“This case could completely wipe out the ATF’s ability to create law and subvert congress, which would be a massive win for the Second Amendment.” [more…]
The Flash Has Hit: Why the Coming Energy Catastrophe Will Blindside the Oblivious Masses
(NaturalNews) A Warning from the Flash: We Are Counting the SecondsWe are living in the flash-to-bang delay, and the silence is deafening. The recent, deliberate …
The Haber-Bosch House of Cards: Why The One Chemical Reaction that Feeds Half the World is About to Go Offline
(NaturalNews) The Most Important Chart in the World – A Glimpse at Our Civilizational PrecipiceI want you to look at a simple chart (see below). On one axis, plot…
Glenn and Pat respond to ayatollah rumor: ‘There’s no gay people in Iran, right?’
President Trump was reportedly stunned to find out that the new Iranian Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei, son of the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, may be gay.
According to sources, Trump was so shocked upon hearing the information that he even laughed when he was briefed on the development.
And Blaze Media co-founder Glenn Beck’s reaction isn’t much different.
“Did you see that the ayatollah’s son might be gay?” Glenn asks BlazeTV host Pat Gray on “The Glenn Beck Program.”
“Yes,” Gray answers, adding, “Which is impossible of course, because there’s no gay people in Iran, right?”
And according to former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, Gray is right.
“In Iran, we don’t have homosexuals,” Ahmadinejad claimed in 2007, as homosexual conduct is illegal in Iran.
“He’s not apparently really a devout Muslim, because he’s [allegedly] having sex with men, apparently,” Glenn says.
“And that might be why his dad wasn’t that excited about him taking over,” Gray chimes in, adding, “Because he’s gay.”
Want more from Glenn Beck?
To enjoy more of Glenn’s masterful storytelling, thought-provoking analysis, and uncanny ability to make sense of the chaos, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
The glenn beck program, Glenn beck, The blaze, Blazetv, Blaze news, Blaze podcasts, Blaze podcast network, Blaze media, Blaze online, Blaze originals, Ayatollah ali khamenei, New ayatollah, Iran war, Iran, Mojtaba khamenei, Pat gray, Pat gray unleashed, Conservative podcast, President trump, The trump administration
‘The Faithful’ puts focus on Bible’s female figures
Rene Echevarria broke into show business by penning episodes of “Star Trek: The Next Generation” in the ’80s.
Now, the versatile writer/director is putting his Christian faith front and center with a limited series unlike any other.
‘Play it like you don’t know you’re in the Bible.’
“The Faithful: Women of the Bible” debuts at 8 p.m. March 22 on FOX and airs the next day on Hulu. The three-part saga explores the book of Genesis through the eyes of consequential women.
Think Sarah (Minnie Driver), the wife of Abraham and mother of Isaac, whose infertility gave way to a spiritual miracle. Or Rebekah (Alexa Davalos), mother of Jacob and Esau and wife of Isaac.
In the beginning
Echevarria’s production partner, veteran TV producer Carol Mendelsohn, came up with the show’s angle.
“She knew I was a believer and loved the Bible,” Echevarria tells Align. “She’s a seeker, with a restless curiosity about spiritual matters.”
The veteran storyteller wasn’t initially convinced that the project would be the perfect fit for him.
“I was a little skeptical … [asking], ‘Is that too limiting?’” he says of the concept, adding that his initial fears were unfounded. “The experience has been great; it opened my eyes to understanding these timeless stories.”
Deeper truth
Echevarria, who has worked with James Cameron (“Dark Angel”) and Steven Spielberg (“Terra Nova”) throughout his expansive career, says he took care to balance creative license with both his faith and the source material.
“I’ve been blessed to have worked in this business a long time. mostly making up stories. interpreting stories,” he says. Not this time.
“I always have to check myself, and sometimes I wish that little piece of Scripture wasn’t there. It would be so much easier,” he says from a dramatic perspective. “I found that if I didn’t try to avoid the challenges but steer into them, … you’ll find something deeper, a deeper truth, … things that I didn’t think of.”
“The Faithful” was shot in Italy, giving the creative team access to lush landscapes, including expanses of olive trees, that created a reasonable facsimile to biblical times. The team decided early in the production to work with mostly British actors and use their vocal cadences in the process.
A new light
The son of Cuban immigrants says making “The Faithful” impacted his personal faith.
“It re-invigorated my love of Scripture. … I’m seeing things I thought I knew in a completely new light,” he says.
Some cast and crew members didn’t necessarily share his faith, which added nuance to the production.
“There’s a lot of downtime on set. So many times, people shared with me stories about why and how this project came to them at the right place in their lives,” he says. “Like people struggling with having lost a parent or having troubles with their kids.”
Others were skeptical about doing a Bible-based project.
“One actor shared that he found himself drawn in and said, ‘Yes, I want to do that,’” he recalls after the performer’s initial reluctance.
RELATED: ‘Last Days’ brings empathy to doomed Sentinel Island missionary’s story
Vertical
No ‘unearned piety’
Still, he turned having actors who didn’t know Scripture into a positive development. It made the humanity of the core players pop.
“Play it like you don’t know you’re in the Bible,” he says of his advice to the cast. That allowed them to avoid an “unearned piety” that brought the figures down to earth. “It’s just ordinary people in extraordinary circumstances.”
Echevarria wouldn’t mind telling more tales from the “Faithful” perspective. He cites the book of Ruth and the Samaritan woman at the well as stories ripe for future “Faithful” installments. That’s assuming viewers flock to the show, set to wrap on Easter Sunday.
“That’s my fondest hope, that the show finds an audience,” he says. Those chances are better than ever given the current pop culture climate. Shows like “The Chosen” and “House of David” have connected with Christians the world over, and the first part of Mel Gibson’s “The Resurrection of the Christ” series could be one of 2027’s biggest movie events.
“There’s a hunger out there for this kind of storytelling,” he says. “They’re resonating. People are taking notice.”
And he hasn’t forgotten how he entered show business several decades ago. He dreams of rejoining the “Star Trek” universe after penning 30-plus episodes across “The Next Generation” and “Deep Space Nine.” He’s been noodling with an idea “out of left field” to share in that franchise.
“I’m waiting for the right moment to bring it over there,” he says.
Faith, Movies, The faithful, Genesis, Women of the bible, Television, Christianity, Minnie driver, Rene echevarria, Entertainment
Friday LIVE: Israel Vows No More Strikes On Iranian Energy Assets After Trump Rebuke! Netanyahu Says Iran Can NO LONGER Enrich Uranium, Declares Country’s Nuclear Program & Missile Production “Destroyed!” MUST-WATCH
Tune in! We are taking YOUR calls while delivering full-spectrum coverage of breaking news and exclusive information the globalists DO NOT want you to hear!
Texas Democrats just gave Republicans a gift-wrapped hypocrisy story
After nominating James Talarico for the Senate in Texas, are Democrats now racists and misogynists?
It’s a reasonable question. Democrats chose James Talarico, a white man, over Jasmine Crockett, a black woman. That choice also collides head-on with what Democrats told the country after Kamala Harris lost the presidency: that racism and misogyny decided the outcome.
Democrats can’t keep changing the rules depending on who wins.
In Texas’ recent Democratic Senate primary, Talarico, a member of the Texas House since 2018, faced Crockett, a two-term member of Congress from Texas’ 30th District. On paper, Crockett looked like the stronger Democrat brand: a young, outspoken black woman with far left-wing views and national visibility.
Yet Talarico won handily, 53% to 45%, after a primary season marked by intraparty drama — including fights that centered on race.
If identity politics commands the party, the result looks odd. Even sympathetic Democratic observers described the two candidates as ideologically similar. MSNBC analyst John Heilemann said Talarico is “not a moderate” and that he and Crockett held “basically the same positions on almost every issue.” In other words, voters didn’t choose a centrist over a firebrand. They chose one firebrand over another — and they chose the white male.
Democrats will reply that the answer is “electability.” They’ll say Talarico gives them a better shot in November. Maybe that’s what many primary voters believed. But Democrats have spent years insisting that “electability” talk is often a cover for bias, a way to push women and minorities aside while keeping the old hierarchies intact.
That’s why the question won’t go away.
Democrats routinely portray themselves as the party most attuned to race and sex. The 2024 numbers underline that self-image: Exit polls showed Harris won overwhelming support from black voters and strong support from women, including black women. Democrats treat those blocs as moral proof of the party’s mission.
They also treated Harris’ loss as moral proof of the country’s failure.
Former President Joe Biden blamed the 2024 defeat on sexism and racism, saying voters “went the sexist route” and wouldn’t accept “a woman of mixed race.” When candidates for DNC chairman were asked whether racism and misogyny played a role in Harris’ defeat, all eight raised their hands. David Axelrod said bluntly that the campaign included appeals to racism and that “anybody” who thinks bias didn’t affect the outcome is wrong.
Rank-and-file Democrats echoed the claim. NBC News’ post-election interviews featured Democrat voters attributing Harris’ loss to the country’s unwillingness to elect a woman, with race layered on top. “Regardless of race,” one black Democrat from Pittsburgh said, “they didn’t want her to win.”
RELATED: James Talarico found a verse — and twisted the meaning
Mark Felix/Bloomberg/Getty Images
So Democrats have made this argument, loudly and repeatedly: When a woman loses at the top of the ticket, the country’s sexism and racism bear much of the blame.
Then Texas Democrats faced their own test. They could nominate the black woman — especially in a race where ideology wasn’t the separating line — and they didn’t.
Democrats might point out that Harris flamed out early in the crowded 2020 presidential primary and that the party still elevated her to vice president and then the 2024 nomination. That’s true. But that history cuts both ways. It suggests Democrats will showcase race and sex when it serves the coalition — and set it aside when it doesn’t.
And this time, they aren’t even pretending they didn’t set it aside.
Talarico’s profile rose fast, aided by a national media moment. Stephen Colbert posted an interview online after CBS declined to air it over “equal time” concerns, and the clip drew millions of views. The controversy boosted Talarico’s visibility and fundraising — and helped turn a state primary into a national narrative.
Democrats are now framing their choice as pragmatic. They’re saying: We picked the candidate who can win.
Fine. But Democrats don’t get to treat “electability” as an illegitimate dog whistle when Republicans use it — then invoke it as a clean, neutral justification when Democrats do.
Here’s the bottom line: When America chose Trump over Harris in 2024 — in a race with major policy contrasts — Democrats blamed racism and misogyny. When Texas Democrats chose a white male over a black woman in 2026 — in a race Democrats say offered little substantive contrast — the party expects everyone to treat it as smart strategy.
That double standard is the point.
Either identity is decisive and bias explains outcomes — or voters, including Democrat voters, sometimes make other calculations and deserve to be treated like adults.
Democrats can’t keep changing the rules depending on who wins.
James talarico, Jasmine crockett, Texas senate race, Democrats, Gop, Texas, Kamala harris, Identity politics, Texas democrats, Opinion & analysis, Racism, Misogyny, Sexism, Joe biden, 2026 midterms
Greenland gets headlines. Alaska does the job.
In recent years, the national conversation has drifted toward the Arctic and the geopolitical contest unfolding there. Greenland pops into the headlines as a strategic prize for the United States. But the truth is, we already hold the most important ground for early warning, deterrence, and defeat of airborne threats: Alaska.
No other place on American soil combines geography, infrastructure, military capacity, and testing range in a way that can anchor what defense planners call the “Golden Dome” — a multilayered, 21st-century shield against missile and air-launched threats.
From the polar sky to the missile fields below, Alaska stands as the nation’s shield — strong, tested, and ready.
For conservatives who believe in peace through strength, constitutional defense, and American sovereignty, Alaska is not just valuable; it is indispensable.
The geographic high ground
Alaska’s advantage begins with location. At the top of the world, it sits astride the northern approaches that matter in great-power competition. When Russia or China run long-range aviation patrols, they do not approach through Florida or California. They come over polar routes.
For decades, the Alaska NORAD Region has met them first. American and Canadian forces have executed countless intercepts, sending a message that never changes: We see you. You will not approach unnoticed.
That deterrence does real work. It prevents miscalculation. It keeps pressure off the rest of the country. Alaska makes that possible by standing watch on America’s northern frontier.
Building the Golden Dome
Homeland defense now faces threats that do not fit Cold War assumptions. Hypersonic glide vehicles, low-flying cruise missiles, and next-generation systems demand fast detection, precise tracking, and long-range defeat.
A Golden Dome won’t be a single system. It will require an integrated network of sensors, communications, long-range radar, interceptors, and command and control.
Alaska already hosts critical pieces of that architecture: early-warning infrastructure, long-range radar, secure communications, and the operational footprint to integrate new systems quickly. Fort Greely anchors an established missile defense mission, with layered capability aimed at threats inside and outside the atmosphere. That foundation allows faster expansion than any “build-it-from-scratch” option elsewhere.
Closing the gaps
Coastal coverage can track many high-altitude threats. Low-altitude cruise missile detection presents a harder challenge, because adversaries design these systems to fly fast and low and to exploit radar limitations.
The Army’s Long-Range Persistent Surveillance system offers a proven way to close those gaps. Alaska’s geography provides a vantage point no other state can match across northern air corridors.
Detection only matters when response follows. Alaska maintains frontline intercept forces today, including fifth-generation fighter squadrons. A Marine Corps presence in Alaska also supports a mobile ground-based air defense mission that can move to critical nodes and build resilient, flexible layers.
A responsive homeland air defense posture starts with geography. Alaska supplies it.
RELATED: America’s next-gen weapons face a down-to-earth foe: The elements
DAVID MCNEW/AFP/Getty Images
The world’s premier testing ground
Missile defense depends on systems tested, refined, and validated under realistic conditions. Alaska offers a unique advantage: the largest live-ordnance range on Earth.
That range supports testing and training at scale — emerging radar and sensor concepts, counter-hypersonic development, and joint-force exercises in conditions that mirror the northern environment where homeland defense may be decided.
Alaska lets the U.S. test what it builds and field what it tests in the same strategic space.
America’s shield, ready today
Alaska is more than a strategic location. Alaska is a living, operating defense ecosystem.
With infrastructure already in place, the latest technologies ready for deployment, multilayered detection systems available, and unmatched training and testing ranges at our disposal, Alaska stands ready to detect and defeat airborne threats long before they reach American cities.
Every investment that strengthens Alaska’s surveillance, detection, and intercept capacity multiplies security across the country. In an era of tight budgets and rising instability, that is exactly the kind of smart national defense conservatives should demand: protect American lives and territory by leveraging American assets that already work.
Other places capture attention. Alaska carries the burden. It remains the geographic high ground of missile defense, the first line of deterrence, and the proving ground for the systems America needs next. From the polar sky to the missile fields below, Alaska stands as the nation’s shield — strong, tested, and ready.
Alaska, Golden dome, Missile defense, Russia, China, Hypersonic missiles, American defense, Airspace, Opinion & analysis
Afghan In Germany Sentenced To 8 Years For Attempting To Murder 3-Year-Old Daughter To Avoid Paying Child Support
Prosecutors said the Afghan man conducted research on poisons for weeks to kill his daughter in order to avoid paying child support.
Elderly Canadian Offered Euthanasia Before Doctor Even Asked What Was Wrong With Her
An 84-year-old woman said that when a doctor approached her at Vancouver General Hospital last year, ‘the very first words of out her mouth’ were [more…]
Netanyahu Declares Iran’s Nuclear Program & Missile Production “Destroyed”
At least one of the objectives used to justify the Iran war may now be complete.
FBI Resumes Buying Americans’ Location Data Without Warrants
The law stops the government from taking your location data, it says nothing about buying it.
UK Covid ‘Stay Home’ Message May Have Cost Thousands Of Lives
Inquiry finds public messaging created the impression the health service was closed, contributing to missed diagnoses and delayed treatment for serious conditions.
Egyptian Gang In Italy Charged After Filming Violent Robberies And Flaunting ‘Trophies’ On TikTok
The main evidence against the migrant gang was the incriminating footage they posted themselves online.
UK Lawmakers Vote To Decriminalize Abortion Up To Birth In England, Wales
The new measure would keep the 24-weeka abortion limit for doctors but remove criminal penalties for women who carry out abortions themselves at any stage, [more…]
Sweden Breach Shows The Security Risks Of National Digital ID Systems
Sweden built the world’s most seamless digital identity system, and someone just walked off with the blueprints.
Global Energy Crisis: Brent Crude Touches $118, European Gas Prices Surge Another 35%
European natural gas prices may even go higher, with a Bloomberg business reporter writing, “The longer Qatar LNG remains offline, the higher prices will go.”
‘Depraved’ serial child molester barricaded himself in bathroom with 1-year-old and tried to commit suicide
A man who committed many “depraved” acts of child molestation was given a record long sentence after being convicted for numerous child sex abuse crimes in Tennessee.
Walter Lucian Lewis, 32, was sentenced to three life sentences without the possibility of parole, with another 60 years in prison added, according to the Sumner County District Attorney’s Office.
‘This behavior will not be tolerated in Sumner County, and you will be held accountable for your crimes.’
The Sumner County Sheriff’s Office began its investigation into Lewis after hearing from two children that he had touched them inappropriately.
Lewis told them to keep the incidents a “secret,” according to the children, who also claimed to have witnessed him molesting a third child. One of the victims was 5 years old during the abuse.
Police said follow-up interviews with the children led them to believe Lewis had molested them in periods in 2024 as well as 2025. They also determined that he had sexually abused a child in 2022 in Rutherford County.
When they confronted him at his Portland house, police said Lewis barricaded himself in a bathroom with a 1-year-old child hostage. After police gained entry, Lewis stabbed himself in the neck with a knife in an apparent attempt to commit suicide.
Deputies found the child unharmed in the bathtub and were able to subdue Lewis. He was hospitalized for treatment.
Lewis was convicted of a slew of crimes as follows:
Continuous sexual abuse of a child;Three counts of aggravated rape of a child;Aggravated sexual battery;Especially aggravated sexual exploitation of a minor;Sexual exploitation of a minor;Especially aggravated kidnapping; andAggravated assault on a first responder.
The sentence given to Lewis was the longest one handed out in Sumner County for abuse-related crimes. It’s also the first sentence given without the possibility of parole in the county.
RELATED: California couple sentenced for ‘monstrous’ abuse of sons after decapitating other two children
“Walter Lewis’ depraved actions have negatively impacted the lives of multiple children and their families. Our community is now safer because he will spend the rest of his life behind bars,” District Attorney General Thomas Dean said in the statement from the end of February.
“This sentence should serve as a warning to anyone who may wish to follow in Mr. Lewis’ footsteps: This behavior will not be tolerated in Sumner County, and you will be held accountable for your crimes,” he continued.
Like Blaze News? Bypass the censors, sign up for our newsletters, and get stories like this direct to your inbox. Sign up here!
Walter lucian lewis child molester, Tennessee child molester, Serial child molester, Sumner county child molestation, Crime
America’s founders risked the gallows. What are we risking?
America is only months away from celebrating its quarter-millennial birthday — officially billed as “America 250” and even, in some quarters, a “Super Centennial.” But will America make it another 50 years, all the way to its tricentennial? Even as President Trump wages an existential conflict abroad, another one rages at home.
Without question, the country has lived a long and remarkable life. But the world also knows it has not been free of grave danger. Go back 165 years to the Civil War, and you’ll find proof that the American experiment can wobble — and nearly break.
‘We must all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.’
Even at the nation’s birth, the outcome was not guaranteed. The men who signed their names to independence did so knowing that the newborn republic could be stillborn. In the eyes of King George III, they were committing treason.
That fragility hit me again recently on one of my many walks through Sleepy Hollow Cemetery in my neighborhood of Sleepy Hollow, New York. Sleepy Hollow is the final resting place of captains of industry — families such as the Rockefellers and Carnegies — as well as Washington Irving, America’s first internationally recognized literary giant.
Inside the cemetery’s borders stand monuments commemorating the dead of both the Revolutionary War and the Civil War. They are stark reminders of how fragile a nation’s life can be.
The words carved on the Revolutionary monument still land with force.
Photo by Albin Sadar
1776 — 1783
In Memory
of the
OFFICERS and SOLDIERS
of the
REVOLUTION
who by their valor
sustained the cause of liberty
and independence
on these historic fields.
While we honor the dead, we should remember the courage of the living — including those too old to take up arms themselves. When Benjamin Franklin signed the Declaration of Independence, an act of treason in the eyes of the Crown, he is said to have offered a grim assessment: “We must all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.”
That line came rushing back when Susan Rice laid out what amounts to a warning shot about the next round of political retribution. On a recent podcast, Rice promised a reckoning for those who “take a knee to Trump,” and she made clear that Democrats, once back in power, will not “play by the old rules.”
Her message was simple: Align yourself with Trump — or with the tens of millions who support him — and your time “is not going to end well.”
For anyone who watched what happened to people swept up in the post-Jan. 6 dragnet, the implication is not subtle. The left’s appetite for lawfare is real. And it rarely stops with the obvious actors. It metastasizes. It broadens. It looks for new targets.
So what can derail the Democrats’ destructive engine?
The answer may be hiding in Franklin’s line: Hang together.
RELATED: America at 250
Al Drago/Bloomberg via Getty Images
President Trump has made two standards central to national survival: secure borders and honest elections. The border is more secure than it has been in years. But Congress still hasn’t delivered the SAVE America Act — and that failure matters.
Within months of July 4, 2026, Americans will again head to the polls. The choices will be stark, and Democrats will not be shy about what they want: revenge, institutional capture, and a reset of the country on their terms.
Two things now matter, and they are not complicated. First, patriots must keep pressure on elected officials to pass the SAVE America Act. Second, they must show up and vote in overwhelming numbers this November. Nobody gets to sit this one out.
That’s how Republicans keep their majorities. That’s how Trump’s agenda survives. And that’s how the country avoids another round of “fundamental transformation” — imposed by people who have already told you they plan to discard the old restraints.
Editor’s note: A version of this article appeared originally at American Thinker.
American founding, President trump, Donald trump, Save act, Civil war, Border security, Ben franklin, Opinion & analysis, America 250, Declaration of independence, Hang together
‘The level of mistrust runs too deep’: Auron MacIntyre’s warning to establishment conservatives
A growing identity crisis is shaking the conservative movement, as longtime tensions between grassroots audiences and establishment voices boil over in our increasingly digital age.
According to BlazeTV host Auron MacIntyre, the chaos is driven by years of mistrust built first between the mainstream media and their own audiences, and now between conservative institutions and their audiences.
“To say that the conservative movement has come off the rails would comically understate the damage,” MacIntyre begins.
“Plenty of commentators blame podcasts for this new disorder, and the new ecosystem gives them no shortage of bad behavior to cite. But that diagnosis misses the deeper cause,” he says, pointing out that the “deeper cause” is, conservatives are now replicating the legacy media’s attitude toward their listeners.
“Establishment conservatives treated their audience the same way the legacy press did: as a resource to be managed, manipulated, and occasionally milked. A movement that spent decades being lied to will not be stitched back together by scolding the people who finally stopped listening,” MacIntyre says.
“Democrats screamed about disinformation, warned about the dangers of free speech, and then launched research projects designed to replicate what they claimed to hate. The right cheered the upheaval. Establishment conservatives, however, never fully grasped what the shift meant for them,” he continues.
“Trump didn’t rise only as a battering ram against progressive media. He rose as a middle finger to conservative establishment media as well. That plan worked and then kept working in ways that many people didn’t anticipate,” he adds.
Now, MacIntyre explains, “conservative gatekeepers” are mimicking the “panicked reflexes the left showed” as they accuse others of “dangerous rhetoric,” call for “deplatforming,” and ask for “responsible voices to regain control.”
“These instincts never belong to one ideology. They belong to institutions that sense their monopoly slipping away,” he says.
Now, MacIntyre is warning conservatives that they “can’t lecture podcast audiences about responsible broadcasting after years of manipulating their own viewers.”
“The level of mistrust runs too deep. Censorship will fail too. Shaming and platform policing didn’t rebuild credibility for Democrats, and it’s not going to rebuild credibility for Republicans, either,” he adds.
Want more from Auron MacIntyre?
To enjoy more of this YouTuber and recovering journalist’s commentary on culture and politics, subscribe to BlazeTV — the largest multi-platform network of voices who love America, defend the Constitution, and live the American dream.
The auron macintyre show, Auron macintyre, The blaze, Blazetv, Blaze news, Blaze podcasts, Blaze podcast network, Blaze media, Blaze online, Blaze originals, Conservatives, President trump, The trump administration, Censorship
Why America’s enemies always target Western civilization first
Radical progressives love to say the United States has no culture of its own — only whatever happens to be popular at the moment. If America amounts to little more than a consumer brand, then why do so many anti-American activists talk less about tweaking our politics and more about erasing Western civilization altogether?
America isn’t distilled water. It carries a civilizational inheritance. That fact explains why the people who hate the American project so often hate Western civilization writ large.
A country can’t treat open hostility to its civilizational foundations as harmless expression while expecting those foundations to survive.
A case in point: Mahmoud Khalil, the pro-Palestinian activist and apologist for Islamic jihad who led a coalition at Columbia University called Columbia University Apartheid Divest. The group’s stated goal is the “total eradication of Western civilization.” That goal raises the obvious question: Why the West? Why not simply “America”?
Because, for many activists in this mold, America represents the West at full strength — the most successful expression of the Western tradition.
America as the West’s culmination
In “The Roots of American Order,” Russell Kirk argued that the United States fused traditions from key centers of Western thought and life: Jerusalem gave us a Judeo-Christian moral order and the idea of covenant under God. Athens bequeathed reasoned inquiry and ordered thought. Rome passed down republican government and the rule of law. London developed parliamentary practice and secure property rights under the common law.
In Philadelphia, America’s founders combined those inheritances into a constitutional republic built around Judeo-Christian concepts of contract, incorporation, property, and ordered liberty. Put simply, America did not emerge from nothing. It grew out of a specific civilizational soil.
Why the West wins — and gets blamed
Many non-Western societies struggle under political and economic systems that concentrate power, block opportunity, and punish initiative. When institutions work well in those places, they often resemble Western inheritances: stable law, predictable property rights, accountable governance.
Daron Acemoglu and James A. Robinson, the authors of “Why Nations Fail: The Origins of Power, Prosperity, and Poverty,” summarized the phenomenon in more politically correct terms, arguing:
Nations fail primarily because of extractive political and economic institutions that concentrate power and wealth in the hands of a few elites, stifling innovation, incentives, and broad-based economic growth. Unlike inclusive systems that foster prosperity, extractive regimes discourage investment and education, creating a “vicious cycle” of poverty and political instability.
That reality should invite honesty. Instead, it often produces resentment.
Under the reigning narrative, Western culture becomes “colonization,” “genocide,” and “taking” — a catch-all scapegoat for failures at home. That story also ignores inconvenient facts, including that Western colonialism had a relatively brief modern run and that many Western countries ultimately divested themselves of empires while insisting — at least in principle — on freedom and sovereignty.
So the West gets blamed for the world’s troubles, while the West remains the place millions still want to move to.
RELATED: What will replace the old world order?
Milos Bicanski/Getty Images
Importing anti-Western radicalism
That leaves America with a growing problem: activists and migrants who embrace America’s freedoms while rejecting the civilization that produced them.
The Trump administration sought to remove Khalil, arguing that his presence created “adverse foreign policy consequences.” An activist judge later ordered his release from detention, and the useful idiot New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani (D) publicly celebrated him at Gracie Mansion.
Whatever one thinks of that specific case, the larger principle holds: A country can’t treat open hostility to its civilizational foundations as harmless expression while expecting those foundations to survive.
A nation that loses confidence in its roots will not protect them — and a nation that refuses to protect them will not keep them.
If the United States wants to survive beyond President Trump’s current term, it needs to recover a healthy pride in its Western inheritance and shape immigration policy with that reality in mind. A society that invites people who openly seek its destruction invites its own decline.
America, Western civilization, United states, Donald trump, Roots of american order, Russell kirk, Migration, Opinion & analysis, Immigration, Jihad, Terrorism, Decolonization
