It's not often life gives nations real second chances when
it comes to the big things, but in America’s case it did. My only hope is that
we don’t squander it… or to be more precise, I hope Donald Trump doesn’t
squander it. The 2026 midterms are less than a year away, that makes what he
does in the next six to eight months monumentally important.
The bottom line is, does he want to be consequential or just
well known? Julius Caesar is easily one
of the most well-known men in history, but was he really that consequential?
The truth is, no. We know more about Caesar than any other Roman not because he
changed the world, but because he was a genius of propaganda and wrote
prodigiously – and
well – about his exploits. The reality is, Caesar was just another Roman general
– albeit a great one – caught up in a century of internecine wars between men
seeking to control the Republic. Augustus, his adopted son – who is far less
well known in history – was far more consequential, having transformed the
Republic into an Empire that would arguably last another 1500 years.
Is Donald Trump going to be Caesar or Augustus? Is he going
to be a president who rearranges the deckchairs on the USS Titanic and simply
slows down her eventual collision with the iceberg or is he going to steer her through
the treacherous waters and bring her out safely on the other side?
When he won re-election last November I was certain that
after enduring 8 years of what is easily the most vitriolic abuse any American
politician had ever endured, he was going to return to Washington and
metaphorical heads were going to roll. Indeed,
he ran on the idea of destroying
the deep state.
Now, a year after the election, I’m not so sure. While I applaud most of his
moves on immigration, particularly his recent move to temporarily cease
all immigration from 3rd world countries, there are two elements
that cause concern. One is his support
for the H1B visa program. If there are jobs that can’t be filled by Americans,
then bringing in foreign workers who have the necessary skills makes sense for
keeping American industry productive.
But that’s not what’s happening. Hundreds of thousands of foreign
workers, primarily Indians, are being brought in to supplant American workers
companies would generally have to pay more to keep or hire. There
is no shortage of American STEM workers, there are merely trillion
dollar tech, consulting and other companies who simply want to bolster the
bottom line by paying foreign workers lower wages. Sadly, Trump
defends the program virtually every chance he gets. Add to that his allowing half a million students
/ spies from Communist China to remain at American universities and one
begins to wonder whose payrolls Trump’s advisors are on.
Hand in hand with allowing that treachery to go unpunished
is the fact that Trump has not put his shoulder into ensuring the passage of
the SAVE act. Indeed, New England, which is about 40% Republican, has 21 House
seats and 100%
of them are Democrat. That’s not good.
Democrats win by cheating.
Period. The
Safeguard American Voter Eligibility Act would require Voter ID, proof of U.S.
citizenship and outlaw most mail-in voting. Strong-arming Congress, which the
GOP theoretically controls, into passing SAVE would do more for saving the
Republic than almost any other thing he could do. If Trump wants to maintain
GOP control over Congress and have any chance of fixing the country, he needs
to fix the voting system now, because we know the second the SAVE act is passed
there’s an army of treacherous federal judges who will seek to derail it.
Which brings us to the last critical issue, the Judiciary. Since
2015 federal
judges across the country have acted as the rear guard for the Obama plan of
“Fundamentally transforming the United States of America” into a leftist
nirvana. From nationwide injunctions to throwing out cases to seeking to
exercise Executive power, the
federal judiciary has become untethered to the Constitution. The
traditional way such overreach is addressed is that cases make their way
through the appellate process where SCOTUS may or may not eventually rectify
the problem. But that system breaks down as a viable solution when fast
approaching elections that decide the direction of the government are
concerned. Congress must act to address this judicial overreach.
As such, Trump should work with Congress to utilize their
Article III powers to fix this. I’d
suggest two possible avenues:
1) Congress abolishes the entire judiciary below SCOTUS and
remakes it with a far more limited and constitutional judiciary.
2) Congress sets up a separate parallel federal court channel
that would deal exclusively with election and Executive power related issues so
that they can be argued in a timely fashion and be resolved long before they
become moot.
Decades from now Donald Trump is going to be
remembered. The question is, will he be
remembered as a celebrity president who attracted a great deal of attention and
simply slowed the collapse as the nation calcified into a failed dystopia
driven by big government and big spending, or is he going to be remembered as an
heroic, mythic figure who fought back the leftist tide and put America back on
firm, limited government, Constitutional footing, giving her a real opportunity
to survive another 250 years? I guess
we’ll see…

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