Let’s take a look at the anatomy of the political problems facing Americans today:
The bottom line: it all goes back to the money.
You probably wouldn’t know it though if you spend any serious amount of time on social media: at this point, all of it is completely captured by the same interests:
Here they are telling you point-blank where the buck truly stops with this.
It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that the likes of Oracle and Silver Lake aren’t in the business of securing the interests of the American people. The White House deal is just another escalation of its shameless decadence and corruption.
One of the biggest ailments afflicting the public is how controlled all of their most accessible sources of information are. Reaganomic policies heralding the rise of CNN and Rush Limbaugh are a sunny walk in the park compared to the corrosive psychological horror being manifested by tech mafia stakeholders today.
You have heard the stories before, but did you know you were also paying for it all too?
“Scam” Altman wants to own everyone’s energy supplies for reasons even complete crackpots can scarcely imagine.
Over and over the Fortune exposé refers to expert anticipations of plugging this phantom of “insatiable demand for AI” that is, in fact, nowhere to be found. Critical journalists like Edward Zitron have thoroughly documented how totally AI has been a failure with enterprises in spite of the fact that they believe the hype and want it to work. The lies can only grow grander as reality continues to balk.
Zitron’s divulgence of the reality of the scam that is “AI” so intensely chaffes the behinds of the industry goons running it that they have even endeavoured to hit back with yellow journalism showcasing the classic hallmark of Russian disinformation: relativistic gaslighting to buttress moral nihilism.
Nothing is real actually, or well this guy isn’t morally infallible so we’re all equally bad anyway and you have no right to judge us, so stop asking probing questions about the AI mania suggesting it might be a load of hot air like every previous bubble was. Sincerely, journalist scumbags bankrolled by the very same people profiting from this rip-off of the American taxpayer.
But if that all sounds too far-out for you to care, here’s the wake-up call: you are paying for it. Your “AI” pioneer “Scam” Altman just inked a deal with Samsung and SK Hynix to buy a staggering 40% of the world’s supply of memory, without an ounce of notice or concern to how badly that’s going to hurt basically everyone except him and his friends.
Since all computers need DRAM in order to function, expect to pay significantly more for all of it to make up for the nonexistent production this requires. First come first serve – you should have inked the deal with them before “Scam” did if you really wanted a better deal than scraps.
Vague, insincere gestures about communist China were all it took for Trump to throw this mob another $500 billion of debt in your name.
The issue of all issues facing down Americans today is simple and singular: the means of your lives is being continually stolen from you. There are thousands of examples of this I can count if I have the time. The reason why life is no longer affordable is because all of the wealth that was once there to furnish it has been taken away.
Americans who value the dynamics of open markets and free trade in the truest sense of the term need to wake up to the fact that we do not meaningfully have a functioning market for our goods, services and money anymore.
The very premises of business itself have been hijacked and are rapidly being devolved by a cabal of delusional international gangsters who have only known the dog-eat-dog worlds of third world politics. Every notion of democracy and republicanism is pure theater to them and they show us this thinking of theirs every chance they get. We have to put a stop to it because if we don’t, no one will.
Ronald Reagan once famously said, “government is not the solution to our problems; government is the problem.” Fancy as that may have sounded in the comparably stable times of the 1980s, the reality is much more mundane: government is in a hierarchy, situated somewhere between the general public and the modern world of business and finance. It is a major aquifer of the loss of institutional credibility you see all around you.
In 2023, I got a part-time job at United Parcel Service. I made $21/hour and averaged about 4 hours/day, trying to get overtime. I enjoyed the job so much I even wrote about it later on. I bought this flame-resistant work shirt in the hopes that UPS would later train me as a welder for them; it cost me $62.80. UPS would fire me at the end of the season despite two levels of supervisors desiring to keep me because of my demonstrably strong work ethic. (As far as I could tell, it was coterminous with the 12,000 layoffs the company did to make up every single lost dollar of a shortfall in earnings projections. They were only $1 billion or so shy of their $95.6 billion target, so they made us pay the difference by firing us.)
I had hoped for so much better.
In 2025, I managed to get re-hired at UPS again, doing the same job at the same facility for the same pay rate (and even for many of the same bosses). The new contract moved the overtime threshold for part-timers like me from 4 hours to 5 hours, basically annihilating any realistic chance I had at getting any like I did two years ago.
I looked on Amazon to the order I placed for that Wrangler FR shirt, and found that it now costs an entire Benjamin.
The shirt didn’t change. It’s the same fabric, from the same company, made by the same people, in the same ways, in the same size and manner in every relevant way, shipped from just as far away as it was before.
My work didn’t change. I made the same wage, doing the same job, for the same amount of time more or less, for the same people, at the same place.
The cost of the shirt nonetheless rose by over 62%.
There’s only one variable not accounted for here: the money itself.
This is what I mean when I say we are bearing the costs of Congress’s neverending deficit spending spree. Organized crime basically takes it for granted at this point that fiscal responsibility is never coming, so it’s been priced in to every monetary policy and investment strategy for decades by now.
I just showed you beyond any reasonable doubt that this is no longer a talking point. I am of the children pundits of decades past warned would be footing the bill for this.
This is a simple matter of actions and consequences: bankers taking a realistic outlook on the need to pay for abominations like the datacenter in Abilene account for it by shifting the balance into areas of the economy that can’t resist it: consumer spending.
I am asking the American people of District 13 to send me to Congress as a bulwark against this existential threat to our ways of life.
Increasingly you are all aware by now how much the fiscal issues of yore pale in comparison to this specter haunting our nation. How can we even begin to have an honest conversation about medical care or trade balance while our coffers are being brazenly looted by gilded autocrats? We can’t, and that’s why my pledge to you is to steady the ship for the sake of what we still have while we strive to chart a nobler course back to American sovereignty.
This is a unique and unprecedented challenge that no nation has yet faced in history. The values of American liberalism are as worthless as the paper they are printed on if we haven’t the means to implement our will about them. If we wish to do right by ourselves, we can’t tolerate this state of affairs any longer.
“This is not a game of cards! This is your life and mine.”
I will not be bear-hugged by the cretins ruining things if I am elected. I wholeheartedly promise you that when my hour of truth comes, I will have that iron in me, just as my cousin Tony did when he was pressed to vote by the coal lobby in West Virginia.
I suffered plenty on my own, being a young man growing up into a country that has increasingly thrown people like me overboard. I know very well what it’s like. I won’t stand to allow any more honest, modest American people like me to be put out of their human potential before they are even born.
I still need you to answer the call to send me there. Brad Knott and his ilk are scarcely going to appreciate the nature of our problems on any timeframe soon enough to stop it. We must vote deliberately and passionately to put our interests over the interests of unelected tech finance racketeers and their phoney, pay-to-win lackeys in office.