Taking Heart From Hungary to Protect US Elections

Source: Brennan Center for Justice
by Michael Waldman

“This week, autocrat Viktor Orbán conceded defeat in Hungary’s general election. It was a landslide victory for Péter Magyar, and for democracy worldwide. Over the course of 16 years, Orbán worked to dismantle and undermine democratic institutions. He took control of most news outlets. He rewrote election rules. He replaced judges with loyalists. His government faced numerous corruption scandals, including one surrounding a presidential pardon. He was also a fan favorite of the Trump administration. Our vice president campaigned for him. What are the implications of his defeat for democracy in the United States? To be sure, midterm elections often rebuke the party in power, and it’s hard to predict whether this election augurs any November results. But just as Brexit presaged Trump in 2016, worldwide trends are at play.” (04/15/26)

https://www.brennancenter.org/our-work/analysis-opinion/people-speak-hungary-and-home

COVID King (and Queen) Remembered

Source: Independent Institute
by K Lloyd Billingsley

“From the nation’s capital to coastal villages in California, protesters cry ‘no kings!’ Similar protests did not break out while the nation was under rule by the closest thing to a monarch since King George. When the COVID virus showed up in 2020, the people found themselves taking orders from Dr. Anthony Fauci, head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) since 1984. Dr. Fauci ordered massive lockdowns of schools and workplaces, causing vast suffering and loss for millions of Americans.” (04/15/26)

https://www.independent.org/article/2026/04/15/covid-king-and-queen-remembered/

Abundance Pragmatism Fails

Source: Law & LIberty
by Richard M |Reinsch II

“The Abundance movement makes a pragmatic case for more essential goods and services and isn’t really concerned with how this supply is incentivized or generated. It forsakes what advocates regard as tired philosophical debates about limited government, markets, and freedom. Of course, to argue in such a way is to choose ends that justify a variety of human actions. Supply-side progressivism can take many different courses.” (04/16/26)

https://lawliberty.org/forum/abundance-pragmatism-fails/

From Iran to the fake Jesus image, Trump facing growing backlash for his inflammatory rhetoric

Source: Fox News
by Howard Kurtz

“Donald Trump is nothing if not impulsive – and there’s often a method to his seeming madness. At times that means going way over the line – consciously, deliberately – and at others it’s just rash. Whether he’s dealing with Iran, the Epstein files, mass deportation or the leader of the Catholic Church, the president busts through the usual guardrails of decency and compassion. I know this is often intentional, because the president has acknowledged it to me. Ripping others may bring him negative publicity, but Trump doesn’t mind that if it gets the pundits and the public chattering about the issue he wants driving the media agenda. Trump posting a user’s AI image of himself as Jesus Christ, healing a patient with glowing hands – and adding a demon in the background – was such a fiasco that he deleted it 12 hours later, which he almost never does.” (04/15/26)

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/iran-fake-jesus-image-trump-facing-growing-backlash-inflammatory-rhetoric

Ana Montes: Traitor and Bad Person?

Source: Future of Freedom Foundation
by Jacob G Hornberger

“Three years ago, a former staff member of the U.S. Defense Intelligence Agency, was released from federal prison after serving around 20 years. Her crime? Spying for Cuba. For some 16 years, Montez had been secretly providing classified information to officials in Cuba that she acquired as part of her federal position. Needless to say, when she was finally caught, federal officials, especially those within the national-security state part of the government, condemned her for being a traitor and a bad person. At her sentencing hearing, Montes made it clear that her spying for Cuba had nothing to do with money. Instead, her spying, she stated, was intended to help Cuba defend itself from acts of aggression by the U.S. government, especially the national-security state part of the federal government (i.e., the Pentagon, the CIA, and the NSA).” (04/15/26)

https://www.fff.org/2026/04/15/ana-montes-traitor-and-bad-person/

Why The Prime Directive is Evil

Source: The Findings Substack
by Paul Rosenberg

“The first problem with the Prime Directive was that it made the captains stupid. Rather than doing what they knew had to be done, they had to contend with a wrench thrown into their formerly strong minds. It was, to have fun with words, stupidizing to those captains. It made them delay rational choices. In the end they ignored the Prime Directive anyway (reason and decency demanded it) or else they found some clever way around it. … When encountering a difficult situation, a capable person considers the facts available and tries to imagine a win-win resolution. And Star Fleet officers were supposed to be great at this: That the primary attribute of a great captain, after all, and it was generally the Federation’s flagship we were observing. What we saw were these powerful minds and wills brought low by the basest of mental choices: a binary, obey-or-transgress choice.” (04/15/26)

https://thefindings.substack.com/p/why-the-prime-directive-is-evil

America’s Insane Tax-Filing Process

Source: The Atlantic
by Annie Lowrey

“If you earn a salary or an hourly wage, the Internal Revenue Service already knows how much money you make. It likely knows how much you owe or how big your refund should be too. Nine in 10 households take the standard deduction, making their liability easy to glean from payroll and banking data. Yet Uncle Sam demands that Americans fire up TurboTax, head to a storefront preparer, hire an accountant, or sit down with a sharp pencil and a strong cup of coffee to get their taxes done each spring. The average filer spends 13 hours on their 1040 — a time tax that many of our wealthy peer countries have reduced to a couple of minutes, if that. Prepopulated documents and return-free systems are common everywhere but here.” (04/15/26)

https://archive.is/c8Nl0