When Amy Klobuchar jumped into the race for governor of Minnesota, no one spilled their coffee in surprise. This wasn’t a plot twist. It was a career politician making a very logical career move. Klobuchar has been circling the governor’s mansion for years, and with the field suddenly opening up, she stepped in like someone…
Should Kristi Noem Be Fired? Accountability, Credibility, and the Real Test of DHS Leadership
The controversy surrounding the Department of Homeland Security’s Minnesota operations—and the fatal shootings that followed—has quickly grown beyond a localized tragedy into a defining test of executive accountability. At the center of the storm stands Kristi Noem, whose handling of the aftermath has triggered rare bipartisan calls for her dismissal. The question now confronting the…
Justice That Takes Life Seriously: Why the Death Penalty Remains Morally Just
Donald Trump’s renewed push to expand and emphasize the death penalty, particularly for murder, has reignited a debate that is often framed almost entirely in emotional or political terms. Yet beneath the rhetoric lies a far more serious moral question: does justice require that the taking of innocent human life be met with the most…
Mixed Signals in the War on Drugs
The U.S. scored a hard-fought win with the guilty plea of Joaquín Guzmán López — son of infamously brutal cartel boss Joaquín “El Chapo” Guzmán — a leader in the cartel faction known as “Los Chapitos.” He admitted overseeing massive trafficking of fentanyl, heroin, cocaine and other narcotics into the United States. That’s the kind…
Stop Using Federal Workers as Political Pawns
Let’s call this shutdown what it is: a national embarrassment. Once again, Congress has failed to do its most basic job — fund the government — and, once again, federal workers are being turned into bargaining chips in a high-stakes game of political chicken. This time, Senator Ron Johnson (R–Wis.) tried to do something practical.…
Andrew Cuomo vs. Zohran Mamdani: When Politics Becomes a Battle of Identities
If there’s one thing America doesn’t need more of right now, it’s another shouting match over who’s the bigger “offender.” Yet, here we are, with Andrew Cuomo, the once (and perhaps future) power player of New York politics, and Zohran Mamdani, the Democratic Socialist Assemblyman from Queens, going head-to-head in a fight that says more…
The Supreme Court and the Sword: A Case That Could Redefine Presidential Power
There’s a tug-of-war playing out across America right now, and it’s not between two candidates or even two political parties. It’s between the Constitution’s two halves: federal and state power. President Trump’s latest legal battle over deploying the National Guard in cities like Portland, Chicago, and San Francisco has pulled that rope tighter than it’s…
When Courts Say “No” to Troops, Should the President Invoke the Insurrection Act?
Over the past few weeks, the Trump administration’s attempt to insert federal military (or Guard) force into major American cities has triggered a cascade of courtroom pushbacks. What looked like a bold posture on law and order is increasingly turning into a legal war of attrition. The administration, frustrated by injunctions and restraining orders, is…
Bombs, Boats, and the Battle Against the Bad Guys
President Trump recently decided that enough is enough when it comes to the drug cartels flooding our streets with fentanyl, cocaine, and all manner of misery. He’s officially labeled these cartels as “unlawful combatants,” a fancy legal way of saying, “We’re treating them like terrorists, not just criminals.” Under this new policy, the U.S. military…
From Portland to Chicago: Is Federal Force the New Normal?
When the National Guard starts showing up in your backyard more often than the Amazon delivery guy, you start to wonder: is this just another bad news cycle or is it the new way we do government? Let’s recap the last few weeks. President Trump sends troops to D.C. to clean up the mess that…