Tax the Fruit, Not the Branches

A Supply-Side Answer to the Deflation Warning Anthony Pompliano dropped a clear warning this week. Truflation’s real-time dashboard shows U.S. inflation at 1.21% year-over-year-down sharply, well below the Fed’s lagging 2.7% BLS print for December. He’s been saying it for months: the real threat isn’t runaway inflation. It’s deflationary pressure from weak demand, delayed purchases, and a middle class that’s pulling back. Inflation is now at 1.2% according to @truflation.For the last year I have been warning that deflation was a much bigger risk than inflation.The Federal Reserve completely screwed this up.They must cut rates aggressively now! pic.twitter.com/WZ6dpfjYS5— Anthony Pompliano 🌪…

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Trump’s Greenland Gambit

Echoes of the 1990 Budget Brinkmanship in "The Art of the Hemisphere" In the high-stakes arena of international relations, President Donald Trump's recent tariff threats against eight European nations over Greenland bear an uncanny resemblance to a pivotal domestic fiscal showdown from over three decades ago. Just as House Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkowski dangled a politically toxic proposal during the 1990 budget negotiations to force President George H.W. Bush to concede on tax hikes, Trump is wielding economic leverage to compel Europe-particularly Denmark-to yield on a strategic asset. This isn't mere bullying; it's a calculated play in what I've…

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The Hidden Factor That Could Flip the Midterms

Taxpayer Rage is the Sleeper Issue in House Races In the gritty underbelly of American politics, where voters don't just read headlines but feel the sting in their wallets at the grocery checkout, something raw and visceral is brewing. It's not the abstract chatter of economic theory or distant foreign entanglements-it's the street-level fraud you can see with your own eyes: empty daycares in Minneapolis sucking down millions in taxpayer cash for ghost kids, questionable social services handouts that reek of a rigged game, and billions vanishing into the ether while hardworking folks scrape by. This isn't some fringe conspiracy; it's…

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Third Circuit Panel Draws the Line

Why the Third Circuit's Khalil Ruling Advances Justice in Immigration Enforcement In a landscape where immigration policy has become a battlefield of legal maneuvers, ideological clashes, and administrative chaos, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals delivered a much-needed dose of procedural clarity today in Khalil v. President of the United States. This 2-1 panel opinion, penned per curiam by Judges Thomas M. Hardiman, Stephanos Bibas, and Arianna J. Freeman, isn't just a win for the Trump administration-it's a reaffirmation that the Immigration and Nationality Act (INA) means what it says: Challenges to removal proceedings belong in streamlined channels, not endless district-court…

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Beyond the Face of the Weak

A Dialog on Reason and Mercy in the Renee Good Discourse My previous column asked readers to see Renee Nicole Good not as a symbol to be weaponized, but as a vulnerable human caught in the crossfire of distorted filters and escalating chaos. Inspired by Kira Davis's "The Face of Renee Good, and What It Taught Me" (Substack, January 13, 2026), it was, at its heart, a call to shepherd the weak-those whose inner convictions bend only when external rewards shift-away from the tyranny of evil men who profit from confusion, manipulation, and outrage. Today, as the January 7 tragedy continues…

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Minnesota Throws Hail Mary at ICE

How Federal Plenary Power Dooms Minnesota's Complaint In Minneapolis, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison and the mayors of Minneapolis and St. Paul have filed an 80-page complaint against the Trump administration's Operation Metro Surge. The suit-State of Minnesota et al. v. Noem et al.-frames the deployment of roughly 2,000 DHS agents as a "federal invasion," complete with "militarized raids" and political payback. It's bold, loud, and almost certainly doomed. From an originalist standpoint, this is another round of blue-state resistance that will hit the brick wall of federal supremacy. The Constitution's text and history allocate immigration authority squarely to the national…

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The Mullahs’ Last Stand

Why This Iranian Uprising Could Change Everything The rial is in freefall, hitting record lows of 1.4–1.8 million per dollar, inflation is ravaging households at over 42% annually (with food prices surging 70–72% year-on-year), and bazaars that once propped up the regime are now shuttered in open revolt. What began as bread riots on December 28, 2025, has exploded into the most widespread, sustained challenge to the Islamic Republic since the 1979 revolution itself. Protests now rage across all 31 provinces and over 190 cities, with crowds in the hundreds of thousands battling security forces in Tehran, Mashhad, Isfahan, Tabriz, Ahvaz,…

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How Close is Too Close?

The Tueller Drill and a Split-Second Choice in Minneapolis In the cold light of a Minneapolis morning, video footage captures a stark encounter: an ICE agent stands inches from the bumper of a red Honda Pilot. The vehicle accelerates forward, and in under two seconds, shots ring out. This moment, frozen in bystander and security camera recordings, serves as a real-world echo of the Tueller Drill-a training exercise that boils down to simple math and the unforgiving reality of human reaction time. The Tueller Drill traces its origins to 1983, when Sergeant Dennis Tueller, a firearms instructor with the Salt Lake…

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Carte Blanche in the Arctic

How Venezuela’s Oil Just Sealed the Greenland Deal When whispers of Trump's renewed interest in Greenland started circulating, I posted yesterday about a potential U.S. Compact of Free Association (COFA) with the Arctic territory, modeled after deals with Pacific islands. It would offer billions in aid for defense control, easing Denmark's financial burden while securing America's northern flank. Fast-forward to today, and here we are: the White House is drafting exactly that, amid threats of outright purchase or even force. As the dust settles from the audacious Venezuela operation, Trump's second term is off to a roaring start, and Greenland looks…

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America First in Our Backyard

Donroe Rising: How Trump Restored U.S. Dominance in the Western Hemisphere In the early hours of January 3, 2026, President Donald Trump shattered years of diplomatic paralysis with a swift military operation that captured Venezuelan dictator Nicolás Maduro, extraditing him to New York to face narco-terrorism charges. This bold stroke, launched from 20 U.S. bases with 150 aircraft, not only toppled a regime long allied with adversaries like China, Russia, and Iran but also signaled a seismic shift in U.S. hemispheric policy. Contrast this with the 2009 Honduran crisis, where President Manuel Zelaya's illegal bid to rewrite the constitution for reelection…

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