How Demographics are Driving America’s Long-Term Fiscal Illness

If it’s not a bizarre new geopolitical crisis, it’s a terrifying headline about the safety of our food supply.

This, no doubt, is an age of constant, low-grade dread. Every time you open your phone, there’s a fresh, steaming pile of bad news waiting to greet you.

But while the mainstream media loves to keep your anxiety levels on a gentle simmer, we prefer to look at the bigger picture. The absurdity of modern life is what we’re after.

Lately, two seemingly unrelated outbreaks have been competing for the spotlight. There’s a microscopic parasite making its way through America’s salad bowls. A healthy lunch has suddenly turned into poison.

At the same time, there’s a massive, systemic failure quietly brewing in Washington. One that’s growing so rapidly it makes a stomach bug look like a walk in the park. While one threatens to disrupt your digestive tract for a week, the other quietly promises to derail the economic security of several generations.

In truth, both of these crises suffer from the exact same fundamental problem. A complete failure of basic hygiene. Whether we’re talking about food safety or fiscal responsibility, ignoring the fundamentals eventually catches up to you. And when it does, the results are always messy, painful, and incredibly hard to clean up. Continue reading

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Why the Era of Cheap Money is Dead

Most Americans, and people across the planet, have been trained by a financial system where borrowing costs became perpetually cheaper. If you got into a pinch, you could refinance your mortgage, with more agreeable terms, and quickly increase your cash flow.

You could also pull out some equity and upgrade your kitchen, pay off your credit cards, take a vacation, or play in the stock market. What a delight.

If you took out a mortgage, expanded a business, or looked at a government balance sheet anytime between the Reagan administration and the dawn of the 2020s, the wind was firmly at your back. Biting off more than you could chew was often rewarded.

But credit cycles operate in massive, multi-decade tides. Their movements are broad and sweeping. And right now, after four decades, the tide is rushing out. The tranquil waters of easy liquidity have turned into a harsh and turbulent macroeconomic sea.

Perhaps you’ve noticed your credit card rates creeping up. Or you’ve looked into a car loan to finance a new vehicle purchase. If so, you’ve seen the painful reality of higher borrowing costs. At the same time, your bond portfolio’s taken a hit. Losses in what was supposed to be the safest corner of your nest egg were not supposed to happen. Continue reading

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Sparklers and Sorrow

As the night falls we shed a tear
Watching all our freedoms disappear
And we said goodbye to the way things were

– Mike Ness, The Way Things Were

Looking Backwards

The United States 250th anniversary should be the party of the century. There should be Main Street parades stretching from Maine to California, fireworks lighting up the night sky with unrestrained joy, and a collective, roaring cheer for the greatest experiment in human liberty ever devised.

But let’s be real. If you tune out the fabricated hype and look around your own community, does it feel like a celebration? Or does it feel a little more like a wake?

For many Americans this milestone doesn’t feel like a triumphant birthday party. It feels like a long, bittersweet goodbye to a past that was genuinely great. An era of care-free innocence, rugged self-reliance, and broad freedom that has been steadily chipped away, piece by piece, by the creeping hand of big government, digital surveillance, suffocating regulation, and crushing taxes.

Instead of looking forward to the next 250 years with the fierce optimism of our ancestors, many Americans are looking backward, grieving the loss of a country we thought we knew. Continue reading

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Banking On Magic

“‘I will surely strike my hands together at the unjust gain you have made and at the blood you have shed in your midst.”

– Ezekiel 22:13

Monthly Budgets Under Assault

American consumers are being squeezed. Between high grocery prices, rising utility bills, and hefty prices at the pump, little float remains in monthly budgets. An unexpected medical bill or car repair is all it takes to blow the household budget.

We’re all living through stressful macroeconomic crossroads here in mid-2026. For a while, it appeared the post-pandemic inflationary dragon had been slain. We were promised inflation would soon return to the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent target.

But that was before the U.S.-Israel attacked Iran and a new energy shock was triggered. Perhaps the MOU negotiations and reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, with UN evacuation, will soften things in the months ahead. Nonetheless, we do not expect there to be long-lasting relief. Continue reading

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