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What if the words keep changing because the plan stays the same? We open with a jolt: an AI prompt that answers “no” to loving white people and “yes” to loving others. It’s a small example with a big implication—models mirror the media that trains them, and the media mirrors the people in power. From there, we track how DEI survives by swapping labels, why “Christian nationalism” is the new scarecrow, and what it really means when a Virginia council drops the Pledge of Allegiance like it’s just bureaucratic clutter.
Then we follow the money and the emails. The Epstein files aren’t just lurid headlines; they’re a map of proximity—royals, billionaires, foundations, universities, and labs woven into the same threads that touched pandemic planning and political warfare. With Virginia Giuffre’s testimony and news of a Prince Andrew arrest, the story moves from rumor to consequence. We examine the monarchy’s dilemma, the media’s selective outrage, and the uncomfortable question of who set the chessboard long before the public noticed.
Zooming back home, we lay out how bad incentives hollow out the middle. Illinois issuing flawed commercial licenses doesn’t just risk highways; it risks trust in the rolls that decide power. Benefit cliffs leave families earning $40k to $100k punished for working more, while non-workers find the floor surprisingly soft. That tension—between narrative battles and economic math—explains why so many feel gaslit by elites who say everything is fine while basic rules break in plain sight.
This isn’t a doom scroll; it’s a to-do list. Gen. Flynn calls for accountability instead of amnesia. We push for local organization: precincts, petitions, receipts at the door, and candidates who won’t treat civic rituals as disposable. Separate the message from the messenger, verify what you can, and start with the lever you can actually move. If a small, aligned class writes the script, the counter is simple and hard: show up, share the clips, build your own table.
If this hit a nerve, subscribe, share with a friend who still argues the facts, and leave a review with the one change you’d make first. What lever will you pull this week?
Support the show
https://1776live.us
www.PeasantsPerspective.com
www.LeftBehindandWithout.org
www.DollarsVoteLouder.com
buymeacoffee.com/peasant
By Taylor JohnatakisSend a text
What if the words keep changing because the plan stays the same? We open with a jolt: an AI prompt that answers “no” to loving white people and “yes” to loving others. It’s a small example with a big implication—models mirror the media that trains them, and the media mirrors the people in power. From there, we track how DEI survives by swapping labels, why “Christian nationalism” is the new scarecrow, and what it really means when a Virginia council drops the Pledge of Allegiance like it’s just bureaucratic clutter.
Then we follow the money and the emails. The Epstein files aren’t just lurid headlines; they’re a map of proximity—royals, billionaires, foundations, universities, and labs woven into the same threads that touched pandemic planning and political warfare. With Virginia Giuffre’s testimony and news of a Prince Andrew arrest, the story moves from rumor to consequence. We examine the monarchy’s dilemma, the media’s selective outrage, and the uncomfortable question of who set the chessboard long before the public noticed.
Zooming back home, we lay out how bad incentives hollow out the middle. Illinois issuing flawed commercial licenses doesn’t just risk highways; it risks trust in the rolls that decide power. Benefit cliffs leave families earning $40k to $100k punished for working more, while non-workers find the floor surprisingly soft. That tension—between narrative battles and economic math—explains why so many feel gaslit by elites who say everything is fine while basic rules break in plain sight.
This isn’t a doom scroll; it’s a to-do list. Gen. Flynn calls for accountability instead of amnesia. We push for local organization: precincts, petitions, receipts at the door, and candidates who won’t treat civic rituals as disposable. Separate the message from the messenger, verify what you can, and start with the lever you can actually move. If a small, aligned class writes the script, the counter is simple and hard: show up, share the clips, build your own table.
If this hit a nerve, subscribe, share with a friend who still argues the facts, and leave a review with the one change you’d make first. What lever will you pull this week?
Support the show
https://1776live.us
www.PeasantsPerspective.com
www.LeftBehindandWithout.org
www.DollarsVoteLouder.com
buymeacoffee.com/peasant