Monday, June 1, 2026

Is America a Miracle or a Mistake? The 250-Year Showdown

America's 250th birthday is not a celebration of perfection. It is a celebration of progress. A nation that ended slavery, expanded voting rights, and dismantled segregation deserves reflection, gratitude, and pride. In plain terms, nations do not become stronger by hating their history. They become stronger by learning from it. America's 250th birthday honors both the lessons and the progress.


As America approaches its 250th birthday in 2026, many people want a celebration while others want a national reckoning. The fight over how to commemorate the milestone reveals a country still arguing over its identity, history, and future.


America’s greatest achievement is its ability to correct its own mistakes. The nation once tolerated slavery, denied women the vote, and enforced segregation. Yet slavery was abolished, women gained voting rights in 1920, and legal segregation was dismantled after 1954. The story is not perfection; it is reform.


Progress came through conflict, not consensus. The founders argued. Abolitionists fought slavery. Suffragists fought for women’s rights. Civil rights leaders challenged segregation. Every major expansion of freedom emerged from fierce national battles. America's history is a story of struggle producing change.


The American Dream still attracts millions.  If America was so flawed, why do millions of people want to come here every year? Despite constant criticism, the United States remains one of the world's top destinations for immigrants. Every year, millions seek visas, residency, or citizenship. Actions speak louder than slogans. People vote with their feet, and many still choose America.


The 250th Celebration is really a debate about patriotism. The extreme left liberals and the ‘entitlement junkies’  sees only America's failures and hesitates to celebrate. The conservative and the moderates sees a nation that continuously improved itself and believes the anniversary deserves pride. The controversy is not really about fireworks or parades—it is about what America means after 250 years.


This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book Series”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief BookSeries.






SpaceX, OpenAI, Anthropic: The $4 Trillion AI Bubble Nobody Wants to Talk About

 Wall Street is throwing a massive party for SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic. The problem? The last great IPO parties in 2000 and 2021 ended with investors counting bruises instead of profits. The bottom line: America is betting huge on AI. If confidence cracks, trillions in market value could wobble, turning today's rocket launch into tomorrow's financial emergency landing.


Wall Street is about to eat the biggest IPO meal in history. A $4 trillion convoy led by SpaceX, OpenAI, and Anthropic is heading toward the stock market. Investors are cheering, but history shows giant market feasts can end badly. The 2000 dot-com boom and the 2021 IPO surge were followed by painful market declines.



The first day frenzy may hide a long-term trap. A small-town investor, whose name is Nancy,  sees SpaceX debut at a $1.75 trillion valuation and rushes in. Three years later, reality bites. Research by Jay Ritter found IPOs from 1980–2024 underperformed the broader market by 20 percentage points on average. Expensive IPOs did even worse.


AI has become the market’s new single point of failure. A decade ago, housing helped trigger the 2008 crisis. Today, AI may be carrying similar systemic importance. AI-related firms already account for about 40% of the S&P 500. If confidence in AI cracks, millions of retirement accounts could feel the shock.


The real avalanche comes after the celebration. The IPO launch is only the opening scene. SpaceX plans to release more shares over time as lockups expire. What begins as a 4% public float could eventually unleash trillions in additional stock. More shares chasing the same dollars can put pressure on prices.


Tech giants are switching from stock scarcity to stock flooding. For years, companies such as Apple and Meta Platforms boosted stock prices through buybacks. Now AI spending is swallowing cash, buybacks are slowing, and companies are raising capital. The story may shift from “too few shares” to “too many shares,” a reversal that has often cooled bull markets in the past.


This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book Series”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief BookSeries.




Kidnapped Futures: How Nigeria’s Children Became Prey While Politicians Play Politics

 Billions flow into Security Votes, yet children still disappear into terrorist camps. If the money is secured but the children are not, somebody owes Nigerians an answer.


On Nigeria’s Children’s Day, May 27,  2026, Nigerian politicians delivered speeches about the future while 88 kidnapped children and teachers remained trapped in forests. The celebration exposed a painful truth: for many Nigerian children, the future is not a dream—it is a hostage situation.


Nigeria’s State Governors receive Security Votes monies to help fight insecurity, yet kidnappers continue raiding schools and villages. Parents are asking a brutal question: if billions are spent on security every year, why do terrorists still keep winning?



Since the 2014 Chibok kidnapping of 276 schoolgirls, school abductions have become a recurring nightmare. Nigeria’s children leave home to learn mathematics and science but sometimes end up bargaining for survival in terrorist camps deep inside forests.



Nigeria’s state governors often appears more energized by party battles, embezzling public funds, and power struggles than by rescuing kidnapped children. The house is burning, but the landlords are fighting over who gets the master bedroom.


A nation is judged by how it treats its weakest people. When children are kidnapped, teachers are beheaded, schools are unsafe, and millions remain out of school, leaders must answer one uncomfortable question: if the children are not safe, what exactly has been secured?


This article stands on its own, but some readers may also enjoy the titles in my “Brief Book Series”. Read it here on Google Play or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief BookSeries.












Dear Jesus, Why Do Nigeria’s State Governors Guard Security Votes Better Than They Guard Schoolchildren?


 Nigeria's children are being kidnapped from classrooms while politicians fight over power. If Security Votes are working, why are the kidnappers winning? In plain terms, while state governors secure political alliances, kidnappers secure hostages. One side keeps delivering results.

If Jesus had been around and taking questions from concerned Nigerians, I know exactly what I would have asked Him.

“Lord, what do You think about the governors of Nigeria’s states and their lack of interest in stopping kidnapping and the general insecurity destroying their states? What do You think about leaders who seem better at protecting Security Votes than protecting schoolchildren?”

I suspect that question would make many governors shift uneasily in their seats.

Children’s Day came on May 27, 2026. It should have been a day of joy. Instead, it felt like a nation was celebrating with one hand while wiping away tears with the other. Across Nigeria, children marched, sang songs, and listened to speeches about being the leaders of tomorrow. Yet 88 children and teachers abducted on May 15 in Oyo and Borno states remained in captivity. Their tomorrow had been replaced by terror.

In Borno State, Boko Haram terrorists stormed Mussa Primary and Junior Secondary School in Askira/Uba and abducted 42 pupils and students. In Oyo State, gunmen attacked schools in Oriire Local Government Area and abducted 46 children and teachers, including toddlers. Assistant headmaster Joel Adesiyan was killed. Mathematics teacher Michael Oyedokun was kidnapped and later beheaded.

Beheaded.

That single word should have stopped political activities across Nigeria. It should have triggered emergency meetings in every governor’s office. It should have produced sleepless nights among public officials whose first responsibility is the protection of life.

Instead, many politicians continued exactly where they left off: fighting over party structures, plotting defections, calculating election strategies, boasting at political gatherings, and engaging in the endless soap opera that passes for politics in Nigeria.

A child disappears into a forest. A politician disappears into a political meeting. One disappearance is a tragedy. The other is a routine expense charged to the taxpayer.

That is the bitter reality.

The most painful part is that governors cannot claim ignorance. They know what is happening. Parents know what is happening. Teachers know what is happening. Terrorists certainly know what is happening. The only thing that seems missing is urgency.

For years, governors have received what are known as Security Votes. These are public funds allocated for security-related purposes. Unlike many government expenditures, these funds often operate with limited public scrutiny and limited transparency. Nigerians are repeatedly told that these funds are necessary because governors need flexibility to respond quickly to security threats.

Fair enough.

But if Security Votes exist to improve security, then ordinary Nigerians have every right to ask a simple question. Where are the results? If billions of naira have been spent on security while terrorists continue kidnapping children from schools, attacking villages, collecting ransom, and controlling forests, then something is seriously wrong. Either the money is not being looted by the state governors, or the entire system is failing spectacularly.

Parents do not measure security through budget allocations. Parents measure security by whether their children return home from school alive.

Since the Chibok abduction of 276 schoolgirls in April 2014, Nigeria has been trapped in a recurring nightmare. According to estimates from Amnesty International and Save the Children, about 1,700 schoolchildren have been abducted in mass school kidnappings since Chibok. Leah Sharibu, abducted during the Dapchi school attack in February 2018, remains in captivity years later.

Think about that. An entire generation of Nigerian children has grown up knowing that schools can become hunting grounds. In many countries, parents worry about grades. In Nigeria, parents increasingly worry about whether their children will return home. That is not merely a security problem.

That is a collapse of confidence.

The tragedy grows even larger when one examines the broader condition of Nigerian children. The country has about 18.3 million out-of-school children, one of the highest figures anywhere in the world. Many parents simply do not trust the system enough to risk sending their children into danger. Others cannot afford education because economic hardship has crushed family finances.

Many public schools look like abandoned relics. Classrooms are crumbling. Teachers are poorly paid. Learning materials are scarce. Some children still sit on bare floors. Others study under trees. Yet politicians continue behaving as though the greatest emergency facing Nigeria is who controls a political party headquarters.

A roof is collapsing, but the landlords are arguing over who owns the key.

The health situation is no less disturbing. Nigeria's under-five mortality rate remains among the highest globally. Millions of children face malnutrition. UNICEF estimates that about 2 million Nigerian children suffer from Severe Acute Malnutrition, while roughly 32 percent of children under five are stunted.

Meanwhile, food inflation is punishing families daily. A crate of eggs that sold for about ₦900 in 2023 now sells for around ₦6,000. Many children who should be reading books are selling goods on highways and street corners to help their families survive.

Yet Nigeria's political elite continue to live in a different country from the one experienced by ordinary citizens. Their children rarely attend the vulnerable public schools that terrorists target. They rarely travel along dangerous rural roads where kidnappers operate. They rarely go to bed fearing abduction. Many study abroad or attend expensive private schools protected by armed guards, high walls, surveillance systems, and layers of security. The contrast is impossible to miss. One Nigeria moves in bulletproof convoys while another moves in fear. One Nigeria spends its days discussing political alliances and succession plans while another searches forests for kidnapped children. One Nigeria enjoys government protection as a birthright, while another wakes up each morning praying not to become the next victim splashed across newspaper headlines. For the powerful, insecurity is often a topic of discussion; for the poor, it is a daily visitor at the door.

Even more disturbing is the impression that some politicians appear more passionate about securing political power than securing human lives. Political meetings are attended. Political strategies are drafted. Political rivalries are pursued with remarkable energy. Yet when children disappear into forests, government responses often seem painfully slow.

The message ordinary Nigerians receive is both devastating and infuriating: the political class often treats insecurity as a public relations problem to be managed with speeches rather than a national emergency demanding relentless action. History has a cruel habit of stripping away political noise and exposing what truly mattered. It will not remember how many party congresses a governor controlled, how many defections he engineered, or how many rivals he outmaneuvered. It will remember whether children could attend school without being kidnapped, whether teachers could do their jobs without fear of execution, and whether those entrusted with power acted decisively when innocent lives hung in the balance. When the final scorecard is written, security—not political scheming—is what separates leadership from failure.

That is why Children’s Day 2026 felt less like a celebration and more like an indictment. While politicians traded speeches, 88 kidnapped children and teachers remained in captivity. While officials spoke about the future, terrorists were holding the future at gunpoint.

If Jesus were answering questions today, I would ask Him whether leaders who cannot protect children have fulfilled their most basic duty. I would ask Him whether governments that spend billions on security but cannot secure schools are truly serving their people. And I would ask Him what He thinks about a political system in which Security Votes often seem more secure than the children they are supposed to protect.

Because at the end of the day, roads, airports, party primaries, political coalitions, and campaign speeches mean very little to a mother whose child has been dragged into a forest by terrorists. For her, there is only one issue that matters.

Bring the children home.

Until that happens, every Children’s Day speech risks sounding like a cruel joke, and every Nigerian governor claiming success must answer a question that grows louder with every kidnapping: If the children are not safe, exactly what has been secured?

 

For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Barnes & Noble and in Google Play. Read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Saturday, May 30, 2026

How Your Favorite Foods Became Public Enemies Overnight

Doctors once praised your favorite foods—now they call them killers. Is science protecting you, or has tasty living quietly become public enemy number one? Yesterday’s “healthy” is today’s danger. Fried chicken, beef, wine—suddenly guilty. If experts keep changing the rules, what exactly are we supposed to trust?


Yesterday, fried chicken, beef, soda, and wine were normal pleasures. Today, doctors treat them like wanted criminals. He begins wondering whether somebody in a white coat quietly declared war on tasty living.



Children grows up hearing beef and chicken are “first-class proteins.” Years later, the same foods suddenly wear warning labels. Confusion grows. People begin asking: Was grandma feeding love, or was she unknowingly cooking danger with extra seasoning?



Doctors keep changing the rules. Eggs are bad, then good. Butter falls, margarine rises, then crashes too. Wine gets praised, then accused. Trust starts limping. When advice changes too often, ordinary people begin smelling confusion disguised as certainty.



Deep inside the hospital, reality refuses to stay quiet. Obesity, diabetes, and heart disease keep filling beds. The body eventually sends the bill for years of overeating. Suddenly, that extra cheeseburger starts looking less like comfort and more like unpaid debt.



Life feels too hard for joyless meals. People work, suffer stress, and survive disappointments. Nobody dreams about plain celery for dinner. The real fight becomes this: enjoy the foods you love, but do not let pleasure quietly dig your grave.


For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Barnes & Noble. Read them here on Barnes & Noble: Brief Book Series.









The Great Food Crackdown: Why Doctors Suddenly Want Us to Eat Like Sad Rabbits

 


Doctors keep blacklisting the foods people love—fried chicken, beef, soda, even wine. Is this science, confusion, or the slow death of joy disguised as “healthy living”?  Yesterday’s healthy foods are today’s medical warnings. If experts keep changing the rules, should we trust the science—or fear the food police? What happens when doctors turn dinner into a crime scene and happiness into a health risk? The answer may leave your plate looking painfully empty.

I think there is a conspiracy going on among medical doctors. Yes, I said it. Call me dramatic, call me stubborn, call me a man refusing to surrender his fried chicken in peace—but something strange is happening in this country, and it smells less like science and more like somebody is quietly trying to turn life into one long punishment disguised as “healthy living.” Every few months, another delicious food gets dragged into the public square like a criminal wearing handcuffs while doctors point fingers and television experts nod like courtroom witnesses. Fried chicken? Dangerous. Beef? Dangerous. Macaroni and cheese? Dangerous. Pepsi and soda? Practically treated like liquid betrayal. Now wine and alcohol have joined the blacklist. At this rate, I am waiting for somebody in a white coat to stand before America and announce that happiness itself raises blood pressure and should be consumed in moderation.

Tell me honestly, is there anybody you know in this life who is truly happy waking up every morning to eat broccoli, celery, kale, spinach, cucumbers, cauliflower, Brussels sprouts, and lettuce alone every single day without secretly dreaming of crispy fried chicken, juicy burgers dripping with flavor, spicy barbecue ribs, sizzling steak, cheesy baked macaroni, hot wings, smoky grilled fish, or a cold soda dancing with ice cubes on a hot afternoon? Let us stop pretending. Nobody throws a birthday party because the salad arrived. Nobody says, “My life changed forever after eating plain celery.” Life is hard already. Bills are climbing faster than blood pressure, rent looks like daylight robbery, and jobs disappear overnight. Must dinner now become another courtroom where joy stands trial?

When I was growing up, school taught us something very different. Chicken and beef were called “first-class proteins.” That phrase sounded official, respectable, almost royal. Beef was not hiding in alleyways plotting against humanity. Fried chicken was not treated like some greasy terrorist threatening national security. Our parents fed us meat proudly because protein meant strength, growth, energy, and health. Suddenly, decades later, the script flipped like a magician switching cards. The same foods once praised are now treated like enemies hiding in plain sight. One minute beef is food. The next minute it sounds like an assassin waiting quietly beside your arteries.

And please, spare me the confusion parade because the medical world changes its story faster than politicians before election season. First eggs were dangerous because of cholesterol. Then eggs became healthy again. Butter became the villain, margarine became the hero, then margarine itself landed in trouble like a politician caught with hidden text messages. Coffee was once treated like liquid panic, then suddenly researchers began whispering that coffee might actually help some people live longer. Wine became the classy gentleman at dinner—the smooth talker in a glass, the heart-friendly prince doctors once tolerated. Then all of a sudden, boom! The alarm bells ring. “Alcohol causes cancer.” Overnight, red wine became public enemy number one. Yesterday it was sophistication. Today it sounds like biological sabotage.

Now before somebody accuses me of throwing facts into the trash can, let us call a spade a spade and stop dressing ugly truths in fancy clothes. Science does change because new evidence shows up. That part is true. Cigarettes were once advertised with doctors smiling beside them like proud ambassadors of bad judgment. Back in the 1940s and 1950s, some cigarette companies literally used physicians to reassure smokers. Then research crushed the illusion. Lung cancer exploded. Reality arrived like an eviction notice. Nobody could argue forever against dead bodies and medical evidence piling up.

The same thing happened with food research. America’s obesity problem did not fall from the sky like unexpected rain. Nearly 40 percent of American adults are classified as obese. Type 2 diabetes keeps spreading like gossip in a small town. Heart disease remains one of the leading killers in the United States. Emergency rooms are full of people paying expensive prices for years of eating like every meal was a championship contest against moderation. Doctors are not inventing clogged arteries just because they enjoy ruining barbecue season.

Still, here is where my frustration kicks in like a mule. Medical experts sometimes talk about food as if human beings are robots powered by spreadsheets instead of emotions. They talk calories, sodium, sugar, saturated fats, processed foods, cholesterol, and blood pressure as though life itself is a chemistry experiment. But food is not just science. Food is memory wearing perfume. Food is family reunion laughter. Food is childhood. Food is culture. Food is my beloved mother standing over a pot refusing to let anybody leave hungry. Nobody remembers their happiest day because somebody handed them plain steamed broccoli and whispered, “Enjoy.”

My mother never called us to dinner saying, “Children, gather around this magnificent bowl of sadness.” No sir. The table carried food that made neighbors suddenly remember they had “important business” near our house around dinner time. The smell alone could resurrect forgotten friendships. Fried fish and "akara" balls (Nigeria's popular delight) snapped in hot oil like applause. Meat simmered with spices until patience itself surrendered. Rice and stew on Wednesdays and Sunday afternoons did not arrive lonely. Chicken did not apologize for existing.

And now the wine drama enters the stage like the latest scandal in a city that never stops gossiping. For years people heard whispers that moderate red wine might help the heart. Suddenly, medical organizations are sounding louder warnings about alcohol and cancer risks involving the liver, breast, colon, throat, and mouth. To ordinary people, this feels less like science and more like betrayal. It is as if doctors keep changing the rules after the game already started. One moment they hand you permission. The next moment they arrive to confiscate your joy.

Sometimes I imagine doctors sitting around a conference table plotting the next victim. “Ladies and gentlemen,” one says while adjusting glasses dramatically, “we successfully scared them away from soda. Excellent work. Now, what food still makes life enjoyable?” Everybody leans forward. Silence fills the room. Then somebody whispers, “Macaroni and cheese.” The room erupts into applause.

Yes, I am joking—but only halfway.

Because the deeper problem here is trust. People stop trusting experts when the advice feels like musical chairs. Every few years, something changes. Every few years, another warning arrives. Ordinary people begin asking themselves whether medicine actually knows what it is doing or whether everybody is guessing while pretending certainty. A man bitten too many times by confusion begins to suspect every handshake.

Still, if I am being brutally honest with myself, I know reality sits somewhere in the uncomfortable middle like an unwanted guest nobody invited to dinner. No, there is probably no underground white-coat conspiracy where doctors secretly hate joy and want humanity surviving forever on celery sticks and disappointment. But yes, I understand why people feel suspicious. When every delicious thing gets labeled dangerous, frustration rises naturally. Nobody wants a future where every meal tastes like punishment and every celebration comes with nutritional guilt attached like a parking ticket.

Life is already hard. We work, suffer stress, pay taxes, survive heartbreak, and wrestle with disappointments. Food remains one of the few honest pleasures left standing. Maybe the answer is not turning fried chicken into a daily religion or pretending soda is holy water. Maybe the answer is balance—a word many people hate because it sounds boring but quietly makes sense. Eat the good stuff, enjoy the fun stuff, but stop behaving like tomorrow is guaranteed while your arteries cry for mercy.

Still, I must confess something. If the day ever comes when somebody tells me fried chicken should be replaced permanently with plain celery and sadness, I may politely smile, nod my head, and then quietly drive straight to the nearest restaurant before the broccoli police arrive.

 

For readers interested in a separate line of thought, the titles in my “Brief Book Series” are available on Barnes & Noble. Read them here on Barnes & Noble: Brief Book Series.

 

Thursday, May 28, 2026

Birthright Citizenship: The Supreme Court May Hand Trump a Brutal Immigration Defeat

Trump’s citizenship gamble may crash hard when the Supreme Court asks one deadly question: If immigrants obey U.S. law, how are they “outside” U.S. jurisdiction?




President Trump’s birthright fight may crash into the Constitution. He may lose Trump v Barbara because the 14th Amendment speaks plainly: people born in America and under U.S. law are citizens. Courts do not usually twist clear constitutional language just because politics gets hot.


Trump appointed 3 justices, but the court has already shown it will block him when he stretches the law too far. Conservative judges often protect legal rules before political loyalty. Even loyal soldiers sometimes refuse bad orders.




If undocumented immigrants and visa holders are supposedly outside U.S. jurisdiction, why can they be arrested, jailed, or deported under American law? That argument starts sounding clever until common sense walks into the room.



The 1898 case United States v. Wong Kim Ark ruled that children born on U.S. soil generally become citizens, even if their parents are not citizens. Throwing away that ruling would shake America’s legal foundation.



Immigration frustration does not automatically equal legal victory. Many Americans are angry about border problems, overcrowding, and illegal immigration. Those concerns are real. But anger does not rewrite the Constitution. Want to change the rules? Bring a constitutional amendment—not a legal shortcut.


As a side note for regular readers, I have also written many titles in my Brief Book Series, now available on Google Play Books. You can also read them  here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.







Is America a Miracle or a Mistake? The 250-Year Showdown

America's 250th birthday is not a celebration of perfection. It is a celebration of progress. A nation that ended slavery, expanded voti...