, one must first recognize the conditions he exploited. Cuba in the early 20th century existed under significant American influence following Spain's defeat in the 1898 Spanish-American War. While the Platt Amendment granted Washington intervention rights, the more immediate catalyst for revolution was the corrupt and repressive regime of Fulgencio Batista.

Batista seized power through a military coup in 1952, canceling scheduled elections and establishing a dictatorship characterized by lucrative links to organized crime and the American mafia. His regime allowed U.S. companies to dominate the Cuban economy, creating widespread resentment among ordinary Cubans. Batista developed a powerful security apparatus to silence political opponents, effectively shutting down constitutional avenues for change.

It was in this environment that Fidel Castro, a young lawyer, emerged. After his constitutional challenges to Batista's rule were rejected by Cuban courts, Castro resolved to pursue armed revolution. His first attempt the 1953 assault on the Moncada Barracks ended in failure, with Castro imprisoned. Yet this defeat became a propaganda victory; his "History will absolve me" defense resonated with Cubans weary of Batista's excesses.

Upon release in 1955, Castro fled to Mexico, where he organized the 26th of July Movement, joined by his brother Raúl and the Argentine revolutionary Ernesto "Che" Guevara. In December 1956, 82 revolutionaries disembarked from the yacht Granma onto Cuba's eastern coast. Though initially scattered by Batista's forces, the rebels regrouped in the Sierra Maestra mountains, waging a guerrilla campaign that progressively eroded the regime's military and popular support. Batista fled on January 1, 1959, and Castro assumed control shortly thereafter.

Conservatives must recognize that Castro's revolution succeeded not because of popular ideological commitment to Marxism, but because Batista's regime had forfeited all legitimacy. The tragedy was that what replaced a corrupt dictator proved far worse: a totalitarian communist state that would outlast its Soviet patron.

Consolidation of Communist Rule and the Cold War

Castro's promises of free elections and democratic restoration proved hollow. Instead, he rapidly transformed Cuba into the first communist state in the Western Hemisphere. His regime nationalized industries, seized American property, eliminated a free press, jailed dissidents, and implemented a one-party system under the Communist Party of Cuba. These were not mere policy disagreements they represented the systematic extinguishing of liberty.

The Eisenhower administration responded by imposing economic sanctions in 1960, freezing Cuban assets and severing diplomatic ties. What followed was a Cold War proxy conflict at America's doorstep. The failed 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion, authorized by President Kennedy, embarrassingly reinforced Castro's narrative while demonstrating the administration's irresolution in the face of Communist expansion.

The Soviet Union quickly filled the vacuum, becoming Cuba's primary ally and economic patron. This alliance reached its most dangerous expression during the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis, when the Soviet placement of nuclear weapons on the island brought the world to the brink of nuclear war. For conservatives, this crisis vindicated the view that Communist regimes in the Americas constitute direct threats to U.S. national security—a principle that remains relevant as rival powers again seek footholds in the region.

The Embargo: Principle Versus Practicality

The U.S. trade embargo, or, bloqueo, as Cubans call it, has been the cornerstone of American policy for over 60 years. Its conservative justification is straightforward: a regime that seized private property without compensation, suppressed fundamental freedoms, and aligned with America's enemies should not benefit from American commerce. Presidential candidates from Eisenhower onward have tightened sanctions, often during election years to appeal to Cuban-American voters in the pivotal state of Florida.

Yet honest conservatives must grapple with the embargo's results. After six decades, the Castro regime now under Miguel Díaz-Canel after Raúl Castro's retirement remains in power. The embargo has certainly inflicted economic pain, but the primary victims appear to be ordinary Cubans rather than regime elites. Between 2023 and 2025, Cuba's GDP contracted by approximately 1.9 percent, 1.1 percent, and possibly as much as 5 percent respectively. Since 2020, cumulative economic contraction approaches 17 percent.

The human toll is stark. Daily blackouts exceeding 1,800 megawatts in capacity loss are common, effectively paralyzing economic activity and subjecting families to hours without electricity. Food production and distribution systems have collapsed, with even rationed goods frequently unavailable. Inflation, though officially reported around 14 percent, is widely believed to be significantly higher.

Some conservative thinkers have begun questioning whether the embargo advances American interests. As one analysis framed it, "Washington's economic war against Cuba has weakened a government that has arguably been our most reliable security partner in the Caribbean". The U.S. Agricultural Coalition for Cuba estimates that American farmers hold only a 15 percent share of Cuba's food import market, which could increase to 60 percent if trade restrictions were lifted. Meanwhile, American businesses are excluded from Cuban opportunities while foreign competitors operate freely.

The China and Russia Problem

Perhaps the most compelling conservative argument for recalibrating Cuba policy concerns geopolitical competition. The maximum-pressure strategy has demonstrably failed to isolate Cuba; instead, it has driven Havana toward America's principal adversaries.

China's presence has expanded dramatically. Today, Cuba imports more goods from China on the opposite side of the globe than from the United States just 90 miles away. Chinese companies have deepened their role in Cuban infrastructure, telecommunications, and energy sectors. These relationships are not primarily ideological; they stem from necessity created by American restrictions.

Russia's renewed engagement is equally troubling. Moscow has offered investment, tourism, and oil shipments. Russian warships have replaced American cruise liners in Havana harbor. The Trump administration's 2026 executive order declared a national emergency citing Cuba's alignment with "malign actors adverse to the United States," specifically referencing Russian and Chinese intelligence cooperation. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has explicitly confirmed Moscow's "firm readiness to continue providing Cuba with the necessary political and material support".

This dynamic exposes the strategic incoherence of current policy. As one observer noted, "hardliners continue to treat the Russian and Chinese presence in Cuba as a provocation, rather than a consequence of their own policies". A conservative foreign policy grounded in realism should recognize that Washington has inadvertently created a vacuum that strategic competitors eagerly fill. The 2014-2016 period demonstrated an alternative: when engagement was possible under President Obama, Havana pursued it. When engagement was replaced by hostility, the regime predictably turned elsewhere.

Cuba's Current Economic Catastrophe

The economic situation in Cuba has deteriorated to crisis levels. The government has characterized conditions as a "war economy". Energy shortages dominate daily life. Public transportation has virtually collapsed in Havana; gasoline queues stretch for hours when fuel is available at all. The black market provides what the state cannot, but at prices far beyond the reach of citizens earning the average state salary.

The electricity grid exemplifies systemic failure. Despite over $1.15 billion in government investment in 2025 for power generation recovery, generation has declined approximately 25 percent since the pandemic. The nation's aging thermoelectric plants suffer constant breakdowns. A genuine bright spot exists in solar energy expansion 50 new solar parks added in 2025, with renewables now providing about 10 percent of electricity. Yet this progress is insufficient against the scale of the crisis.

Tourism, once Cuba's economic lifeline, has cratered by 30 percent amid blackouts and fuel shortages. Agricultural production meets a shrinking fraction of domestic food needs. The government's 2025 stabilization program has been too little and too late.

The human dimension manifests in migration. Nearly half a million Cubans arrived in the United States in 2022-2023 alone the largest exodus since the revolution. For conservatives concerned about border security, this underscores that economic collapse in Cuba directly impacts American communities.

Toward a Conservative Realism

The conservative path forward must reject both reflexive engagement and rigid ideological intransigence. The goal should be a policy that serves American national interests rather than domestic Florida politics or Cold War nostalgia.

First, conservatives should acknowledge that the embargo has proven an ineffective instrument of regime change. After 65 years, the Castro government persists, now buttressed by Chinese and Russian support. Continuing a failed policy for symbolic reasons undermines conservative credibility on governance.

Second, a recalibration in no way requires endorsing the Cuban regime. The United States can simultaneously condemn political repression while pursuing cooperation on shared interests. Cuba already functions as an effective partner in combating drug trafficking, maintaining aggressive security that prevents transnational criminal organizations from establishing Caribbean footholds. The State Department's decision to remove Cuba from narcotics control reports was ideologically motivated and practically indefensible.

Third, engagement serves the strategic objective of countering Chinese and Russian influence. Every American business operating in Cuba represents diminished dependence on Beijing or Moscow. Every cruise ship docking in Havana symbolizes Western tourism rather than Russian naval presence. Access to Cuban critical minerals the world's fourth-largest cobalt reserves and significant nickel deposits—serves U.S. supply chain security.

The Trump administration's own National Security Strategy advocates "flexible realism" and acknowledges that "there is nothing inconsistent or hypocritical about maintaining good relations with countries whose systems of government and societies differ from our own". Cuba policy currently violates this principle.

Conclusion

Cuban communism has been an unmitigated disaster for the Cuban people. It destroyed a once-prosperous island, extinguished freedom, and impoverished generations. Conservatives are right to view the Castro regime as illegitimate and oppressive.

But American policy exists to advance American interests, not merely to express moral disapproval. Those interests include secure borders, counter-narcotics cooperation, strategic denial of Russian and Chinese footholds, and economic opportunities for American businesses. Current policy achieves none of these objectives while imposing taxpayer costs for enforcement and fueling regional instability.

A conservative Cuba policy for the current era would maintain principled opposition to tyranny while pursuing pragmatic engagement on matters of mutual benefit. This is not appeasement—it is realism. The alternative is continued irrelevance as Beijing and Moscow fill the vacuum that Washington has created just 90 miles from American shores.

#UnitedStates #Cuba #Castro #Communism #US

5/28/26

How The Federalist Papers Decode the Constitution and What the 14th Amendment’s Authors Really Meant About Birthright Citizenship


How The Federalist Papers Decode the Constitution and What the 14th Amendment’s Authors Really Meant About Birthright Citizenship




If the Constitution is the script for the American experiment in self-government, The Federalist Papers are the director’s commentary. Written under the pressure of a ratification battle, the eighty-five essays penned by Alexander Hamilton, James Madison, and John Jay were designed to persuade a skeptical New York public to accept the new charter. In doing so, however, they did something far more enduring: they unpacked the language of the Constitution, defined its terms, and explained exactly why the text reads the way it does. For anyone seeking the original meaning of the Constitution’s compressed, legalistic phrases, The Federalist Papers remain the single most authoritative record of the Framers’ intent. And when we apply that same originalist methodology looking to what those who drafted and ratified a provision said it meant to the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause, the historical record delivers a clear, if now controversial, answer: birthright citizenship was never intended to apply to the children of those who owe allegiance to a foreign power.


The Federalist Papers as the Rosetta Stone of the Constitution


The Constitution is a remarkably short document. It sketches the architecture of government in broad strokes, leaving the detailed mechanics and philosophical underpinnings largely unwritten. That is not an accident; it was drafted in the closed sessions of the Philadelphia Convention, and the final text was designed to be ratified by the people, not merely dissected by lawyers. But the lack of a legislative history for the Constitution itself has always made its terse phrases vulnerable to misunderstanding and manipulation. The Federalist Papers fill that gap. They are not just political propaganda for ratification. They are contemporaneous expositions, written by two men who sat in the Constitutional Convention (Madison and Hamilton), explaining clause by clause what the drafters meant.




Consider how The Federalist Papers define the Constitution’s most elastic and abused phrases.


“Necessary and Proper”

The Necessary and Proper Clause (Article I, Section 8, Clause 18) grants Congress the power “to make all Laws which shall be necessary and proper for carrying into Execution the foregoing Powers.” In the hands of modern progressivism, this has become a catch-all for virtually unlimited federal authority. But Madison, in Federalist No. 44, calmly dissects the language. He mocks the anti-Federalist fear that “necessary and proper” could swallow the enumerated powers, calling it a “misconstruction.” He explains that “necessary” does not mean “absolutely indispensable” in every case, but rather that it must be “conducive” to the end and that “proper” means the law must be consistent with the Constitution’s principles and the reserved rights of the states. The clause, he insists, is declaratory of what would have been implied anyway. Without it, the Constitution would be a “dead letter.” It is a rule of construction, not a grant of unconfined discretion. Hamilton, in Federalist No. 33, goes further: the power to make laws necessary and proper is “perfectly harmless” because if Congress tries to use it for a purpose not delegated, the act would be a “usurpation.” The Framers never dreamed that the clause would be read as a license to regulate inactivity (as in the individual mandate cases) or to create a national police power.


“General Welfare”

The Taxing and Spending Clause gives Congress the power to “provide for the… general Welfare of the United States.” Hamilton and Madison famously split later, but in The Federalist Papers they speak with one voice: this is not an independent, plenary grant of power. Madison in Federalist No. 41 directly addresses the “triumphant misconstruction” that the general welfare phrase gives Congress a “power to legislate in all cases whatsoever.” He states unequivocally that the general welfare clause is limited by the “specified powers” that follow; otherwise, the enumeration of powers would be “absurd and useless.” The phrase “general welfare” is a description of the purpose for which taxes can be raised, not a separate bucket of authority. The federal government is one of limited, enumerated powers, and the general welfare language was never intended to transform it into a Leviathan that could spend on any object a bare majority deemed “general.”




“Supreme Law of the Land”

The Supremacy Clause (Article VI) declares that the Constitution, laws made in pursuance thereof, and treaties are the supreme law. In Federalist No. 27, Hamilton explains that this doesn’t mean the federal government can run roughshod over the states. The key qualifier is “in pursuance thereof”: only those federal actions that are constitutional are supreme. A federal statute that exceeds the enumerated powers is void. This is the foundation for judicial review. The clause ensures uniformity in the application of legitimate federal authority, but it does not nullify the states’ reserved powers. It is a hierarchy of law, not a permission slip for federal omnipotence.


Separation of Powers and the Judicial Role

Federalist No. 51 is perhaps the most famous essay in the series, and its maxim “ambition must be made to counteract ambition” is often quoted. But what is less often appreciated is Madison’s precise description of the separation of powers. He explains that the branches must be “separate and distinct” so that each can act as a check on the others, not that they must be hermetically sealed. The goal is to prevent the “accumulation of all powers, legislative, executive, and judiciary, in the same hands.” In modern terms, this forecloses the administrative state agencies that simultaneously write rules, enforce them, and adjudicate disputes. Madison might not have envisioned the EPA or the CFPB, but his logic condemns them.




Then there is Federalist No. 78, where Hamilton sets out the nature of the judiciary. The courts have “neither FORCE nor WILL, but merely judgment.” They are to declare the sense of the law, and when a statute conflicts with the Constitution, they must prefer the superior obligation. Hamilton’s essay is the ur-text for originalism itself. The judiciary’s duty is to interpret the law according to its original meaning, not to substitute its own policy preferences. The Constitution is a fixed, written instrument; judges are not at liberty to “substitute their own pleasure to the constitutional intentions of the legislature.” This vision of a restrained judiciary, faithful to text and history, is the conservative vision.


The Structure of Liberty

One of the most telling aspects of The Federalist Papers is their explanation of why the original Constitution lacked a Bill of Rights. In Federalist No. 84, Hamilton argues that a bill of rights is unnecessary in a constitution of limited and enumerated powers because the government has no power to abridge freedom of speech or religion in the first place. “Why declare that things shall not be done which there is no power to do?” he asks. A bill of rights might even be dangerous, because it could imply that the government possesses power not expressly granted. Madison later shepherded the Bill of Rights through the First Congress, but Hamilton’s argument reveals the Framers’ core understanding: the Constitution grants power, and whatever is not granted is reserved. The people’s liberties are protected by the structure of the government itself a structure of enumerated powers, federalism, and separated branches.


This structural insight is the key to reading the Constitution as a conservative originalist. You do not look for isolated phrases to justify expanding government. You read the document as a whole, with the default being liberty and local self-government. The Federalist Papers are the handbook for that reading.


Applying the Originalist Method: The 14th Amendment and Birthright Citizenship

If The Federalist Papers teach us anything, it is that the meaning of the Constitution is fixed at the time of its enactment and can be recovered from the public debates of those who wrote and ratified it. The same rule applies to the amendments. And no clause is more fiercely contested today than the first sentence of the 14th Amendment:


“All persons born or naturalized in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State wherein they reside.”

From a conservative originalist perspective, the crucial phrase is “subject to the jurisdiction thereof”. That language was not empty. It was carefully chosen to exclude certain classes of persons born on American soil. The modern, loose interpretation that anyone born within the geographic boundaries of the United States, regardless of their parents’ legal status or national allegiance, is automatically a citizen is a departure from the amendment’s intended meaning.




The Historical Context: Overturning Dred Scott, Not Creating Universal Birthright Citizenship

The Citizenship Clause was drafted in the aftermath of the Civil War to overturn the Supreme Court’s infamous decision in *Dred Scott v. Sandford* (1857), which had held that black Americans, whether free or enslaved, could never be citizens. The Clause constitutionalized the language of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, which declared that “all persons born in the United States, and not subject to any foreign power, excluding Indians not taxed, are hereby declared to be citizens of the United States.” Notice the wording of the 1866 Act: it grants citizenship to those born in the U.S. and not subject to any foreign power. That phrase, “not subject to any foreign power,” is the forerunner of “subject to the jurisdiction thereof.” It tells us that the framers of the 14th Amendment were consciously drawing a line between those who owe complete allegiance to the United States and those who owe allegiance to another sovereign.


The Senate debate on the 14th Amendment makes this explicit. Senator Jacob Howard of Michigan, the amendment’s floor manager and the man who introduced its language in the Senate, explained what “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” meant. He said:


“This will not, of course, include persons born in the United States who are foreigners, aliens, who belong to the families of ambassadors or foreign ministers accredited to the Government of the United States, but will include every other class of persons.”


Critics of the conservative view often stop reading there, claiming Howard only meant to exclude diplomatic families. But Howard immediately continued, providing a broader definition of “jurisdiction”:


“It settles the great question of citizenship and removes all doubt as to what persons are or are not citizens of the United States. … The word ‘jurisdiction,’ as here employed, ought to be construed so, as to imply a full and complete jurisdiction on the part of the United States, coextensive with all the powers of Congress, and operating directly upon the citizen, and not merely a qualified jurisdiction, such as that which is recognized in the case of Indians, or of foreigners temporarily residing within the limits of the United States.”


Howard is distinguishing between two types of jurisdiction: “full and complete” jurisdiction, which is what the United States exercises over its own citizens and those who have permanently transferred their allegiance, and “qualified” jurisdiction, which applies to Indians living under tribal sovereignty and, critically, to “foreigners temporarily residing” in the country. In the legal understanding of the 1860s, the allegiance of a child followed that of the father. A child born to a temporary foreign resident, someone who had not renounced his native allegiance and become part of the American Political Community was himself subject to a foreign power.


“Subject to the Jurisdiction Thereof” Means Allegiance, Not Mere Territorial Subjection

The phrase “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” was drawn from the law of nations and Anglo-American common law principles of jus soli (birthright citizenship). In its traditional form, jus soli was not an unconditional rule. William Blackstone’s Commentaries, which were the legal bible of the founding era, recognized that children born within the realm to “alien enemies” or to ambassadors were not subjects of the Crown. More importantly, the leading American treatise writer, Attorney General Edward Bates, in an 1862 opinion on citizenship, stressed that “jurisdiction” in this context means the “allegiance” owed by the individual and the protection owed by the sovereign a mutual, exclusive relationship.


When Senator Lyman Trumbull of Illinois, a key architect of the Civil Rights Act, was asked whether the Act would make citizens of Chinese laborers living in California or Indians, he answered that it would not, because they owe allegiance to “their own tribal regulations” or to a foreign emperor. Trumbull stated that the law applies to those “subject to our laws” but who are also “not owing allegiance to anybody else.” That is the crucial test: not merely being physically present and bound to obey traffic laws, but owing exclusive political allegiance to the United States.




The conservative originalist position holds that the 14th Amendment’s Citizenship Clause was designed to extend citizenship to the freed slaves and their descendants people who had no other allegiance, who were permanently domiciled, and who were fully and completely subject to the political jurisdiction of the United States. It was not designed to extend automatic citizenship to the children of foreign nationals who happen to be present within U.S. borders, whether legally as tourists or illegally. The modern interpretation conflates territorial jurisdiction (the obligation to obey local laws) with political jurisdiction (the reciprocal bond of allegiance and membership in the body politic). Everyone within U.S. borders is territorially subject to our laws; that is why a tourist can be prosecuted for theft. But that does not make them part of “We the People.”


What About United States v. Wong Kim Ark (1898)?

The Supreme Court’s 1898 decision in Wong Kim Ark is frequently brandished as a trump card. The Court held that a child born in San Francisco to Chinese parents who were lawful permanent residents was a citizen under the 14th Amendment. But conservative scholars like John Eastman and others have argued that the case was correctly decided on its narrow facts the parents were domiciled permanent residents, not temporary visitors or undocumented migrants. The Court specifically noted that Wong’s parents had a “permanent domicil and residence” in the United States and were “not engaged in any diplomatic or official capacity under the Emperor of China.” In other words, the parents had taken up permanent allegiance, and the child was therefore subject to full and complete jurisdiction. The case says nothing about the children of illegal aliens, temporary workers, or tourists, and the interpretive dicta that sweeps more broadly is just that dicta, inconsistent with the original meaning.




The writer of the 14th Amendment, Senator Howard, and his colleagues, repeatedly emphasized that the amendment codifies the principle of the 1866 Civil Rights Act: birth within the United States, plus not subject to any foreign power. A person who enters the country illegally, or who remains only for a temporary purpose, has not severed his allegiance to his home country. Their children, as a matter of law at the time, inherited that foreign allegiance. They were not, and were never meant to be, birthright citizens.


The Constitution’s Text Deserves Its Original Meaning


The Federalist Papers demonstrate that the Constitution’s words were chosen with precision to convey a fixed meaning. The “general welfare” did not mean anything that pleases Congress; “necessary and proper” did not mean convenient; the separation of powers was not a suggestion. In the same way, the 14th Amendment’s “subject to the jurisdiction thereof” was not an empty flourish. It was a legal term of art that incorporated the common law understanding of allegiance and excluded those who remained subject to a foreign sovereign.




A conservative perspective on the Constitution insists that we take the Framers and the Amendment-writers at their word. We do not rewrite the plain meaning through judicial fiat or political expediency. The federal government’s obligation to protect the constitutional order includes the duty to ensure that citizenship is not cheapened into an accident of geography. The 14th Amendment was a noble and necessary corrective to the evil of slavery, establishing that a person’s race could never bar him from full membership in the American political community. It was never intended to be a loophole for circumventing immigration law. Reading the language in light of its original public meaning, illuminated by the notes left behind by the men who wrote it, reveals a Citizenship Clause that is both clear and demanding a cornerstone of sovereignty, not a reward for crossing a border.

#Constitution #14thAmendment #FederalistPapers #BirthrightCitizenship 

FOOD STAMP FRAUD IN THE US

 


FOOD STAMP FRAUD IN THE US

The American taxpayer is footing the bill for a multi-billion-dollar underground economy, and the U.S. government's food assistance programs have become its unwitting banker. What was designed as a nutritional safety net for the nation's most vulnerable has, through a combination of outdated technology, weak oversight, and deliberate obstruction, morphed into a lucrative international criminal enterprise. From the bodegas of New York City to the black markets of the Caribbean, the story of modern food stamp fraud reveals a systemic failure that conservative lawmakers have long warned about.


The Staggering Scale of a Broken System


The numbers paint a grim picture. The Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) now operates on an annual budget that has swollen to approximately $112.8 billion, serving an average of 42.1 million people per month. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins has publicly estimated that 20% to 30% of that funding potentially tens of billions of dollars annually may be lost to fraud, waste, and abuse.




This isn't a problem of a few bad actors gaming the system at the margins. Since the Biden administration's 2023 decision to create a special program for replacing stolen benefits, the government has already doled out at least $61.5 million to cover pilfered food stamps in 127,290 cases. By the third quarter of 2024, reported fraudulent transactions had skyrocketed to 287,661 in a single three-month period a jump of over 100,000 from the previous quarter affecting families across all fifty states.


Meanwhile, the cost of fraud has grown so sophisticated that for every single dollar in benefits stolen, it now costs agencies $3.93 in total losses a figure that has risen consistently year after year.


Urban Epicenters: Where Fraud Thrives


The crisis is most acute in America's largest cities, where dense populations and diverse commercial landscapes provide ideal cover for large-scale trafficking operations.


New York City stands as the undisputed capital of SNAP fraud. Between August 2023 and early 2025, the city's Department of Social Services processed more than 142,000 claims for stolen benefits, approving over 96,000 claims and disbursing approximately $43.7 million in replacement funds to victims. The fraud problem grew so severe that the city was forced to spend over $28 million in taxpayer money in a single year simply reimbursing people for stolen benefits.




But the skimming and theft that devastates individual recipients represents only the street-level manifestation of a much deeper problem. In May 2025, federal prosecutors unsealed charges in what they described as "one of the largest food stamp frauds in U.S. history." The scheme, centered in the New York metropolitan area, involved six defendants including a USDA fraud investigator who was supposed to be catching criminals and generated more than $66 million in unauthorized SNAP transactions. The group operated approximately 160 unauthorized EBT terminals that processed over $30 million in illegal transactions, with the corrupt USDA employee selling confidential license numbers to enable another $36 million in fraudulent redemptions.


The USDA employee, Arlasa Davis, stands as a particularly galling example of the rot within the system. She worked in the very division responsible for identifying food stamp fraud, yet stands accused of selling confidential government information to the criminals she was supposed to catch accepting bribes disguised in communications as "birthday gifts" and "flowers".


Boston has proven equally vulnerable to exploitation. In December 2025, federal authorities arrested two men originally from Haiti who allegedly trafficked over $7 million in SNAP benefits through two small storefronts in Boston's Mattapan neighborhood. The monthly redemptions at these modest shops ranged from $100,000 to $500,000, dramatically outpacing full-service supermarkets in the same area that typically redeem around $82,000 per month. The investigation revealed an operation in which SNAP benefits were systematically exchanged for cash, and perhaps most disturbingly, donated food products from the nonprofit "Feed My Starving Children" meals intended for humanitarian relief overseas were being sold for approximately $8 per package at these locations.




In the Twin Cities of Minnesota, the problem grew so pervasive that in 2026 federal agencies launched "Operation Cold SNAP," executing search warrants at twenty retail locations simultaneously. USDA Inspector General John Walk minced no words in his assessment: "Fraudulent SNAP retailers steal from victims that include children who rely on federal nutrition assistance and dishonor the charity of American taxpayers who fund the assistance".


Columbus, Ohio, has emerged as yet another hotspot where organized fraud rings have systematically exploited the system. From June 2023 to December 2024, more than 34,000 Ohio households were defrauded out of nearly $17 million in SNAP benefits. Investigative reports detailed how certain restaurant owners allegedly operate attached grocery stores, purchase ingredients in bulk with SNAP benefits, and then funnel the food to their restaurants where it is sold for cash. This closed-loop scheme effectively launders taxpayer-funded benefits into untraceable revenue, with one case resulting in a guilty plea for a nine-year conspiracy totaling over $10 million.




The Barrel Trade: America's Welfare Becomes the Caribbean's Black Market


For years, the most audacious form of SNAP fraud has operated in plain sight. Shipping containers full of food cereal boxes, baby formula, energy drinks, and other non-perishable goods purchased with American EBT cards leave ports in New York, New Jersey, and Florida bound for the Dominican Republic, Jamaica, Haiti, and other Caribbean nations, where they are sold on the black market for pure profit.


This is not a new phenomenon. A 2013 New York Post exposé first documented how Caribbean migrants enrolled in SNAP were buying non-perishable items, packing them into 55-gallon blue barrel drums, and shipping them to home nations to be sold. One seller, a Bronx native identified as Maria-Teresa, openly admitted to the practice: "It's a really easy way to make money, and it doesn't cost me anything". She also described how her sister conducted bogus $250 transactions with grocers who would hand her $200 in cash while pocketing the remaining value, calling it "a way of laundering money, but it's easier because it's free".


More than a decade later, the practice has only expanded. The scale and sophistication of these operations now involve organized criminal networks using electronic skimming devices to steal benefits, cloning EBT cards, and purchasing massive quantities of high-value, non-perishable goods specifically for overseas resale. In one Oregon-based case, an Italian national illegally residing in the United States conspired with sixteen others to steal over $2.4 million in SNAP benefits. The group used cloned EBT cards to purchase more than 120,000 pounds of infant formula, energy drinks, and other goods, storing them in warehouses before transporting them across state lines to be sold on the black market.


These schemes represent a complete perversion of the program's purpose. Food intended for struggling American families or, in the case of the Boston operation, meals actually donated for starving children ends up funding a parallel economy in foreign nations, all at the expense of the U.S. taxpayer.




The Enablers: Why Fraud Flourishes


The question that naturally follows is how such widespread fraud continues unabated. The answer lies in a combination of deliberate political obstruction, technological negligence, and a fundamentally flawed approach to program integrity.


Foremost among these enabling factors is the outdated technology that underpins the entire EBT system. While American consumers have long enjoyed the security of chip-enabled credit and debit cards, SNAP benefits are distributed through magnetic-stripe cards that are laughably easy to skim and clone. As of 2024, New York State the state with the highest number of stolen benefits in the nation had failed to transition to chip technology, despite California and Oklahoma having already made the switch. The state initially claimed that federal approval was required, but when pressed, the USDA confirmed that "there is no prohibition on adoption of chip cards and states may choose to do so at any time". This technological backwardness is not merely an inconvenience; it is an open invitation to criminal exploitation.


Equally troubling is the political obstruction that has met efforts to root out fraud. When Agriculture Secretary Rollins requested that states turn over SNAP recipient data including Social Security numbers, dates of birth, and immigration status twenty-one Democrat-controlled states refused to comply. Among those resisting were the very states known to have payment error rates exceeding the national average: California, New York, New Jersey, Illinois, Maryland, and Massachusetts. These states claim privacy concerns as their justification, but as one former fraud investigator explained to the New York Times, "there is a perception that forcefully tackling this issue might cause political backlash among the Somali community, which is a core voting bloc".


The preliminary data that has emerged from cooperating states is damning. Among the 29 states predominantly Republican-led that complied with the data request, investigators discovered 186,000 deceased individuals still receiving benefits, 500,000 people receiving more than double the allowable amount, and thousands drawing benefits from three, four, even six different states simultaneously. Secretary Rollins has made clear that the fraud in non-cooperating blue states is "likely even worse".


The Immigration Dimension


A particularly contentious but unavoidable aspect of the fraud crisis involves illegal immigration. Although SNAP is legally restricted to individuals with lawful status, the Center for Immigration Studies estimates that 4.5 million illegal immigrants are nevertheless using the program. Their research indicates that 47% of all non-citizen households receive taxpayer-funded food assistance, and roughly 60% of illegal immigrant households use at least one major welfare program.


The nexus between illegal immigration and organized SNAP fraud is not coincidental. The Somali-operated fraud rings exposed in Ohio, the Haitian traffickers arrested in Boston, the international crime ring prosecuted in Oregon these are not isolated incidents but patterns that point to systematic exploitation of America's porous borders and generous benefit programs. International criminal organizations have been identified as heavily involved in and benefiting from SNAP fraud at increasing rates.


The Path Forward: Conservative Reform Proposals


For conservatives, addressing SNAP fraud is not an argument for eliminating food assistance but for restoring integrity to a program that millions of genuinely needy Americans depend upon. The reform agenda is clear and has been championed by Republican lawmakers despite fierce Democratic opposition.


First, the immediate nationwide implementation of chip-enabled EBT cards is non-negotiable. The technology exists, has been successfully deployed in several states, and would dramatically reduce the skimming and cloning that account for a massive portion of stolen benefits. States that continue to resist this transition should face financial penalties.




Second, work requirements must be strengthened and enforced. The "Big Beautiful Bill" advanced by Republicans includes provisions requiring able-bodied adults without dependents to work, train, or volunteer for at least 80 hours per month to maintain eligibility. These requirements would extend to adults up to age 64, reflecting the principle that welfare should be temporary and tied to personal responsibility.


Third, the program needs meaningful restrictions on what can be purchased with taxpayer funds. Currently, nearly 25% of all SNAP spending goes to soda, candy, and other junk food subsidizing the very dietary habits that drive America's obesity crisis. Eleven states have already requested waivers to prohibit junk food purchases, a reform that should enjoy unanimous support.


Fourth, states must be required to share in the financial consequences of poor program management. Under the GOP-backed reconciliation framework, states with high payment error rates would be required to cover a portion of overpayments and administrative costs, creating a powerful incentive for proper oversight.


Finally, and most fundamentally, the law must be enforced. The brazenness of operations shipping barrels of taxpayer-funded food overseas, the audacity of corrupt USDA employees selling access to the very criminals they were hired to stop, and the scale of organized retail fraud demand a robust prosecutorial response. Federal agencies have demonstrated their capability with operations like "Cold SNAP" in the Twin Cities and the multi-agency takedown in Oregon, but consistent enforcement requires political will that too many state and local officials have been unwilling to muster.




Conclusion


The erosion of integrity in America's food assistance programs represents more than a financial scandal; it reflects a deeper crisis of governance in which partisan interests and bureaucratic inertia have been allowed to triumph over the public good. When a USDA employee can sell government secrets to fraud rings, when a small Boston storefront can process more SNAP transactions than a full-service supermarket, and when shipping containers full of taxpayer-funded food depart American ports for Caribbean black markets, something is fundamentally broken.


Conservative reforms chip cards, work requirements, purchase restrictions, state cost-sharing, and aggressive enforcement offer a clear path toward restoring accountability. What remains in question is whether the political establishment, particularly in the nation's large cities where the fraud is most rampant, possesses the will to prioritize struggling families over the entrenched interests that benefit from the current dysfunction. Every dollar stolen from SNAP is a dollar denied to a child who genuinely needs it a principle that ought to transcend partisan politics, even if the evidence suggests it too rarely does.

#Fraud #SNAP #EBT #Crime