Debt, Democracy, and Division: Our Republic Under Structural Stress

America’s national debt has crossed $38.5 trillion — growing at $92,912 every second.
Interest payments now exceed defense spending.
Social Security faces insolvency by 2032.
And the two political factions that must address these crises can’t agree on basic facts, let alone solutions.
In this new article, we identify three structural realities locked in an impossible contradiction — the Constraint Triangle — and map five futures that can emerge from it:
slow erosion, grand bargain, political realignment, national rupture, or democratic collapse.
Each scenario is grounded in data, not ideology.
The question isn’t whether a reckoning is coming.
It’s which kind — and whether we’re equipped to navigate it.
Read the full analysis now.

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When Everyone Has AI, What Do You Actually Bring? What’s in Your Wallet?

AI gave every professional the same engine. So what separates the ones who accelerate from the ones who stall? Here are the eight skills that determine whether AI makes you more valuable — or more replaceable. This is the framework. Put it in your wallet!

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The Myth of the AI-Proof Job

Everyone’s asking which jobs AI can’t touch. This series of articles argues they’re asking the wrong question entirely. In this opening article of The Human Advantage series, we dismantles the myth of the AI-proof job and makes the case that careers now rise or fall on skill architecture—not titles, not credentials, not wishful thinking.

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The Great Debate – Bertrand Russell on Religion

In 1927, Bertrand Russell — Nobel laureate, co-author of the Principia Mathematica, and one of the most disciplined logicians who ever lived — published his case against religion. Fifteen arguments. Precise. Unflinching. Devastating on first reading.
Then I put fifteen philosophers in the ring with him.
C. S. Lewis. Alvin Plantinga. Viktor Frankl. Martin Luther King Jr. Edith Stein. Kierkegaard. Chesterton. Whitehead — Russell’s own collaborator.
No straw men. No polite deflections. Argument met with argument, logic tested against logic, conviction against conviction.
Neither side wins cleanly. That’s the point.
Critical thinking isn’t choosing the approved side. It’s giving both sides a genuine hearing — and having the courage to sit with what you find.

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The Long Shadow of the Ballot Box – Voter Fraud in America — From the Founders’ Fears to the Modern Fight for Election Integrity

Voter fraud is real. It is also rare. And the fear of it may now be more dangerous than the act itself. “The Long Shadow of the Ballot Box” traces election fraud from Hamilton’s warnings about “cabal, intrigue, and corruption” through Tammany Hall — where the dead filled in for the sick and the counters mattered more than the ballots — to the FBI’s January 2026 raid on Fulton County and the House passage of the SAVE America Act. The founders built a republic designed to resist exactly the kind of corruption Americans are arguing about today. This article follows the evidence across two centuries, forty-two endnotes, and both sides of the aisle. It won’t tell you what to think. It will make it harder to be fooled.

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