Last week, the Texas Legislature stirred up quite a storm by passing a bold—and let’s be honest, pretty controversial—mid-decade redistricting map. Now, that’s not your typical move. Redistricting usually happens after the census, every ten years, not smack-dab in the middle of the decade. But here we are. The vote split right down party lines:…
Liberty, Law, and Loyalty: The Case of Rumeysa Ozturk
On March 25, 2025, federal agents descended on Somerville, Massachusetts, and arrested Rumeysa Ozturk, a Turkish Ph.D. student at Tufts University. The agents, dressed in masks and black uniforms, detained her without any public warning. The reason? Her student visa had been revoked by the U.S. government, reportedly in response to a pro-Palestinian op-ed she…
Wrong Tool for the Job: Why the Alien Enemies Act Was Misapplied
Yesterday, I wrote an article arguing that the Alien Enemies Act (AEA) was the wrong legal tool to deport members of Tren de Aragua (TdA)—a position that my fellow conservative over at The Conservative TAKE strongly disagrees with. You can read his counterargument here. While he raises some valid points, his overall argument is fundamentally…
A Felony Conviction and the Oval Office: The Perils of Presidential Immunity and Moral Compromise
The sentencing of Donald Trump to an unconditional discharge in his hush-money case—a conviction that leaves him as the first U.S. president-elect with a felony on his record—marks an extraordinary chapter in American legal, political, and moral history. Justice Merchan's decision, though couched in high-minded language about respecting the office of the presidency, sets a…