Search This Blog

Noble Gold

NATIONAL DEBT CLOCK

Real Time US National Debt Clock | USA Debt Clock.com


United States National Debt  
United States National Debt Per Person  
United States National Debt Per Household  
Total US Unfunded Liabilities  
Social Security Unfunded Liability  
Medicare Unfunded Liability  
Prescription Drug Unfunded Liability  
National Healthcare Unfunded Liability  
Total US Unfunded Liabilities Per Person  
Total US Unfunded Liabilities Per Household  
United States Population  
Share this site:

Copyright 1987-2024

(last updated 2024-08-09/Close of previous day debt was $35123327978028.47 )

Market Indices

Market News

Stocks HeatMap

Crypto Coins HeatMap

The Weather

Conservative News

powered by Surfing Waves

5/1/26

Don't Believe The Hype Words From Tara Leigh

 


Don't Believe The Hype

By Tara Leigh

"It still blows my mind that one can put real information right in front of people, things they could verify in five minutes if they wanted to, and they’ll reject it instantly, not because it’s been disproven, but because it doesn’t fit what they’ve been taught to believe. That’s not thinking, that’s conditioning my friend. 

I don’t make a dime questioning narratives or pointing out inconsistencies. There’s no payoff for me to say “hey, maybe look at this a little closer.” If anything, I'm ridiculed, verbally assaulted, demonized and insulted. Where's my incentive to keep posting what I do? Oh, I know...it's because I value truth and I feel that the fellow human beings that I share this planet with deserve to hear another side and make the decision for themselves. 

Meanwhile, the institutions pushing those narratives, government, big pharma, massive systems with real power, have billions on the line depending on what you believe and how compliant you are.

So ask yourself, who benefits from you staying exactly where you are, and who benefits from you asking questions.

You don’t have to agree with me, but at least be willing to think beyond what you’ve been handed. Blind trust in authority isn’t intelligence, it’s comfort and convenience. Open your mind. Other people have valuable information to share. Wake up."


-Tara Leigh ✌️💜


#ThinkForYourself #QuestionEverything #FollowTheMoney #WakeUp #DoYourResearch #TruthMatters #StayCurious #SeeThroughTheNoise

The UAE Is Leaving OPEC

 


The UAE Is Leaving OPEC

The United Arab Emirates’ decision to exit OPEC, effective May 1, 2026, is not merely a bureaucratic reshuffling of oil politics. It represents a seismic shift in the Middle Eastern order one that underscores the failure of cartel economics, the realignment of regional power dynamics, and the vindication of a conservative, pro-market energy vision long championed by the United States.

For decades, the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries has functioned as an archaic restraint on free markets, artificially manipulating supply to prop up prices. The UAE’s departure is a long-overdue acknowledgment that the organization has become a straitjacket for ambitious nations.

The Straitjacket of Production Quotas

To understand the profundity of the UAE’s exit, one must first appreciate the economic handcuffs OPEC imposes on its members. The cartel’s primary mechanism of control is the production quota system, a scheme designed to prevent the natural laws of supply and demand from dictating the price of crude. Under this system, sovereign nations are told they cannot develop their own natural resources as they see fit.

For the UAE, this restriction had become economically suffocating. The country possesses a production capacity exceeding 4.8 million barrels per day (bpd) but was confined to a quota of roughly 3.0 to 3.5 million bpd. This represents a staggering “idle” capacity of over a million barrels a day capital investment sunk into the ground, rendered inert by the edict of a multinational bureaucracy. While nations like the UAE can balance their budgets at lower price points around $49 a barrel Saudi Arabia requires prices nearing $90 per barrel to fund its state apparatus. Consequently, OPEC policy has long favored Riyadh’s high-price preference at the direct expense of Abu Dhabi’s volume growth strategy.

This dynamic places OPEC in direct opposition to the foundational principle that nations should be sovereign over their economic destiny. The UAE had repeatedly signaled its frustration, arguing that it made massive investments in production capacity only to be told it could not monetize those assets. The conservative perspective recognizes that when an international body forcibly prevents a nation from lawful commerce, it stifles prosperity. The UAE’s exit affirms that the wealth of a nation belongs to its people, not to a temporarily convenient cartel headquartered in Vienna.

The Abraham Accords: A Strategic Pivot

The economic rationale, however, is inextricably linked to a geopolitical realignment fundamentally shaped by the Abraham Accords. The 2020 normalization agreements between Israel, the UAE, and Bahrain were not just peace treaties; they were the architects of a new Middle Eastern order. By choosing recognition and cooperation over the stale, decades-old animosity propagated by Iran and its proxies, the UAE signaled it was willing to break from the “old guard” consensus that had paralyzed the region.

This alignment with Israel naturally dovetailed into a stronger strategic partnership with the Trump administration and a broader conservative international order. The Abraham Accords recognized that the economic and technological future of the Gulf states was tied to innovation corridors in Jerusalem and Silicon Valley, not just the extraction of hydrocarbons. However, to fund this post-oil technocratic vision including massive artificial intelligence investments and economic diversification the UAE needs to liquidate its oil assets at maximum volume before global demand peaks.

The Accords isolated the clerical regime in Iran and implicitly challenged Riyadh’s cautious, consensus-heavy approach to regional diplomacy. Economist John Sfakianakis notes that the UAE’s exit from OPEC places it “fully aligned” with the U.S. and on a trajectory toward a broader normalization with Israel, a posture distinct from Saudi Arabia’s hesitation. In a conservative view, the OPEC exit is the economic corollary of the Abraham Accords: a declaration of independence from failed multilateral establishments in favor of bilateral, interest-driven sovereign partnerships.

The Crucible of the Iran Conflict

If economic constraints were the gunpowder, the recent U.S.-Iran conflict and the subsequent Strait of Hormuz crisis were the match that lit this geopolitical fuse. When Iran launched thousands of drones and missiles at the UAE, killing civilians and damaging infrastructure, Abu Dhabi expected a robust, unified military response from its Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) partners to reopen the strategic chokepoint blocked by Tehran.

That unified front never materialized. Instead, Saudi Arabia pushed for a more diplomatic, restrained approach, leaving the UAE to bear the brunt of Iranian aggression. This perceived failure of collective security, which the UAE’s diplomatic adviser Anwar Gargash described as the GCC’s “weakest” stance historically, broke the camel’s back. The UAE realized that the multilateral frameworks whether the GCC or OPEC that were supposed to protect Gulf interests were incapable of decisively countering the Iranian threat.

From a conservative security perspective, the UAE’s decision is a rational response to a security dilemma. If OPEC is functionally led by a Saudi Arabia that refuses to physically secure the waterways through which the oil must flow, why should the UAE constrain its output to support that bloc’s pricing strategy? The calculus became simple: leave OPEC, increase production to fund your own defense, and deepen bilateral security ties with Washington and Jerusalem—partners that proved willing to directly confront Tehran’s aggression.

The Dawn of a Volatile but Freer Market

Critics warn that the UAE’s exit weakens OPEC’s ability to stabilize markets. But for conservatives who champion free markets, the “stability” provided by a cartel is an artificial suppression of true price discovery. The market turmoil predicted by detractors needs to be contextualized; the primary driver of oil price spikes has been the Iran conflict and Hormuz closure, not the UAE’s production policy.

In the long run, the exit promises to erode the influence of a monopoly that once held the West hostage, as during the 1973 embargo. A structurally weaker OPEC, deprived of its third-largest producer, will be less capable of collectively punishing consumers. The UAE intends to ramp production to 5 million bpd, an influx of supply that provides a much-needed counterweight to geopolitical risk premiums. President Trump rightly hailed the move as a mechanism to lower energy costs, a sentiment aligning perfectly with a domestic energy agenda focused on abundance and consumer relief.

The UAE’s exit from OPEC is a resounding victory for the forces of sovereignty and market realism over the decaying pillars of a managed economy. It proves that the Abraham Accords have spawned a new strategic axis that views economic liberalization and security assertiveness as two sides of the same coin. By discarding the quota shackles worn in deference to Saudi Arabia, the UAE has not just recast the Middle East; it has set a course toward a future where prosperity is dictated by capability and courage, not by cartels and compromise.

#UAE #OPEC #AbrahamAccords #Iran #MiddleEast

4/30/26

National Guard Military Police Battalion Deploys in Support of Operation Epic Fury

 


National Guard Military Police Battalion Deploys in Support of Operation Epic Fury

How UAE Leaving OPEC Could Recast the Middle East

 


How UAE Leaving OPEC Could Recast the Middle East

Iranian Economy Descends Into a Death Spiral



Iranian Economy Descends Into a Death Spiral

RANT AND OPINION ABOUT TRUMP HATERS. THEY HAVE NO CASE

 


RANT AND OPINION ABOUT TRUMP HATERS. THEY HAVE NO CASE

Am I Stupid Or What:

Can Someone Help Me Understand Democrats/Trump Haters? And What Child Did Molest? He didn't shower with his Daughter Like Biden Did ... I Had To Explain To A Unrealistic FB Friend That Asked How Could I Support Him. Who Am I supposed To Support, A Democrat? They Can't Govern. All They Want Is Your Money and Power. BTW, What Have Democrats Done For Black People? [Yeah, That's What I Thought - NOTHING] Why is Good Bad and Bad Is Good?

I won't mention her name, but she will see it ...

Interest rates are down now, we are actually selling oil as opposed to begging for it and draining the strategic oil reserve, we rounded up a Dictator sending fentanyl from Venezuela, no drug boats are coming from Venezuela, we are stopping a 47 year old problem that has disrupted the Middle East and killed Americans left and right, we have better trade deals, crime is down, the border is secure ... ZERO Illegals have crossed the border in the past 12 months, fraud has been exposed, Military recruiting us at record highs, and PEACE THROUGH STRENGTH. That started with REAGAN, not Trump.

When Trump left office in 2021, his last two months in office we did not ship a single barrel of oil from overseas. That was the first in 70 years. A d he didn't touch the strategic oil reserve. He stocked ii up when oil was in the $40's ... then Biden gave it away to China.

When Trump left office in 2021 Inflation was 1.5%. When Biden got in office after stealing the election Inflation hit 9% like the Carter years. Mortgage rates were 2.9%. They hit 7.9% under Biden. Biden pushed that stupid EV and Solar crap and Ford lost money on every EV they sold. Also, all those Solar Panel companies have gone belly-up. And the homeowners that signed those Solar panel contracts STILL have to pay. Trump and Musk found how out money has been wasted with USAID. Oh, I forgot, Trump 45 got us the Abraham Accords as in Peace In The Middle East. For the first time in 70+ years a commercially plane left Israel and landed in the UAE.

What else ya wanna know???

#Trump #Reagan #Economy #MiddleEast #AbrahamAccords

4/27/26

Threats Made By Celebrities and Promoted By or Fluffed By The Media


Threats Made By Celebrities and Promoted By or Fluffed By The Media

It is a peculiar and deeply troubling hallmark of our age that the rhetoric directed at a sitting President of the United States has descended from political opposition into a dark liturgy of violent fantasy. From a conservative perspective, this is not a matter of mere partisan sensitivity or a misinterpretation of artistic expression. It is a calculated, systemic corrosion of the norms that protect the republic, executed by a class of cultural elites who operate with absolute impunity. We have moved beyond the era of sharp political satire into a montage of explicit threats, assassination chic, and bloodlust imagery that would have ended careers and triggered Secret Service investigations in any previous administration. That it has become normalized is a scathing indictment of the media and entertainment industry’s partisan rot.

To understand the severity of the moment, one must view the montage in its entirety—a rolling, horrifying tape that does not feature the rantings of obscure internet trolls, but the words and images broadcast by multimillionaire celebrities and media figures with massive platforms. We are not dealing with dog whistles; we are dealing with air horns.

The visual catalogue of violence began almost immediately and has never ceased. We witnessed a so-called comedian, Kathy Griffin, posing with a grotesque, bloodied prop meant to represent the severed head of President Donald J. Trump. This was not a throwaway comment made in the heat of a stand-up routine; it was a premeditated, high-production photo shoot designed to shock. The conservative response was not one of confusion about the "joke" it was a demand for decency. The Left’s defense was that she was a provocateur, that it was art. But if conservatism teaches us anything, it is that civilization relies on unspoken lines of moral conduct. When a cultural figure not only crosses that line but dances over it with a simulated decapitation, and is then subsequently embraced on a rehabilitation tour by the very media that purports to condemn violence, the message is clear: the rules do not apply when the target is a Republican president.

The montage continues, moving from simulated gore to the explicit celebration of bodily harm. In a now-infamous video for the Public Theater in New York, a production of *Julius Caesar* depicted the assassination of a president unmistakably modeled on Trump—a bloated, blond-haired demagogue in a suit with a long red tie, violently stabbed to death on the Senate floor by his allies. The artistic merit of Shakespeare was merely a fig leaf; the production’s intent was voyeuristic, allowing a liberal audience to cathartically experience the murder of a sitting leader they loathed. To conservatives, this was not distant art imitating life; it was an elite cultural institution in Manhattan literally staging a dress rehearsal for political violence. It offered a vector for a fantasy, normalizing the concept of the “tyrannicide” to a populace that is constantly told by the media that the current president is an existential threat to humanity.

This theatrical violence was seamlessly integrated into the lyrical content of the music industry. Conservative commentators watched in disbelief as a constellation of pop stars and rappers, arbiters of youth culture, issued directives that went far beyond dissent. Eminem, an artist with an unparalleled reach, gave a freestyle at an awards show where he flatly stated his audience must choose between the president and him, framing the election as a choice of loyalty to the resistance. This was mild compared to others. Rap artists from Snoop Dogg, who pointed a toy gun at a clown dressed as Trump in a music video, to the routine lyrical allusions to blowing up the White House or harming the president, saturated the atmosphere. They were repeatedly dismissed as "just metaphors" or "street poetry." But imagine, for a moment, a conservative country music star filming a video simulating the shooting of a Democratic president. The Secret Service would be at their door before the final edit was rendered. The Recording Academy would ban them for life. The double standard is not a theory; it is the defining structural reality of our cultural discourse.

The media, which ought to serve as a dam against the flood of incitement, instead opened the sluice gates. The montage of threats is not solely visual; it is verbalized constantly by the intellectual class on prime-time television. We saw a senior editor at *Newsweek* publicly opine online that the president should be executed for treason before the 2020 election. Not impeached. Not criticized. Executed. We saw commentators like MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell traffic in violent Russian-novel metaphors, describing the president’s associates as being on a path to a "firing wall." The most egregious and systematic media threats, however, have often been camouflaged as concern-trolling. Endless segments on cable news have featured "experts" and "former intelligence officials" darkly musing about invoking the 25th Amendment—a soft coup or speculating with faux-gravity about the military refusing to obey orders. This isn't reporting; it is a wish-fulfillment fan-fiction of the president’s removal, crafted by an upper-crust elite that has decided the democratic will of the people is a temporary error to be corrected by any institutional means necessary, including the whispered fantasy of a forced removal.

For the conservative observer, the most chilling chapter in this montage is the direct threat made against the president’s child. British actor Peter Fonda, the scion of a Hollywood dynasty, took to social media not to discuss policy but to direct his malice toward a child. He tweeted, in a now-infamous, depraved rant, that Barron Trump should "be taken from his mother and put in a cage with pedophiles." The implication of violence and sexual assault against a minor was stomach-turning. The Secret Service initiated a standard inquiry, but the cultural consequence was void. Fonda's career did not combust. The systemic message sent by this incident is perhaps the most damning fact of the entire montage: in the eyes of the political left, there is no sanctity. No one is off-limits. If you wear the Trump name, even a young boy is fair game for the most sadistic death threats and sexualized violence the mind can conjure.

The common defense from the Left is that "conservatives do it too," an argument that collapses under the slightest scrutiny of scale, platform, and institutional legitimacy. Critics will haul out an obscure blogger or a street-corner protester with a crude sign, trying to equate that with the star of a network sitcom or a Pulitzer Prize-winning newsroom’s social media output. The false equivalency is a moral cop-out. When a random individual makes a vile statement, society has the antibodies to reject it. When the most powerful culture-shapers in the world celebrities, lead anchors, entertainment institutions use their paid platforms to simulate, advocate, or dream about the assassination of a sitting president, they are mass-producing a permission structure for violence.

This has real-world consequences that conservatives viscerally understand, grounded in a belief in human fallenness and the reality of evil. Ideas have legs. Rhetoric has victims. The montage of threats did not stay on the screen; it eventually walked off the stage and into reality. The near-assassination of President Trump in Pennsylvania was the moment the abstract bloodlust became literal bloodshed. A bullet tore through the air, and a heroic firefighter lost his life. In the immediate aftermath, blue-checkmark journalists and celebrities were caught deleting their tweets that had wished for exactly this scenario—proving they knew all along that their words were not mere jokes, but had a grim, directing power. The "joke" of the severed head, the "art" of the Shakespearean stabbing, the casual talk of execution—it culminates in a 20-year-old thinking history requires him to pull the trigger. The conservative movement understands that this was not an isolated madman, but a product of an ecosystem that spent years dehumanizing a target as a Nazi, a dictator, and an unredeemable monster whose death would be a public service.

Ultimately, this montage is not an indictment of a single party’s anger, but of a cultural rot specific to a progressive elite that identifies itself entirely with a monopoly on virtue. They believe their moral superiority grants them an exemption from civility. The violent rhetoric is a feature, not a bug, of a worldview that sees the battle not as political differences among neighbors, but as a cosmic war between pure good and ultimate evil. In that gnostic framework, eliminating the vessel of evil is a righteous act. Conservatism, in its truest form, rejects this dangerous spiritualization of politics. It sees the authoritarian urge in the attempt to silence and terrify a sitting president through the implied and often directly stated—threat of death. It is time for the silent majority to demand that cultural gatekeepers apply a single standard of human decency before the montage claims another victim, and the republic’s brittle uniqueness is lost to the mob for good.

#Threats #Celebrities #Media #Trump #Hollywood

4 people killed, 11 others injured in Chicago weekend shootings, CPD says

 


4 people killed, 11 others injured in Chicago weekend shootings, CPD says


Crisis by Design: The Political Calculus of Hakeem Jeffries

 


Crisis by Design: The Political Calculus of Hakeem Jeffries


The Story:

For nearly two decades, the Democratic Party has undergone a fundamental transformation, not in its core ideology which has always trended toward centralized power but in its tactical approach to governance. Gone are the days of the “Happy Warrior” politics of Hubert Humphrey or even the triangulating, pragmatic liberalism of Bill Clinton. In their place stands a new archetype of Democratic leadership, cold, calculating, and utterly convinced that chaos is a ladder. In the House of Representatives, no single figure embodies this new, destructive philosophy more completely than Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.

On the surface, Jeffries presents a facade of calm competence. He is articulate, sharply dressed, and media-savvy, a stark aesthetic contrast to the gavel-banging theatrics of Nancy Pelosi or the socialist fire-and-brimstone of Bernie Sanders. This surface serenity, however, is the most dangerous kind of political deception. It masks a deliberate, systematic strategy of manufactured dysfunction. Hakeem Jeffries is not a leader attempting to govern a divided conference; he is the chief architect of legislative sabotage, a man who has realized that the modern Democratic Party’s path back to power is paved not with better ideas, but with the shattered rubble of functional governance.

To understand the Jeffries strategy, one must first shed the naïve belief that his caucus is simply a collection of diverse views struggling to find consensus. It is, in fact, a disciplined machine designed to obstruct. Since assuming the role of Minority Leader, Jeffries has perfected the art of strategic duplicity. Publicly, he delivers somber speeches about the need for “bipartisanship” and “putting people over politics.” Privately, his whip operation enforces a monolithic voting bloc designed to prevent even the most commonsense conservative legislation from receiving a handful of Democratic votes, thereby denying the majority any claim to a mandate.

Consider the repeated debt ceiling and appropriations dramas that have punctuated the 118th Congress. A responsible opposition party, historically, uses these moments to extract modest concessions while ensuring the full faith and credit of the United States is never placed in real jeopardy. Hakeem Jeffries sees these moments not as governing realities, but as fundraising opportunities and messaging coups. He runs a blackmail operation, not a legislative caucus. The instruction is simple: withhold every single Democratic vote from any rule or manager’s amendment, force the GOP to pass everything on a purely partisan basis, and then when the inevitable fracturing of the narrow Republican majority causes a stall point a finger and scream “chaos in the House.”

It is a cynical jiu-jitsu that relies entirely on a compliant media apparatus. When conservative hardliners hold out for fiscal sanity, it is framed as “extremism” and a “civil war.” When Jeffries enforces a unified blockade against a border security bill or an Israel aid package, it is framed as a principled stand. The press corps, largely staffed by activists who see Jeffries as a stylistic upgrade, rarely interrogates the paradox: How can the leader of the minority simultaneously claim the majority is dangerously incompetent while actively engaging in the legislative sabotage that creates that incompetence? The answer is that dysfunction is the product. The goal of the Congressional Democratic leadership is to make the very concept of a functioning conservative government seem impossible to the low-information voter.

This strategy extends far beyond the budget. The border crisis a humanitarian and national security catastrophe of historic proportions provides the most glaring example of the Jeffries doctrine of arson dressed as firefighting. When record-shattering numbers of illegal crossings overwhelmed the system, the House GOP passed H.R. 2, the strongest border enforcement bill to clear a chamber in a generation. Hakeem Jeffries called it “draconian.” He and his leadership team voted in lockstep against it. When the crisis deepened and the political pressure became unbearable, the Senate negotiated a “bipartisan” border deal. Jeffries immediately dismissed it as dead on arrival in the House, leading the charge from the left flank even before the text was fully dry. He demands the border be “fixed” while ensuring every tool required to fix it is denied. Why? Because an orderly border removes a potent cudgel to beat Republicans over the head with in suburban swing districts. Hakeem Jeffries needs the border to bleed so his candidates can win. It is the politics of human suffering, coolly calculated for electoral gain.

The collapse of the traditional Democratic moderate is the essential ingredient in Jeffries’s ascent. During the Pelosi era, leadership occasionally threw a bone to vulnerable members, allowing them to vote for military construction or against the most unhinged environmental regulations to protect their seats. Jeffries has abolished that courtesy. His leadership style is totalitarian in its uniformity. He has managed to muzzle the “Squad” without ever publicly rebuking them, while simultaneously dragging the remaining moderate Democrats leftward by threatening primary purges. The result is a caucus that presents no alternative vision. They are not for a different tax plan; they are for an end to the fossil fuel industry. They are not for reforming policing; they are for defunding it. They are not for securing the border; they are for decriminalizing illegal entry.

When Republicans attempt to address these radical positions through legislation that also funds the troops or feeds hungry children, Jeffries weaponizes the poison pill narrative. He packages extreme cultural demands into must-pass bills—demanding abortion on demand up to birth in military spending bills, for example, or tying veterans’ benefits to radical climate mandates—and then cries victim when Republicans reject the blackmail. It is a legislative psychosis designed to blur the lines of responsibility. The average American sees a government shutdown looming and blames “both sides,” not realizing that one side is asking for a clean funding bill while the other is demanding the systematic dismantling of biological reality and border sovereignty.

The conservative perspective understands that conflict in a constitutional republic is a feature, not a bug. The friction between the branches and the parties, the delay, the gridlock—this was the design of the founders to prevent tyranny. But Jeffries represents something far more insidious than gridlock. He represents the active, revolutionary dismantling of the legislative branch from the inside. By refusing to allow the House to function as a deliberative body, by converting the minority party’s role from that of a loyal opposition into an agent of total obstruction, he hollows out the institution. He accelerates the transfer of power to the executive branch and the administrative state. If Congress cannot fund the government or pass a border bill because the minority leader views a broken system as his best campaign ad, then the presidency, regardless of who holds it, will eventually assume the power to act unilaterally. For the Left, which controls the permanent bureaucracy, that is a feature, not a bug. Jeffries is effectively the Capitol Hill liaison to the deep state, ensuring legislative paralysis paves the way for executive rule.

The most tragic aspect of this charade is the betrayal of the very communities Jeffries purports to represent. The minorities and working-class constituents in his Brooklyn district and across the country are the ones who suffer most acutely from the crises he manufactures. Illegal immigration depresses wages for blue-collar workers and floods public services. Soft-on-crime policies—which Jeffries has championed despite his hawkish rhetoric—turn urban neighborhoods into war zones. An inflationary economy, supercharged by the very spending bills he refuses to negotiate on, destroys the savings of the elderly on fixed incomes. If a Republican leader were caught deliberately sabotaging a legislative fix to prolong a crisis that kills thousands of Americans via fentanyl poisoning, it would be the lead story on every evening news broadcast for a month. When Jeffries does it, it’s just Tuesday.

The 2024 election cycle and the impending 2025 fiscal battles will determine whether this strategy of arson receives its ultimate reward. Hakeem Jeffries is wagering that the American people are too ill-informed to notice the wiring behind the stage. He is betting that his curated TikTok clips and Sunday show platitudes can cover the stench of the institutional rot he is spreading. His ambition is no secret; he does not want to be a legislative craftsman—he wants to be Speaker. But a speaker who wins the gavel not by presenting a governing agenda, but by destroying the ability of the opposition to govern, inherits a wasteland he cannot manage.

Conservatives must see the Jeffries era for what it is: a psychological operation against the American experiment in self-governance. The Republican leadership must stop walking into the traps he sets, refusing to negotiate with hostage-takers who hold the American people’s security as collateral. We must expose the mechanism of the crisis: a Democratic leader who votes against every attempt to enforce the law, who whips against every effort to balance the budget, and who then blames the resulting disaster on the absence of a “spirit of bipartisanship.”

Hakeem Jeffries is not a legislator; he is a political mortician, measuring the body of the House of Representatives for a casket. He is the architect of a dysfunction so profound that it is no longer distinguishable from malice. It is the duty of the conservative movement to bypass the flattering media profiles, pull back the curtain, and reveal the truth: that the chaos in Washington is not an accident of circumstance. It is an expertly crafted strategy, and in Hakeem Jeffries, the Democratic Party has found its most dangerous and duplicitous engineer yet.

#Whitehouse #Trump #WhitehouseBallRoom #WhitehouseCorrespondantsDinner

The Architect of Dysfunction: Hakeem Jeffries and the Democrats’ Manufactured Crises



The Architect of Dysfunction: Hakeem Jeffries and the Democrats’ Manufactured Crises

In the theater of American politics, few figures embody the modern progressive paradox as completely as House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. He presents himself with the calm, measured cadence of a corporate litigator, a stark aesthetic departure from the bombastic style of the “Squad” members he now leads. Yet, beneath the polished veneer lies an ideological rigidity that places him firmly on the leftward fringe of the American spectrum. Analysis of his voting record, fiscal brinkmanship, and rhetorical strategy reveals not a moderate broker, but an architect of chaos—a leader expertly manufacturing crises to expand government control, most recently exemplified in the furor over expiring healthcare subsidies and the orchestrated paralysis over border enforcement funding.

To understand the aggressive nature of Jeffries’s progressive vision, one must look at the current healthcare panic he is attempting to foment. As the enhanced subsidies of the Affordable Care Act (ACA) face expiration, Jeffries and the Democratic caucus have sounded the alarm, warning of a looming “healthcare apocalypse” with sky-high premiums. In a masterclass of political jiu-jitsu, they are blaming Republicans for the predictable collapse of a law that was fundamentally flawed from its inception. The historical record, however, is damningly clear: The Affordable Care Act was a strictly partisan invention. Not a single Republican in the House or Senate voted for its passage. It was forced through on a razor-thin partisan margin via a reconciliation process that broke traditional norms of governance. It is the Democrats’ law, built on their promises, and crashing on their actuarial tables.

Representative Jeffries’s current demand is that Republicans bail out this failing framework with another massive infusion of federal cash. From a conservative perspective, this is not a "fix"; it is a shakedown. The subsidies in question were not a permanent fixture of the law; they were a temporary, two-year expansion jammed into the American Rescue Plan—a massive spending bill that itself received zero Republican votes. Jeffries now defines the expiration of a temporary Democrat-passed subsidy as a Republican “cut.” This is linguistic manipulation of the highest order, a rhetorical strong-arm tactic designed to obfuscate the fact that the underlying insurance system is unaffordable without perpetual, mounting government intervention. He frames a return to the previous subsidy structure—a system that was itself bloated—as a radical deprivation of healthcare. This position isn't just a defense of a government program; it is a rigid, left-wing refusal to acknowledge market reality, insisting instead that the state must indefinitely underwrite a collapsing model. It is the politics of a hostage-taker, using the anxiety of families as leverage to cement an entitlement that cannot be sustained without profound economic disruption.

This leads directly to the second front of Jeffries’s political war: the deliberate sabotage of government funding. We are witnessing a synchronized, strategic shutdown dance, and Hakeem Jeffries is the choreographer. The common narrative in a budget impasse usually involves esoteric spending levels, but the current battlefield is distinct and reveals the true, radical open-borders inclination of the Democratic leadership. The sticking point is not merely accounting; it is border security and the enforcement of immigration law.

To secure the votes necessary to keep the government’s lights on, House Democrats are demanding that funding legislation effectively dismantle the successful border security apparatus rebuilt by the current administration. Under the previous Biden-Harris regime—in which Jeffries served as a chief legislative enabler—Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and Customs and Border Protection (CBP) were strategically defanged. The policy of “catch and release” was not a bug but a feature, reversing the Trump-era “Remain in Mexico” protocols that had successfully disincentivized illegal crossings. Deportation policy was narrowed to a degree that it became functionally symbolic. The result was a historic, catastrophic surge of millions of illegal crossings, a humanitarian crisis at the border, and a national security catastrophe.

Now, facing a funding deadline, Jeffries is demanding a return to that exact failed model. The Democratic negotiating position is, at its core, a demand to tie the hands of law enforcement. They are insisting that the Department of Homeland Security revert to the Biden-era prosecutorial discretion memos, effectively stopping the deportation of millions who violated federal immigration law and mandating a return to the policies that led to the worst border crisis in American history.

Jeffries wraps this demand in sanitized language, claiming he is fighting for “due process” or “human dignity.” But conservative analysis reveals this for what it is: a radical, ideology-driven pursuit of a porous border. Preventing deportation is not about protecting a finite group of DREAMers; it is about preventing the enforcement of U.S. law against the vast population of recent crossers. It is an ideological obsession that exposes the Democratic Party’s transformation under his leadership. Where once the party sought to balance security with compassion, they now seek to completely subjugate the former to the latter. President Trump’s team is right to refuse this extortion. To revert to the Biden deportation policies would be to forfeit national sovereignty and signal that the chaos of the previous four years is an acceptable status quo. Jeffries knows this is a red line for the administration and for a majority of the American people who support mass deportations of illegal aliens. By injecting this poison pill into funding bills, he is not trying to govern; he is trying to force a shutdown that he believes he can pin on Republicans.

The synthesis of these two crises—healthcare and the border paints a clear picture of Jeffries’s strategy, one that has evolved far beyond the Obama-era "hope and change" liberalism into a hardened, left-wing procedural extremism. He is weaponizing the legislative process to achieve policy outcomes that could not and would not ever pass as standalone bills in this divided government.

To a conservative, the House Minority Leader’s outlook is defined by a glaring hypocrisy. He decries Republican governance as extreme while requiring multi-trillion-dollar bailouts for progressive shell games. He has flipped the meaning of a government shutdown on its head. In a normal universe, a shutdown occurs when the legislative majority fails to pass a budget. In Jeffries’s universe, a shutdown occurs when the minority party refuses to provide the votes to pass a majority budget unless their extreme, defunding-ICE-style agenda is adopted. It is a form of structural extortion only possible because the narrow House majority requires near-unanimity. He is not a legislator in this context; he is a saboteur.

His most extreme position, however, may be his transparent attempt to rewrite the moral culpability for his party’s legislative failures. For fifteen years, Republicans have warned that the Affordable Care Act’s centralized controls, individual mandate penalties, and subsidy scheme were fiscally unsustainable and actuarially unsound. They were condemned as heartless for those warnings. Now that the math is collapsing precisely as predicted, Jeffries looks the nation in the eye and claims the Republicans are responsible for the wreckage of a car they never built, never bought, and explicitly warned would break down. Defining the refusal to throw another trillion dollars into an unaccountable federal money pit as a “healthcare crisis created by Republicans” is a case study in the distorted logic of a man driven not by facts, but by a passionate, left-wing dogmatism. It is the political equivalent of arson disguised as firefighting.

In Hakeem Jeffries, the American public sees a smooth delivery masking an unyielding commitment to a massive administrative state. He claims to be fighting “extremism,” but forcing the government into paralysis to secure open-border policies and holding health insurance markets hostage to preserve a one-party boondoggle are the tactics of a radical. For conservatives, the job is to cut through the debate club polish and expose the reality: the crises Hakeem Jeffries is shouting about are ones his own party deliberately engineered.

#HakeemJeffries #Congress #Lies #Democrats

The Case For The Whitehouse Ballroom

 


The Case For The Whitehouse Ballroom

The ballroom will have bullet proof windows. It will have a drone proof roof. It will basically be a Military Installations. It is to be built with PRIVATE FUNDS. How can any American be against it ... unless you have Trump Derangement Syndrome...IT WOULD BE MORE SECURE!

#Ballroom #Whitehouse #WhitehouseBallroom #WhitehouseCorrespondentsDinner


The Case for the White House Ballroom: A Fortress for American History

In the pantheon of American architecture, few structures carry the weight of symbolism like the White House. It is not merely a residence; it is the living, breathing headquarters of the free world. It is where Abraham Lincoln paced the halls during the Civil War, where Ronald Reagan restored our national confidence, and where Donald J. Trump, against all odds, fought back the machinery of the administrative state. Now, a proposal has emerged that perfectly marries the practical demands of modern security with the aesthetic grandeur befitting a great civilization: the construction of a White House Ballroom, built with private funds, engineered to be a military-grade secure facility, complete with bulletproof windows and a drone-proof roof.

To oppose this endeavor is not a matter of reasonable political disagreement. It is, as the proposition states, a symptom of a disorder—a visceral, irrational Trump Derangement Syndrome (TDS) that prioritizes resistance over reason. Let’s be clear: if a structure can be built solely through the generosity of private donors, at no cost to the taxpayer, while simultaneously making the President and visiting dignitaries exponentially safer, the only logical objection is that it carries the name "Trump."

The Generosity of Private Funding vs. The Swamp’s Addiction to Spending

First, we must address the fiscal component, which should shame every "deficit hawk" Democrat and establishment Republican who suddenly finds objections. The proposal specifies that this ballroom will be constructed entirely with private funds. In an era where the national debt has spiraled past $34 trillion, where every government project seems to come with a 300% cost overrun and a decade of delays, a major infrastructure upgrade that costs the treasury zero dollars is a unicorn.

Conservatism values stewardship. It is not conservative to say, "No, we don't want a generous benefactor to donate a world-class secure facility to the seat of government." That is the language of the spiteful radical. We have seen celebrities and leftist billionaires fund everything from climate change vanity projects to legal defense funds for rioters. Yet when patriots offer to fortify the People’s House, ensuring that a piece of American heritage is built without burdening the single mother in Ohio or the small business owner in Texas, the left screams "tacky" or "monarchical."

This is not an episode of Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous; this is a strategic augmentation of a national security asset that just so happens to be funded by the voluntary goodwill of American citizens rather than the coercive power of the IRS. Any conservative worth their salt should be standing and applauding.

Beyond Aesthetics: The Logic of a Military-Grade Facility

The critics will inevitably conjure images of gold-plated toilets. They will scoff at the word "ballroom," imagining Louis XIV fantasies. But strip away the nomenclature and look at the specifications: bulletproof windows, a drone-proof roof, a structure that is "basically a military installation." At this point, the ballroom is no longer merely a room for receiving guests; it is a hardened safe room, a secure strategic asset located on the most targeted 18 acres on the planet.

The security environment is not what it was in 1920 or even 1990. We live in the age of commercially available drones capable of carrying grenades—a tactic we see tragically validated on battlefields from Ukraine to the Middle East. The current White House complex, for all its Secret Service protection, is a historic building retrofitted with modern security. It is a patchwork. A purpose-built structure designed to withstand aerial and ballistic threats on the grounds of the White House isn’t an extravagance; it’s a necessity.

The president’s critics often hyperventilate about "security breaches," yet here is a concrete proposal to eliminate vast categories of risk. Bulletproof windows facing the South Lawn don’t just darken a room; they stop a high-powered rifle round from a mile away. A drone-proof roof doesn’t just keep the rain out; it neutralizes the swarm technology that current counter-UAS systems struggle to intercept. To argue against hardening a target that houses the presidency because you don’t like the aesthetic name "ballroom" is the height of intellectual bankruptcy. It’s architectural nihilism driven by personal animus.

The Historical and Cultural Mandate

Detractors will also ask, "Why a ballroom? Why not just a bunker?" Because America is not a nation that cowers. A nation that converts its executive mansion purely into a brutalist bunker without spaces for elegance, diplomacy, and celebration has surrendered its spirit. The White House is, and always has been, a primary tool of American soft power. The State Dinner is not a party; it is a chessboard. The reception of foreign dignitaries in an aesthetically grand, physically impenetrable room sends a message to allies and adversaries alike: the American presidency is secure, stable, and unshakeable.

President Trump understands the psychology of strength better than any president since Reagan. To host a head of state beneath a roof that can tank a drone strike while surrounded by the opulence of American generosity isn’t a contradiction. It is the perfect synthesis of "speak softly and carry a big stick," or in this case, "dine beautifully and sit under a titanium-reinforced canopy." It tells the world that we can protect our leaders and our civilization simultaneously.

The left’s reaction to this is predictable. They view any display of national confidence as "fascist." They want a president in a sweater, looking weak and apologetic, cowering in a basement. The Trump mindset the conservative mindset is to project power. To stand on a balcony. To hold a magnificent event in a room that just happens to be an anti-ballistic fortress. It demonstrates that were we to be attacked, the party goes on. That is the American spirit.

The "TDS" Litmus Test

The final, undeniable truth of this case is the sheer transparency of the opposition. The original post frames it perfectly: "How can any American be against it ... unless you have Trump Derangement Syndrome?" This isn't rhetorical excess; it's a diagnostic criterion.

If the Obamas had proposed a "Green Energy Resilience Pavilion" funded by Hollywood and tech oligarchs a glass dome with bulletproof recycled glass and a solar-powered drone shield the media would have canonized them. There would have been fawning Architectural Digest spreads titled "Fortress of Hope." We would have been told it was the natural, progressive evolution of presidential security.

But because the proposal is associated with Trump, the terms are reversed. Private money? "He’s trying to grift!" (ignoring, of course, that the money goes to a public building, not his pocket). Military grade? "He’s militarizing the White House!" (ignoring that the White House is already a military-controlled zone defended by surface-to-air missiles). Beauty and grandeur? "He’s a fascist Caesar!"

Americans who are thinking soberly see the ballroom for exactly what it is: a gift. It is a gift from a patriotic movement to a nation that deserves a chief executive who can function safely in a high-threat environment. The vitriol against it proves that the progressive left does not actually care about security, nor do they care about fiscal responsibility. They care about destroying Donald Trump. If Trump discovered the cure for cancer, they would mourn the loss of "cancer culture." If he builds a building that stops bullets, they cry that he’s poisoning the "aesthetic of vulnerability."

A Sanctuary of Strength

Let’s situate this ballroom in the broader conservative vision. We believe in strong borders; what is a drone-proof roof but an air-sovereignty border for the executive residence? We believe in the Second Amendment and the right to self-defense; what are ballistic windows but the armored right to self-defense for the First Family and its guests? We believe that private charity is superior to government compulsion; this project is the ultimate act of private altruism directed toward a public symbol.

The new White House Ballroom wouldn't just be a room full of tables and dance floors. It would be a generational statement that America can still build beautiful, impenetrable things. It is a rejection of the flimsy, stucco-box architecture of the modern strip mall, and a rejection of the vulnerability that has crept into our national security posture since the Cold War ended.

We have spent billions securing embassies abroad with blast walls and setback distances. We treat our ambassadors to fortresses. Yet critics balk at reinforcing the central hub of the executive branch? The president’s movements are already incredibly restricted for security reasons. A secure event space on the grounds expands his ability to conduct the business of freedom without having to enter the dangerous, uncertain surveillance environment of a downtown Washington, D.C., hotel.

Finally, this ballroom represents permanence. Administrations come and go, but a building like this would stand for centuries. It would forever alter the defensive layout of the White House complex for the better, long after the current personalities leave the stage. Blocking its construction in a fit of anti-Trump hysteria is tantamount to stripping the sandbags from a foxhole because you dislike the colonel who ordered them placed. When the next crisis hits, and an aerial threat closes in on the Rose Garden, the Secret Service won't be asking about the architect’s political affiliation; they’ll be praying for a drone-proof roof.

The case for the White House Ballroom is airtight. It is fiscally conservative. It is aesthetically traditional. It is strategically indispensable. The only barrier to it becoming a reality is the spiritual sickness of an opposition that would rather see the presidency remain vulnerable than let Donald Trump cement one more stone of his legacy into the foundations of the Republic. Clear eyes see this not as a monument to a man, but as a fortress for a nation. Build the ballroom.



---



THE BRITISH ARE COMING...THEY'RE HERE ALREADY!

 


'THE BRITISH ARE COMING...THEY'RE HERE ALREADY!

The King of England has landed in town. It reminds me of when I stopped in Gibralter, a British Colony next to Spain while headed to Desert Shield. They told us "You can say anything about Margaret Thatcher, but don’t say anything about the Queen."

That reminds me:

British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher

"Socialism works until you run out of other people's money." ~ The Late Great Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. Her and Reagan were good friends and both loves riding horses. She would bomb you with a quickness. She didn't play.



[When Princess Diana died there was a baby birth boom nine months later. The 'experts' said it was because hearts were broken and people wanted intimacy, so more people had sex.]

#KingCharles #Camilla #GreatBritan



It’s not every day that the King of England comes to town, but when he does, it tends to stir something deep in the souls of those who remember history, honor tradition, and understand the unbroken thread that ties the present to the past. For Americans, a visit from the British monarch is an echo of heritage, an acknowledgment that the civilization we inherited—and helped save more than once—still stands. As a veteran who once passed through Gibraltar on my way to Desert Shield, the news takes me back to a dusty outpost, a British Overseas Territory clinging to the Iberian Peninsula, where a local gave me advice I have never forgotten: “You can say anything about Margaret Thatcher, but don’t say anything about the Queen.”

At the time, the late Queen Elizabeth II sat on the throne, a quiet but formidable anchor for the free world. The warning wasn’t about political correctness; it was about reverence. In Gibraltar, that towering rock of a colony claimed by Britain since 1713, loyalty to the Crown was non-negotiable. You could critique policy, mock Parliament, grumble about No. 10 Downing Street, but the Queen was a symbol of permanence in a world of chaos—something the Left, then and now, has never truly understood. That moment also calls to mind the towering conservative figure who then presided over the United Kingdom: Margaret Thatcher, the Iron Lady, who famously declared, “Socialism works until you run out of other people’s money.” It’s a line that cuts to the bone in today’s America, where redistribution is rebranded as equity and government greed disguises itself as compassion.

Thatcher and Ronald Reagan, two shopkeepers’ children who rose to lead the free world, didn't just share a political philosophy; they shared a personal chemistry forged in conviction. Both loved riding horses, a pastime suited to people who understand that direction requires a firm hand and a steady seat. Both understood that the West wasn’t just a geographic expression but a moral inheritance worth defending—militarily, economically, and spiritually. And contrary to the caricatures painted by their detractors, neither hesitated to use force when freedom was on the line. Thatcher, as one British tabloid put it, “would bomb you with a quickness.” When Argentina’s junta invaded the Falkland Islands in 1982, plenty of transatlantic sophisticates clucked that the islands weren’t worth a war. The Iron Lady knew otherwise. She dispatched a task force 8,000 miles, reclaimed British soil, and freed a people who wished to remain British. She didn’t seek permission from the United Nations ditherers. She didn’t run a focus group. She led.

That kind of leadership is almost incomprehensible to today’s managerial class. Thatcher understood what the Left refuses to admit: civilization requires a backbone. Watching the King process through streets lined with both admirers and the professionally aggrieved, one can’t help but notice how much has been forgotten. A monarch today, even one with no executive power, stands as a rebuke to the leveling impulse of modern progressivism. A hereditary sovereign reminds the smug egalitarian that not everything can be reduced to a democratic plebiscite or an equity audit. Tradition, ritual, and continuity have claims on the human heart that no technocratic five-year plan can satisfy.

Thatcher’s quip about socialism exhausting other people’s money was funny because it was true. But it’s no longer just a quip. We are living in its burn phase. Across the West, welfare states built on the post-war consensus are groaning under demography and debt. Britain’s National Health Service, a secular religion in the UK, consumes ever more treasure while delivering worse outcomes. America’s entitlement state Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid is hurtling toward insolvency, and the solution offered by the ruling party is always more revenue, meaning more of your money. The socialists never run out of promises, just out of taxpayers. When the money runs dry, as it always does, they don’t repent; they reach for the printing press, unleashing inflation that steals silently from savers and wage earners.

Reagan famously said, “We who live in free market societies believe that growth, prosperity, and ultimately human fulfillment are created from the bottom up, not the government down.” He and Thatcher put that belief into practice. They cut taxes, deregulated, privatized failing state enterprises, and stared down public-sector unions who confused their own narrow interests with the public good. The results confounded the credentialed skeptics. Britain went from the sick man of Europe to a dynamic enterprise economy. America broke the back of stagflation and launched two decades of prosperity. The secret wasn’t clever tweaking by central planners; it was unleashing the creative energy of millions of free men and women. Both leaders understood something that today’s conservatives sometimes forget: economic freedom isn’t just about GDP growth. It’s a moral cause. It’s about the dignity of the individual, the right to keep the fruits of your labor, and the pushback against an overweening state that treats citizens as fiscal livestock.



The King’s visit also reminds us of the special relationship, that oft-invoked but rarely defined bond between the United States and the United Kingdom. To listen to some corners of modern progressive discourse, you’d think the relationship was an embarrassment, a relic of dead white males and colonial nostalgia. The Left sees it as a club of former oppressors. But that’s a profound misreading of history. The Anglo-American alliance, forged in the crucible of two world wars and tempered in the Cold War, is the most successful partnership for liberty the world has ever seen. It was Reagan and Thatcher who together sounded the alarm about Soviet expansionism when the chattering classes were still playing detente parlor games. She called the USSR “brittle” when others called it permanent, and she famously stated, “I always cheer up immensely if an attack is particularly wounding because I think, well, if they attack one personally, it means they have not a single political argument left.”

That pugnacity is sorely missed. Today’s conservatives in both countries often find themselves on the defensive, trying to preserve what remains of the Thatcher-Reagan inheritance from constant institutional assault: administrative state overreach, woke capital, the erosion of national sovereignty through transnational bodies. The king’s presence, graceful but powerless, is a reminder that tradition survives, but only if it is defended. Crowns don’t keep themselves. Neither do borders, nor free speech, nor the right to earn an honest living without the government snatching half and scolding you to be grateful for the privilege. Each generation has to rediscover and re-fight the battles its grandparents thought they’d won for good.

It’s worth pausing to consider what Thatcher’s declaration on socialism and other people’s money actually implies for a conservative vision today. It means that compassion isn’t measured by the size of a government budget. True compassion is found in a humming economy that produces jobs, in a civil society of families and churches and neighborhoods that actually care for their own, and in a safety net that catches the fallen but doesn’t ensnare the capable. The socialist model always ends the same way, from Venezuela to Zimbabwe to the declining cities of blue-state America: a few party cronies get rich, the middle class is immiserated, and the poor are kept dependent, their votes purchased with their own stolen purchasing power. Thatcher understood this viscerally, and Reagan’s anti-communism ran on the same insight: that freedom is indivisible, that you cannot have political liberty long without economic liberty.

When I stood in Gibraltar, a young soldier heading toward the sands of the Middle East, the shadow of the Rock fell over a town that was fiercely British despite being attached to Spain. The Union Jacks fluttered from balconies. The people knew they were part of something bigger than a zip code a civilization with a memory and a mission. The King’s arrival in an American city today is, in its own way, a similar reminder. He represents a thousand years of legal and cultural evolution: Magna Carta, the Glorious Revolution, the stubborn insistence that the king himself is not above the law. That inheritance, passed from Britain to America, is the bulwark against arbitrary power, whether exercised by a despot or a woke diversity commissar with the full force of administrative law.

Conservatives should take heart. The fact that a British monarch’s visit still makes front pages, that people still line the streets, that the memories of Thatcher and Reagan can still stir applause, tells us something durable. The embers of the old virtues loyalty, honor, thrift, self-reliance, patriotism—haven’t gone out. They are waiting to be fanned into flame by leaders who mean what they say, who would bomb you with a quickness if you mistake our politeness for pacifism, and who know that money borrowed from our grandchildren to fund today’s vote-buying isn’t compassion; it’s theft. The King’s visit is more than ceremony: it’s a quiet call to remember who we are, what we inherited, and what we must fight, peacefully but relentlessly, to preserve. Because socialism still doesn’t work, and someone else’s money still runs out.

#MargaretThatcher #Socialism

Backdoor Scam Money: The Child Tax Credit

 


Backdoor Scam Money: The Child Tax Credit

Remember when Biden entered office Kamala was talking constantly about increasing the Child Tax Credit. At the same time hundreds of thousands of unaccompanied minors were crossing the border with a phone number and sometimes an address. The fix was in. They created a money transfer via the Tax Code.

The Child Tax Credit is a 'REFUNDABLE CREDIT', meaning when the credit gets your tax liability to $0, the credit keeps going below $0. I did taxes for a single Mother in California with 4 kids. She made 48K one year, which isn't much for California. She paid in $1800 one year. I got her back $4800. She profited from the Child Tax Credit. Basically she got other people's money. She didn't pay in $4800. The Tax Code is actually 'Subsidizing' raising kids.

Trust me, ILLEGALS that come here know our Tax Code Better than YOU


#Taxes #ChildTaxCredit #IRS

The Child Tax Credit Racket: A Backdoor Wealth Transfer Hiding in Plain Sight

The post that sparked this discussion cuts through the usual political noise and gets straight to the heart of a fiscal scandal that the Washington establishment would prefer you ignore. It reads: “Remember when Biden entered office Kamala was talking constantly about increasing the Child Tax Credit. At the same time hundreds of thousands of unaccompanied minors were crossing the border with a phone number and sometimes an address. The fix was in. They created a money transfer via the Tax Code.

This isn’t conspiracy theorizing. It is a succinct, if blunt, summary of a policy confluence so brazen that it should have dominated every news cycle for years. Instead, the administrative state, abetted by a compliant media, normalized the wholesale transformation of the Internal Revenue Service from a revenue collection agency into a welfare distribution pipeline. From a conservative perspective, this represents not just a fiscal calamity, but a moral failure that incentivizes illegal immigration and punishes the responsible taxpayers who foot the bill.

To understand the scale of the scam, one must first dispel the progressive linguistic alchemy surrounding the term “tax credit.” In normal English, a credit reduces a liability. If you owe no liability, there is nothing to credit. But the modern tax code has twisted this logic into a pretzel. As the original post notes, the Child Tax Credit is "refundable," meaning the Internal Revenue Code treats the credit not merely as a shield against taxation, but as a sword to extract wealth from the Treasury. When that credit pushes a filer’s liability below zero, the government doesn’t stop; it simply cuts a check. This is not a tax refund. It is a direct cash grant disguised in IRS jargon.

The anecdote from the tax preparer is the empirical nail in the coffin: a single mother in California earning $48,000 a year paid $1,800 in federal income tax and received a refund check for $4,800. That is a net profit of $3,000 from the government on an income stream that, while modest for California, is firmly within the working class. She did not overpay the government. She did not loan Uncle Sam money interest-free. She was simply a conduit for redistributing other people’s money into her own pocket. The tax code is no longer funding the constitutional functions of government; it is subsidizing lifestyle choices, and in this case, specifically subsidizing children.

This “refundable credit” architecture is the vehicle for the backdoor scam. For decades, the conservative movement has warned against making the IRS an agent of social policy. Ronald Reagan’s 1986 tax reform was brilliant precisely because it severed the tax code from social engineering. Loopholes were closed, rates were flattened, and the dignity of work was respected. Fast forward to the post-Trump era, and the bipartisan consensus has drifted toward a destructive fusion of tax policy and welfare policy. When a family “profits” from filing their taxes, the social contract between the citizen and the state is shattered. The citizen is no longer a sovereign individual paying dues for shared services; they are a client of the state, and the state is the master.

The post’s central charge that this system was deliberately engineered as a magnet for illegal immigration is not just plausible; it is logically inescapable. As Vice President Kamala Harris talked endlessly about expanding the CTC, the southern border dissolved into chaos. Hundreds of thousands of unaccompanied alien minors surged across the border, often clutching a phone number and an address—not of distant relatives, but frequently of sponsors connected to a sprawling resettlement network funded directly and indirectly by the American taxpayer. The “fix was in” refers to the seamless integration of these minors into a tax apparatus designed to monetize their presence.

For an illegal alien who has overstayed a visa or crossed the border surreptitiously, the tax code is not a labyrinth to fear; it is an ATM to exploit. Through the use of Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers (ITINs), individuals who are legally barred from working in the United States and who lack a valid Social Security number can still file tax returns and claim refundable credits. The IRS has, with deliberate bureaucratic precision, walled off the enforcement arm of immigration law from its “customer service” ethos. The agency audits small business owners and middle-class conservatives with ruthless efficiency, but it steadfastly refuses to verify the legal status of individuals claiming the Additional Child Tax Credit.

The post accurately states, “ILLEGALS that come here know our Tax Code Better than YOU.” This is the brutal truth. The cartels and the trafficking networks don’t just sell a crossing; they sell a destination package that includes immediate enrollment in the shadow welfare state. They understand the statutory nuance that U.S. citizens often miss: to claim the refundable portion of the child tax credit, a child does not need to be a U.S. citizen. They need merely a valid ITIN or Social Security number. For many unaccompanied minors, the process of being paroled into the interior and placed with sponsors generates the paper trail necessary to establish just enough legal presence to trigger these credits for the adults housing them.

The result is a massive, reverse-incentive machine. Every dollar Washington distributes through refundable credits to individuals who have no legal right to be in the country is a dollar that broadcasts to the rest of the world: *come, bring children, and the IRS will become your financier.* Meanwhile, the American family that plays by the rules watches their purchasing power evaporate due to inflation, much of it driven by out-of-control government spending on these very programs. The single mother in the example, living legally and working a job, is caught in a tragic irony. Her refund might seem like a jackpot, but it is a pittance compared to the systemic looting occurring on a grand scale, and it is paid for by debt that will crush her children’s generation.

Conservatism has long understood that you cannot have open borders and a robust welfare state simultaneously. The Founders envisioned a limited republic, not a global charity. The Child Tax Credit expansion, particularly the temporary supercharging of the credit under the American Rescue Plan, was a Trojan horse for a Guaranteed Basic Income for families, regardless of citizenship. The monthly checks that went out in 2021—halting child poverty at the stroke of a pen, we were told—were functionally a universal child allowance. But that pot of money does not appear out of thin air. It is extracted from the productive economy, or borrowed against the future, weakening the dollar and mortgaging national sovereignty.

The conservative solution is not to tinker with the credit’s phase-out thresholds, as some tame reformists suggest. The solution is a fundamental decoupling of welfare and taxation. A just tax system treats all citizens equally and asks only for the revenue necessary to execute the enumerated powers of the federal government. It does not pick winners and losers. It does not inform a single mother that her neighbor’s income is now, thanks to the wisdom of the IRS, hers. The refundable Child Tax Credit should be repealed in its entirety for non-citizens, and dramatically reformed for citizens perhaps replaced by an increased standard deduction that protects the genuinely poor from paying income tax, but refuses to wire them a check simply for breathing.

To prevent the “backdoor scam money” from flowing, mandatory E-Verify must be synced with the IRS database. If you are not authorized to work, you should not receive work-derived tax credits. It is a commonsense proposition treated as radical only because the bipartisan uniparty benefits from the cheap labor and the political patronage of the newly arrived. The original post calls this what it is: a fix. The political class gets a dependent voting base and corporate America gets suppressed wages, all lubricated by the Treasury. The taxpayer is the mark.

Ultimately, the outrage captured in the viral post is the outrage of a citizen who has peeked behind the curtain of the administrative state and seen the gears turning in reverse. The Tax Code is no longer just about roads, defense, and courts. It is a vast engine of redistribution. And every time a conservative hears the left claim that illegal immigrants “pay taxes,” the proper response is the one implied by this post: they may pay, but they take out far more than they put in through these refundable scams. It’s a negative tax rate dressed up in the garb of compassion.

The fix is indeed in, and it can only be broken by a return to first principles: no citizenship, no credit. Simplify, flatten, and stop the stealing. Anything less is complicity in the greatest heist of American prosperity in history.