Trump’s empty promises and the ruin of rural America

Source: The Hill
by Max Burns

“President Trump’s second term has been nothing if not a laundry list of broken promises. But few Americans have suffered more from Trump’s deceptions than the nation’s struggling farmers. … Trump captured 62 percent of the rural vote in 2024, 4 points better than his performance in 2020, based largely on promises to lavish prosperity (and federal money) on small farms on the verge of collapse. Like so many Trump promises, the help never arrived.” (04/15/26)

https://thehill.com/opinion/campaign/5830567-trump-economy-hurting-farmers/

JD Vance’s Devil-May-Care Attitude Is UnAmerican and UnCatholic

Source: The UnPopulist
by Thomas D Howes

“Elie Wiesel is often credited with the observation that the opposite of love is not hate but indifference. Indifference is clearly not morally neutral. To respond with indifference when love and concern are due is a sign that something has gone wrong — whether it’s a voluntary fault and thus immoral, or something involuntary and inculpable. But indifference in such cases is never something to praise or, worse, advocate for. Yet that is just what Vance consistently does. He is not alone in this. A growing current on the right has explicitly reframed indifference as a virtue — denouncing empathy toward immigrants, refugees, and foreign peoples as ‘suicidal,’ manipulative, or simply naive.” (04/15/26)

https://www.theunpopulist.net/p/jd-vances-devil-may-care-attitude

The Incels Are Taking Over

Source: Persuasion
by Seva Gunitsky

“There are three well-known, and well-trodden, families of explanation for the emergence of right-wing populism. There is the economic story: deindustrialization, stagnant wages, the hollowing out of the working class. The cultural story: immigration, demographic change, the anxiety of losing a familiar world. And the institutional/technological story: declining trust in democratic norms, the fragmentation of media, the algorithmic amplification of outrage. None of these, however, explain why this moment has coalesced not around a particular program or a set of policies but around a similar character type: the swaggering, transgressive, dominance-performing strongman.” (04/15/26)

https://www.persuasion.community/p/the-rise-of-the-incel-global-order

Kentucky General Assembly failed to deliver on housing affordability

Source: Bluegrass Institute
by Caleb O Brown

“Kentucky’s next generation deserved better from this legislative session. For two years, Kentucky’s Housing Task Force built a record, heard from builders, experts, local officials, and families struggling to afford a place to live. Ultimately, the task force embraced recommendations advanced by the Bluegrass Institute last year. … Legislation that was one concurrence away from final passage would have altered the housing marketplace to make homes more affordable, enhance Kentuckians’ property rights, clear away needless regulatory barriers, and give developers greater confidence to undertake projects. Kentucky lawmakers couldn’t get the job done, and that failure carries real consequences for young people across our commonwealth.” (04/15/26)

https://www.bluegrassinstitute.org/kentucky-general-assembly-failed-to-deliver-on-housing-affordability/

It’s No Accident That Trump’s Iran War Steals Money From Healthcare and Education

Source: Foreign Policy In Focus
by Ben Luongo

“Ronald Reagan’s budget director, David Stockman, spoke candidly years ago about why Republicans like tax cuts so much. In his 1986 book, The Triumph of Politics: Why the Reagan Revolution Failed, he confided that tax cuts served the purpose of creating budget deficits that could then be used to justify spending cuts on government programs. Typically, administrations only cut spending for a program if it’s no longer necessary, and the resultant surplus may then be used as a tax cut to stimulate the economy. However, Stockman turned this on its head by using the tax cuts to create a budgetary crisis that would then require cuts in spending regardless of whether the programs were necessary or not. In other words, Stockman used tax cuts to create a revenue problem that the Reagan administration could then mask as a spending problem. This is known as ‘starving the beast’.” (04/16/26)

https://fpif.org/starving-the-beast-through-war/

Rural Kentucky Tenants Win Unprecedented Lease Agreement After Yearlong Campaign

Source: In These Times
by Thomas Birmingham

“When yet another air conditioner in her apartment building broke down in early March, Heather Myatt braced herself and began her usual beeline for the property manager’s office. For more than a year, Myatt and her neighbors have been waging a war to secure long-overdue repairs at Maple Grove Apartments, an income-restricted building in Brandenburg, KY. Being ignored had become routine for the tenants of Maple Grove; last summer, an elderly resident whose AC had been broken for two years, despite regular complaints to the building’s landlord, reportedly collapsed from the heat. But now, for the first time, Myatt knew her demand might actually be heard. ‘Y’all really don’t want to be violating this contract already,’ Myatt, a proud mother of two, recalls telling the property manager. ‘You have 24 hours to respond, or that’s a breach. You put it on this paper. You just signed it. Keep your word.'” (04/16/26)

https://inthesetimes.com/article/kentucky-tenant-union-contract-win-retaliation

Another Trillion Racks Up for the National Debt

Source: Independent Institute
by Craig Eyermann

“The U.S. government’s total public debt outstanding is on the verge of permanently surpassing $39 trillion. In truth, it already has, first breaching it on March 17, 2026. Since then, it’s bounced around that level, sometimes over, sometimes under. This situation won’t last. Soon, the U.S. government will borrow even more money to support its excessive spending. When it does, it will leave $39 trillion in the rear-view mirror, probably for good.” (04/15/26)

https://www.independent.org/article/2026/04/15/another-trillion-national-debt/

Trump’s Illegal War in Iran Is Financed by Your Taxes. That’s a Good Reason To Stop Paying Them.

Source: Reason
by Eric Boehm

“The executive branch is out of control. We’re now more than six weeks into a deeply unpopular, unnecessary war with Iran that lacks any semblance of congressional authorization. The Trump administration has sent masked, unaccountable goons into American cities, where they have harassed and arrested innocent people and killed multiple times. President Donald Trump’s signature economic policy is an illegal tax increase that his administration is refusing to refund. Congress has been unwilling or unable to stop these unlawful actions. If legislators will not deploy ‘the power of the purse,’ then it falls to the rest of us to do something. That’s why I have stopped paying the federal income tax. I’m not the only one doing it. I think you should, too.” (04/15/26)

https://reason.com/2026/04/15/trumps-illegal-war-in-iran-is-financed-by-your-taxes-thats-a-good-reason-to-stop-paying-them/

Civil Society Needs the High Trust that Only Individuals Can Provide

Source: Future of Freedom Foundation
by Wendy McElroy

“Individuals may feel powerless but, in fact, individuals are the only restorative for civil society because they are the ones who can bind it together by establishing what is called ‘high trust.’ A high-trust society is characterized by members who reasonably expect others in the community to treat them fairly, which encourages voluntary association far beyond family bonds or other tight networks.” (04/16/26)

https://www.fff.org/explore-freedom/article/civil-society-needs-the-high-trust-that-only-individuals-can-provide/

The government never stops growing

Source: Eastern New Mexico News
by Kent McManigal

“Why does government continually grow in size and in power? If you look at a roster of things it meddled with a century ago compared to today, you’ll notice today’s list is much longer and more comprehensive. Government is never satisfied; it never has enough control. It won’t give up control or take “no” for a final answer. If it loses in court (which it controls), it acts as though it didn’t. Often, it doubles down on its illegal activities. This is because there are no immediate, painful consequences for its defiant criminality. It lies, and many people still believe it.” (04/16/26)

https://www.easternnewmexiconews.com/story/2026/04/15/voices/opinion-the-government-never-stops-growing/233211.html