Veterans Day underscores service to country and Constitution over loyalty to power.
SNAP cuts reveal a politics that treats suffering as discipline instead of failure.
The winning message isn’t abstract—it’s about the price of living and who’s making it higher.
The conversation began with gratitude for veterans, but widened into a reckoning with how far the country has drifted from that ethic of service. Rick Wilson drew the line between principle and performance, arguing that the same surrender Democrats showed in the Senate now echoes in policies that let children go hungry. His fury wasn’t about partisanship—it was about moral collapse, about leaders who’d rather appear decent than be effective. The moral thread ran through everything: a nation that rewards cruelty cannot claim strength. Yet, within that anger was a call to clarity—one that insists decency means nothing without defense.
Tune in to this Veterans Day edition from Lincoln Square.
Democrats: The Party That Forgot to Fight | Enemies List
This may get some blowback, but it has to be said: This week's entry to the Enemies List are those Democratic consultants who spend millions of dollars talking at men. The crisis facing the Democratic Party isn’t just about policy — it’s about perception, narrative, and emotional connection. MAGA gives disaffected men a sense of belonging, identity, and…











