The Horribles

Three Democrats. Three Levels of Government. One Unmistakeable Pattern. Zohran Mamdani runs New York City with the fervor of a DSA socialist. Tim Walz steers Minnesota from the statehouse using the same ideological toolkit—the very man who nearly became Vice President of the United States. Ro Khanna advances the agenda from Congress. These aren’t fringe voices or passing embarrassments. They represent the direction the Democrat Party has deliberately chosen: rhetoric over results, grievance over governance, and a quiet but persistent hostility to the America that still gets things done. Start in the city that never sleeps—now governed by a man who…

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The Platner Class

Democrats Owned Him, Defended Him, and Are Now Scrambling to Save Themselves The Democrat Party didn’t just nominate Graham Platner. A broad coalition of prominent Democrats — the Platner Class — owned him, platformed him, and defended him through scandal after scandal. Now, as his campaign collapses under credible sexual assault allegations, they’re desperately trying to distance themselves. This isn’t principle. It’s raw power politics. They believed women only when it was convenient. Sen. John Fetterman stood apart with principle. And as I’ve documented since October 2025, this disaster was entirely predictable. No one in the Platner Class gets to slither…

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The Revolution Always Eats Its Own

How the Radicals Are Devouring the Democrat Party The images from the last week tell the story better than any poll or press release. On one side, Hakeem Jeffries beams as he congratulates the new DSA-backed members of New York’s congressional delegation — calling them public servants, union organizers, and community activists, as if they’re simply Democrats who took a different path. On the other side, the same radical energy that carried those candidates to victory turns inward almost immediately. Crowds chant “You’re next” at Jeffries himself. In San Francisco, longtime progressive stalwart Scott Wiener is surrounded, harassed, and physically intimidated…

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The Democrat Fracture

The Pieces Are Falling Right Into Republican Hands The Democrat Party is fracturing in real time, and the pieces are landing exactly where Republicans can pick them up. Last night in New York, Zohran Mamdani’s socialist machine knocked off two incumbents tied to House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries. One of the winners, Aber Kwas, is the child of illegal immigrants who won a state senate race. She has already blamed 9/11 on America’s “system of capitalism, racism, white supremacy, and Islamophobia.” Another Mamdani-backed candidate helped lead an organization whose stated goal includes the “eradication of Western civilization.” These are not fringe…

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Pride Before the Fall

MLB's Selective War on Christian Conscience Just days ago, three San Francisco Giants pitchers—Landen Roupp, JT Brubaker, and Ryan Walker—took the mound during the team's Pride Night wearing the league-issued rainbow caps. They did not protest. They did not disrupt the game. They simply added a quiet inscription in white: “Gen 9:12-16.” That passage from the Book of Genesis carries the original meaning of the rainbow. God declares to Noah: “This is the sign of the covenant that I make between me and you and every living creature that is with you, for all future generations: I have set my bow…

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The SpaceX 4,400

The Ordinary Workers Who Own the Future In the flood of viral posts and headlines after SpaceX’s blockbuster IPO, one image cuts through the noise: hardworking Americans—janitors, cooks, and welders—standing tall beside the rockets they helped build, now minted as millionaires. It’s not mere meme fodder. It’s cultural shorthand for a truth that unsettles much of the modern political and media class. SpaceX’s public debut, valued around $1.77 trillion, did far more than pad one man’s paper wealth. It created generational wealth for roughly 4,400 current and former employees—welders, cafeteria workers, technicians, launch site staff, engineers, and support personnel at every…

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California’s Engineered Election Opacity

How the Democrat Machine Protects Itself and Why Election Day Must Mean Election Day It’s Sunday, June 7 — five full days after Election Day on June 2 — and LA County officials continue counting ballots in the Los Angeles mayor’s race. Incumbent Karen Bass maintains a solid lead at roughly 34.8% and advances to the November runoff. The real contest for second place continues: Independent outsider Spencer Pratt still leads progressive Councilmember Nithya Raman by about 7,500 votes at ~78% counted. Yet each new batch of late mail and provisional ballots narrows that gap. Raman will almost certainly overtake Pratt…

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Everybody Knows a Platner

The Man Everyone Warns You About There’s a certain type of man many women — and men — have encountered in life. Charming at first. Articulate. Full of big ideas and intensity. Then the mask slips. What starts as passion turns volatile, demeaning, controlling, and sometimes worse. Unfaithful. Heavy drinking. Threats. Emotional whiplash that leaves people walking on eggshells. Graham Platner is that guy. And everybody knows a Platner. The New York Times recently published a detailed piece on Platner’s past relationships that should end any lingering illusions about his fitness for higher office. Multiple women described unsettling, toxic, and volatile…

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Henry Nowak’s Death Must Not Be in Vain

Britain’s Final Stand Henry Nowak lies dead at eighteen years old, stabbed five times by a killer who carried a protected religious blade. As he bled out on a Southampton street, Henry gasped the same words that once shook the world: “I can’t breathe.” British police officers did not rush to save him. They handcuffed him instead, believing the false racism claim of his attacker. This is not a random tragedy. It is the predictable result of a nation that has lost its way. Britain stands at a precipice. The long march of unassimilated migration has transformed its cities, strained its…

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The Skin Suits

Why Inauthenticity and Chaos Will Doom Talarico and Platner Democrats have a serious candidate selection problem heading into the 2026 midterms. In two states with some of the strongest, most distinct political cultures in America, they have advanced nominees who are profoundly mismatched with the very electorates they need to persuade. One is culturally inauthentic. The other is personally and temperamentally chaotic. These are not minor liabilities to be messaged away or spun. They are the defining characteristics of their candidacies — and they are likely fatal in Texas and Maine. James Talarico is not authentic. Graham Platner is not steady.…

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