Latest posts
-
Welcome to Senate Doomscrolling: Why 2026 Is a Democratic Nightmare and 2028 Is the Sequel No One Survives

In American politics, hope springs eternal, but the Senate map springs something closer to gastrointestinal distress. Democrats already understand the 2026 landscape is bleak. What they have not fully absorbed is that 2028 is worse, the kind of worse that makes you stare into the middle distance like a Victorian widow holding a folded flag.
-
When the Courts Have to Tell the President to Feed People: A Shutdown Fable for a Starving Republic

There are countries where courts decide matters of constitutional doctrine, high-stakes mergers, or the limits of executive war power. And then there is the United States of America, where a federal judge now has to order the President to feed hungry people like he’s reminding a teenager to take out the trash. This week, Judge
-
Clean Toilets, Dirty Secrets: ICE Finally Gets a Court-Ordered Makeover in Broadview

Somewhere between bureaucracy and mildew, the Constitution just won a small victory. This week, a federal judge in Chicago decided that the Bill of Rights applies even when the floors are wet. U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman issued a temporary restraining order forcing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to clean up the Broadview detention facility
-
The Dick Cheney Legacy: When Power, Privilege and Paradox Collide

At 84, Dick Cheney leaves us a blueprint of power run amok, and a side note on gay rights that doesn’t redeem the wreckage. There is a kind of irony that follows the news of Dick Cheney’s death in 2025 like an aftershock: the man who helped expand the presidency’s power, condone torture, harden the
-
The Night New York Chose Hope Over Fear And Turned Zohran Mamdani’s Microphone On

A working city ignored a presidential threat, shrugged at nostalgia, and handed the job to a 34-year-old borough organizer who treated power like a verb. The story begins the way most power stories do, inside a pressure chamber. A president raised the cost of defiance on a city he does not love. A former governor
-
The Case for Kamala Harris: The 107-Day Trial, the Lost Race, and Why 2028 Could Be Her Full Shot

This piece is part of my ongoing series where I make the affirmative case for every potential 2028 Democratic presidential candidate—their virtues, their pitfalls, their receipts. Each of them gets the same treatment: no mythmaking, no memes, no mercy. Today’s subject is the one who had the least time but left the deepest mark. Kamala



