The Fourth of July is supposed to feel like a reset, but it hits differently when people look around and see a country that can fund anything abroad while families cut back at home. We start with a viral political message about America’s contradictions, then challenge the instinct to turn Independence Day into a scolding session. For us, the better move is to separate the ideals worth celebrating from the government actions worth opposing and to ask what it would take to return the American empire to a constitutional republic.
From there, we dig into the economic anxiety behind the anger. When millions feel like they have no prospects, politics becomes a fight over villains instead of a fight for opportunity. We talk about the opioid crisis, fentanyl overdoses, and suicides as brutal signals that parts of the country have lost hope. The key question is not whether wealth exists, but whether regular people can realistically climb, start businesses, and build stable lives.
That leads to the heart of our argument: corporate welfare and regulatory capture. Government contracts, subsidies, and a sprawling regulatory code reward the biggest players and punish everyone else. If only giant corporations can afford compliance, lawyers, and lobbying, “free markets” become a slogan while competition quietly dies.
We then connect the domestic squeeze to US foreign policy: NATO burden sharing, the Iran war, the Strait of Hormuz, and a Ukraine poll showing strong public preference for negotiations. Power is shifting, allies are saying “no,” and Washington cannot paper over reality with talking points. If this conversation adds value, subscribe, share the show, and leave a review. What’s one change you think would do the most to rebuild freedom and opportunity?
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