Friday, March 13, 2026

Because of both illegal and legal mass immigration, the U. K. is now a lost cause. Other nations have suffered similar destruction; are we next?

 


Diversity and the Death of England

It’s risky to maintain a friendship with a nation intent on committing suicide.

Jeremy Egerer | March 13, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

The whole point of Impractical Jokers is a few pranksters doing things, on purpose, which violate the norms of our society.  This is what’s known as comedy.  In real life, the whole point of a border is keeping people out who violate the norms of our society by accident.  This is what we know as “having a country.”

Now, we all know that a country can be comical, but things get serious when too many people from too many countries start violating your norms willy-nilly.  For instance, do Americans stand in line or crowd to the front?  Do we throw trash in the garbage bins or on the street?  How loudly can we play our music with the windows open?  And can anybody park on the lawn?

Things get more uncomfortable when you ask, at what age is an impregnable women too young?  And can you just follow one around if she’s alone, or stare at her on the bus?  Do you have to wash your hands before making a stranger a hot dog?  And should people own actual dogs?  And can you blast prayers at six in the morning from the top of a building?  And do you have to hold it all in, or can you just poop on the street?

(Fooled you on that last one.  In San Francisco, almost anyone can fit in except Republicans.)

Some other differences go well beyond laws and affect the norms.  George Patton writes in his memoirs that when he visited the sultan in Morocco, a leopard broke out of its cage and ran straight into the harem.  A lot of screams were heard, and the sultan took off.  And when he came back, he told Patton (with a calm face) not to worry.  It just got one of the concubines in the neck.  The real wives were all safe, so they could carry as usual.

This is the kind of thing that pisses Americans off, but it highlights a crucial difference between American and Arabian society.  In 1942 Morocco, a man of eminence could pile up dozens of women of no eminence, and sometimes they got bled to death by leopards.  In modern America, a woman of no eminence can pile up men of eminence and bleed them dry on her own.  This is what we refer to as “alimony” and “child support,” and if a man tries to escape the harem, we throw him in another one where the sultan is his cellmate.

Thus, so far from being against ethnic diversity, I’m for it — somewhere else.  The great value of having other countries (and dare I say it: other states) is that you can view them from a distance.  The chief benefit of viewing them from a distance is you can find out which things you want to do yourself and which things you want the cops to shoot at.

This is the conservative’s idea of diversity.  It’s a plan where clear distinctions lie between “us” and “them” so we can delineate between the two and plan accordingly.  If you like this sort of thing, you believe deeply in Immigration and Customs Enforcement.  The problem with the leftist’s diversity is that the diversity happens right at home, so by the time you realize you hate something, you’re stuck with it.  Also, you have to like it.  This is the whole point of HR and DIE — not to let anyone at work say, “I really support ICE.”

One country I’m really glad is “over there” is Great Britain — for the simple reason that the British will consider anybody “British.”  And for the additional reason that if you disagree with who can be British in Britain, you can end up in prison.

That’s why more people get arrested in Britain than in Russia for having opinions.  It’s also why Mohamed is the most popular name in the country.  And when Pakis started raping thousands of little girls, it’s the reason police swept the accusations under the rug.  Simply put, Brits wanted to defend everything but Britishness — and that’s why the United Arab Emirates won’t send any students to college in England.  The UAE took one look at the radical Islamists in Oxford and decided that Oxford was too much like Mohamed to let the Islamic students back into Arabia.

Yesterday, our forefathers would have burned the whole world because the British wanted to tax us too much.  Today, our forefathers would burn the whole world because the British tax their citizens to fund all the wrong things.  I include here such laudable expenditures as disarming law-abiding citizens, hiding crime by foreigners, feeding terrorists and layabouts, making a joke out of God, and terrorizing the ethnically British.  Sixty years ago, the whole civilized world was allied against Soviet Russia.  Today we have not just an interest, but a moral obligation to have the whole free world ally ourselves against the general ethos of Great Britain.

Whether Russia belongs on our team, in the age of China, is a fair question.  Whether the U.K. belongs on it without respecting themselves is obvious.  A country should always question whether its allies are the kind of people who commit murder.  But a country should never ally itself with a country in the middle of a suicide.

Thus, we wish Rupert Lowe and Restore Britain the best of luck.  And if he gets crushed by the DIE machine, we wish Britain itself the worst of it.

 

Thursday, March 12, 2026

Wake up America - call your elected leaders and demand they pass the 'Save Act'!

 



We must hang together to save America’s fragile liberty

America has weathered past existential crises by hanging together and fighting. That’s still our job today.

Albin Sadar | March 11, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

America is only a few short months away from celebrating its quarter-of-a-millennial birthday, which is being officially feted as “America 250,” as well as its “Super Centennial.” But can America survive for another fifty years, all the way to its Tri-Centennial Celebration? Even as Trump fights an existential war abroad, there’s one here at home, too.

Without question, the country has had a long and glorious lifespan. However, as the world surely knows, its life has not been without errors when it was navigating rocky roads and dangerous waters, and its survival was iffy, at best. One need only go back 165 years to the Civil War to verify that observation.

Of course, at the moment of our nation’s creation, it experienced multiple “birth pangs.” But the men and women who willingly put their very lives on the line did so despite knowing that the outcome was not guaranteed. The nation could have been stillborn in the earliest days of its fight for survival against the overwhelming might of the British Empire.

Just recently, I was reminded of both the fight for America’s survival during the Civil War years (the nation might not have reached even its Centennial celebration) and its founding conflict, when I took one of my many walks through the famous cemetery in my neighborhood of Sleepy Hollow, New York.

Sleepy Hollow Cemetery is the final resting place of many captains of industry (families such as the Rockefellers and Carnegies), as well as this country’s very first internationally recognized literary giant, Washington Irving.

Within the borders of the expansive cemetery are monuments commemorating both the Civil War and Revolutionary War dead. These landmarks are stark reminders of how fragile a nation’s life can be.

The words carved in stone on the Revolutionary monument remind us:

 


Photo by the author.

1776 - 1783

In Memory

of the

OFFICERS and SOLDIERS

of the

REVOLUTION

who by their valor

sustained the cause of liberty

and independence

on these historic fields.

While we honor the dead, it’s important to remember the raw courage of the living, including those too old to take to the battlefield themselves. When he signed his name to the Declaration of Independence, an act of treason in the eyes of King George III and the British Crown, and therefore a hanging offense, Benjamin Franklin allegedly made this grim observation: “We must all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.”

That ominous observation recently came to mind when one of Barack Obama’s henchwomen, Susan Rice, laid out the Democrats’ game plan once they regain power. On a recent podcast, she warned that those who “take a knee to Trump” would be getting a reckoning. Rice stated that the Democrats would not be “playing by the old rules” when it came to retribution.

Rice was making it clear: Do not align yourself now with Trump or any of his tens of millions of supporters and followers. Your time is “not going to end well.” We know that’s not an empty promise. Those who ventured to Washington, D.C., on January 6, 2021, not just because they believed that the 2020 election was stolen, but because they knew it was flipped for Biden...well, they saw that the Democrats excel at revenge.

Rice’s promised “lawfare” will once again be redefined, smashing all previous Funk & Wagnalls definitions (Rowan and Martin will be turning over in their graves).

So, what can derail the Democrats’ destructive engine?

Might “hanging together” in these critical days be strongly advised?

Might “patriotism in action” be the solution?

President Trump has made it abundantly clear that two major standards are needed for defining a nation: secure borders and honest elections.

The border is secure. However, the S.A.V.E. America Act is still twisting in the wind.

Within months of the spectacular celebratory events surrounding July 4, 2026, Americans will once again have the sacred opportunity to head to the polls to choose their leaders. The choices this year could not be more stark. The Democrats will be clearly and unabashedly out for revenge.

Two things are now necessary to—again, in Franklin’s words—keep the Republic: Patriots must maintain the pressure on elected officials to pass S.A.V.E., and then they must vote in overwhelming numbers this November. No one can afford to sit this one out.

These actions will uphold the Republican majority in Washington and assure that President Trump’s impressive and powerful agenda continues to stave off America’s “fundamental transformation.”


 

Confidentiality lost! We live in a totally different world today.

 


Whatever Happened to Confidentiality?

A government that can peer into your medical file, your legal records, your spiritual life, and your finances without resistance is not a guardian of rights but rather an overlord. 

Jim Cardoza | March 12, 2026 www.americanthinker.com

In a free society, confidentiality is more than a courtesy; it is a fundamental pillar of trust. Whether in the examining room, the attorney’s office, or the confessional booth, certain relationships have long been protected by a simple principle: what is said in confidence stays in confidence. This was a recognition that certain professional relationships can only properly function when insulated from surveillance and coercion. However, in modern America, these sacred trusts are under relentless attack by government mandates, digital intrusions, and public policies which promote government control at the expense of individual liberty.

Consider the doctor-patient relationship, once understood to be unassailable. Patients could share their most intimate concerns with the confidence that their disclosures would remain private. That allowed doctors to diagnose and treat without fear that their patients would withhold critical information. But today, that trust no longer exists. 

Government reporting mandates now require doctors to report a growing list of health information, sometimes under penalty of law. These electronic health records are often linked to databases accessible by government officials and third-party contractors. In some states, physicians are compelled to even report gun ownership if a patient expresses emotional distress. 

The justification for these intrusions is always the same: public safety, public health, or that vague concept promoted as “the common good.” The pandemic accelerated this trend. Under the guise of COVID-19 contact tracing, vaccination records, and “community safety,” the government gained unprecedented access to personal health data. Some doctors were even threatened with license suspension for expressing dissenting views on pandemic policy. What remains of doctor-patient confidentiality when neither party is free to speak honestly?

A similar decline can be seen in the realm of legal counsel. The principle of attorney-client privilege is supposed to be ironclad -- ensuring that even the guilty have the right to mount a defense without fear that their lawyer might become a witness against them. But modern government practice has taken aim at this also. Prosecutors increasingly seek to pierce attorney-client privilege in politically charged cases. When discretion is left to bureaucrats or judges with political agendas, the exception can quickly become the rule.

We saw this play out in cases where government agencies raided law offices, seized privileged communications, and government lawyers were the ones to decide which documents are protected and which are not. When that happens, we no longer have a legal privilege. We have a legal pretense.

Clergy-penitent privilege is also damaged when the state deems religious confessions to be in conflict with mandatory reporting laws. The therapist-client relationship has been riddled with carve-outs and disclosure requirements. Even the financial advisor and client relationship is no longer free from surveillance, thanks to a raft of regulations requiring the flagging and reporting of “suspicious” transactions -- an undefined term that gives bureaucrats broad license to probe.

What all these trends reveal is a fundamental shift in the balance of power between the individual and the state. Confidentiality, once viewed as a protection for the individual against government overreach, is now simply identified as an obstacle to government control. While the language used to justify this shift is always dressed in noble-sounding abstractions -- safety, health, transparency, security -- what it actually means is that the state reserves the right to know everything about you.

The cost of this transformation is the destruction of professions. A doctor who fears that an honest conversation will be monitored becomes a bureaucrat with a stethoscope. A lawyer who hesitates to give frank advice because it might be subpoenaed becomes an agent of the state, not a client advocate. A pastor who wonders whether to report a confession becomes a snitch, not a shepherd.

The erosion of these trusted relationships produces patients who don’t tell their doctors the full story, clients who must think twice before trusting their attorneys, and parishioners who avoid spiritual guidance altogether.

What makes this trend all the more dangerous is its creeping nature. No one declared the end of confidentiality. It is being undone subtly by incremental policies, executive orders, and professional “guidelines.” The very people tasked with protecting confidentiality -- doctors, lawyers, and clergy -- are being slowly morphed into instruments of state policy.

History has shown us where this leads. A government that can peer into your medical file, your legal records, your spiritual life, and your finances without resistance is not a guardian of rights but rather an overlord. The birthright of liberty is reduced to a permission slip.

For this very reason, the founders of our nation wrote a Constitution that assumes government power must be restrained. Confidentiality is one such restraint. It is not a loophole to be closed but a firewall to be maintained. To defend it is not to protect criminals or endanger society -- it is to uphold the only kind of society worth living in: one where free individuals can speak, seek counsel, and be healed without the state eavesdropping at the door. 

 

Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Time after time, the USA citizens favor common sense-Constitutional-realistic approach to life and government. Like wise 'government does its own thing.t

 

Shock NBC poll reveals American voters' true feelings about ICE and Democrats

Landon Pfile March 09, 2026 theblaze.com

While Democrats have historically pushed for softer enforcement, 53% of registered voters now say they approve of the job the Trump administration is doing on border security.

As President Donald Trump continues his push to secure the nation, a new NBC News survey reveals that American voters hold positions on enforcement of immigration laws that are at odds with the mainstream media narrative. The poll, conducted by Hart Research Associates and Public Opinion Strategies, shows that when it comes to border security, voters prefer the Republican Party over the Democratic Party by a staggering 27-point lead.

The American people have more faith in the agency protecting the border than in the party that has consistently undermined it.

The survey was conducted between Feb. 27 and March 3, 2026. It included interviews with 1,000 registered voters, with 620 respondents reached via cell phone and 309 interviewed through an online survey sent via text message. The results, which have a margin of error of ±3.10%, reveal a growing divide.

The poll also has shocking news for the Democratic Party. According to the survey, 38% of voters have a positive view of Immigration and Customs Enforcement. By comparison, only 30% of voters have a positive view of the Democratic Party. This eight-point gap suggests that despite radical "Abolish ICE" rhetoric from progressives, the American people have more faith in the agency protecting the border than in the party that has consistently undermined it.

In a post on X, Fox News legal analyst Jonathan Turley noted, "[The Democratic Party] barely edged out Iran in popularity. As Democrats push airports toward a shutdown during peak Spring break travel, they could soon lose not just to Iran but Ebola in future polls."

Republicans hold their largest issue-based advantage on the border, far outpacing the 22-point lead they hold on the issue of crime. Meanwhile, the Democratic Party trails significantly on these pressing security concerns.

While 50% of voters say they prefer a Democrat-controlled Congress, they are simultaneously backing the Trump administration's firm stance on the U.S. border and immigration enforcement.