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America 250

Stop Hating America

Plus: failing power grids, Canadian euthanasia, AOC running for president, and more...

Liz Wolfe | 7.2.2026 9:30 AM

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Young kid waving an American flag in a field | Envato
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Land that I love? Younger Americans are less patriotic than ever before. Two new polls illustrate this: Only 31 percent of youngsters aged 18 to 29 are "extremely" or "very" proud to be an American, per a new NBC poll, compared with 75 percent of those 65 and older. And a new poll from the Public Religion Research Institute reports that only 34 percent of that same younger age group are proud to be an American, whereas 66 percent of those 65 and older, 59 percent of Americans aged 50 to 64, and 43 percent aged 30 to 49 feel proud to be FROM THE GREATEST COUNTRY THAT EVER WAS.

I guess they're in good company. "Oh my country," John Adams once wrote. "How I mourn over thy follies and Vices, thine ignorance and imbecility, Thy contempt of Wisdom and Virtue and overweening Admiration of fools and Knaves!"

John Adams is dead, but Zoomers aren't yet, so there's still time to convince them of how much there is to love: American Flag cake and tech innovation and federalism and homesteading and Martha Stewart and the Beach Boys and the Fourth Amendment and going to space and Lana Del Rey and religious pluralism and Michael Jordan. But it's so much more than my silly little fixations: America is the land so many of our ancestors took a chance on and embraced great uncertainty to immigrate to. It's the place where risk, coupled with work ethic, has historically been rewarded; where upward mobility seemed possible; where rising above your station—socially, economically, whatever—has been not just allowed, but encouraged, even for the fools and knaves among us. Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, baby!

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America hasn't always treated every group that it set out to protect correctly, but Enlightenment ideals make clear what we're striving for: Each person has inherent dignity and equality, and ought to be afforded as much liberty as we can muster. Honest Abe said that America was "conceived in Liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal." Pretty good mission statement, kinda nails the essentials. Culturally and politically, we've historically been broadly opposed to massive wealth redistribution and think people mostly ought to be able to keep what they earn. We've valued privacy highly, and let community flourish far away from the prying eyes of the state. We tend to have a high tolerance for rebelliousness and nonconformity, experiments in living both good and bad, and we've set high standards for our people. Make something of yourself. Don't be a freeloader. Follow your dream, see if there's a market for it, and leave it all out on the field. These haven't always been perfectly executed ideals—libertarians can find a lot to quibble with, and the trend lines might not look great—but it sure as hell beats France, Morocco, or China.

More broadly, the fact that so many younger Americans don't feel proud of our country, and appreciative of the great American experiment, says that we're taking our political circumstances for granted. And when we take our blessings for granted, we lose not only perspective but also hope in our country's betterment.

It is true that we botch a lot of things in America. Allowing slavery, forcing Natives down the Trail of Tears, interning Japanese-Americans, enacting the New Deal, and going to war in Iraq were all travesties that should not have been so. Our leaders are not always prudent. Our political parties lead us astray. Our bureaucrats are often dunces. Our legislators are frequently clownish, just in different flavors. Team Red/Team Blue partisanship feels ever nastier these days, and the socialist wave threatens to knock us all off our feet.

"Only a virtuous people are capable of freedom," said Benjamin Franklin. If you think we've become less free, consider whether we've become less virtuous; if you think we've become less virtuous, consider whether we're struggling to handle all that freedom. But let's not give up on one another. It's long been civic discourse that's helped us define what exactly virtue looks like, and communities coming together that give us the opportunity to live virtue out. Put down the phones; talk to your neighbors. Be charitable in thought and deed.

America is still a fundamentally good experiment—one still in progress, and one very much worth keeping. We can't be cynical about everything, we've gotta pick some things to love. I pick America, long may she live. Happy Fourth of July weekend to you and yours!


Scenes from New York: 

New York: it's hot out there, and the power grid is working overtime to keep us cool.

Set your AC to 78 degrees, turn off lights/electronics you're not using, and unplug what you can.

Our City is doing its part too: maintaining the 78 degrees rule in our buildings,…

— Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani (@NYCMayor) July 1, 2026

Some more inside baseball about NYC's power grid (and how ill-prepared we are for a heat wave):

Our new hydropower line to Quebec went down suddenly!

Gov Hochul got it permitted, but it only just turned on this month and it's apparently not stable yethttps://t.co/LWMiRf1d2Y

— Alex Armlovich (@aarmlovi) July 2, 2026


QUICK HITS

  • Tell it to NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani:

Air conditioning has reduced heat deaths in the US by three quarters since the 1970s. https://t.co/oMmrKiOeml

— Megan McArdle (@asymmetricinfo) July 1, 2026

  • "OpenAI has begun preliminary discussions about giving the US government a 5% stake in the ChatGPT-developer, the Financial Times reported, citing two people familiar with the talks. OpenAI Chief Executive Officer Sam Altman and other executives proposed that move as part of a broader arrangement under which Washington would hold 5% of each of the leading US AI developers, the FT reported. That might include Anthropic PBC and listed sector leaders Google and Meta Platforms Inc., though it's unclear if those other firms would agree with the proposal," reports Bloomberg.
  • Russian strikes in Kyiv kill at least 17.
  • "In the decade since Canada legalized euthanasia, known there as medical assistance in dying, or MAID, its physician-assisted death regime has developed into one of the most permissive in the world. Between 2016 and 2024, 76,475 Canadians received lethal doses from doctors or nurse practitioners. The 16,499 cases in 2024 accounted for 1 out of 20 deaths in Canada. In some regions of Quebec, the rate is 13 out of 100," writes Charles Lane for The Washington Post. "Now, however, Canada might finally be maxing out on MAID. On June 17, a special parliamentary committee recommended that the government 'indefinitely exclude' patients whose only medical condition is a psychiatric one such as depression or schizophrenia. Pro-euthanasia activists had urged that MAID eligibility be expanded to include them, but 'safe and equitable implementation' of MAID in such cases is simply not possible, the committee said."
  • Lord help me:

Reporter: JD Vance just said in an interview that he thinks you are going to be the leading Democratic candidate for president in 2028. What's your response to that?

AOC: pic.twitter.com/s5qodMBiN1

— Acyn (@Acyn) June 30, 2026

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NEXT: Thomas Paine: The Founding Father Worth Celebrating

Liz Wolfe is an associate editor at Reason.

America 250United StatesHistoryDemocracyCivil LibertiesFreedomPoliticsReason Roundup
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  1. Fist of Etiquette   2 hours ago

    Stop Hating America

    AMEN, SISTER

    Log in to Reply
  2. Fist of Etiquette   2 hours ago

    Younger Americans are less patriotic than ever before.

    Younger Americans have the most recent, direct and prolonged contact with captured institutions. Coincidence?

    Log in to Reply
    1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   1 hour ago

      It's funny because it's not true.
      The right has consistently been 90% proud to be american
      The left peaked at 80% under Obama and are at 20% now
      It the left that hates America. They should leave

      Log in to Reply
      1. Medulla Oblongata   24 minutes ago

        But Michelle Obama had never been proud of America until it elected her(*) husband.

        Log in to Reply
    2. Rick James   2 minutes ago

      Coincidence

      I think not!

      Log in to Reply
  3. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   2 hours ago

    Liz got a headline directed at 90% of reason writers

    Log in to Reply
    1. Medulla Oblongata   23 minutes ago

      90% seems like a low number.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   8 minutes ago

        Good Liz, robby, and stossel I would say like america

        Log in to Reply
  4. Fist of Etiquette   1 hour ago

    Happy Fourth of July weekend to you and yours!

    In other words, NO ROUNDUP TOMORROW. Is this what the Founders fought and died for?

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   1 hour ago

      Is this what the Founders fought and died for?

      Not Thomas Paine.

      Log in to Reply
    2. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   1 hour ago

      My weekend started yesterday afternoon, but the Goddess’s doesn’t start till noon. I’ll be sarc-like by late afternoon.

      Log in to Reply
      1. MK Ultra   5 minutes ago

        God bless America. Turn the AC down to spite the French.

        Log in to Reply
  5. Fist of Etiquette   1 hour ago

    New York: it's hot out there, and the power grid is working overtime to keep us cool.

    Set your AC to 78 degrees, turn off lights/electronics you're not using, and unplug what you can.

    Our City is doing its part too: maintaining the 78 degrees rule in our buildings,…

    — Mayor Zohran Kwame Mamdani (@NYCMayor) July 1, 2026

    76 degrees if you're Social Credit Score is up to snuff, though, comrades.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Spiritus Mundi   1 hour ago

      Or we could let the private sector build more energy infrastructure. But first we have to get rid of commies like mamdani.

      Log in to Reply
      1. Fist of Etiquette   1 hour ago

        South Africans saved their own power grid by bypassing their corrupt/ineffectual government.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   53 minutes ago

          I also love their new commitment in returning all of the land to nature

          Log in to Reply
        2. Spiritus Mundi   50 minutes ago

          I got a education on SA power generation when I was there last year. Power would come a go at random times. Turns out the local coal plant was built at the coal mine. It had orginally used a conveyor to move coal from the mine to the plant. When 'the government' took control, they cut the belts and demanded trucks be used to move the coal. But they could only use one, black owned, trucking comapny that just happened to be owned by the local politican. Biggest problem, the company didn't actually own a truck or have drivers.

          Log in to Reply
    2. Mickey Rat   1 hour ago

      ASHRAE 55 Standards for human comfort -

      "Summer Comfort Zone: Assumes light clothing (\(0.5\text{ clo}\), such as shorts and a short-sleeve shirt) ASHRAE Standard 55-2020: Thermal Comfort . The acceptable range spans 75F to 82F.

      "Humidity alters how efficiently the human body sheds heat through perspiration ANSI/ASHRAE 55-2023: Thermal Environmental Conditions for ...:Upper Boundary: ASHRAE Standard 55 sets a strict upper threshold of 60% RH or a humidity ratio of \(0.012\text{ lb}\) of water per pound of dry air. High humidity limits sweat evaporation, making the space feel warmer than the actual thermometer reading.Lower Boundary: The thermal comfort standard does not dictate a minimum humidity floor. However, building and health standards like ASHRAE Standard 62.1 frequently recommend staying above 30% RH to prevent dry skin, eye irritation, static electricity, and respiratory discomfort."

      The issue here that humidity control generally requires artificial cooling.

      Log in to Reply
    3. Medulla Oblongata   19 minutes ago

      In upstate New York State (way upstate, like St. Lawrence River upstate) there's solar farms and wind turbines about as far as the eye can see.

      And there's the hydro output from the river, which uses Lake Ontario as an overfilled bathtub for hydro-power reserves (2 catastrophic floods in last decade due to new management plan, Plan 2014 that focuses on 1: never let Montreal get it's toes wet, and 2: keep all the water in Lake Ontario to generate hydro power with).

      And yet, National Grid bills just keep going up up up.

      Log in to Reply
  6. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   1 hour ago

    Aoc, because Obama Biden and Harris aren't retarded enough

    Log in to Reply
    1. Ajsloss   44 minutes ago

      Vance would metaphorically rape her in a debate.

      Log in to Reply
  7. Spiritus Mundi   1 hour ago

    Team Red/Team Blue partisanship feels ever nastier these days...

    Recency bias. It has always been bad.

    https://www.thoughtco.com/the-election-of-1828-1773861

    Log in to Reply
  8. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   1 hour ago

    If you rely on French Canadians you deserve misery

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   1 hour ago

      We didn’t want no imported electrons anyway!

      Log in to Reply
      1. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   1 hour ago

        What's the difference between the electron in a circuit and an illeagal?
        Eventually the electron goes back

        Log in to Reply
  9. Fist of Etiquette   1 hour ago

    Our new hydropower line to Quebec went down suddenly!

    Time to finally declare war on Canuckistan, Mr. President!

    Log in to Reply
  10. Rev Arthur L kuckland (5-30-24 banana republic day)   1 hour ago

    "In the decade since Canada legalized euthanasia, known there as medical assistance in dying, or MAID, its physician-assisted death regime has developed into one of the most permissive in the world.

    And yet Ron Bailey, matt welsh, enb, sullum, and bohem have not traveled to Canada to personally try it out.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   1 hour ago

      More testing needed!

      Log in to Reply
      1. mad.casual   1 hour ago

        MAID does prevent influenza, RSV, cancer, and autoimmune disease, but technically, thus far, it hasn't generated an immune response, so it's more of a therapy than a vaccine.

        Log in to Reply
        1. Medulla Oblongata   15 minutes ago

          Saw where this lady waited 6 Canadian years to get a knee replacement. Finally had the surgery, then spent 8 days in hospital waiting to get the surgery wound closed, got infected, and leg had to be amputated.

          I've been mildly suprised she wasn't counseled to MAID herself.

          Log in to Reply
          1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   12 minutes ago

            So about 4.5 US years?

            Log in to Reply
    2. Medulla Oblongata   17 minutes ago

      Canda is essentially killing as many of its citizens as guns are killing Americans.

      Log in to Reply
  11. Fist of Etiquette   1 hour ago

    Tell it to NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani:

    Air conditioning has reduced heat deaths in the US by three quarters since the 1970s.

    Yes, tell the commie to care about the proles. See how far that gets you.

    Log in to Reply
  12. Spiritus Mundi   1 hour ago

    In the decade since Canada legalized euthanasia...

    The left loves:
    Abortion
    Euthanasia
    Islam
    Child genital mutilation
    Population control

    But they are totally not a (D)eath cult

    Log in to Reply
  13. Fist of Etiquette   1 hour ago

    Russian strikes in Kyiv kill at least 17.

    Are we going to be asked to care about this again?

    Log in to Reply
    1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   58 minutes ago

      Does this mean the Iran war is over this time?

      Log in to Reply
  14. Fist of Etiquette   1 hour ago

    In the decade since Canada legalized euthanasia, known there as medical assistance in dying, or MAID, its physician-assisted death regime has developed into one of the most permissive in the world.

    Somehow lucrative, too, I would wager. (Beyond, of course, The System ridding itself of its burdens.)

    Log in to Reply
    1. Super Scary   45 minutes ago

      It has certainly been great for organ harvesting.

      Log in to Reply
  15. Quo Usque Tandem   1 hour ago

    You need perspective to appreciate what this writer is saying; that derives from life experience and a factual knowledge of history. Both of these are sadly lacking in those who have an “overweening admiration of fools and knaves.”

    Log in to Reply
  16. mad.casual   1 hour ago

    The 16,499 cases in 2024 accounted for 1 out of 20 deaths in Canada.

    A la "San Francisco licenses more dogs than births." Canada's birth rate ticked up slightly from 2023 to 2024, by about 13,000 births. Meaning Canada actively killed more people than it birthed... not counting abortion.

    On a long enough timeline, "Free (Reproductive) Healthcare" actually will cost nothing.

    Log in to Reply
  17. Stupid Government Tricks   1 hour ago

    I always figure I can't be proud of being an American any more than I can be proud of being my race or height or having 5 fingers on each hand; I was born this way. Naturalized citizens can be proud of it; they made the choice. I wouldn't want to live anywhere else, the Constitution is still a pretty damned good second draft, even with all its invisible amendments from court reinterpretations, but I had nothing to do with any of those.

    Log in to Reply
    1. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   56 minutes ago

      Glad I won’t be celebrating the 4th with this guy.

      Log in to Reply
    2. mad.casual   54 minutes ago

      I always figure I can't be proud of being an American any more than I can be proud of being my race or height or having 5 fingers on each hand; I was born this way.

      You can be proud of not hating the place where you were born or grew up and/or not hating everyone who lived or lives there. It's a choice now.

      Log in to Reply
  18. Medulla Oblongata   59 minutes ago

    We're in the process of getting solar panels put in with the express purpose of "I want to be able to run my AC at 68°all summer long if I want to. And the pool pumps..."

    Log in to Reply
  19. Medulla Oblongata   57 minutes ago

    Fraud all the way down, a lot of it is imported, too!

    https://www.justice.gov/usao-edmo/pr/former-st-louis-building-inspector-admits-16-million-fraud

    A former building inspector with the City of St. Louis on Tuesday admitted steering $1.64 million meant for the repair of decrepit buildings in St. Louis to himself and relatives.

    Adebanjo “Banjo” Popoola, 57, pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in St. Louis to three counts of wire fraud. Popoola was a building division inspector with the City of St. Louis at the time and was responsible for managing important aspects of two programs designed to aid in the stabilizing and rehabilitating of city properties, Stable Communities STL and Prop NS. Stable Communities STL was funded through federal American Rescue Plan Act funds and intended for privately-owned properties. Prop NS was intended for residential properties owned by the City’s Land Reutilization Authority (LRA) and was funded through City issued general obligation bonds. Popoola was primarily responsible for identifying properties for rehab or stabilization; developing the scope of work; seeking, reviewing and awarding bids; inspecting the work that had purportedly been completed on each property and then certifying that the work had been completed so funds could be disbursed to the contractors.

    Log in to Reply
  20. Medulla Oblongata   53 minutes ago

    Fraud all the way down, much of if imported...

    This clown was billing Medicare for expensive medical-grade Pediasure then giving his patients the over-the-counter stuff.

    https://ag.ny.gov/press-release/2026/attorney-general-james-announces-arrest-medical-supply-company-owner-stealing

    New York Attorney General Letitia James today announced the arrest and indictment of Nduka Lewis Ekpenyong, 36, of Hewlett, New York arrest and indictment of Nduka Lewis Ekpenyong, 36, of Hewlett, New York for allegedly stealing more than $2.5 million from Medicaid through a fraud scheme that left children without the nutritional supplements they needed. An investigation by the Office of the Attorney General’s (OAG) Medicaid Fraud Control Unit (MFCU) found that from April 13, 2023, to July 15, 2025, Ekpenyong submitted over 6,000 claims to Medicaid through his company, Duke Medical, Inc. (Duke Medical), for PediaSure with Peptides, but did not purchase the vast majority of the product for which he submitted claims to Medicaid. Ekpenyong pocketed more than $2.5 million from Medicaid through his false billing scheme, which he used to buy luxury cars, including a Bentley and a Range Rover, and pay the mortgage on his Long Island mansion. Ekpenyong and Duke Medical were charged with Grand Larceny, Healthcare Fraud, and Scheme to Defraud.

    Log in to Reply
  21. Medulla Oblongata   51 minutes ago

    Boston Globe article not working out the math like they thought...

    https://x.com/BostonGlobe/status/2071575899825115279

    More than 10,000 Haitians in the Massachusetts workforce, many filling crucial jobs in long-term care, construction, and transportation, will lose their Temporary Protected Status.

    https://x.com/JRobFromMN/status/2072022280733892923

    90,000 Haitians live in Massachusetts

    45,000 are on TPS

    AND ONLY 10,000 ARE WORKING?

    And remember the classic:

    Democrat Rep. and LGBT activist Becca Balint: "If we don't have avenues for people to come here legally to work or to build a home here… We're not going to have anybody around to wipe our asses because we don't have enough people."

    Log in to Reply
    1. Michael Ejercito   1 minute ago

      I heard a rumor there are these people called Americans.

      Log in to Reply
  22. Medulla Oblongata   49 minutes ago

    I've been away and may have missed this...

    WSJ:

    Over 440,000 people—or more than 1,200 a day—became millionaires in the U.S. in 2025, accounting for nearly half of the world’s new millionaires, according to an annual report on global wealth published Tuesday by UBS.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Purple Martin   10 minutes ago

      Inflation tends to push that along …

      Log in to Reply
  23. Medulla Oblongata   44 minutes ago

    Da Pope!

    Setting up Islamic prayer rooms in the Vatican and excommunicating ultra-traditionalist Catholics.

    Log in to Reply
  24. minus the clever name   32 minutes ago

    many haters on here are actually self-haters hobie, Molly, Nelson.
    america taunts them with undeniable truths, morality to be lived up to, and esp dreams that went wrong because the dreamer went wrong. Most of the arguments I monitor on here are not promoting anything,they are just attacking -- a prime indicator of self-hate. and the general anti-God, anti-morality and laxness toward sexual depravity eg makes me fairly certain guilt and self-condemnation are the root cause. It bothers rootless desperate people that somebody is actually joyful and thankful

    Reminds me of the old Puritan joke...what is a Puritan ? Someone who fears that somewhere, somehow, someone is having fun.

    Log in to Reply
  25. Medulla Oblongata   28 minutes ago

    NYC should unplug the electric cars all charging...

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   8 minutes ago

      First you tell me to get vaccinated to keep Grandma alive and now you want me to unplug her?! Make up your mind!

      Log in to Reply
  26. MWAocdoc   27 minutes ago

    I think I can safely say that no one loves America more than I do. I plan to spend most of July Fourth marching in a small town parade wearing a Continental fife and drum corps Army uniform whilst playing "Yankee Doodle" on a fife. But the patriotism of loving one's country is not the same thing as "my country right or wrong" patriotism. Being willing to die defending my family and my homeland from enemy military invasion is not the same thing as being willing to die for the warhawks' military wet dreams in some god-forsaken third world miasma pretending to make the world safe for democracy or fighting a useless global war on drugs. I swore an oath to uphold and defend the Constitution of the United States of America, not to make America great again ... America never stopped being great! Anyone who cannot understand our history and see that even today, surrounded by fools and nominally under tyrants who scoff at the Constitution as we are, has failed to pay the debt we owe to our ancestors who founded the only government of the People, by the People and for the People in the history of humanity.

    Log in to Reply
  27. Horatio Cornblower   26 minutes ago

    Pretty cool article about 4,000 year old markets. Seems to be a decent website, too.

    The recurring argument for managed economies, regulated markets, and designed commercial systems rests on a premise that is rarely stated explicitly but always present: that markets are artifacts, constructed things, instruments of policy that require expert supervision to function and expert correction when they fail. In this view, the market is downstream of theory. Someone had to think it up. Someone has to maintain it. Remove the hand of the designer, and the thing collapses.

    Kanesh is a four-thousand-year refutation of that premise. The courts that enforced Ahatum’s loan contracts were not the creation of a policy commission. The interest rates that told Pushu-ken whether a shipment was worth the risk were not set by a central authority. The early-exit penalty in the founding charter of that twelve-partner company was not mandated by a regulator. These were the spontaneous products of people with things to trade, routes to travel, and enough accumulated experience to know that trust required terms and terms required enforcement.

    https://thedailyeconomy.org/article/ancient-clay-tablets-show-markets-worked-4000-years-before-economists-explained-them/

    Log in to Reply
  28. Medulla Oblongata   25 minutes ago

    I was a kid during the bicentennial and recall it was a huge deal. The semiquincentennial is barely a footnote.

    In a conversation with a hometown classmate wherein I mentioned this, she, a very liberal white woman, said basically "what's to be proud of?"

    I try very hard to stay friends with people of different ideologies, but it hurts my head sometimes.

    Log in to Reply
    1. mad.casual   15 minutes ago

      I try very hard to stay friends with people of different ideologies, but it hurts my head sometimes.

      Pro Tip: If you're peaceful and content and your neighbor or classmate is indignant, ashamed, and spiteful of your peace and contentedness, *you* might be friendly, but you are probably not friends.

      Log in to Reply
  29. Moderation4ever   23 minutes ago

    I have no doubt that the Republicans would like AOC to be the Democrats nominee for President. I think that is absurd and while Ms. Ocasio-Cortez may run some day it is simply to early. What I would say is that when dark horse candidates do arise, Jimmy Carter and Bill Clinton for example, they tend to go all the way. So, were a AOC run to happen it could be a freight train that goes all the way.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   5 minutes ago

      I’m sure she does.

      Log in to Reply
  30. Moderation4ever   17 minutes ago

    It the NYC power grid can handle the load most days is it wrong to ask people be careful on a few days of peak load? It seems to me that is better to ask people to be careful rather than spend millions just so people can do whatever they want anytime they want to.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   5 minutes ago

      …just so people can do whatever they want anytime they want to.

      Fuck off

      Log in to Reply
  31. MWAocdoc   15 minutes ago

    "If you think we've become less free, consider whether we've become less virtuous"

    I don't necessarily agree with everything old Ben said, and I disagree with him that only virtuous people are capable of freedom. People today are no less virtuous than the colonists who fought for and won independence from Great Britain. I have said before and will say again now that the purpose of the living is to live their lives, not to wear virtue on their sleeves. People should, of course, pay attention to what the people they elect to office are doing with the power they hold. But power-seekers in office will always hold an advantage over their constituents - officials have nothing else to do all day long other than gather more and more power unto themselves, using essentially unlimited public resources to gain and maintain power. The people are rightly busying themselves elsewhere living their lives. You don't have to be particularly virtuous to realize that your own best interests lie in defending everyone else's equal rights along with your own rights to avoid losing them eventually. The Constitution is not a "living document" in the sense of ignoring its fundamental principles to gain a temporary advantage over someone. Either the Constitutional principles are immutable, being adapted to apply to changing circumstances as needed; or it is not a Constitution at all. If our more recent ancestors had taken that to heart, we would not have to worry about the virtue of our more recent generations now.

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  32. GOD OF PENGUIN ISLAND   9 minutes ago

    Lying Jeffy’s dream for America:

    Gov. Tim Walz and Minnesota's Board of Pardons pardoned an immigrant Tou Lue Vang, convicted of s*xually abusing a 10-year-old girl, helping him fight deportation.

    https://x.com/ResisttheMS/status/2072686255582961972

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  33. MWAocdoc   38 seconds ago

    "the fact that so many younger Americans don't feel proud of our country, and appreciative of the great American experiment, says that we're taking our political circumstances for granted"

    Again I disagree. The great American experiment ended in 1861 with the War Between the States. After the Confederacy surrendered and slavery was ended, division of powers and checks and balances started to die. Although some parts of the Bill of Rights were extended to prevent violation by individual states, every other Federal power was also extended to rule the individual states as well. Political parties finally killed off any pretense of The People choosing their own representatives; and those representatives no longer answered to the people who elected them. Our representatives now answer to their party elite organizations. No wonder young people no longer feel proud of an experiment that they have never seen first hand. Their only experience has been with partisan fights, polarization, endless warfare around the globe and the struggle to gain free benefits at someone else's expense by claiming victimhood.

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