Tuesday, March 31, 2026

An 'Outstanding' post to end the month of March. Much wisdom can be found in this article!

 

The ’rules-based international order’ is cracking

One British observer sees the writing on the wall.

In a wide-ranging interview on The Winston Marshall Show, released March 28, 2026, science writer and House of Lords member Matt Ridley delivered a sobering diagnosis: The post-1945 “rules-based international order” is unraveling.  Institutions like the U.N., the WHO, the IMF, and the sprawling climate bureaucracy, built in the aftermath of World War II to promote security, stability, health, and cooperation, have instead become self-serving, corrupt, ideologically captured, and detached from empirical reality.  Recent U.S. actions under President Trump, including withdrawals from or defunding elements of the WHO and Paris Agreement signal the visible dismantling of a top-down technocratic system that no longer delivers results.

Ridley, author of The Evolution of Everything and a longtime advocate of bottom-up innovation, contrasts two ways societies solve problems.  According to Ridley, order in markets, language, culture, and technological progress emerges from decentralized trial and error and spontaneous coordination.  Top-down control, by contrast, concentrates power in experts and bureaucracies that inevitably prioritize self-preservation, funding, and narrative control over truth and effectiveness.

Crisis of Expertise and Institutional Capture

Nowhere is this clearer than in the handling of COVID-19.  Ridley highlights the strong likelihood of a lab leak origin in Wuhan, pointing to early cover-ups, politicized emails among scientists, and the WHO’s initial deference to China, even admitting that sometimes science must defer to politics.  The organization’s flawed investigations and reluctance to challenge official narratives damaged public trust.

Similar patterns appear in climate science, where exaggerated models, suppressed dissent, and funding incentives reward alarmism.  He noted that climate scientists are quick to attack anyone who questions the dogma or conclusions of climate scientists, but rarely critique hyperbolic alarmists who exaggerate predictions and promise impending doom.  Ridley describes himself as a “lukewarmer,” acknowledging human influence on warming but rejecting catastrophic forecasts, criticizing groupthink, the “hockey stick” controversies, and the treatment of reasonable skepticism as heresy.

These failures and resulting extremism are not sporadic, but endemic.  Institutions designed for cooperation have morphed into vehicles for bureaucratic expansion and ideological enforcement.  They protect their budgets and reputations when evidence contradicts their preferred narratives.

Energy Policy and Economic Stagnation

Ridley draws a sharp contrast between the United States and Europe, particularly Britain.  The U.K.’s heavy subsidies for renewables, combined with overregulation, have produced electricity prices substantially higher than in the U.S., contributing to flat per-capita GDP growth and stagnant productivity for more than 15 years.  In contrast, America’s shale revolution and emerging nuclear innovations demonstrate the power of market-driven energy abundance.  Deregulation and technological breakthroughs, not centralized planning, have made the U.S. the world’s top oil and gas producer while keeping energy affordable.

Europe’s self-inflicted energy woes illustrate the broader danger: When ideology overrides evidence and incentives, nations pay in lost prosperity and diminished competitiveness.  The post-war consensus that favored ever-greater supranational coordination and compelled consensus is colliding with reality.

The Collapse of the Post-War Consensus

Ridley sees recent American actions, such as defunding or exiting elements of the WHO, reconsidering Paris Agreement commitments, and prioritizing national sovereignty and self-interest, as evidence that the old system is fracturing.  These actions signal American rejection of dysfunctional multilateral structures that demand resources and compliance while delivering poor accountability and results.

He remains optimistic about technological progress, especially in the U.S., where bottom-up innovation continues to advance energy, medicine, and other fields.  He warns that Britain and much of Europe risk being left behind without radical reform: lower taxes, deregulation, and a return to evidence-based policy over ideological commitments.

The Significance for America: Humanity over Bureaucracy

Ridley’s analysis echoes a deeper truth articulated by economist Julian Simon in The Ultimate Resource (1981/1996).  Simon’s thesis holds that human beings — our ingenuity, creativity, and problem-solving capacity — are the ultimate resource.  In free-market economies, potential scarcity triggers innovation, experimentation, substitution, and efficiency gains through rising prices.  Population growth, when paired with economic freedom, becomes a net blessing rather than a curse.

This was a direct rebuttal to the doomsayer predictions of international bodies (such as the Club of Rome’s Limits to Growth reports) and self-interested disciplines in academia, NGOs, environmental bureaucracies, and U.N. agencies.  Those static, top-down models assumed fixed resource stocks and underestimated human adaptability, often while serving institutional incentives like grants, influence, and regulatory expansion.  Simon demonstrated through long-term price and abundance trends that such pessimistic forecasts repeatedly failed.

Corrupt institutions with the power to elevate consensus over truth-seeking sacrifice the ultimate resource and its benefits.  As the old system fractures, an opportunity emerges to refocus on what works: secure borders, affordable energy, scientific integrity, and policies that empower citizens and entrepreneurs rather than insulate bureaucracies from consequences.

Matt Ridley’s conversation with Winston Marshall is a timely reminder that institutions exist to serve people, not the other way around.  When they fail that test, honest reform or replacement is imperative.

Lawlessness prevails because of the horrific illegal immigration policies of the previous administration

 


'Trans' illegal alien rapist who attacked 14-year-old boy reaches appalling plea deal with Bragg's office

Cortney Weil March 30, 2026 theblaze.com

Under the deal, Nicol Suarez would already have served his sentence.

An illegal alien from Colombia who pled guilty to rape last week has reached a shocking plea agreement with the office of Democrat Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg.

According to the terms of the agreement, Nicol Suarez, a 31-year-old biological male who identifies as transgender, would be sentenced to six months, a sentence he has already served while awaiting trial, in exchange for pleading guilty to second-degree rape. In New York, second-degree rape typically results in two to seven years behind bars.

'Six months in jail for raping a child is a gross miscarriage of justice.'

The accusations against Suarez are heinous. On February 11, 2025, Suarez was walking his dog in East Harlem when he followed a 14-year-old boy into a restroom inside a Bodega and raped him. The boy immediately reported the attack to bystanders in the area, and Suarez was arrested within hours for first-degree rape.

Following the arrest, ICE almost immediately lodged an immigration detainer against Suarez, who entered the U.S. illegally in 2023 under the Biden administration.

RELATED: Transgender illegal alien accused of raping boy, 14, in restroom; was freed last June after violent crime charges: Reports

 


Jason Alpert-Wisnia/Hans Lucas/AFP/Getty Images

What's more, Suarez has been accused of violent crimes — armed robbery, prostitution, and assault with a dangerous weapon — in Massachusetts, and the New York Post also alluded to possible outstanding charges in New Jersey.

The Trump Department of Homeland Security has slammed the lenient plea deal, calling the offered six-month sentence "insane."

"This plea deal is a disgrace. Six months in jail for raping a child is a gross miscarriage of justice. This pervert was let into our country by the Biden administration and then again released from jail following his arrests for armed robbery, assault with a dangerous weapon, and prostitution," said acting Assistant Secretary Lauren Bis.

According to the DHS, the New York Department of Corrections has agreed to honor the ICE detainer and "not release this child rapist into American communities." Suarez is scheduled to be sentenced officially on April 27.

Bragg's office and the New York Department of Corrections did not respond to a request for comment from Blaze News, though the Daily Mail published this statement from Bragg's office: "We expect the defendant to remain detained and be deported following sentencing, due to the felony conviction."

According to the Daily Mail, the DA's office claimed that the plea agreement was made after consulting with the victim's family and to spare the victim from having to testify.

 

Monday, March 30, 2026

The Senate of our Legislative Branch of government has become worthless; disgusting Democrats and uncooperative Republicans have caused this stalemate.

 


I Traveled Through the DHS Shutdown Chaos — Here’s What Actually Happened

How politicized government decisions move beyond policy debates to directly impact the daily lives of millions of Americans.

Gregory Lyakhov patriotpost.us 3-27-26

Unsurprisingly, traveling last weekend became a case study in what happens when government decisions move from abstract debate to immediate consequence. Public frustration with Washington often centers on policy disputes, protests, or ideological conflict, but those decisions rarely translate into real-time disruption for ordinary Americans.

Most political outcomes unfold gradually. The airport chaos over the past several days did not.

Moments where government action — or inaction — directly reshapes daily life remain relatively rare, but recent history provides a few clear examples. The handling of COVID-19 created a stark divide across the country, where some states operated with relative normalcy while others remained locked down for extended periods, in some cases not fully reopening until years later.

More recently, the political shift following President Donald Trump’s return to office led to a rapid cultural reversal, with institutions that had aggressively promoted DEI and CRT frameworks retreating from those positions within months.

This partial government shutdown belongs in that same category. The effects are not theoretical. They are visible, measurable, and, in many cases, dangerous.

At John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York City, the breakdown was immediate. Reports of multi-hour delays do not fully capture the scale of the problem. Many travelers waited up to eight hours to clear TSA checkpoints. Even locating the beginning of the line became a prolonged process, with passengers forming makeshift queues lacking any defined structure. There was minimal direction, limited staffing, and no coherent system to manage the volume of people moving through the terminal.

That level of disorder extends beyond inconvenience and raises legitimate safety concerns. Overcrowded pre-security areas restricted movement, limited emergency access, and increased the risk of medical incidents. Travelers experienced exhaustion, dehydration, and visible distress. When large groups are confined without clear organization or adequate staffing, the risk of panic or a crowd-control failure becomes a serious concern.

Debates in Washington have centered on whether individual agencies — most notably the TSA — can be funded independently while ICE and CBP remain unfunded. That proposal may appear to offer a compromise, but it reflects a fundamental misunderstanding of how the Department of Homeland Security operates.

DHS was designed as a unified national security framework in which each component supports the others. TSA screening at airports does not function in isolation from broader enforcement and intelligence operations. Airports serve as critical entry points into the United States, where TSA screening intersects directly with CBP enforcement and indirectly with ICE’s interior operations.

The idea that TSA can function effectively while other DHS components remain underfunded ignores the shared infrastructure, data systems, and personnel coordination that define the department. Disruption in one agency will inevitably cascade into the others. Reduced staffing, delayed operations, and weakened coordination quickly translate into visible breakdowns, as demonstrated in airports across the country.

In the absence of full funding, temporary measures have emerged. One of the most notable has been the deployment of ICE agents to assist in airport operations. Democrats have focused on the fact that ICE agents are not trained to perform the full scope of TSA responsibilities, particularly tasks such as operating X-ray screening equipment or conducting specialized security checks. That distinction is accurate, but it misses the broader point. The current crisis is not solely a technical screening failure; it is also an organizational one.

ICE agents receive training in areas immediately relevant to a high-pressure airport environment, including crowd control, situational awareness, and maintaining order in large, congested spaces. Those functions become critical when passenger volume overwhelms existing infrastructure.

Improved organization alone can significantly reduce delays, even if processing times remain longer than under normal conditions. Without that structure, delays expand exponentially, and the environment deteriorates further.

ICE is not a substitute for a fully staffed and properly funded TSA. But at a minimum, it is a measure that prevents total operational collapse. The broader solution remains straightforward: restore full funding to the Department of Homeland Security and reestablish the coordination that the system was designed to maintain.

 

Sunday, March 29, 2026

If you thought the Nation is divided - how about the ten square mile area known as Washington District of Columbia! Divided - Oh Yeah!

 


Dems’ ICE Fearmongering Fails

Thomas Gallatin patriotpost.us 3-28-26

Have Chuck Schumer and his party overplayed their hand on their Trump-deranged, pro-illegal alien protests of immigration enforcement?

The Democrat-led shutdown of the Department of Homeland Security, which has been ongoing for more than a month now, has finally produced the Left’s desired effect — chaos and disruption. Americans have become increasingly frustrated by longer and longer wait times at airport security lines as Transportation Security Administration employees struggle with staffing issues after going without pay.

Upwards of 400 TSA personnel have left the agency since the shutdown began, and according to TSA Chief Ha Nguyen McNeill, collectively, the two most recent Democrat-caused shutdowns have resulted in over 1,500 personnel calling it quits.

Meanwhile, TSA is seeing significantly higher rates of personnel calling in sick, further straining the already shrinking workforce and creating long lines, missed flights, and flaring tempers for travelers.

For Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and his fellow Democrats, the calculus has been to force President Donald Trump and the Republicans to accept their demands to severely limit Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents’ ability to carry out their duties. Indeed, the Democrats’ real agenda appears to be doing everything in their power to limit immigration enforcement, and if they had it their way, they’d see ICE eliminated entirely.

Why else would Democrat lawmakers repeatedly refer to ICE agents as the Gestapo, Nazis, and fascists? Apparently, these legitimate federal immigration law enforcement officers are “evil,” “dangerous,” and “lawless” because they dare to do their job of enforcing American sovereignty.

Such framing might work when many Americans never actually have direct contact with ICE officers. But thanks to President Trump’s decision this week to send ICE agents to supplement TSA airport security screeners, hundreds of thousands of travelers are seeing and even interacting with ICE. And guess what? They are finding that these agents are not the fascist monsters the Democrats paint them out to be.

In fact, many travelers have welcomed ICE’s presence, as it has had a significant impact on reducing long airport security lines. This despite warnings from the likes of House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, who ridiculously claimed, “The last thing that the American people need are for untrained ICE agents to be deployed at airports all across the country, potentially to brutalize or in some instances kill them.” Seriously? Talk about unhinged fearmongering.

Fortunately, those who would otherwise take the Democrats’ anti-ICE bile seriously are learning otherwise. “I was concerned,” conceded one traveler passing through Atlanta’s Hartsfield-Jackson International Airport, “but they’re not bothering us, so let’s get it done.” Another traveler welcomed seeing ICE agents, saying, “I like that they’re here. It’s allowing us to move and get to where we need to go.” Still another said, “As long as they can help us move a little bit faster, maybe they can take some of the work off TSA agents. I’m all for it.”

Meanwhile, Border Czar Tom Homan explained that ICE agents will not only be helping out TSA personnel, but “we’re gonna arrest criminals going through the airport. We’re going to look for human trafficking, sex trafficking, money smuggling.” He further emphasized, “We’re not gonna give up President Trump’s promise of making this country safer.”

The more that everyday Americans see the Democrats’ false framing of ICE, the weaker will be the Democrats’ position to extract concessions from Republicans.

Furthermore, Senate Majority Leader John Thune and several Republican senators were singing a positive tune following their recent White House meeting with Trump. They appear to have developed a plan to secure DHS funding while also seeking to pass elements of the SAVE America Act via reconciliation. This avoids any effort to eliminate the filibuster, which lacks sufficient Republican support anyway, while offering Republicans a path to get around the Democrat roadblock.

Republicans also see reconciliation as the path to get Trump the estimated $200 billion he’s seeking for the ongoing military operation in Iran.

It will soon become evident whether Democrats will decide to get back to looking out for the interests of Americans or whether they will continue putting illegal aliens ahead of U.S. citizens.