Sunday, February 22, 2026


 
Let me ask something real.
Do you believe there’s a secret group of powerful people controlling the world?
A hidden network that traffics women, protects pedophiles, brought down the Towers on 9/11, and is behind people going missing?
A lot of people believe this. And I understand why.
When the world feels chaotic…
When powerful people get caught doing evil things…
When corruption is real…
When justice feels selective…
It’s easy to connect everything into one giant hidden hand.
But here’s the hard question:
Is it one secret master group…
Or is it greed, corruption, broken systems, and powerful individuals protecting their own interests?
History shows us something important:
There have been conspiracies.
There have been cover-ups.
There have been trafficking rings.
There have been intelligence failures.
There have been powerful men protected for years.
But history also shows:
Large, coordinated “control the whole world” groups are incredibly hard to hide long term.
Secrets leak.
People talk.
Agendas clash.
Sometimes what looks like one giant shadow is actually many smaller corrupt systems overlapping.
We should question power.
We should demand transparency.
We should protect children.
We should fight trafficking.
We should hold elites accountable.
But we also have to be careful not to let fear turn into stories that lump everything into one invisible monster.
Ask yourself:
What evidence is proven?
What is speculation?
What is emotion?
What is politics?
What is documented fact?
Truth matters.
Fear spreads faster than facts.
And real justice requires clarity — not just suspicion.
I’m not telling you what to believe.
I’m asking you to think.
Larry D. Roberts..


 
If We Had a Population of Philosophers, Would the State Still Exist?
“If we had a population of philosophers, citizens would no longer willingly subject themselves to being ruled by the state.”
At first glance, this sounds liberating — even revolutionary.
But is it true?
To answer this properly, we must define two things:
What is a philosopher? And what does it mean to be ruled?
What Is a Philosopher?
A philosopher is not merely someone who reads books or debates abstract ideas.
A philosopher, in the civic sense, is someone who:
• Thinks critically before reacting
• Examines assumptions
• Understands trade-offs
• Questions authority without rejecting order
• Values truth over tribal loyalty
If a society were filled with such citizens, blind obedience would certainly disappear.
But would governance disappear as well?
Not necessarily.
Submission vs. Rational Consent
There is an important difference between:
• Blind submission
• Rational consent
Blind submission accepts authority without question.
Rational consent accepts authority because it is justified.
A population of philosophers would reject blind obedience.
But they might rationally agree to governance if it protects rights, maintains order, and coordinates collective action.
In other words, they would not “subject themselves.”
They would consent thoughtfully.
What the Great Thinkers Argued
History does not support the idea that philosophy eliminates the state.
Plato believed society should be governed by philosopher-kings — not abolished.
Aristotle described human beings as “political animals,” naturally forming structured communities.
Centuries later, Thomas Hobbes argued that rational individuals would accept a sovereign to prevent chaos.
Meanwhile, John Locke argued that government derives legitimacy from consent — and may be replaced if it violates rights.
None of them imagined a world without governance.
They imagined a world where governance must be justified.
Why Governance Still Exists — Even Among the Wise
Even a society of disciplined thinkers must still:
• Build infrastructure
• Resolve disputes
• Enforce contracts
• Coordinate defense
• Manage shared resources
Political organization is not only a response to irrationality.
It is also a response to complexity.
Modern societies are too interconnected to function without structure. Roads, courts, trade systems, public health, and national security require coordination beyond individual decision-making.
Freedom reduces the need for coercion.
But it does not eliminate the need for institutions.
The Real Transformation
If a population of philosophers existed, the state would not vanish.
It would transform.
• Authority would rest on transparency, not fear.
• Laws would require stronger justification.
• Public debate would be disciplined, not chaotic.
• Leaders would be evaluated by reasoning, not charisma.
Governance would become lighter — not because power disappears, but because citizens are mature.
The relationship would shift from ruler and subject
to institution and participant.
A Counterargument
However, we must also acknowledge something important:
Even philosophers disagree.
Disagreement does not disappear with intelligence.
Different values, priorities, and interpretations of justice still exist.
A population of thinkers may debate more intensely — not less.
Politics exists not only because people are irrational.
It exists because human interests and moral visions differ.
So governance remains necessary, not as domination, but as arbitration.
The Deeper Risk
The real danger is not that philosophers would abolish the state.
The real danger is when citizens stop thinking.
When questioning disappears, power centralizes.
When emotional reaction replaces reasoning, institutions weaken.
When citizens prefer comfort over truth, manipulation becomes easy.
A passive society invites domination.
A thoughtful society demands accountability.
Conclusion
So the stronger statement is not:
“A population of philosophers would eliminate the state.”
It is this:
A population of philosophers would no longer submit blindly to authority — they would consent thoughtfully to governance.
That is not anarchy.
That is maturity.
And perhaps the future of stable leadership does not begin with better rulers — but with better thinkers.
Final Reflection
We often ask:
“Who should rule?”
Perhaps the better question is:
“What kind of citizens are we becoming?”
Because leadership ultimately reflects the intellectual and moral condition of the people.
If we cultivate wisdom, power must rise to match it.
And that is where real political growth begins.

MAGA is fighting an enemy that doesn't exist...
This morning, I awoke to a right-wing rant on my wall about the liberal poor and the liberal elites. Notedly absent from hairless Captain Caveman's theories were the estimates 62% of Democrats in the upper middle class.
I'm told every day by bald man wearing sunglasses standing next to motorcycle to "cut my hair, get a job, and stop sponging off the government." I see comments all over Facebook from the night shift supervisor at the local turd factory, saying, "We're the one's paying for everything,"
I see some moron flailing his arms, wildly screaming that the entire city of San Francisco looks like the Tenderloin, or all of LA looks like Skid Row, or even the President calling Portland "war torn" as there's a hip, artsy farmers market peacefully existing.
Then, obviously, if this page has taught us anything, nothing outrages these emotionally stunted, amped up crap-throwing, zoo monkeys more than giving them facts. Don't do that, no matter what you do because according to them--even though they could leave their economically crumbling town for the first time in their lives and see for themselves--everything I said is ALL LIES (paid for by George Soros).
Either I'm living in squalor or I'm funded by billionaire. No one knows, not even me.
They look at their paycheck, all $49 of it, and see the $1.49 that came out in taxes, and say, "Them Jewosexuals what are in that Commieformia done took all my money and done gave it to the blacks and the Mexicans for Nutty Bars."
As Mr. MAGA sits there angrily eating a literal rock rubbed in Montreal Steak seasoning for dinner, he doesn't consider it was a bad choice to drop out of high school to become a cough syrup and airplane glue dealer, that skipping college opting for high front end wages of the trades wasn't the best long term financial choice--sure it was a great until he had 11 kids.
My observations on all of this don't come from what I read on the internet. I've traveled this country for 14 years. I've seen the state of small to medium towns all over America, the backwards mindset, met the "town lesbian" who the locals all go out of their way to say, "Here's our local gay and I am totally cool with that."
Why bomb Methlab, Kentucky? It would only look nicer.
They think I woke up in California this morning, got robbed by a homeless man, took my non-binary kid who uses a litter box to school, so the teacher could indoctrinate them with "ejicashin" and then cut of their genitals. Then they're angry as hell about it and they're gonna vote to stop it even though it's not even happening in the first place.
There was no better example of MAGA idiocy than the moment the kirkroaches went from, "you're all unemployed" to getting everyone fired from their jobs. You can't make it make sense.
They're all fighting a monster that lives in their minds, a Joe Biden who is solely responsible for 9% inflation even though he is not the chairman of the fed, didn't invade Ukraine, and UK experienced 11% inflation at the exact same moment. Nope, it's all the "DUM O CRAT BIBEN FALT."
Then, when all else fails, when they can't defend anything they say, they pull out the trans card, "Oh yeah, you don't even know what a woman is!" I'm assuming they gathered this from the fact that I have two kids and three grandkids.
Old Ronny John Quixote is out seeking windmills again, but don't say windmills because like clockwork, they'll suddenly start caring about the health and safety of birds (birds aren't real), and shout drill baby drill.
That's right honkeytrons, drill... a hole in my head and scrape out my frontal lobe because West By God Viriginia, none of my high fangled book learning means anything when you show up.
So why bother?
I have no idea. I don't even know why I am typing at anymore, other than just to keep my fingers in shape so I don't get a sprain while I'm signing up for all them there entitlements what they work 22 hours a day to pay for.
Maybe I need to join them.
GET A JOB LIBRELS
Follow me if you feel me and send me stars so I can afford a $33 box of Nutty Bars thanks to tariffs and people who don't read good.

 


The Communist Manifesto After 1848
Revolution, Property, and the Problem of Power
In 1848, Europe erupted.
From Paris to Berlin, from Vienna to Milan, revolutions broke out demanding constitutions, national unity, economic reform, and political rights. In the middle of this storm, two young thinkers — Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels — published a short pamphlet that would outlive the barricades: The Communist Manifesto.
The revolutions of 1848 largely failed. Monarchies survived. The old order reasserted itself.
But the ideas did not disappear.
Instead, they entered history.
The Real Clash: Bourgeoisie vs Proletariat
Marx argued that history moves through class struggle. In the industrial age, the decisive conflict would be between:
• Bourgeoisie — owners of factories, capital, finance
• Proletariat — wage laborers who sell their labor
The old aristocracy was fading. A new ruling class had emerged: industrial capital.
Marx’s claim was bold: capitalism itself creates the conditions for its own replacement.
But what exactly did he propose?
1. Abolition of Private Property (But Not Personal Belongings)
One of the most misunderstood demands in the Manifesto is the “abolition of property.”
Marx did not mean abolishing personal possessions like clothes or homes for living. He meant abolishing bourgeois private property — ownership of large-scale productive assets such as factories, mines, and industrial capital.
The goal was to eliminate class-based control over production.
Here lies the tension:
• The middle class may support redistribution (taxation, welfare).
• But it resists abolishing ownership itself.
This is the dividing line between moderate socialism and revolutionary communism.
2. Abolition or Restriction of Inheritance
Marx proposed heavy limits on inheritance because inheritance reproduces class inequality across generations.
For many families, inheritance represents security and legacy.
For Marx, it represented structural inequality.
This debate continues today in discussions about estate taxes and generational wealth concentration.
3. Centralization of Credit
The Manifesto proposed centralizing credit in the hands of the state through a national bank.
In 19th-century Britain, financial institutions like the Bank of England symbolized the growing power of finance.
Marx believed private finance amplified capital’s dominance over labor.
State control of credit was meant to break that power.
But this introduces a philosophical problem:
If finance is centralized in the state, who controls the state?
4. Centralization of Communication and Transport
Communication and transport were the arteries of industrial capitalism.
Marx proposed public control to prevent oligarchic monopolies.
Supporters argue this promotes equality.
Critics argue this risks authoritarian control.
The deeper question remains:
Is concentrated economic power safer in private hands or in political hands?
5. Combination of Agriculture and Manufacturing
Marx wanted to dissolve the sharp divide between:
• Rural peasants
• Urban industrial workers
In 1848, different regions had different concerns:
• Poland focused on agrarian reform.
• Germany focused on industrial labor.
• France demanded republicanism.
• Switzerland experienced radical democratic movements.
Communism attempted to unify these struggles under one international class movement.
6. Free Education for All Children
Marx supported free public education to:
• Eliminate child labor
• Empower workers
• Break the cycle of inherited disadvantage
Education shapes citizens in every system — capitalist, socialist, religious, secular.
The real issue is not whether education influences minds. It always does.
The question is:
Who defines truth? The market? The state? The church? The party?
The Vanguard and the Withering Away of the State
Marx envisioned a transitional phase — the “dictatorship of the proletariat” — after which the state would eventually “wither away.”
Later, Vladimir Lenin developed the idea of a disciplined revolutionary party to lead the working class.
History, however, revealed a tension.
In the 20th century:
• Soviet Union
• China
• Cuba
The ruling parties did not voluntarily dissolve themselves.
The state did not fully “wither away.”
This is one of the deepest philosophical contradictions in revolutionary theory:
Can centralized power ever peacefully eliminate itself?
History suggests: power rarely disappears voluntarily.
Why Internationalism?
The Manifesto ends with a call:
“Workers of the world, unite!”
Marx believed capitalism was global.
Therefore, revolution must also be global.
To critics, this looked like international conspiracy.
To Marx, it was historical logic.
The tension between national sovereignty and international solidarity remains relevant today.
What 1848 Actually Proved
The revolutions failed in the short term.
But in the long term:
• Constitutional reforms expanded.
• Industrial capitalism intensified.
• Trade unions grew.
• Socialist parties formed.
• Welfare states later emerged.
Capitalism did not collapse in 1848.
It adapted.
Instead of immediate revolution, many countries developed:
• Social democracy
• Labor protections
• Public education systems
• Regulatory states
The bourgeoisie compromised to survive.
A Philosophical Reflection
If we view history as a structured “game,” then 1848 revealed three players:
1. Aristocracy (land-based power)
2. Bourgeoisie (capital-based power)
3. Proletariat (labor-based power)
Marx predicted the final victory of labor over capital.
What happened instead was more complex:
Capital reorganized itself.
The state expanded.
Democracy widened.
And class conflict transformed rather than disappeared.
The Enduring Question
Communism sought justice, equality, and the end of exploitation.
But it required:
• Centralized authority
• Revolutionary discipline
• Temporary suppression of opposition
Here lies the paradox:
To eliminate domination, one may first need to concentrate power.
And concentrated power rarely dissolves itself.
The Communist Manifesto after 1848 was not just a revolutionary document.
It was a diagnosis of modern industrial society.
Some predictions were premature.
Some critiques remain alive.
The clash between bourgeoisie and proletariat continues in new forms — through debates about wealth inequality, financial power, state intervention, and global labor markets.
The barricades of 1848 fell.
But the philosophical battle over property, justice, and power continues.
 

Saturday, February 21, 2026

 
The Masks Are Slipping
Jeffrey Epstein wasn’t some fringe creep operating alone in the dark.
Evil Epstein moved in the highest circles on earth.
Billionaires. Presidents. Prime Ministers. Royalty. University presidents. Media executives. Hedge fund managers. That isn’t conspiracy. That’s documented reality. The photos are real. The flight logs are real. The court documents are real.
The part people can’t swallow isn’t just what he did.
It’s how long he was protected.
After his first conviction, every powerful person in his orbit should have run the other direction. Instead, many stayed close. Universities took his money. Financial giants paid him. Influential people met with him. His social status barely cracked.
If an ordinary citizen had that stain on their name, they’d be erased from public life overnight.
Different rules. That’s the truth.
Then he supposedly ends up dead in federal custody. Cameras fail. Guards “fell asleep.” A high-profile inmate on suicide watch was left alone.
And we’re supposed to just move on and accept the bullshit. I think not.
People did move on, for a while. But the questions didn’t disappear. Every unanswered question created 5 more.
Then came the pandemic. Governments told us to trust them completely. Media narrowed what could be said. Tech companies decided what counted as acceptable opinion. Emergency powers expanded. Massive sums of money moved at breathtaking speed.
And again, power concentrated.
You don’t need dramatic internet mythology to see that something is wrong. You don’t need demons and secret cults to understand that elite networks protect themselves. Finance overlaps with politics. Politics overlaps with media. Media overlaps with global institutions. They sit on each other’s boards. They fund each other’s projects. They hire each other’s law firms.
And when one of them falls?
The fallout is managed.
Contained.
Controlled.
Hidden.
That is what destroyed public trust.
The anger online isn’t random. It isn’t hysteria. It’s what happens when justice is selective. When investigations drag on and on. When documents stay sealed. When resignations replace prosecutions.
People don’t fill the silence with suspicion because they’re crazy.
They fill it because no one is answering plainly.
Here’s where I stand.
If powerful people committed crimes, investigate them.
If evidence exists, charge them.
If charges are proven, jail them.
Not because we want chaos. Because the rule of law means nothing if it only applies downward.
And if crimes were not committed, then unseal the documents and prove it. Release the information. Clear the air.
But secrecy breeds mistrust. Silence breeds speculation. And selective accountability breeds resentment.
The public is not willing to accept “trust us” anymore.
That era is over.
The masks are slipping.


Larry Fink just dropped a major blueprint for the future at the World Economic Forum: a fully digitized global financial system.
Every asset, stocks, bonds, real estate, money market funds, even cash, would exist on a single unified blockchain. Ownership would be tokenized, fractionalized, programmable, and instantly transferable.
Fink says the goal is to "reduce corruption", but the plan effectively centralizes control over the entire global economy in one digital system.
This isn't science fiction, this is the direction BlackRock and Elite financial institutions are pushing right now. #digitalcurrency #GlobalFinance #oneworldgovernment #newworldorder #blackrock #LarryFink #fblifestyle
 
***Anyone alive, stupid enough to fall for this "TRAP" is beyond help! This is total and absolute control, right down to oxygen intake. YOU will never own anything, all will be rented or leased right down to cars and whether you can even own animals especially farm animals, etc. You will be controlled as to how, when, and what you spend the digital currency you are allotted, you will be fined if you've spent on something not approved by the "Controllers" actual cash will be abolished and not allowed. The control of each and every human will be maintained by the billionaire oligarchy who have designed and are enforcing this new way of life. Democracy will be eliminated, extremely limited freedom will be only for the chosen in rewards and their status. Once you're caught in this net the only way out will be death. Trust these capitalist wardens at your peril, with the understanding every single choice given to you is at their discretion and mercy. 

After a demoralizing defeat in November 2024, the Democratic Party has been enjoying an electoral surge across the country; throughout 2025, the average result in special House races was a 15.6 percent improvement on the 2024 baseline. The party’s worst showings, in fact, were a pair of 13 percent surges in Tennessee and Arizona. Democrats romped to impressive victories in New Jersey and Virginia. An energized left scored major wins in mayoral races in New York City and Seattle. For the first time in decades, the party notched statewide office wins in Georgia. So far, the trend does not seem to be abating; a recent state Senate race in deep red Tarrant County, Texas, saw a 34 percent swing and the election of Democrat Taylor Rehmet. Usual disclaimers about the unrepresentativeness of special elections aside, these are some seismic shifts. 

A lot has happened in the past year. President Donald Trump is singular in his ability to pack a whole 52 decade-long weeks into a single trip around the sun. But there are some commonalities across all of the Democratic overperformances. They all focused relentlessly on cost of living issues and channeling widespread dissatisfaction with the status quo. Freed from the polite norm of defending a floundering, disliked incumbent, candidates are emboldened to rage against the machine. Whether we’re talking about democratic socialists in New York, middle-of-the-road liberals in New Jersey, or blue-collar unionists in Texas, everyone has built their coalition on a pillar of directly addressing economic anxiety. It even has a name: affordability politics.

But just beneath the surface of the affordability messaging that has been propelling Democrats to victory is something far more profound than annoyance at high nominal prices: anger at corporate power. To create a durable affordability agenda, Democrats must embrace widespread feelings of economic powerlessness head on—and embrace making enemies of the corporate behemoths controlling our lives. The party’s leadership that is still in thrall to an outmoded form of politics that no longer works must be jettisoned. Americans are simply fed up, and with good reason: Corporate power is taking a dive for the benefit of Trump.

In 2022, jury-selection consulting firm Orrick found that 45 percent of survey respondents had somewhat or very negative perceptions of large corporations, compared to 40 percent with somewhat or very positive perceptions. That represented a doubling of negative sentiment from Orrick’s 2019 findings. And while the firm noted increased skepticism of institutions broadly, distrust of corporations outstripped the other categories Orrick analyzed: the courts (17 percent, up from 8 pre-pandemic) and police (36 percent, up from 11).  

In its 2025 follow-up research, Orrick determined that the high level of distrust in institutions, foremost major corporations, had “cemented over the last three years.” In 2025, 86 percent agreed with the statement that “corporations use their power and money to improperly influence regulatory agencies or lawmakers.” 

Orrick’s findings are not anomalous; both Gallup and Pew have shown marked declines in sentiment toward big businesses. Gallup has big business’s approval rate falling from 52 percent in 2019 to 37 percent in 2025. Pew shows a less marked drop, mostly because it found a far lower 2019 approval rate, moving from 36 percent believing large corporations have a positive impact on the nation’s direction to 29 percent over the same period. Notably, Pew’s research shows that, while Democratic-leaning voters have been relatively consistent—the percent believing large corporations improve society was in the 20s for the entire time—Republican-leaning voters’ faith in big business has plummeted. 

The American National Election Studies, using data from late 2024, found the most negative perception of big business on record since 1964. This tracks a large and growing body of evidence showing that since at least 2020, Americans have become deeply skeptical of large corporations and their influence over the government and economy. According to polling outfit Navigator, 71 percent of Americans blame the wealthy and large corporations not paying enough taxes for their own tax burden. In 2021, Data for Progress and the Revolving Door Project found that 75 percent believe the federal government “prioritizes the interests of corporations and the wealthy” and 80 percent agreed that “wealthy people and corporations are regularly not punished for breaking the law.” A fall 2025 poll from YouGov and The Economist shows 80 percent of people think the rich have too much power.

Crucially, large majorities of Americans blame corporations for their affordability issues. In the YouGov/Economist poll, 72 percent think that developers maximizing profits is somewhat or very important in making housing costs more expensive. Data for Progress and Groundwork Collaborative research in 2022 found 63 percent of people believed large corporations were unfairly raising prices. In 2023, 90 percent of respondents told YouGov that they blamed corporate profit-seeking at least some for inflation, with 61 percent blaming it a lot. The public is right; executives were openly saying on earnings calls, where lying is prohibited by federal law, that they were using the inflationary environment to rent-seek.

The rage over affordability issues has everything to do with the public’s exhaustion with being ripped off. Understanding this is the first step toward building a real politics of affordability. The next is to embrace open conflict with the corporate villains extorting the public. 

The public agrees; the DFP/RDP survey saw 83 percent of respondents say that not punishing the wealthy and corporations for misconduct leaves ordinary citizens to bear the cost of their actions. In fall 2024, Navigator found 73 percent of “economically persuadable” voters wanted “cracking down” on corporate price gouging to be a top priority, the single highest share of all economic issues in the sample. Of all respondents, 83 percent said it should be either a priority or a top priority. Only 4 percent said it should not be a priority at all. In a Demand Progress poll from May 2025, 82 percent said they would be more likely to vote for a candidate if they heard the message: “The thing we need to do to make the government and economy do a better job of serving working and middle-class Americans is to get money out of politics, break up corporate monopolies, and fight corruption.”

Whether to crack down on corporate misconduct is only a debate in policy-wonk circles; the public has long since made up its mind that a crackdown is the only way to rebalance the economy and restore affordability. The Democrats who ran on affordability in 2025 realized this. New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani proudly promised to take on corporate greed and is, according to veteran finance analyst Albert Edwards, the start of a reckoning corporate America has brought upon itself by raking in profits and raising prices while Americans struggled to keep their heads above water. 

Our current chapter of Democratic bumbling on “kitchen table”–style politics is downstream of a lasting legacy of economic determinism as a view of politics. Clinton’s famous “it’s the economy, stupid” preceded a chapter of political science and punditry in which elections were viewed largely as predetermined by economic factors. This view has haunted the left-of-center world and is directly responsible for much of the worst politics and punditry of the last two decades. 

In 2009, Democrats looked destined to ride the coattails of the Great Recession into another period of political dominance. Their ascendance looked to be ordained by the combination of complete Republican humiliation from their botched stewardship of the economy—even if the blame was shared with Bush’s predecessors, including the outgoing Clinton administration, especially for repealing Glass Steagall and blocking oversight of over-the-counter derivatives—and the inexorable march of demographic change that was making the nation less white and more diverse. Then came the 2010 midterms: Democrats were knocked off their high horse before they could ride off into the sunset. 

The official story of Democratic politics centered around two dueling determinisms. In the short run, the party was always destined to lose significant ground in 2010, because sluggish economic recovery would translate into electoral backlash. All the models said so. In the longer run, Democrats would coast on the shifting electorate, guaranteed success as Republicans became saddled with a shrinking base. 

Nothing corroborated this view quite so clearly as the 2012 Republican National Committee postmortem on Mitt Romney’s campaign, which reasoned that, because of the growing Hispanic voting population, “we must embrace and champion comprehensive immigration reform. If we do not, our Party’s appeal will continue to shrink to its core constituencies only.” A couple paragraphs later, the report said that the party had to become “welcoming and inclusive” to appeal to minority voters and young people. It’s quaint to remember that the GOP once committed these ideas to print. Four years later, Donald Trump would assume the presidency after doing the polar opposite.

Those twin prophecies conveniently offered the Democratic political class both an alibi and an undue confidence in their party’s fortunes. Election losses were temporary setbacks, mere speedbumps on America’s drive along the road to true multiracial democracy. And so the erstwhile party of the people withered into a husk of itself. The remaining vestiges of Democrats’ New Deal– and Great Society–style populism were pruned. President Obama famously set up an organizing infrastructure outside of the Democratic National Committee that competed with official party organs for resources. Centrist pundit Matthew Yglesias at the time described the post-Obama Democratic Party as a “smoking pole of rubble.” Official partisan infrastructure has since often eschewed even the pretense of a mass politics. 

Rather than prioritize the hard work of political education and organizing, the party shifted toward a reductive model of “persuasion,” where votes were won by strategically triangulating on policy planks to try to approximate the median voter. What the entire mobilization-versus-persuasion debate misses is that no one will be persuaded if the message is never communicated. The lack of a mass politics made the liberal chattering class become myopically focused on appealing to an imagined model voter, rather than building infrastructure for grassroots engagement, which is the engine of both mobilization and message saturation. Rather than using politics to construct a durable majority, Democrats spent their years between the wars chasing ghosts.

Perhaps the clearest example of this is Chuck Schumer dismissing worries around losing blue-collar voters by claiming that such losses will be more than offset by picking up moderate swing voters like the phantasmal Baileys—the bespoke ghosts that Schumer consults as he slaloms through his decision-making process. Schumer, perhaps, was unaware that it was not his imaginary friends but the blue-collar voters and the unions that represented them that operated the on-the-ground political organizing that had powered the Democratic Party for decades. Schumer modeled explicitly what the party as a whole was implicitly oriented around: abandoning living, breathing constituents for the imagined model voter. But the Baileys don’t vote in the real world.

The reduction of politics to an optimization problem was, however, extremely good for the donor class and corporate media. If economic backlash is a flash in the pan, and you’re predestined to prevail in the long term, then the opportunity cost of eschewing old-fashioned populist politics is essentially nil. All of this was happening downstream of what David Sirota and Jared Jacang Maher have called a “Master Plan” being implemented from the 1970s onward. Spelled out in the infamous Powell memo, corporate interests were executing a coordinated plan to weaken the left, empower private interests, and subordinate the common good to business interests.

Against this backdrop, the Obama administration’s choice to let Wall Street off easy and consistently not pursue the investigation and prosecution of high-ranking executives is entirely rational. Doing so wouldn’t fix the economy in the short term and was thereby irrelevant to the midterms. It was largely irrelevant to the march of demographic diversification and so was totally unnecessary to the party’s long-term performance. All it would do, from this point of view, was antagonize business interests, inconveniently undermine donors’ networks and friends, and make dinner parties more awkward.

President Clinton first choreographed this dance when, in 1993, he pivoted aggressively away from his economic populist campaign planks and fully embraced the neoliberal consensus. But it was President Obama’s approach to banks and big business, bailing out corporations and executives while failing to deliver promised aid to homeowners and “Main Street,” that marked the conquest of this view of politics. 

But politics hadn’t been solved. That inexorable liberalizing of the electorate was revealed to be entirely exorable.

Since that fateful decision, Democrats have championed a status quo where the wealthy amassed ever more treasure and privilege while employment conditions have continued to stagnate or deteriorate. The rise of populism, both traditional left economic populism headlined by Bernie Sanders and the faux-populist revanchism of Trump and MAGA, were powered by the widespread discontent with a government that abandoned workers in the name of economic efficiency. 

The increasing powerlessness we all encounter in more and more economic interactions is part and parcel of a broad shift in how we structure our economy that began decades ago but has accelerated in recent years. 

Against the backdrop of the “war on crime,” increasingly aggressive immigration enforcement, and mass incarceration, government regulation of corporations and prosecution of white-collar crime have plummeted. Fiscal year 2025 had the lowest prosecution rate for white-collar crimes since at least 1986. The number of white-collar prosecutions in 2024 was less than half of what it had been in 1994. Looking at nearly any benchmark of corporate enforcement, the past decade has seen a major drop in penalties and the number of cases, just in nominal terms. In the context of rising inflation, a growing economy, and population growth, we should be seeing higher penalties and more cases. As inflation cheapens the dollar, penalties need to grow to pack the same punch. As the economy and workforce grow, even a relatively constant rate of illegal conduct would see the raw count of violations increase.

And yet, most federal enforcement peaked in the second Obama administration and has since fallen markedly. The number of cases brought against companies for wage and hour violations by the Department of Labor has been dropping since 2012. Total corporate penalties peaked in 2014 and have only come close to the level seen under Obama’s second term once since, in 2023. 

Some measures peaked sooner. The prosecution rate for white-collar crime hit its maximum of just about 50 percent in 2009; the second George W. Bush term is the only period in the last 40 years that consistently saw more than 40 percent of criminal referrals to the Department of Justice result in prosecutions. 

And in those rare instances where corporate enforcement has been reasonably robust, billionaires and executives have been visibly enraged. Billionaire donors led by Reid Hoffman made a huge fuss over ditching Lina Khan as a test of Kamala Harris’s fealty to business interests, despite the fact that Khan’s tenure at the Federal Trade Commission was broadly popular and she became something of a folk hero. Gary Gensler’s Securities and Exchange Commission was tarred by the crypto industry and Chamber of Commerce types for daring to (gasp) enforce long-standing securities law. Corporate America responded to Rohit Chopra’s effectiveness at the Consumer Finance Protection Bureau in forcing firms to provide restitution for violating consumer protection laws by seeking to litigate the agency out of existence.

It isn’t just that corporations, executives, and the ultrarich are above the law; they also flaunt the fact. The billionaire class has, as Michael Hirschorn wrote for The New York Times, “gone full Louis XIV.” People know that our government is more committed to serving wealth and capital than it is to serving citizens because it has become more and more transparent. 

Student debt relief took over a decade of organizing and campaigning, only to be dashed on the rocks of a Supreme Court case that had to look the other way just to find standing to sue. But when crypto and fintech accounts were threatened by lazy asset management, keeping large deposits in accounts at Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank over the deposit insurance limits—despite the widespread availability of tools like CDARs that are able to ensure deposits are split up across multiple banks to be fully insured—the Federal Reserve, FDIC, and Treasury Department created authority out of thin air to functionally guarantee all deposits despite clear statutory text to the contrary. Still no word from the Supreme Court. (This is not to say that the bailout was bad on the merits; something probably had to be done to contain the damage. But it is both something that people can intuit and extremely telling that we parse the legal authority endlessly when it comes to helping everyday Americans but not at all when it comes to protecting wealthy investors.)

Similarly, the Supreme Court, over the course of 2025, made obviously contradictory determinations that Congress cannot insulate administrative agency heads who protect consumers and workers from presidential removal, but that it can insulate leadership of the Federal Reserve from presidential removal. The point here is not that leaders at the Fed should not have that protection, only that, if the primary independent regulator is responsible for protecting capital interests through managing price levels and ensuring stable economic conditions and returns on investment (which is, to be clear, often good for everyone), it does not follow logically that the same protections cannot be extended to independent regulators who protect the interests of workers and consumers. It’s a farce so obvious that it feels ripped from a Marxist parody of our government. 

The past decade-plus has seen the government, our courts, and big business routinely playing Calvinball with the rule of law, right in front of our faces. That’s why we face a rising tide of popular resentment toward institutions broadly and corporations specifically.

The onslaught of corporate power is also corroding the basic logic of economic transactions right in front of our eyes. The very concept of prices is breaking down in real time. Everyone is used to being able to talk about “the price” of various goods and services. Obviously there is hardly ever a true, single price. But they have tracked a general price level enough that we can intelligibly talk about price levels, how much something costs, and whether it ought to cost that much. But no longer.

Now, different people are often charged different prices for the same product at the same time at the same retailer through proliferating dynamic or surveillance pricing that seeks to extract the maximum price from each consumer through estimating individualized willingness to pay. An investigation in December 2025 from Groundwork Collaborative and Consumer Reports found that on Instacart, the same product was priced up to 23 percent higher based on dynamic pricing.

Corporations and some pro-corporate pundits try to paint dynamic pricing as something that will lead to lower prices for some, higher prices for some, and generally be good because it “tailors” the cost to each purchaser. But we didn’t all just tumble off the turnip truck. Executives are saying on earnings calls that they anticipate dynamic pricing to be able to increase revenue through “pricing power.” Revenue can increase through raising prices or moving more product, and executives are not generally talking about moving more product. So the average price most of us pay must be going up.

And this all exacerbates the problem of shifting to an “access economy” dominated by platform monopolies. Not only is the basic logic of how much something costs in flux right before our eyes, but more and more, everything we buy is a recurring subscription, rather than a one-off cost. The result is that we are trapped in a growing cycle of paying over and over again while being less able to predict the costs we face. 

Since the Great Recession, people have watched corporate behemoths amass ever more control over daily life. The affordability agenda has to not just make it possible for people to live within their means but also to renew a sense of economic agency. 

Rent-seeking is not exclusive to corporations, obviously, though public corporations do operate under a particularly corruptible incentive structure that compels them to ruthlessly pursue financial returns with no statutory countervailing requirement of good corporate citizenship. But while a homeowners’ association also contributes to higher prices through restricting market access, the platforms that render Americans increasingly powerlessness are in the hands of corporate actors. 

Junk fees, noncompete clauses, predatory training programs that create debt traps, and more effects of concentrated private economic power serve to raise prices or suppress wages. It isn’t merely that people think the standard of living has gotten worse, but that they can tell that it simply hasn’t improved as much as it should. Most Americans today are better off than a pharaoh in ancient Egypt. But they aren’t comparing themselves to Tutenkamen, they’re looking at how they measure up to Elon Musk. 

As long as our market structure exacerbates inequality and undermines economic self-determination, people will feel like they are barely treading water. Freezing the rent and utility prices is a good start, but only a start. Prosperity is not possible until those who have schemed against the American people are run to ground and held accountable at last.