No Kings, But Plenty of Knobs: From $47k Switches to $15 Fixes

Streamed on:
191

A cracked screen, a sharp pivot, and then the punch: when power says “trust me,” what does the proof look like? We dig into allegations around New York’s top prosecutor, CNN’s take on politicized prosecutions, and a staggering 30 million-line phone dragnet from the J6 probe to ask a harder question—how elastic have the rules become, and who gets stretched next?

From there, we follow the money. Treasury vows to trace funding behind increasingly choreographed protests as DHS flags cartel-linked bounties on federal officers. The pattern is unsettling: third-party groups, state grants, and foreign channels that can turn “activism” into something darker. Meanwhile, redistricting and census choices reset the House battlefield, while a Minnesota registration loophole exposes how an ID can prove address without proving citizenship. Zoom in to Arkansas and you see the backlash against local paper ballot wins—misdemeanor charges over exit polling where transparency should live.

We switch theaters but stick to the theme: misaligned incentives. Inside the Pentagon, a $47,000 assembly gets replaced because a tiny plastic knob breaks; a $15 3D-printed fix proves how procurement reform can save millions. Energy policy gets the same treatment: domestic production as a resilience play that powers industry and strengthens U.S. leverage abroad. On regulation, we track EPA rollbacks and the fight to turn “endangerment” from a catch-all into a rulebook that builders and cities can actually navigate.

Then the information front: how “researchers” became operatives, how EU laws re-import moderation mandates into U.S. platforms, and why free speech—messy, loud, necessary—remains the keystone. Finally, we connect the global dots: Middle East alignments that shift China’s energy math and create leverage to unwind the Russia tie. You don’t have to love the players to see the logic: results beat slogans, and systems you can verify beat narratives you can’t.

If this helped you see the moving parts more clearly, tap follow, share with a friend who cares about process over spin, and drop us your first reform: ballots, budgets, or speech—what should be fixed first?

Support the show

https://1776live.us

www.PeasantsPerspective.com

www.LeftBehindandWithout.org

www.DollarsVoteLouder.com

buymeacoffee.com/peasant

Loading comments...