Stuart’s firsthand account from Ukraine reveals a nation rebuilding amid constant threat — and refusing to yield.
Simon warns that Trump’s foreign policy “ruse” is designed to hand Europe to Putin under the guise of fighting cartels.
The Republican Party’s moral collapse is traced from the Southern Strategy to its current pro-authoritarian identity.
Both argue that defending democracy now means matching the courage and clarity of those already under siege.
Stuart Stevens’ stories from Ukraine weren’t about heroism — they were about endurance. “These people aren’t going to quit,” he said, describing judges moonlighting as drone fighters and young engineers turning gaming skills into life-saving tech. In Kyiv, resilience isn’t rhetoric; it’s routine. Amid bomb shelters beside spas and Maxim guns reborn as anti-drone weapons, he found no self-pity, only resolve. The contrast with America’s complacency was unmistakable — while Ukrainians improvise to survive, too many here mistake safety for permanence.
Simon Rosenberg listened with urgency, drawing parallels between that courage abroad and the erosion of democracy at home. His warning was blunt: Trump’s talk of “cartels” and new enemies is a smokescreen — “an elaborate ruse,” he said, “to cover up their effort to give Europe over to Putin.” As the administration escalates military action in the Caribbean, Simon sees not foreign policy but performance art for authoritarianism, a geopolitical con that trades allies for optics.
The collapse of moral conviction inside the Republican Party didn’t happen overnight. It’s the product of decades spent rewarding obedience over integrity, grievance over governance. The party that once claimed to defend democracy abroad now wages war on it at home — its leaders hollowed out by the same fear they once mocked. What began as a strategy to divide the country by race has matured into a movement that divides it by reality itself.
What’s left is a question of will. The lessons from Kyiv aren’t about foreign courage; they’re about human obligation. Freedom only exists where people insist on it — where fatigue doesn’t harden into apathy and humor becomes defiance. Mockery, truth-telling, and collective action remain our last unbanned weapons. The world isn’t waiting for America to lead, it’s watching to see if we still can.
Tune in to this urgent conversation with Stuart Stevens and Simon Rosenberg.
Ukraine Will Win
Ken Harbaugh just returned from another humanitarian mission in Ukraine. Here's the retired U.S. Navy pilot's story from the front lines.