Latest posts

  • America’s Next Top Solution: How Reality Shows Could Fix Society’s Problems

    America’s Next Top Solution: How Reality Shows Could Fix Society’s Problems

    Imagine a world where Congress is replaced by contestants in sequins, Supreme Court rulings come down to who gets the final rose, and infrastructure funding is determined by who can survive the most eliminations on a beach with zero electricity and twelve influencers. If this sounds absurd, ask yourself: is it really any worse than

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  • Bombs First, Congress Later: Trump’s Strikes on Iran Break the Rules (Again)

    Bombs First, Congress Later: Trump’s Strikes on Iran Break the Rules (Again)

    On June 21, 2025, President Donald Trump announced via Truth Social that the United States had conducted “a very successful attack” on three Iranian nuclear sites—Fordow, Natanz, and Esfahan. In the post, he proudly confirmed that a “full payload of bombs” had been dropped on the Fordow facility, and that all U.S. warplanes had exited

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  • Medicaid and Social Security Replaced with Thoughts and Prayers (and Other Promises from the Apocalypse)

    Medicaid and Social Security Replaced with Thoughts and Prayers (and Other Promises from the Apocalypse)

    Welcome to the future: where the oceans have risen, the temperature is lava-adjacent, and America’s retirement plan is a half-used candle from Hobby Lobby labeled “HOPE.” In this brave new world, Medicaid and Social Security have officially been replaced with a federal program called Thoughts and Prayers, which is just a pop-up window that plays

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  • The Unseen Side of the South: What My Road Trips Reveal Beyond the Postcards

    The Unseen Side of the South: What My Road Trips Reveal Beyond the Postcards

    When people think of the American South, a particular image springs to mind: magnolia trees, sweet tea, wraparound porches, maybe a fiddle in the background and someone with a syrupy drawl offering you a “bless your heart.” And while those postcards aren’t exactly wrong—hell, I’ve sipped a sweet tea on a wraparound porch in Georgia

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  • The Unseen Hand – What the Supreme Court Is Doing While You’re Not Looking

    Lately, the headlines often roar with the latest political dramas, the fiery pronouncements from the White House, or the contentious debates reverberating through the halls of Congress. These are the visible storms, the public performances that capture our immediate attention and define the daily news cycle. But beneath this roiling surface, often away from the

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  • Student Visa Pause – A Self-Inflicted Wound for America’s Future

    The news that rippled through the higher education community this past week landed with the force of a sudden, unwelcome jolt: the U.S. government has paused student visa interviews. For colleges and universities across the nation, this decision immediately translated into chaos, confusion, and profound disruption. But for me, as someone who believes deeply in

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  • The Art of the Perfect Side-Eye: A Masterclass in Non-Verbal Communication

    Some people wield words like weapons. Others prefer subtle daggers of silence. Me? I’ve got the side-eye. Not just any side-eye. I’m talking about a calculated, well-seasoned, generationally perfected look that says everything I don’t need to vocalize — with just a flick of the eyeball. My abuela had it. My mother could do it

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  • From Vocal Powerhouses to Storytellers: The Shifting Role of Singers in Music

    There was a time when being a singer meant you had to bring the house down with one note. You didn’t just hold a tune—you held court. You commanded the stage with a voice that could gut an arena full of people and leave them clinging to the last note like it was their therapy.

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  • The Real Cost of Building Walls: Immigration and National Identity

    Somewhere along the border between two countries, a child stares through slats of steel, wide-eyed and sunburned. A few miles away, an American citizen posts a meme about “illegals” stealing jobs. One is seeking hope. The other is clinging to fear. And between them stands a wall—concrete, metal, ideology. It’s sold as protection, but like

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  • Why Awards Shows Are My Favorite Form of Performance Art (And Occasional Train Wreck)

    There’s something oddly comforting about the chaos of an awards show. Maybe it’s the glittering gowns that look like someone lost a bet with a glue gun. Maybe it’s the presenters who butcher the teleprompter like it insulted their mother. Or maybe it’s just the promise that something will go off the rails and Twitter

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