Sunday, July 13, 2025

He Promised Change, But Left Behind Rice Bags and Regret: Buhari’s Final Journey

 


Buhari rode in as a messiah and bowed out as a myth—delivering disappointment instead of deliverance, and leaving Nigerians poorer, hungrier, and politically heartbroken.

He came wearing the face of hope, a former general who had once ruled with a firm grip but now claimed the heart of a democrat. Muhammadu Buhari, who died at the age of 82 in a London clinic, returned to Nigeria’s top job in 2015 through the ballot box, not a military coup. It was a moment Nigerians had never seen before—a man who had once taken power by force now chosen by the people to lead them into a better future. His victory felt like a sunrise after years of long political darkness.

He had tried three times before and failed. But when he finally broke through in 2015, it wasn’t just a personal triumph. It was history. He became the first opposition candidate to defeat an incumbent in Nigeria. His face appeared on campaign posters, his name whispered in the alleyways of Kano, and in the crowded, sunburnt streets of Lagos. He was “Mai Gaskiya”—the man of truth. And most of all, he was trusted.

People believed in him not because he smiled much—he rarely did—but because he didn’t need to. His face was carved in seriousness. He was known for being honest, a rare thing in a country whose rulers often left office far wealthier than they had entered it. He promised to fight corruption, to defeat Boko Haram, to lift up the poor, to bring rice back to their tables. And so, millions walked behind him, cheering a man who they hoped would lead them with the discipline of a soldier and the heart of a father.

But now that he is gone, the smell left behind is not one of fresh bread or fertile rain. It is of dust, disappointment, and doubt.

His rise to power had begun decades earlier, shaped by the hard lines of military schools and the cracked roads of post-colonial Nigeria. Born in 1942 in Daura, a small town near Nigeria’s northern border, Buhari was raised by his mother after his father died when he was just four. He was his mother’s 13th child, his father’s 23rd. Even as a boy, Buhari was marked by discipline. He joined the army soon after Nigeria gained independence from Britain in 1960, trained in England, and rose through the ranks with a quiet, cold determination.

By the early 1980s, he was at the top, installed as Nigeria’s military ruler after a coup that removed the elected government. He didn’t hide from the task. He launched a “war against indiscipline,” ordering civil servants to frog-jump in public if they were late to work and commanding citizens to form lines at bus stops under the eyes of soldiers with whips. He jailed hundreds—officials, journalists, even musicians like the great Fela Kuti. He changed the color of Nigeria’s currency overnight and forced people to exchange old notes in a tight window, an echo that would return decades later. Some called it bold reform. Others called it cruelty. But even his enemies could not say he was corrupt.

That’s why, after years in the political wilderness, he came back. Not with tanks, but with ballots. His second act as president was supposed to be different. Now, he said, he believed in democracy. And Nigerians believed him.

But what they got instead was a man too distant to fight the storms, too slow to steer the ship, and too old to keep up with a country bursting with young, hungry energy. His critics gave him a nickname: Baba Go Slow. He said it wasn’t his fault—it was the system. But people did not feel the system when they slept hungry. They felt the price of rice.

Ah, rice. When Nigerians were asked what they would remember most about Buhari’s presidency, the answer came not in analysis but in a single, sad phrase: Bag of rice. Under Goodluck Jonathan, the previous president, a 50kg bag of rice cost 7,500 naira ($4.90). Under Buhari, it rose to 60,000 naira ($39.00). Rice, the food that fills the bellies of ten in one household, became a symbol of hunger. Buhari had banned rice imports to push local farming. But the farms didn’t yield enough. The people bore the price.

The economy sank. Global oil prices crashed, and with them, Nigeria’s hopes. Young people, who had chanted his name in 2015, now sat jobless and restless. The promise of employment became a ghost. Insecurity spread. Boko Haram was not defeated—it multiplied, its factions forming alliances with the Islamic State. Bandits roamed the northwest, kidnapping schoolchildren and terrorizing villages. In central Nigeria, clashes between farmers and Fulani herders turned deadly. Buhari, himself a Fulani, was accused of silence—too soft on those he should have restrained.

And then came the protests. In October 2020, the youth rose again—not in celebration, but in fury. The #EndSARS movement demanded an end to police brutality. They gathered at the Lekki tollgate in Lagos, waving flags, singing the anthem. What followed was blood. Soldiers opened fire. The images circled the globe. Buhari stayed quiet for too long. When he finally spoke, it felt empty. The nation had bled on his watch, and he offered no balm.

Even his final years were marked by confusion. The naira swap policy, introduced just before the 2023 elections, plunged the country into chaos. Old notes were confiscated, new notes were scarce. Markets froze, people couldn’t buy food, weddings were canceled, and sick patients couldn’t pay for transport. The policy was meant to reduce vote-buying. But many believed it was a secret move to sabotage Bola Tinubu, Buhari’s own party’s candidate. He claimed neutrality. But his silence screamed.

And then there was his health. Throughout his first term, Buhari vanished for long stretches, often to London, for undisclosed treatments. Nigerians never knew what ailed him. In a country where even the common man must explain a day's absence, their president vanished without explanation. The nation wondered: Is he still fit to lead?

Buhari never stopped believing he was right. He insisted the 1983 coup was justified, that journalists jailed under his rule had broken the law, that his delays were not his doing. He rarely said sorry. But now he is gone, and the final judgment comes not from generals or judges, but from the people who once placed their trust in him.

He was buried with the prayers of some and the disappointment of many. His wife, Aisha, once threatened not to support his re-election. His supporters, once proud to carry his banner, now speak in past tense, their voices flat. His legacy, once glowing with promise, now hangs in the air like unfinished business.

He came as a soldier, ruled as a general, returned as a reformer—but left as a symbol of promises unkept. Muhammadu Buhari, Nigeria’s austere anti-corruption crusader, now belongs to history. But his story, for many Nigerians, still stings in the present. The man who came to clean the house left behind broken windows and a half-swept floor.

 

From Filtered to Fierce: Why Gen Z Is Turning to Conservatism

 


Gen Z is becoming more conservative. The woke mob promised utopia, but Gen Z saw the bill. Now they want liberty, not lectures—truth, not tantrums—and Trump, not gender-neutral nonsense.

They said Gen Z would bring the rainbow revolution. Instead, it’s bringing back red, white, and a whole lot of red states. At the Turning Point USA Action Summit in Tampa, 7,000 young conservatives didn’t just show up—they sent a message louder than any TikTok dance: they’ve had enough of leftist hypocrisy, economic fairy tales, and identity confusion masquerading as progress. This isn’t a phase. This is a fire.

For years, the media painted Gen Z as woke warriors—marching for pronouns, shouting down free speech, and burning down gender norms. But while the press was busy scripting their fantasy of progressive utopia, real young Americans were waking up to the chaos. Rent doesn’t pay itself with hashtags. Reality has a rude way of crashing through ideology. And now, more and more Gen Z voters are ditching the pride parades for patriotism—and that’s a welcome change.

They’ve watched liberal politicians scream about lockdowns and then hit the party circuit without masks. They’ve listened to celebrities yell about climate change while flying private. These young conservatives have eyes, and they’re not buying the show. The hypocrisy is thicker than Hunter Biden’s laptop files, and Gen Z is done pretending otherwise. The so-called leaders of “truth” are being exposed as emperors with no clothes—and no moral compass.

But don’t be fooled. This movement isn’t just about economic pain or political slogans. It’s about something deeper. It’s about moral clarity. While the left preaches that gender is a costume, Gen Z conservatives are screaming, “No, thank you.” They know that men are men, and women are women—and no amount of surgery or slogans will change that. It’s not hate. It’s called common sense. And it’s roaring back like a lion in a zoo that finally broke the lock.

These young patriots are not just mad—they’re bold. They’re not whispering anymore. They’re marching, speaking, voting. They are the ones who are no longer afraid to say what millions think but are too scared to utter. And they’re not alone. Courage, after all, is contagious. That’s why when one NFL player like Nick Bosa breaks the woke wall and celebrates Trump in the end zone—even if it costs him $11,000—millions cheer. It’s not a dance. It’s a declaration.

President Trump, now back in office, has made it easier for this new generation to stand tall. His executive orders—yes, the same ones the left warned would end the world—did the unthinkable: they affirmed that there are only two sexes, and that educational institutions receiving federal funds must respect reality over radicalism. It wasn’t a war on rights. It was a defense of women’s sports, parental control, and sanity. And Gen Z is here for it.

They’re also here for the facts. This isn’t some fringe rebellion. These young conservatives are not storming cities or setting fires—they’re showing up to vote, attend summits, and speak truth to nonsense. They’re walking away from the left not because they’re angry—but because they’re awake. As one conservative leader put it, it’s not left versus right anymore; it’s truth versus lies, courage versus conformity, freedom versus fear.

They’re rejecting the plastic smiles of Kamala Harris and the polished fraudulence of establishment elites. Trump may be brash, but he’s not fake. And that’s exactly what this generation loves—raw, unfiltered, unafraid. They were raised in a world of filters, fakes, and fact-checkers. They crave the real thing. Trump delivers it like a sledgehammer to the safe space.

Some may say this is all a reaction to pain—economic struggle, moral fatigue, identity whiplash. They’d be right. Gen Z has seen enough broken promises. Their degrees don’t pay off. Their rents are sky-high. Their jobs are low-paying. And their freedoms are shrinking. So they’re not crying—they’re changing direction. They’re not canceling people—they’re canceling lies.

The assassination attempt on President Trump one year ago didn’t kill the movement. It turned it into a crusade. That bullet missed its target, but it hit something else—it awakened a generation that saw what hate really looks like. And they decided to love harder. To fight louder. And to show up stronger. They saw what the radical fringe would do to silence one man—and they said, not on our watch.

Now, with the Supreme Court poised to hear a critical case on Title IX, the stakes couldn’t be higher. Gen Z conservatives know what’s at risk: truth, fairness, and the right to believe what they know deep in their bones. The court cases, the protests, the executive orders—they’re not side stories. They’re the battlegrounds of a culture war, and this generation just enlisted.

Gen Z isn’t running from controversy. It’s surfing it like a wave. They’re showing that patriotism is not a relic—it’s a rebellion. They’re reminding America that you can’t fix the roof by burning down the house. And they’re not here to apologize for believing in reality. They’re here to rebuild it.

So the next time a progressive professor whines that the youth are all turning into “fascists,” hand them a mirror and a copy of the Constitution. The future isn’t woke. It’s wide awake. And it wears red, white, and MAGA hats.

This generation isn’t burning bras—they’re burning bad ideas. And if the left keeps pushing, Gen Z just might build the bonfire.

 

Friday, July 11, 2025

Flex, Inject, Regret: How Testosterone Turned American Men into Chemical Clowns

 


American men are trading fatherhood for fake muscles—injecting testosterone like it’s protein powder, then crying when their sperm count vanishes faster than their manhood. Let me put it as simple as I can: Real men build strength with discipline; today’s American males buy it in vials, then flex online while their testicles shrink and their egos explode.

I never thought I will  live to see the day when being a man meant rolling up your sleeve not for a flu shot but for a weekly dose of lab-made manhood. Yet across America, testosterone injections are flowing faster than cheap beer at a bachelor party. And if you think this is about health, think again. It’s about hype, hustle, and hormonal hijacking.

Walk into a Gameday Men’s Health clinic, and you don’t find a doctor’s office—you find a “man cave.” Black leather chairs. TVs blaring sports. A fridge full of snacks. The vibe screams locker room; the service screams sales pitch. You get a quick blood test, a wink from the nurse practitioner, and before you can say “midlife crisis,” a needle is sliding into your arm. If you refer a buddy, they’ll knock $50 off your next hit. Testosterone has gone from prescription to promotion. When medicine becomes a membership, expect more needles than healing.

The numbers are juiced—literally. Between 2019 and 2024, testosterone prescriptions in America skyrocketed from 7.3 million to 11 million. That’s not a bump. That’s a stampede. And it’s not just tired old guys chasing youth. Men under 35 are stampeding into these clinics like it’s Black Friday for their hormones. Texas is ground zero. In just one quarter, more testosterone scripts were filled than the entire year of 2021. And Gameday? From one clinic in April last year to 325 in just over a year. It’s not a trend—it’s an arms race, and the arms are jacked.

Yes, low testosterone is real. Yes, some men suffer silently. But let’s call it what it’s become: a business model dressed in gym shorts. These clinics don’t just treat medical conditions—they manufacture them. Tired? Depressed? Not shredded enough? That’s not life, bro—that’s a “symptom.” Even if your testosterone is normal, they’ll still offer you the goods. When the needle becomes the therapist, truth gets buried under muscle mass.

The loudest cheerleaders aren’t wearing lab coats. They’re holding microphones and iPhones. Joe Rogan shouts it to 20 million listeners. Dax Shepard brags about turning from “medium boy” to “big boy.” On TikTok, gym bros film their injections like it’s a sacred ritual. Doctors? They get ignored—unless they run a clinic and own a franchise.

Even the government is getting in on the flex. Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., the same man who once doubted every jab, now pushes testosterone as his “anti-aging protocol.” That’s not just irony. That’s policy doing squats in a hall of mirrors. When the watchdog joins the parade, the wolves dance free.

But here’s the gut punch—this isn’t safe. This isn’t clean. This isn’t honest. A quarter of men who got testosterone therapy last year weren’t even tested before starting. A third weren’t deficient at all. They just wanted to feel better. And who can blame them when society screams that bigger is better, and tired means weak?

Real doctors, like Akanksha Mehta at Emory University, reject nearly half the men who come in begging for T. But Gameday? They serve everyone like it’s happy hour. No questions asked. No thorough exams. Just injections, invoices, and Instagram reels.

The side effects? They don’t talk about those in the brochure. Infertility is a big one. Skip the balancing hormone and boom—your sperm count drops to zero. Some men don’t find out until it’s too late. One doctor says he can maybe restore 25% of baseline fertility. But when the well runs dry, no dose can bring back the river.

And what’s inside the needle isn’t always what it seems. These clinics often get their testosterone from compounding pharmacies—cheaper, unregulated, inconsistent. The FDA doesn’t approve it. Potency fluctuates. Some doses might be weak, others too strong. Contamination? Who knows. Quality control takes a back seat when the priority is speed and profit. Meanwhile, big suppliers like Pfizer can’t keep up with demand. When the factory can’t feed the hunger, the street starts serving plates.

Online operations—like Hone and DudeMeds—take it further. No office visit. No proper oversight. Just click, pay, inject. Once you’re on the subscription train, getting off is harder than quitting cable. But it’s not just the legal side growing—testosterone is now a black-market darling. Customs agents are seizing illegal supplies at the border. Steroid dealers don’t need to lurk in alleyways anymore—they’re opening clinics and cashing checks.

And don’t believe the myth that this is a safe drug. Sure, a recent trial said testosterone doesn’t cause heart attacks or prostate cancer. Great. But that doesn’t mean it’s harmless. High doses, long use, and unsupervised regimens can wreck your body in other ways—like thickened blood, blood pressure spikes, and damage that won’t show until years later. A body pumped today may deflate tomorrow.

Let’s be real: this is not healthcare. It’s hormone capitalism. They’ve turned insecurity into inventory. These men aren’t getting better—they’re getting hooked. They think they’re hacking life. What they’re really hacking is their future. Testosterone can save lives when used properly. But that’s not what this is. This is a business model wrapped in a muscle tee, selling manhood by the milligram. It’s frat-house medicine with a finance degree.

And I’ll leave you with this: America’s men aren’t just chasing testosterone—they’re chasing a dream sold to them in a vial. A dream that says masculinity comes from a needle, not character. That strength is bought, not built. That real manhood can be rented, once a week, with a referral discount.

So go ahead, fellas. Get your shot, flex in the mirror, and tell yourself you’re better. Just don’t cry when you find out your sperm are on strike, your heart’s overclocked, and your wallet is empty. Because nothing screams alpha male like being chemically dependent on a company with a leather couch and a punch card.

 

When Tariffs Give You Lemons, America Makes a Martini—But the Ice Is Melting

 


America’s economy is flexing now, but tariffs are the ticking time bomb—once the stockpiles dry up, Main Street will pay for Wall Street’s gamble. The truth is, President Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariffs are America’s economic slow poison—killing quietly, priced perfectly, and wrapped in flags to keep voters from smelling the rot.

I hate to admit it, but there’s something weirdly thrilling about watching an economic doomsday forecast get dodged like a bullet in a spaghetti Western. Back in April, when President Donald Trump rolled out his “Liberation Day” tariffs, economists across the board sounded alarms like smoke detectors on overdrive. Stocks crashed. Pundits predicted that the U.S. economy would nosedive into a recession before the year’s end. I braced myself for the sky to fall. But here we are—three months later—and it hasn’t. The sky is still up, the shelves are still stocked, and the S&P 500 is strutting around like it owns Wall Street.

Let’s be real. It doesn’t make sense at first glance. Tariffs, by their very nature, are supposed to choke trade and raise prices. They’re taxes dressed up in patriotism. So why is the American economy not just standing tall but actually doing somersaults in defiance of the very laws of economic gravity? It feels like the country swallowed a hand grenade and started juggling. And for now, it’s not blowing up. Not yet.

But don’t be fooled. The signs of strain are there. You just need to look a little closer. According to the available published evidence, American businesses stocked up like doomsday preppers early in the year, racing to beat the tariff hikes. The result? GDP took a hit in the first quarter, not because the economy was weak, but because the flood of imports messed with the numbers. It’s like someone shoved extra groceries into the fridge so fast that the door wouldn’t close, and then declared the kitchen broken. Now that stockpiles are thinning, businesses are slowly crawling back to the global market. And here’s where the fork hits the plate.

Customs duties are now more than three times what they usually are. That’s not a bump. That’s a bonfire. Businesses are at a crossroads. Either they eat the cost of tariffs and watch their profits bleed out, or they pass the cost to customers and risk revolt. So far, most have chosen to swallow the pain. It’s like biting into a cactus and hoping dessert shows up. The reason? Everyone’s gambling that President Trump might change his mind. After all, what’s the point of jacking up prices if the tariff storm passes tomorrow?

But let’s not pretend the pain isn’t real. Prices have edged up, just not in a headline-grabbing way. You need an economic microscope to spot them. Alberto Cavallo and his team at Harvard peered into the data like archaeologists unearthing a fossil. They found slight upticks—maybe one or two percent—in the price tags of imported goods and even domestic competitors. Not eye-popping, but not invisible either. A whisper of inflation is still a sound. And these aren’t just any price rises—they're the quiet echoes of a 10% effective tariff rate, the highest America has seen in eighty years.

Eighty years! That’s Roosevelt-era territory. Back then, America had sock hops and victory gardens. Now, it has smartphones and streaming services. Yet here we are, dancing with the same trade policies that smell like mothballs from the Great Depression. If President Trump pushes ahead with the next round of tariff threats scheduled for August 1st, we’re not stepping up—we’re stepping off a ledge.

Here’s the truth: the economy is dodging disaster, not defeating it. It’s sprinting across a frozen lake that’s just starting to crack. The ice holds—for now. But every step forward is riskier than the last. We can’t keep pretending that because the sky hasn’t fallen, it never will. A house may look steady on the outside, but termites don’t announce themselves with a parade.

What we’re witnessing is an elaborate game of chicken between the business world and the White House. CEOs are praying the tariff policy is just a bluff. They're watching the calendar like kids waiting for Christmas—but instead of gifts, they’re hoping for relief. Nobody wants to be the first to raise prices and lose customers. So instead, they bleed slowly, hoping the wound clots before August rolls in like a freight train.

And all the while, the American consumer walks through stores blissfully unaware of the silent war raging behind price tags. They don’t see the choice that each retailer faces. They don’t hear the boardroom conversations debating whether to take a loss this quarter or pass the pain down the line. They just swipe their card, grab their bag, and go. But when the tree shakes, even the blind can feel the leaves fall. And if these tariffs stay, the leaves will come down fast.

The danger isn’t that the economy will crash tomorrow. It’s that it’s being worn down slowly, like a statue eroded by wind. We’re surviving on borrowed time and stockpiled goods. But those run out. And when they do, the real cost of this tariff regime will hit the checkout counter, the gas pump, and the bottom line of every small business from Seattle to Savannah.

I’ll say it plainly: President Trump’s economic resilience is impressive—borderline miraculous. But it’s not sustainable. It’s like juggling flaming swords on a tightrope while blindfolded. Sure, it’s a great show. But eventually, the crowd gasps. The rope snaps. And the swords fall.

So let’s not celebrate too early. Let’s not confuse delay with immunity. Just because a storm hasn’t arrived doesn’t mean the sky is clear. The American economy is astonishingly dynamic, yes—but not invincible. If this tariff regime stays, we’ll soon learn that even the strongest engine can stall when it’s running on fumes.

And when that happens, the same pundits who once cried doom will be the ones saying, “Well, obviously.” Meanwhile, the rest of us will be left wondering how we managed to set our own house on fire and then act shocked when it burned.

After all, nothing screams “winning” like taxing your own people in the name of punishing someone else.

 

“You Promised You’d Never Hurt Me”: A Book Review

 


She believed him—until the silence spoke louder than his words.

Of all the promises whispered in the dark, the most dangerous is the one that says, I’ll never hurt you. It sounds so gentle, so sincere, like a lullaby wrapped in velvet. But when broken, it slices deeper than any blade. “You Promised You’d Never Hurt Me is not a love story—it’s a survival story dressed in poetry, written in bruises, and sung through the tears of a woman who believed in forever and ended up holding the pieces of her own heart.

This book does not open with fireworks or fairy tales. It begins in the slow fade of affection—a lover who starts answering texts with silence, a once-warm room now filled with cold stares. The heroine doesn’t crash all at once. Her fall is slow, like a cup slipping from a trembling hand, each chapter another crack until she finally shatters. What unfolds is not just a story of heartbreak, but a vivid documentation of emotional trauma: the sleepless nights, the self-doubt, the panic attacks that come uninvited like thieves in the night. Her pain is not abstract—it is mapped on her body, in her breath, in her bones. Even the mirror forgets her name.

But what makes this book truly unforgettable is that it refuses to let pain be the end of the story. It turns the mirror around. It asks: what does a woman become when she stops waiting for someone to save her? When she begins to save herself? Her healing doesn’t come in grand declarations or new lovers. It arrives slowly—first as resistance, then as resolve. Like a house rebuilt after a storm, she begins to reclaim the pieces of herself one beam at a time. Her journey back is not easy, but it is holy. A tree that survives lightning doesn’t grow back the same; it grows stronger, deeper, untouchable.

By the final page, the reader doesn’t meet a woman who’s been rescued. They meet a woman who rescued herself. And that is the quiet triumph this story delivers: not the return of love, but the rediscovery of self-worth. There are no kisses to seal the ending, no hand-holding under moonlight. Instead, there is her—standing alone, unafraid, unbroken. And for every reader who has ever loved too deeply, bent too far, or apologized for their own hurt, this book becomes a mirror reflecting back their strength.

The brilliance of this book  lies in its brutal honesty. There is no sugar-coating, no fairy dust. Its sentences are sometimes jagged, like the voice of someone trying not to cry. And yet, its pages sing. The prose moves between sharp confessions and tender affirmations, weaving poetic lines that land like truths you didn’t know you needed. If a journal could bleed, it would sound like this. If silence had a voice, it would speak like these pages.

The structure is spare—just 69 pages—but don’t let the length fool you. Every sentence is a gut-punch, every paragraph a revelation. The small size makes the emotional weight feel even heavier, as though the truth can no longer be stretched or delayed. The format becomes a kind of confrontation, daring the reader to sit in their own discomfort, to not look away. In that way, “You Promised You’d Never Hurt Me” is not merely a book. It is an encounter.

The market is filled with romance novels that chase happy endings and characters who are saved by external love. This book rewrites the genre. It does not pretend that every scar is healed by a new kiss. It does not wrap heartbreak in ribbon. Instead, it allows the heroine to break, rage, mourn, question—and then, finally, rebuild. It treats emotional pain with the seriousness it deserves. The heart is not a toy to be tossed and replaced—it is a nation that must learn to defend its borders.

And what of the reader? They come away changed. Whether you have been betrayed or have betrayed someone, whether you’re standing in the ashes or watching someone else burn, this book holds up a mirror and whispers: You are still here. You are still enough. That quiet reminder is more than literature. It’s lifeline.

“You Promised You’d Never Hurt Me” doesn’t belong on a shelf with forgettable romances or self-help jargon. It belongs in the hands of anyone who has ever curled into themselves wondering why love hurts so much. It is not a how-to. It is not a warning. It is a witness. And like all good witnesses, it tells the truth, even when it trembles.

Sometimes, the best books are not the ones that dazzle, but the ones that feel like they were written just for you. This is that book.

Author: Julia M Cross

Publisher: Independently published
Publication Date: July 9, 2025
Print Length: 69 pages
ISBN-13: 979-8291782224
Price: $11.99
ASIN: B0FH68ZWHC
Language: English
Dimensions: 6 x 0.16 x 9 inches
Weight: 5.6 ounces

 

Wednesday, July 9, 2025

Putin's Cannonballs May Have Just Fired Trump’s Nobel Dreams Into Motion

 


President Trump just realized stopping Putin’s blood-soaked rampage is his golden ticket to the Nobel Peace Prize—and he’s aiming those missiles with ambition, not mercy.

When it rains missiles, it pours revelation—and it looks like President Trump is finally waking up to the bloody truth about his old pal Vladimir Putin. For years, the Russian president has played the butcher of Eastern Europe, and Ukraine has been his slaughterhouse. From bombed-out maternity wards to smoldering apartment complexes, Putin has written his legacy with smoke, blood, and rubble. But now, the man who once called Putin “very smart” might be preparing to rewrite his own legacy—with the Nobel Peace Prize inked at the end.

Let’s be honest. President Trump has known what kind of man Putin is. You don’t accidentally admire a man whose military doctrine reads like a terrorist’s handbook. Since February 24, 2022, Russia’s unprovoked war has rained down devastation across Ukraine. At least 30,000 civilians have been killed according to the UN, and over 11 million people displaced. Hospitals have been hit. Schools turned to ashes. On July 8, 2024, a missile obliterated the largest children's hospital in Kyiv—Okhmatdyt—killing 40 people, including medical staff and kids with cancer. That attack, according to Western analysts, was no accident. It was Putin’s message: “I have no red lines.” But now, it seems Trump is drawing one of his own.

Until now, President Trump has played his usual game of ambiguity on Ukraine. A few praise-filled nods to Putin here, a couple of “both sides” remarks there. He has long resisted fully committing to arming Ukraine in the way they begged for—holding back long-range missiles, fighter jets, and air defenses in a war where such tools meant life or death. But with the 2025 presidential spotlight searing hot and the Nobel Peace Prize committee whispering at the gates of Stockholm, Trump appears to have had a change of heart—or a collision with ambition.

This week, the Trump administration resumed the delivery of powerful 155 mm artillery shells and precision-guided GMLRS rockets to Ukraine—just days after a bizarre and abrupt pause ordered by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth. The pause blindsided the White House, and Trump publicly distanced himself from it with classic Trumpian flair. “I would know if a decision is made,” he said on July 3, 2025. “I will know. In fact, most likely I’d give the order.” Translation: Don’t look at me—I’m the boss, not the blunderer.

Privately, Trump was fuming. According to multiple insiders, the president expressed sharp frustration with Hegseth’s decision, which he viewed as undermining his administration’s global message. The Pentagon insisted the decision was a routine review of stockpiles, but no one in Washington bought that story. What really happened was that Trump saw a clear path: arm Ukraine now, stop Putin’s madness, and snatch a Nobel before the ink on the Oslo ballots dries. A goat does not wander into a lion’s den unless it wants to die, and Trump is no goat. He’s hunting history now.

And here's the twist: this isn’t just about Ukraine. This is about legacy. President Trump knows that no peace prize committee ever gave a medal to a spectator. If he wants the world to forget the Helsinki press conference of 2018—when he stood beside Putin and said he believed him over U.S. intelligence—then this is how he does it. If he wants people to remember him as a man who stopped a tyrant, not flirted with one, then this is the moment to act.

The Nobel Peace Prize is awarded for "the promotion of fraternity between nations," not for “vibes.” So Trump can’t just tweet his way to Oslo. He needs to do what Biden never dared: stop pretending Putin can be reasoned with and start handing Ukraine the firepower to finish the job. Diplomacy, at this stage, is just sugar on a poisoned yam. Putin doesn’t want peace; he wants submission. And Trump has finally understood that you can’t shake hands with a man who’s holding a grenade.

This latest shipment of munitions is not just military aid—it’s a warning shot. The White House is sending a message: America may have been slow to anger, but it is no longer asleep. And Trump is clearly no longer interested in playing the neutral mediator. This is a man now staring down history, trying to outmaneuver not just Putin, but also his critics who’ve long accused him of being weak on Russia.

Let’s not forget, Russia’s war crimes have stacked up like corpses in Bucha. Satellite images and international investigations have shown civilian massacres, systematic torture, and forced deportations of Ukrainian children to Russian territories. Over 19,000 Ukrainian children have been confirmed abducted since the war began—each one a human tragedy, and each one a stain on Putin’s soul. For two years, the West tiptoed around these atrocities, clinging to old diplomatic norms. But now, it appears Trump is ready to burn those norms and bury Putin’s image in a ditch of global condemnation.

It’s a high-stakes game. Putin, cornered and humiliated, is more dangerous than ever. On July 9, 2025, his air force launched a record 728 drones at Ukrainian cities overnight, a desperate show of force that destroyed infrastructure but earned him global disgust. Even India and China, two of Russia’s biggest diplomatic shields, issued statements of concern after the attack. Putin’s playbook is running out of pages. And Trump seems eager to slam it shut.

Trump knows this is his moment. The world is exhausted by Putin’s barbarism, and America is tired of wars with no end. If Trump can push Ukraine to a decisive victory—not by sending American boots, but by arming Ukrainian resolve—he might just carve a new identity for himself as the man who crushed an empire with artillery, not armies. That’s a Nobel-worthy move, and Trump knows it. A fly that does not listen to advice follows the corpse into the grave, and Putin is dancing dangerously close to the pit.

So where does that leave us? A new chapter has begun. Trump is arming Ukraine not just to stop Russia, but to score one of history’s rarest trophies. This isn’t generosity—it’s strategy. It isn’t friendship—it’s ambition. The battlefield has become a stage, and the Nobel Peace Prize is the curtain Trump wants to drop on Putin’s tyrannical performance.

But here’s the kicker: Putin still thinks he’s the villain in charge. He doesn’t yet realize the plot has turned against him. Trump isn’t trying to save him anymore. He’s trying to beat him. And when the dust clears, it won’t be Trump standing beside Putin—it’ll be Trump standing on top of him.

After all, nothing says “Peace Prize” like turning a war criminal into a footnote.

 

Tuesday, July 1, 2025

The Aisle of Madness: Why Zohran Mamdani’s State-Run Grocery Stores Will Butcher New York’s Soul

 


If Zohran Mamdani becomes mayor and opens his utopian grocery chain, don’t expect savings. Expect scandals. Expect waste. Expect government-controlled bread lines with unionized shelf-stockers and politically approved peanut butter. Expect to stand in line, waiting for an overpriced banana while someone in a suit tells you it's “equity.

This little piggy went to market, this little piggy stayed home, and Zohran Mamdani wants the government to own them all. That’s not a joke. That’s the plan. Zohran Mamdani—the Democratic nominee for New York City mayor—isn’t just selling socialist dreams. He’s packaging them in taxpayer-funded grocery bags. His wild idea? Government-run grocery stores that pay no rent, no taxes, make no profit, and undercut every honest supermarket in town. If this sounds like he’s out of his mind, that’s because he probably is. Either Mamdani is crazy or he’s hallucinating—there’s no third aisle in this store of madness.

Let’s put his proposal on the chopping block. He wants to build city-owned grocery stores—one in each borough—where food is sold “at cost” to help poor New Yorkers. But groceries aren’t expensive because stores are greedy. They’re expensive because everything in New York costs a fortune: rent, wages, utilities, transportation. In fact, the grocery business already operates on razor-thin margins—1 to 2 percent after taxes. So even if every private grocer in NYC went nonprofit tomorrow, they still couldn’t match Mamdani’s fantasyland prices.

That’s because his prices would be artificially cheap, paid for by taxpayers. His stores wouldn’t pay rent or property taxes. He’d plop them down on city-owned land like a game of Monopoly with no rules. Every banana, every loaf of bread, every frozen pizza would be quietly subsidized. Mamdani says this will make groceries affordable. What he’s not saying is: you’ll be paying for your neighbor’s groceries whether you shop there or not. It’s like robbing Peter to feed Paul, then sending the receipt to both.

And here’s the worst part: if these government stores succeed, they’ll drive private supermarkets out of business. You can’t compete with “free”—especially when it’s funded with your own taxes. Trader Joe’s, Key Food, Fairway, and thousands of beloved mom-and-pop bodegas would get eaten alive. And with them would go variety, creativity, and choice. Say goodbye to your bodega’s hot sandwiches. Say farewell to that weird but amazing seaweed snack you found on aisle six. The city will give you canned peas and like it.

Small store owners—especially bodegas—are terrified. And they should be. Bodega associations are calling this a death sentence. They know exactly what happens when government bulldozes its way into local business. These aren’t corporations with safety nets. These are families who’ve run corner stores for decades, paying taxes and employing neighbors. Mamdani wants to throw them under the government bus. And then charge them for the ride.

But let’s pretend, just for fun, that these city-run stores actually work. Let’s say they manage to sell groceries at a discount, keep their shelves full, and avoid turning into overpriced snack depots with spoiled fruit. Even then, the savings would be tiny. Experts agree: even with no rent and no profit, these stores would barely lower prices—maybe a few cents on the dollar. And those cents? Paid for by the public purse.

Now let’s face reality. The city can’t even run public bathrooms. New York just spent $1 million per no-frills public toilet. Yes, that’s one toilet. Mamdani thinks the same city that can’t install a working sink is going to master food distribution, logistics, perishables, and customer service? That’s not a plan. That’s a comedy sketch.

What Mamdani’s cooking up isn’t affordability—it’s forced dependence. His model punishes success, rewards inefficiency, and chains grocery access to political cycles. If the city budget tanks, your neighborhood store vanishes. If the wrong administration comes in, the shelves go bare. When you make the government your grocer, you make politics your pantry.

And it’s not just the mom-and-pop stores warning about this disaster. Billionaire grocer John Catsimatidis said he’d consider shutting down or moving out of New York entirely. Other investors are threatening to pack up their portfolios and flee. Financial leaders are calling Mamdani’s plan a “communist delusion.” And they’re not wrong. There’s no capitalist country on Earth where state-run supermarkets outcompete private grocers. But plenty of failed socialist regimes tried. Russia, Venezuela, Cuba—they all learned the hard way. When the state opens the store, it also locks the shelves.

The most insulting part of Mamdani’s fantasy is that he’s trying to pay for it with money that doesn’t exist. He says he’ll fund his grocery dreams by “redirecting subsidies” that go to private grocers. But the real number? About $30 million in tax breaks—most of which support hiring and training in low-income neighborhoods. He’s selling magic beans and calling it a balanced budget.

Even liberals are starting to sweat. City officials know this plan is unworkable without state approvals and zoning overhauls. Mayor Eric Adams has slammed it as a “snake oil scam.” Moderates within Mamdani’s own party are bracing for economic collapse. Some are even trying to convince national donors to fund an independent campaign to stop him.

And let’s not forget Mamdani’s favorite scare tactic: “food deserts.” He says New York has too many areas where people can’t buy fresh produce. But data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture says New York has fewer food deserts than any other state. The real issue is inflation—something government grocery stores won’t fix. If anything, Mamdani’s plan will raise costs by wasting tax dollars, gutting competition, and making people dependent on politically controlled food.

Let’s not pretend this is about helping the poor. Mamdani’s stores won’t check your income at the door. Wealthy tech bros in Brooklyn will shop side-by-side with seniors on fixed incomes—both enjoying taxpayer-funded discounts. It’s a gift to the rich disguised as a program for the poor. It’s affordability theater.

What we’re looking at here is a five-borough experiment in madness. A dream so far-fetched, it makes “unicorn meat” sound plausible. A plan so detached from economic reality, it could only be born in the fever swamp of radical ideology.

If Zohran Mamdani becomes mayor and opens his utopian grocery chain, don’t expect savings. Expect scandals. Expect waste. Expect government-controlled bread lines with unionized shelf-stockers and politically approved peanut butter. Expect to stand in line, waiting for an overpriced banana while someone in a suit tells you it's “equity.”

At this rate, the only thing Mamdani should be allowed to stock is the fiction section. And even that’s probably too close to reality for comfort.

 

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