Silence on the Dial? Untangling the Legal Reality Behind Threats to Broadcasters.

I woke up this morning to multiple reports on TV, social media, and online papers, that the Trump Administration has threatened to revoke broadcasting licenses of news outlets that post “distortions“ about the US/Iran conflict. Speaking of distortions, President Donald Trump and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth have described the conflict with Iran using several…

Understanding the SAVE America Act and Its Impact

The Safeguard American Voter Eligibility (SAVE) Act (H.R. 22) was passed by the House in April 2025 and is currently stalled in the Senate due to opposition. A re-brand of the bill, the SAVE America Act (S. 1383), was introduced in early 2026 to, in part, strengthen proof-of-citizenship requirements for federal voting. KEY SENATE BILLS…

Epic Fury, Endless Questions: Rhetoric, Reality, and the War Powers Debate

‘We didn’t start this war, but under President Trump, we’re finishing it.’ With those words, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth kicked off a news conference that leaned heavily on historical grievances rather than current intelligence. By framing the current strikes as a necessary response to ’47 long years’ of ‘savage, one-sided‘ Iranian aggression, Hegseth sought to justify unilateral action without…

A symbolic digital illustration of a glowing globe surrounded by currency symbols and high-rise structures, representing the global financial scale of the private detention industry.

Beds, Budgets, and Billionaires: The Business of Mass Detention

Did you know that some for-profit detention owners are getting incredibly rich—and we’re the ones picking up the tab? It’s true. Our tax dollars are fueling a massive, private industry that is quietly booming under the radar. In 2025, Congress approved a staggering $45 billion to expand immigration detention. To put that in perspective, that’s a 265% increase…

Nationalizing The Vote?

Nationalizing the vote—a proposal to remove election administration authority from the states and place it under federal control—is considered unconstitutional primarily because the U.S. Constitution expressly delegates the authority to manage elections to the states. While Congress has limited, enumerated powers to alter some election regulations, a total federal takeover or “nationalization” of the voting…