965 – Economics—just a socialist econspiracy?

 Comments Off on 965 – Economics—just a socialist econspiracy?
May 202026
 

economic system
One could argue that the Left has been using the very word ‘economics’ as an ‘econspiracy’ towards its objective of seizing the means of production.

As explained by Franck Zanu, host of the Zanu Project Rethink, “economics is simply a social science” which studies the mechanisms of supply and demand. But with socialist politicians promising to deliver ‘economic power’ to their constituents, he points out that there is no such thing: “It is not a tangible thing that anybody can ‘give’ anybody.”

Lamenting that most people do not understand the relationship between citizens and government, he warns that those who believe “that a government’s job is to give people economic power… are doomed forever.”

Worse, with socialist proclamations that the ‘top one or two per cent’ control 90% of a nation’s wealth, it is forgotten that, as Zanu explains: “the two per cent are not ‘controlling’ the economy – they created it.” Continue reading »

964 – Why socialism is evil—Every Variant Is Leftist

 Comments Off on 964 – Why socialism is evil—Every Variant Is Leftist
May 132026
 

Cuba
With socialists and communists occupying elected positions in both the United States and Canada, how is it possible that so many people living in the most free nations on earth could possibly embrace the ideology of socialism?

That’s a question plaguing many on the Right, who often mistakenly assume that those on the Left share their love of individual freedom.

“From each according to his ability to each according to his need” has long been a socialist bromide, seen by some as a virtuous altruistic ideology upon which a society should be based.

But one need only take that slogan literally to recognize that this is a prescription for human slavery – the very political prescription that is followed by socialist, communist, and fascist dictatorships everywhere. Continue reading »

963 – Reservations not required—they’re just an Indian Act

 Comments Off on 963 – Reservations not required—they’re just an Indian Act
May 062026
 

Tara Armstrong
In the wake of outrageous and absurd ‘indigenous land claims’ being made on lands and territories where no such claims can possibly be valid, the time has long passed to settle a few issues and questions surrounding the real political agenda behind these claims.

From the issue of basic definitions and terms, to the actual history of North America’s Indians, and to their current conditions when segregated on ‘Indian reservations,’ ignorance about these factors has led to the creation of racist narratives used by the Left to justify its continual attacks against basic private property rights.

On the definition front, in his May 3 Substack article, Robert Vaughan explains that “The myth of the ‘indigenous’ somehow being special is simply that – a myth.” Citing the roots and definition of the word ‘indigenous,’ he observes that “Nobody can be considered to be ‘Indigenous’ to the place they currently live – not the English in Britain, not the Chinese in China, and not the ‘Indigenous’ peoples of North America.”

Beyond this epistemological crisis, there have been decades of fictional stories and histories told about North America’s Indians, leading to the false impression that ‘racism’ was somehow at the root of the disputes and wars between them and the new European settlers. But far from being peaceful and noble stewards of the land, as so many narratives depict them, “The Indians were brutal – to settlers and to each other.” (Matt Walsh, April 2, 2026) Continue reading »

962 – Have no faith in constitution—but in yourselves

 Comments Off on 962 – Have no faith in constitution—but in yourselves
Apr 292026
 

Before and After
Preserving the free nation that has been handed down to its descendants is a mission that many on the Right would wholeheartedly defend, and rightly so.

Towards that end, the importance or significance of having a written constitution to preserve and identify certain basic principles and rules upon which such a country is founded is paramount.

However, even when such documents exist, laws and constitutions aren’t worth the paper they’re written on if the people to whom they apply no longer abide by them.

When it comes right down to it, with or without a written constitution, all societies are effectively governed or ruled by convention. That means that whatever current values and practices are being applied and broadly accepted without resistance or opposition effectively become the law. Continue reading »

961 – The Right’s struggle—with being Right

 Comments Off on 961 – The Right’s struggle—with being Right
Apr 222026
 

Capitalism-Socialism
How is it that ‘socialism’ continues to gain so much popular and political support when it should be understood by all that socialism destroys wealth and causes poverty?

And how is it that ‘capitalism’ continues to lose popular and political support when it should be understood by all that capitalism is the only system capable of producing wealth and creating prosperity?

As many on the Right struggle to understand this, they have been entertaining the idea that the Right has a ‘branding problem.’ Ironically this is correct, but the ‘problem’ is less about ‘branding’ than it is about a failure to precisely define what it is that requires branding.

For example, among the various factions considered to be on the Right are ‘small-c conservatives,’ libertarians, patriots, freedom-loving individuals, nationalists, free trade advocates, constitutionalists, reformers and others. Continue reading »

960 – Language of fools—socialism’s absurdity

 Comments Off on 960 – Language of fools—socialism’s absurdity
Apr 152026
 


In the aftermath of the world-wide ridicule and laughter directed at the Woke behavior witnessed at Canada’s NDP conference, it was easy to overlook the fact that the same behavior was being exhibited elsewhere, most notably at the so-called ‘No Kings’ rallies held in both the United States and in Canada.

Fueled exclusively by what is widely recognized as TDS (Trump Derangement Syndrome), these protests once again illustrated the absurdity of those on the Left, as they attempted to equate Donald Trump’s democratically established presidential authority with that of some kind of medieval monarch.

And on another socialist front, the latest Woke phrase to attract further laughter and ridicule apparently goes by the acronym: MMIWG2SLGBT2QIA+

The utterly ridiculous concept described by this acronym is “Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women Girls and 2 Spirit Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Queer Questioning Intersex and Asexual Plus People.” Of course, there is no such thing or class of people.
Continue reading »

959 – You will own nothing NDP happy—socialism is an absurdity

 Comments Off on 959 – You will own nothing NDP happy—socialism is an absurdity
Apr 082026
 

Avi Lewis
In vowing that his party would use “the unmatched power of public ownership,” Canada’s New Democratic Party leader Avis Lewis was really saying “You will own nothing NDP happy.”

As the world ridiculed and laughed at all of the ‘points of privilege’ who attended the party’s March 29 conference in Winnipeg Manitoba, the really laughable fool at the event was Avi Lewis himself, as he and his party continue to advocate the absurdity that is ‘socialism’.

Citing private enterprise and private profits, Lewis reminded his audience “that this country is awash in wealth. We can have nice things. The money is there! We need a government with the courage to go and get it for all of us.”

That such glaring envy, greed, and avarice should be seen as something to be admired in a political party leader – along with his outright calls for the theft of private property – is perhaps among the greatest tragedies of today’s political zeitgeist.
Continue reading »

958 – Story time—heroes tell the tale

 Comments Off on 958 – Story time—heroes tell the tale
Apr 012026
 

Hogan's Heroes
Is it possible that the most dangerous weapon in the entire world is a story? It’s a proposition that carries more weight than most might imagine.

If you’ve ever wondered why ‘controlling the narrative’ has become such a common phrase, it’s because as never before, people are becoming aware of the fact that they are perpetually immersed in an information war upon which the nature and values of their culture is being contested.

Behind the West’s growing dystopian zeitgeist has been a concerted effort on the part of the American entertainment industry to hijack the great stories and heroes of the distant and recent past. From stories about the American revolution to the sci-fi and fantasy realm of Superman and Star Trek, the promotion of heroism has virtually been abandoned, and with it, any concept or clarity about what distinguishes good from evil. Continue reading »

957 – Ballot boxing—the fight for voting integrity

 Comments Off on 957 – Ballot boxing—the fight for voting integrity
Mar 252026
 

Exporting votes
Voting integrity: “On this one issue, we either get to keep America or Lose America” warns American lawyer Peter Ticktin.

With the introduction of the Save America Act (requiring voter ID and proof of citizenship), the fight for voting integrity has entered the arena of a ‘ballot boxing match,’ with the Right in one corner on the side of voter and voting transparency and with the Left in the other corner on the side of secretive and hidden tabulation of votes.

Despite the overwhelming number of Americans polled supporting voter ID, the Left remains adamantly opposed to these requirements. This fact alone should be all the evidence needed to conclude that the Left is dependent on both voter fraud and rigging elections.

After all, the principles behind conducting open and transparent elections are so simple and clear that to obfuscate them should be considered criminal. They include the prohibition of mail-in ballots and machine sourced vote counts. Above all, the use of paper ballots, voter I.D., and a one day voting period should be the norm.
Continue reading »

956 – Intuitively speaking—about the risks and power of intuition

 Comments Off on 956 – Intuitively speaking—about the risks and power of intuition
Mar 182026
 

spidey sense
Using claims that artificial intelligence is becoming ‘conscious’ and ‘intuitive,’ governments are now planning their next artificial crisis from which to save us.

Speaking at the Canadian Senate’s ‘Committee on Matters Relating to the Impact of Artificial Intelligence in Canada,’ Professor Geoffrey Hinton, introduced as the “godfather of A.I.,” painted a dystopian future of A.I. clearly calculated to induce terror and fear.

The fear-mongering echoes past panics over climate and pandemics, but intuition itself offers the antidote. True intuition guards and protects, always rooted in reality and aligned with our best interests. It leaps from A to Z instantly, bypassing the slow plod of logic, and delivers ‘lightning-like’ warnings we ignore at our peril. Continue reading »

955 – Regime changes—from Iran to Canada

 Comments Off on 955 – Regime changes—from Iran to Canada
Mar 112026
 

regime change
“Regime change has a history of destructive regimes being replaced by better ones,” argues Dinesh D’Souza in anticipation of Iran’s liberation. And on that count, he has concluded that “the only people mourning regime change in Iran are the Democrats, the mullahs, and Tucker Carlson.”

And while all eyes are focused on Iran, few are aware of other regime changes occurring in Canada, most notably in the provinces of British Columbia and Alberta.

With the recent announcement by Dallas Brodie (member of the Legislative Assembly of British Columbia representing the electoral district of Vancouver-Quilchena) that the Canadian federal government “has granted aboriginal title over all of the lower mainland to the Musqueamin Indian Band whose population is a mere 1250 band members,” the alarm was sounded that a regime change is taking place without anyone’s knowledge or consent. Continue reading »

954 – Revelations—from Left to Right

 Comments Off on 954 – Revelations—from Left to Right
Mar 042026
 

Left and Right
Both this year’s State of the Union Address and Trump’s bombing of Iran have provided explosive revelations about the true divide between the political Left and Right.

Indeed, the way Democrats behaved during Donald Trump’s State of the Union Address (delivered Tuesday Feb 24, 2026) was simply uncivilized. They revealed themselves to be perfect caricatures of everything Left.

The image accompanying this week’s blog post depicts the Democrats on the Left remaining seated, while the Republicans on the Right all stand in affirming that their first duty is to protect American citizens, and not illegal aliens. Continue reading »

953 – Restoration project—Britain’s last hope?

 Comments Off on 953 – Restoration project—Britain’s last hope?
Feb 252026
 

Nigel Farage, Rupert Lowe
Is Rupert Lowe’s newly forming political party, ‘Restore Britain,’ really Britain’s last hope to preserve its culture? Apparently, Elon Musk thinks so.

On the other hand, Nigel Farage, leader of Britain’s Reform UK, strongly disagrees:

“Unless we are able to provide a proper democratic antidote to this, then I fear that we will see a rise of a really worrying dangerous form of extreme right ethno-nationalism. And I think that we’re beginning over the last couple of weeks already to see some specimens of it. Nobody over the last quarter century has done more to defeat the genuine intolerant abhorrent extreme far right than me.”

Given his own identification with the Right, boasting that he is an opponent of that polarity calls into question Farage’s motivation behind his condemnation of Restore Britain, which is also identified with the Right. Continue reading »

952 – From Canada to Can’tada

 Comments Off on 952 – From Canada to Can’tada
Feb 182026
 

Indigenous Street

Canada appears to be on the doorstep of its final demise, as more and more people are discovering the country’s dismal political history and its disintegration as a viable sovereign nation.

It can be argued that Canada is already finished as a nation, particularly in the light of a recent court ruling declaring that various indigenous tribes were the legitimate ‘owners’ of long-established and developed Canadian municipalities – and that not even the Crown had any jurisdiction over such lands.

The re-naming of Vancouver’s Trutch Street to šxʷməθkʷəy̓əmasəm Street in the Musqueam language is an affront not just to Canada’s identity, but to fundamental linguistic principles and to the means of communication itself.

Also symbolic of Canada’s collective mental illness, the recent mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge BC was attributed to a female ‘gun person’ when in fact it was well known that the shooter was a male ‘trans-sexual.’ Continue reading »

951 – Too stupid for words—irrationality

 Comments Off on 951 – Too stupid for words—irrationality
Feb 112026
 

Big Lie
Over the past several years, we have been subjected to one crisis after another, justifying calls for actions and policies that could be categorized as being ‘ just too stupid for words,’ especially given the growing tyranny that is a consequence of such thinking.

People have been instructed to get vaccinated for a non-existent pandemic, to de-industrialize in an effort to cut carbon dioxide emissions, to limit the First Amendment to prevent the polarization of disagreement, to open borders to hordes of ‘undocumented’ immigrants, to attack ICE agents during the performance of their duties, to wear face masks and social distance to prevent the spread of unidentified viruses, to fight climate change in order to protect the environment, and to support the surgical mutilation of those suffering from gender dysphoria. Just to mention a few.

Wide public support for these irrational actions has been referred to as the result of an ’emotional plague’ by Wilhelm Reich, or as ‘mass formation’ by Mattias Desmet, or as ‘suicidal empathy’ and a ‘mind virus’ by Gad Saad, while the growing wave of stupidity dominating today’s zeitgeist has drawn the attention of a similarly growing number of analysts. Continue reading »

950 – Identity problem—Left or Right?

 Comments Off on 950 – Identity problem—Left or Right?
Feb 042026
 

Left-Right
The recent arrest of former CNN news anchor Don Lemon has unleashed a flurry of controversy about issues ranging from illegal immigration to free speech.

Charged with two felonies, (1) conspiracy against the right of religious freedom in a place of worship, and (2) violating the FACE Act (Freedom of Access to Clinics Entrances Act), Lemon’s role in storming Cities Church in Saint Paul Minnesota on January 18 has itself been among the many controversies surrounding the event.

Arguing that “It’s traumatic for the people here, but that’s what protesting is all about,” Lemon accused the victims of his ‘protest’ of being “entitled Christians” whose “entitlement comes from a white supremacy.”

What any of this had to do with the protest against the arrest and deportation of illegal aliens by ICE agents is anybody’s guess, but Lemon made it abundantly clear that he himself is an avowed racist who hides behind his “black and gay” identity politics to avoid responsibility for his role in the event. Not as a journalist, but as a participant.
Continue reading »

949 – Intelligently artificial—the contrived AI controversy

 Comments Off on 949 – Intelligently artificial—the contrived AI controversy
Jan 282026
 

Intelligently artificial
When Yuval Noah Harari bizarrely asserted that “Anything made of words will be taken over by AI,” this was not a prediction, but a threat.

Speaking at the Davos World Economic Forum (WEF), his justification for the AI takeover was to circumvent the fact that “humans learned to use words to get strangers to cooperate,” because now something has emerged that will do that for us.

Given that “using words” to get people to cooperate is a process known as persuasion, to say that something ‘better’ has emerged to accomplish this goal suggests that one is abandoning persuasion as a means of achieving cooperation. Or in other words: “When persuasion fails, just use force.” Or censorship. Or propaganda. Continue reading »

948 – ICE storm—sliding down the slippery slope to insurrection

 Comments Off on 948 – ICE storm—sliding down the slippery slope to insurrection
Jan 212026
 

ICE storm
With U.S. president Donald Trump clearly in a position to unilaterally declare the Insurrection Act over the ongoing obstruction of federal law enforcement by the Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency (ICE), it remains to be seen how far the situation may escalate.

Protests and unrest in Minneapolis have been ongoing since early January 2026, primarily against ICE agents detaining and arresting illegal immigrants. What many observers are asking themselves is: just what are the ‘protesters’ protesting against?

As the War Room’s Harrison Smith noted, “They’re not protesting against rapists and murderers. They’re literally protesting against the arrest of criminals, against law and order itself.” Continue reading »

947 – Forcing a discussion—about force itself

 Comments Off on 947 – Forcing a discussion—about force itself
Jan 142026
 

force
The extradition of Venezuelan President Nicolás Maduro under President Donald Trump has unleashed a torrent of pundits on the Right passing moral judgement on the action. And once again, one might be led to conclude that their differing opinions are yet another symptom of the ‘fragmentation’ of the Right.

From Robert Barnes‘ “strict constitutionalist” conclusion that Trump’s action is an “unconstitutional illegal act,” to Glenn Beck‘s conclusion that “this is the most ‘America First’ thing I have ever seen,” it is understandable that many might interpret these contrasts as evidence of such ‘fragmentation,’ but it is not necessarily so.

For example, despite Beck’s joy over Trump’s America First action, he nevertheless acknowledges that the “strict constitutionalists are absolutely right.” And despite Barnes’ “strict constitutionalist” stance, he too acknowledges that an act can be “illegal and moral” or “legal and immoral” and applies the same standards to policies and laws.

Thus, the real differences of opinion (and seeming contradictions) originate within the context from which they are expressed (i.e., legal, moral, or pragmatic). But which is Right? Continue reading »

The Trump Corollary: “My Own Morality, My Own Mind”

 Audio, Foreign Relations, Governance, Latest, Law, Military, Politics, Terrorism, Video  Comments Off on The Trump Corollary: “My Own Morality, My Own Mind”
Jan 132026
 

In the wake of the United States’ military operation in Venezuela—including the abduction of the murderous, communist, dictator Nicolás Maduro—Professor Salim Mansur of Western University and Robert Vaughan examine the profound ramifications. Domestically, the action raises serious questions about the U.S. Constitution, as only Congress holds the authority to declare war. Internationally, it appears to contravene established norms of international law.

Although the Trump administration’s conduct violated constitutional principles in principle, such actions are far from unprecedented. Every U.S. president since the end of World War II has engaged in military interventions without formal congressional declarations of war. Similarly, on the global stage, violations of international law by permanent members of the UN Security Council—endowed with veto power—have occurred repeatedly without effective consequences.

Our conversation underscores a troubling reality: the United States, often regarded as exceptional by various measures, operates beyond meaningful constraints of international law due to its veto in the Security Council. Likewise, the president appears increasingly unbound by the Constitution, given historical precedent and Congress’s consistent failure to assert its authority—often through tacit bipartisan acquiescence.

Both the U.S. Constitution and the United Nations framework have proven impotent when confronted with a president acting unilaterally in what he deems the best interest of American citizens.

In a recent interview with The New York Times, President Trump was asked whether any checks existed on his power on the world stage. He replied: “Yeah, there is one thing. My own morality. My own mind. It’s the only thing that can stop (me).” When pressed on international law, he added, “I don’t need international law. I’m not looking to hurt people.”

Some may view this stance as echoing President Truman’s famous motto, “The buck stops here”—an assertion of personal responsibility. Others, however, may interpret it as monarchical in character. As Salim noted in our conversation, “Donald Trump is not following in the footsteps of George Washington. Donald Trump is now the George III of America.”

History since World War II demonstrates that U.S. presidents have proven largely unstoppable in such matters, with American forces overwhelmingly dominant. As Salim also observes, “The cost of enforcement can only lead to further conflict—a conflict, especially in the age of nuclear weapons, that nobody can say how it will end.”

Transcript Donate

946 – Culture shift—in high gear | with Rasheed Muhammad

 Comments Off on 946 – Culture shift—in high gear | with Rasheed Muhammad
Jan 072026
 

culture shift
The incredible speed with which cultures change and how that change has manifested itself in the zeitgeist of 2026 is the predominant theme of Robert Vaughan’s discussion with Rasheed Muhammad, host of the Red Pill Diaries. On this count, Robert laments that the positive conditions long associated with Western culture may never return.

In a political world that has increasingly embraced the dystopian ideology of Karl Marx and the evils of collectivism, conditions are ripe for “gangsters, psychopaths, sociopaths, thugs” and various corrupt interests to take control of the populace.

“Today begins a new era,” announced New York mayor Zohran Mamdani during his January 1 inauguration speech. “We will replace the frigidity of rugged individualism with the warmth of collectivism. Continue reading »

945 – Tabula Rasa—a blank slate for a new year?

 Comments Off on 945 – Tabula Rasa—a blank slate for a new year?
Dec 312025
 


Just as a newborn child comes into this world in a state of tabula rasa, so too are all individuals in a similar state when it comes to what political and social events will transpire in 2026.

In addition to defining ‘tabula rasa’ as “the mind before it receives the impressions gained from experience,” the American Heritage Dictionary also defines the term as “a need or an opportunity to start from the beginning.”

In the spirit of making a New Year’s resolution, this might be a good time to consider starting the new year afresh with a blank slate that first acknowledges the true political polarity of Left and Right, before attempting to form alliances among those who use these labels in ways that confuse.

As the old saying goes: “Ain’t so much what people don’t know that gets them into trouble; it’s what they do know that just ain’t so.”

This speaks to a truth about both humanity’s strength and weakness when it comes to acquiring valid knowledge. It is always possible to be wrong. And being Right requires an accurate epistemology. Continue reading »

944 – Religion is culture—religion is politics

 Comments Off on 944 – Religion is culture—religion is politics
Dec 242025
 


“Those who say religion has nothing to do with politics do not know what religion is.”

With that statement, Mahatma Ghandi spoke to the reality that, effectively, religion ‘is’ politics.

The ‘religious forces’ behind much of the world’s social conditions – whether during times of peace or times of conflict – essentially frame the philosophy of a given culture, which in turn determines its zeitgeist of the time.

At a time of year when various religious celebrations are taking place, it cannot be ignored that in this season of peace on earth and good will towards men, Earth continues to be embroiled in conflict and war.

And as with political ideologies, religious beliefs can be identified in terms of a Left and Right polarity. In this context, the fundamental distinction concerns the contrast between a ‘culture of life’ on the Right (i.e., Christianity, Judaism) and the ‘death culture’ of the Left (i.e., Islam).

While religion clearly functions as a uniting force among its own adherents, it has also been a major divisive force whenever competing religions come into direct conflict. Whether in religion or politics, the values of Left and Right are incompatible and cannot co-exist.

Thus the path to a world in which there can be ‘peace on earth and good will towards men’ first requires an awareness of the polarized nature and relationship between culture, religion, and politics that is Just Right.

If you found this presentation valuable please consider supporting us:
🧡 PayPal

943 – Intrinsically subjective—objectively speaking

 Comments Off on 943 – Intrinsically subjective—objectively speaking
Dec 172025
 


“The belief that truth is purely subjective is a far greater threat than any other because that will strike at the core of our reasoning, and ultimately to our ability to choose between right and wrong,” asserted American politician and social media influencer Nick Freitas to a crowd of young Republicans at the University of California, Berkeley earlier this month. “I have never bought in to this truly ridiculous notion that truth is subjective.”

Subjectivism is the belief that reality is not a firm absolute, but something which can be altered by the consciousness of the perceiver.
Objectivity is the only way to determine what is true, Freitas rightly argued. And on this point fellow Christians Matt Walsh and Tucker Carlson likewise asserted that objective truth exists and that we must agree that there ‘is’ a truth.

Unfortunately, when many Christians on the Right correctly assert that Truth can only be determined objectively, their definition of ‘objective’ is far from being so. Continue reading »

942 – Color blinded—to racism’s color blind antidote

 Comments Off on 942 – Color blinded—to racism’s color blind antidote
Dec 102025
 


“Our country is at a tipping point,” recently warned U.S. president Donald Trump. “I don’t know if people mind me saying that, but we could go one way or the other – and we’re going to be going the wrong way if we keep taking garbage into our country. Ilhan Omar is garbage; her friends are garbage. They don’t go ‘let’s make this place great,’ they are people who do nothing but complain.”

One cannot help but notice how America’s immigration crisis is being debated and discussed in an increasingly aggressive and hostile manner, from America’s president right down to the average man on the street. Trump’s reference to an America flooded with ‘garbage’ people metaphorically reflects the reality of literal rivers of garbage associated with cultures whose people not only do not clean up their garbage, but live in it.

By equating criticism of other cultures with racism, the Left has effectively distracted everyone from the fact that ‘cultures’ are a product of human beliefs, actions and choices, whereas ‘race’ pertains to skin color and other physical characteristics not open to any moral or intellectual considerations. Most importantly, the Left has turned the racial divide into a false polarity, with people of white skin color on one side, and everyone else on the other. Continue reading »

941 – Democratic dilemma: Is democracy just a fiction?

 Comments Off on 941 – Democratic dilemma: Is democracy just a fiction?
Dec 032025
 


Democracy: Consent of the governed? Or government by consensus?

What most fail to realize is that these two views are incompatible. That’s because the principle of ‘consent’ rests on individual rights, while the principle of ‘consensus’ allows for the violation of individual rights.

These two very different concepts of ‘democracy’ have long been in conflict, resulting in a social condition that no longer seems ‘democratic.’ Consequently, many no longer feel that their governments represent them and they are actually questioning whether or not what most see as ‘democracy’ is a just a fiction.

One can argue that America is a constitutional republic and not a democracy, but this does not address the reality that it currently operates as neither, given its assumed mandate of protecting life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.

Many voices on the Right have gone into a panic mode trying to resolve the nation’s democratic dilemma
by offering many valid observations and insights into the symptoms of the problem. Unfortunately, they have offered few viable solutions to a cure, owing to a fundamental misunderstanding of what has assumed to be ‘democracy’.

Democracy, like government itself, should be limited in terms of elections and voting; voting should never be allowed to violate or infringe on the individual rights of others – and thereby also on their ability to consent.

Under the principle of ‘majority rule,’ no such limits exist. That’s why understanding democracy in a way that is Just Right first requires abandoning the foolish notion of ‘majority rule’ as a justification for the violation of individual rights.

If you found this presentation valuable please consider supporting us:
🧡 PayPal

940 – Right wingers—from fragmentation to stagnation

 Comments Off on 940 – Right wingers—from fragmentation to stagnation
Nov 262025
 


It’s bad enough when those on the Right publicly exhibit internal ideological conflicts; it’s even worse when those conflicts become personal.

For example, says Ben Shapiro: “The fragmentation of the political right is caused purposely by a splinter faction led by Nick Fuentes. They’re white supremacists; they hate women, Jews, Christians, brown people, blacks, America’s foreign policy and constitution, and they admire Hitler and Stalin,” and “Tucker Carlson is an intellectual coward, a dishonest interlocutor, and a terrible friend.”

Says Mark Levin: “Tucker is a racist so, no, I don’t debate the Klan and I don’t debate Nazis.”

Says Tucker Carlson: “Mark Levin is full of hate. (He supports) killing kids because you don’t like their parents. He is describing blood guilt.”

You get the general idea – not exactly inspiring displays of reasoned debate or clearly defined principles. And these are but a few examples.

The concern has been raised as to whether or not the various conflicts between recognized voices of the ‘Right’ will cause a fragmentation on the Right serious enough to compromise the MAGA movement and its resistance to the Left.

Whether or not these conflicts will evolve from a minor right wing fragmentation to another major right wing stagnation is something impossible to predict.

But to suggest that these disagreements are being aired and debated in a way that is Just Right depends on whether one takes them seriously or just as comedic entertainment.

If you found this presentation valuable please consider supporting us:
🧡 PayPal

939 – Socialism—not very social

 Comments Off on 939 – Socialism—not very social
Nov 192025
 


Thanks to the recent election of Zohran Mamdani as the City of New York’s ‘socialist’ mayor, there have been increasing alarms warning of a rise in ‘socialism’s popularity’ among a majority of America’s young people. However, this may be an overstatement.

While it is fair to say that there has been a rise in the number of socialist politicians getting elected, to attribute these electoral wins to any love of socialism is simply misguided. Why? Because the average ‘socialist voter’ has no concept of socialism, either in terms of its definition or in terms of its horrific history. They are voting ‘against’ something, not for it.

Socialism, as an understandable or relatable concept, has little or no relevance to most voters’ daily concerns and lives. To them, socialism is just some nebulous label that politicians use to belittle one another (even though they may all behave the same and pursue the same socialist policies).

In practice, socialism is the political application of the philosophy of egalitarianism. Socialist ‘equality’ does not mean ‘equality before and under the law’ – it means equity: the ‘equality’ of results. It means that those who work hard, take risks, and produce the goods, services, and products upon which a society’s survival depends, must be punished to the degree of their success, while those who do not fit into the productive class (for whatever reason) are to be rewarded by sharing in the products they had no part in creating. Continue reading »

938 – The great escape—from Canada | Mark Vandermaas

 Comments Off on 938 – The great escape—from Canada | Mark Vandermaas
Nov 122025
 


“I’ve gone from being a patriotic Canadian to the point where I wouldn’t risk a hangnail for Canada,” laments our guest Mark Vandermaas. “Canada’s done. There is no political solution; there is no legal solution.”

A retired member of the Canadian armed forces, Mark’s experience as a Canadian activist included his being arrested for carrying a Canadian flag in public. This was perhaps an event symbolic of his ultimate decision to escape the tyranny in Canada and thus be able to say: “We love our life in Ecuador.”

In sharing his story of how he came to ultimately choose Ecuador as his destination, Mark’s narrative of events describing Canada’s descent into tyranny serve as a chilling reminder of just “how fast a supposedly civilized society can go off the rails.”

Referring to the Canada of today as a “grotesquely racist country,” whose national pass time has become “hating people,” Mark is convinced that Canada is not “fixable” and is doomed to collapse as a nation. Continue reading »

Escaping Neverland—A Canadian refugee in Ecuador | Mark Vandermaas

 Audio, Governance, Health Care, Latest, Politics, Society, Video  Comments Off on Escaping Neverland—A Canadian refugee in Ecuador | Mark Vandermaas
Nov 102025
 


“When in the course of human events it becomes necessary for one people to dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another…” These immortal words from the Declaration of Independence heralded the birth of a great nation, forged in revolution against despotic rule. Today, however, one man has chosen a quieter path to freedom: relocating from Canada to Ecuador to escape the creeping shadow of political tyranny.

That is precisely what Mark Vandermaas and his wife did after life in Canada had grown unpredictably autocratic. Host, Robert Vaughan, likened his homeland to the Neverland of Peter Pan, where the Lost Boys remained children, perpetually stunted in their growth and maturity, unable to become responsible adults and forever treated like children by a paternalistic, stern, and stifling government.

Confronted by a relentless onslaught of encroachments upon their personal liberties—assaults that permeated the lives of every Canadian—they swiftly packed their belongings and departed for the serene, temperate elevations of that comparatively tranquil nation. They established their new home in the city of Cuenca, nestled high amid the majestic Andes Mountains.

In our discussion, we explore Mark’s activism in Canada, the pivotal decision he and his wife made to emigrate, and the striking contrasts in politics and culture between Canada and Ecuador.

If you found this presentation valuable please consider making a contribution:
🧡 PayPal