Wednesday, April 29, 2026

No ID, No Vote: Why the Simplest Rule in America Became the Hardest to Accept

 

No ID at the ballot box? Then anyone can decide your future. When identity stops mattering in elections, control slips, trust dies, and democracy quietly bleeds out in plain sight.  Put simply, if proving who you are is optional when voting, then your vote is already at risk. A system without identity is a system begging to be gamed—and you will pay the price.

I have lived long enough to know that when something simple turns into a shouting match, there’s usually more going on beneath the surface. But sometimes, just sometimes, people twist themselves into knots to avoid saying the obvious. And this is one of those moments.

I keep hearing the same argument over and over again—that requiring a voter to show a state-issued ID is somehow unfair, somehow dangerous, somehow a threat to democracy. I sit back and listen, and I ask myself a very basic question: how did we get here? Because in the America I walk through every day, identity is everything. You don’t just show up and exist—you prove who you are. That’s the rule.

You walk into a store and try to buy alcohol or cigarettes, and if you look even slightly young, the cashier stops you cold. “ID.” No ID, no sale. No debate. No emotional speech about fairness. Just a hard stop. You want to board a plane? Same story. TSA doesn’t care about your feelings or your philosophy. They want to see your ID, or you’re not getting on that flight. You want to open a bank account, rent an apartment, enroll in school, even pick up certain prescriptions? ID.

And nobody calls that oppression. Nobody writes headlines about how unfair it is. Nobody storms the streets because a bartender asked for identification. So I ask again—why is voting suddenly different?

Voting is not buying a soda. It is not catching a flight. It is the mechanism that decides power in the most powerful nation on earth. It determines who writes laws, who controls budgets, who shapes the future of millions. If there is any place where identity should matter, it is right there, at the ballot box.

Yet here we are, arguing as if asking “Who are you?” is some kind of moral crime. Let me be blunt. That argument  doesn’t sit right with me. Not even close. Besides, it is completely illogical and stupid.

I came into this country as an immigrant. My paperwork was not sitting neatly in some office down the street. My birth records were over 6000 miles away, buried in a different system, under a different sky, in a place where retrieving documents is not always simple or fast. It took effort. It took patience. It took persistence. But I got it done, and have my State ID. So when I hear someone say it is “too hard” for a citizen—someone born here, with access to records, institutions, and systems built for them—to obtain a state ID, I raise an eyebrow. Not out of disrespect, but out of disbelief. Because effort is not oppression. Preparation is not punishment.

Elections in the United States don’t appear overnight like a surprise storm. They are scheduled months, even years in advance. November is not a mystery. It is a fixed point on the calendar. If obtaining an ID is part of the requirement, then the timeline is clear. January comes. February follows. The clock ticks. There is time—real, measurable time—to prepare and get a state ID. And preparation is part of responsibility.

Now, let’s talk facts, because emotion alone does not carry this argument. Studies and surveys over the years have shown that a strong majority of Americans support voter ID laws. Polls conducted by organizations like Pew Research Center have often found support levels above 70%. That’s not a fringe opinion. That’s a national consensus leaning toward a basic standard: verify identity before voting.

At the same time, concerns about voter fraud and election integrity have not disappeared. Even if cases of in-person voter fraud are relatively rare, the perception of vulnerability matters. Trust in elections is the oxygen of democracy. Without it, the entire system starts to suffocate. If people believe the process can be manipulated, even slightly, confidence erodes.

And once trust is gone, getting it back is like trying to catch smoke with your bare hands.

So what does requiring ID do? It signals seriousness. It tells citizens that the process is protected, that participation comes with a basic level of accountability. It aligns voting with the same standards we already accept in daily life.

But the counterargument comes fast and loud. Millions of Americans, some say, do not have a valid government-issued ID. Estimates from institutions like the Brennan Center have suggested numbers ranging from 11 million to over 20 million people. That is not a small figure. That is a real concern.

And I won’t pretend that the system is perfect. It isn’t. There are people who face obstacles—transportation issues, bureaucratic delays, lost documents, mismatched records. Those challenges exist. They are not imaginary.

But here’s where I draw a hard line: the existence of a challenge does not mean the standard should disappear. We don’t remove rules because they require effort. We improve access so people can meet them. If IDs are required, then make them accessible. Offer them for free. Expand office hours. Create mobile ID units. Streamline documentation processes. Bring the system closer to the people instead of lowering the bar entirely.

Because lowering the bar comes with its own cost. If you leave the door wide open, don’t be surprised when you stop knowing who walked in.

History has shown that election rules matter. From the days of poll taxes and literacy tests to the passage of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, America has wrestled with the balance between access and control. That balance is delicate. Push too far in one direction, and you risk exclusion. Push too far in the other, and you risk chaos.

The voter ID debate sits right in the middle of that tension.

I’m not interested in slogans. I’m not interested in political theater. I’m interested in consistency. If identity is required for small things, it should not vanish when the stakes become enormous. Because that inconsistency is what confuses people. It’s what fuels frustration. It’s what makes an ordinary citizen sit back and say, “Wait… this doesn’t add up.”

And when things don’t add up, trust starts to crack. I’m not asking for perfection. I’m asking for coherence. Show me an America where identity matters across the board, or show me an America where it doesn’t matter at all. But don’t pick and choose based on convenience. Don’t tell me ID is essential at the airport but optional at the ballot box. That’s not logic—that’s contradiction dressed up as policy.

At the end of the day, voting is both a right and a responsibility. Rights open the door. Responsibilities keep the house standing. And if asking someone to prove who they are before they shape the future of a nation feels like too much to ask, then maybe the problem isn’t the rule. Maybe the problem is how far we’ve drifted from common sense.

 

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.

 

The Death of the Dealmaker: How Congress Became a Cage Fight Instead of a Brain Trust

 


America is not extreme—but Congress is. As pragmatists disappear, loud radicals take over, turning lawmaking into chaos and leaving the country trapped in a dangerous, self-made crisis. In plain terms, Congress is collapsing into a loyalty cult—independent thinkers are hunted, compromise is dead, and a loud minority is hijacking power while a purple America is left voiceless and exposed.

I will say it plain: smart, flexible politicians are going extinct, and nobody in power seems bothered. The system is not broken—it is doing exactly what it was redesigned to do. It rewards noise over nuance, loyalty over logic, and survival over good policy. When only the loudest voices win, wisdom does not just lose—it gets buried.

I have watched this slow-motion collapse for years, and it always plays out the same way. A lawmaker tries to think, tries to negotiate, tries to bridge the gap. Then the machine turns on them. Not the voters first—the machine. The donors. The party base. The primary challengers lurking like sharks. The message is clear: fall in line or fall out of power.

Look at the numbers. According to data from the Pew Research Center, ideological polarization in Congress has reached its highest level in over 50 years. In the 1970s, there was overlap—liberal Republicans and conservative Democrats. Today, that overlap is nearly zero. Members of Congress now vote with their party more than 90% of the time. That is not unity; that is obedience.

I see it like a street fight. Two sides step into the ring. There is no referee interested in fairness, only a crowd screaming for blood. The fighter who pauses to think gets knocked out. The one who swings wildly gets cheered. That is Congress now.

The tragedy is that America itself is not built that way. The country is politically “purple.” Roughly 40% of voters identify as independents. In states like North Carolina, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania, elections are decided by narrow margins—sometimes less than 2%. These are not ideological war zones; they are mixed neighborhoods. People want practical solutions. They want roads fixed, healthcare working, and schools functioning. They are not asking for purity tests. But Congress ignores that reality.

Why? Because the real battle is not in November anymore—it is in the primaries. In many districts, the general election is a formality. The real threat comes from someone inside the party, someone more extreme, more loyal, more willing to burn everything down. Voter turnout in primaries is often below 25%, which means a small, highly motivated group decides who gets power. That group is not interested in compromise. They want warriors, not problem-solvers.

I remember when bipartisan deals were not treated like treason. In 1983, President Ronald Reagan worked with Democratic Speaker Tip O’Neill to fix Social Security. That deal stabilized the system for decades. In 1990, George H. W. Bush agreed to a bipartisan budget deal that reduced deficits. He paid a political price for it, but the policy worked. Even in 2008, during the financial crisis, lawmakers from both parties came together to pass the Troubled Asset Relief Program. It was messy, unpopular, and necessary.

Today, that kind of deal would get you crucified.

The system punishes independence. Lawmakers who try to think for themselves get labeled as traitors. I have seen it happen again and again. A senator votes against their party on a key issue, and within hours, the attacks begin. Fundraising dries up. Activists flood social media. A primary challenger appears almost overnight. The message is brutal: you are replaceable.

And so, politicians adapt. They stop thinking out loud. They stop negotiating in good faith. They start performing. Every speech becomes a soundbite. Every vote becomes a signal to the base. It is not about solving problems; it is about surviving the next election cycle.  When the drumbeat gets loud enough, even the wise start marching out of step—or get trampled.

The media ecosystem makes it worse. Cable news and social media reward outrage. A calm, reasoned argument gets ignored. A fiery, extreme statement goes viral. Politicians know this. They feed the machine because the machine feeds them back power. It is a loop, and it is tightening.

I have also seen how money shapes this behavior. Campaign costs have exploded. According to the Federal Election Commission, the 2024 congressional elections cost over $10 billion. That kind of money does not come from small donors alone. It comes from interest groups, super PACs, and wealthy individuals with clear agendas. Those donors are not paying for moderation. They are investing in outcomes. Loyalty becomes currency.

Then there is the fear factor. Lawmakers are not just worried about losing elections; some are worried about their safety. Threats against members of Congress have risen sharply. The U.S. Capitol Police reported over 8,000 threats in 2023 alone. When politics turns personal and dangerous, people retreat into their corners. They trust fewer voices. They take fewer risks. Independent thinking becomes a liability.

I have heard lawmakers admit it quietly, off the record. They know the system is broken. They know many policies being pushed are flawed or incomplete. But they also know that speaking up could end their careers. So they stay silent or play along. It is not courage; it is calculation.

And here is the part that should worry everyone: the long-term damage. When Congress stops functioning as a place for negotiation, the power shifts elsewhere. The executive branch grows stronger. Courts get dragged into political fights. Decisions that should be made through debate and compromise get decided by orders and rulings. That is not balance; that is drift.

The Founders designed Congress to be messy, yes, but also deliberative. They expected disagreement, but they also expected deals. The system was built on the idea that competing interests would force negotiation. That only works if politicians are willing to negotiate. Right now, they are not. America is still purple, but Congress is painted in hard red and blue lines. That mismatch creates tension. Policies swing wildly depending on who holds power. Long-term planning becomes nearly impossible. Businesses hesitate. Voters grow frustrated. Trust erodes.

I can feel that frustration on the ground. People are not stupid. They see the games. They hear the empty talking points. They watch problems linger while politicians argue over optics. They are tired of it. But the system keeps feeding itself. You cannot fix a house when everyone is fighting over the paint while the roof is collapsing.

The disappearance of smart, flexible politicians is not an accident. It is the outcome of incentives that reward the opposite. If nothing changes, the trend will continue. The loud will get louder. The thoughtful will get quieter—or leave altogether.

And when that happens, Congress will not just be ineffective. It will be irrelevant.

 

On a different but equally important note, readers who enjoy thoughtful analysis may also find the titles in my  “Brief Book Series” worth exploring. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Tuesday, April 28, 2026

From Redcoats to Red Carpets: The British Are Back—But This Time We Smile

 


The British once came with fire; now they come with smiles—but beneath the charm, power still plays the same ruthless game. In plain terms, they burned the White House in 1814; today we roll out carpets—because power flipped, not because danger disappeared.

In 1814, if someone ran down a dirt road screaming that the British were coming, people didn’t ask questions—they grabbed muskets. Panic wasn’t a reaction; it was instinct. Back then, the name “Britain” didn’t mean tea, accents, or royal weddings. It meant fire. It meant warships. It meant men in red coats marching through your town like they owned it—because they often did. I’m talking about a time when the War of 1812 was still burning hot, when British forces marched into Washington, D.C., and torched the White House in August 1814. That wasn’t symbolism. That was humiliation, written in smoke and ash.

So when I hear the same phrase today—“The British are coming”—I almost laugh. Not because it’s funny, but because it’s unbelievable how far we’ve drifted. In April 2026, that same announcement doesn’t send people running for cover. It sends them reaching for cameras. Because this time, the British aren’t coming to burn anything. They’re coming to shake hands. King Charles III walks into America not as a threat, but as an honored guest. He steps into the White House, sits across from Donald Trump, and then walks into Congress—not with an army, but with applause waiting.

Let’s not pretend this is normal. It’s not. It’s history flipped on its head.

Back in 1814, the United States had roughly 8.7 million people. Britain had the largest navy in the world—over 600 ships at its peak during the Napoleonic era. America wasn’t just outmatched; it was outgunned, outnumbered, and barely holding its ground. When British troops landed in Maryland and marched toward Washington, they met resistance, sure—but it wasn’t enough. They burned government buildings, including the White House and the Capitol. President James Madison had to flee. That’s not diplomacy. That’s domination.

Now fast forward to 2026. The United States has over 330 million people. It has the most powerful military on earth, with a defense budget exceeding $800 billion annually. The United Kingdom? Still influential, still respected—but no longer the empire that once ruled over 25% of the world’s land and people. That empire peaked in the early 20th century. Today, it’s a shadow of its former self, holding influence through diplomacy, alliances, and soft power—not brute force.

So what changed?

Power changed. Interests changed. But more than anything, enemies changed into partners. After World War II, the U.S. and the U.K. stopped sizing each other up across battle lines and started sitting side by side in war rooms. They became the backbone of NATO, a military alliance formed in 1949 to counter Soviet expansion. That alliance still stands today, with 31 member countries. The U.S. and the U.K. share intelligence through the “Five Eyes” network—one of the most advanced surveillance partnerships in the world. That’s not coincidence. That’s calculated trust.

But let me be blunt—this isn’t just about friendship. It’s about convenience. Nations don’t fall in love. They align interests. The U.S. and the U.K. realized something simple: fighting each other is expensive; working together is profitable. Trade between the two countries exceeded $280 billion in 2023. British companies employ over 1 million people in the United States. American companies do the same in the U.K. That’s not nostalgia—that’s business.

Still, I can’t shake the irony. The same nation that once burned the White House now gets invited in through the front door, greeted with handshakes, speeches, and standing ovations. Yesterday’s arsonist is today’s dinner guest. That’s not just change—that’s transformation with a touch of amnesia.

And here’s where it gets uncomfortable. We like to dress this up as progress, as if time magically turned enemies into friends. But history doesn’t forget—it just gets buried under ceremony. The truth is, the U.S. didn’t forgive Britain overnight. It outgrew the conflict. It became stronger, richer, more secure. When you’re the biggest player in the room, you don’t fear old rivals—you host them.

So when King Charles III stands before Congress yesterday, he isn’t representing an invading force. He’s representing continuity, tradition, and a nation that learned how to survive without ruling the world. And when American leaders welcome him with flowers and pageantry, they’re not surrendering—they’re signaling control. Because the strongest nation doesn’t panic when someone knocks on the door. It decides who gets invited in.

But let’s not sanitize this too much. Power still talks. If the roles were reversed—if Britain had remained the dominant global force and America had stayed weak—you think there would be red carpets? No chance. There would be demands. Conditions. Maybe even threats. Power doesn’t apologize; it negotiates from strength.

So yes, the world has changed. But not in the soft, romantic way people like to believe. It hasn’t changed because humans suddenly became kinder or wiser. It changed because the balance of power shifted. Because war became less useful than cooperation. Because economics replaced conquest.

In 1814, the phrase “The British are coming” meant survival was on the line. In 2026, it means a photo op is about to begin. That’s not just a change in tone—it’s a complete rewrite of meaning.

And I stand here looking at it, half impressed, half skeptical. Because history has a way of circling back. Today’s allies can become tomorrow’s rivals if the numbers change, if the interests shift, if the stakes rise again. We’ve seen it before. Nations don’t have permanent friends—they have permanent interests.

So when I hear that phrase now, I don’t panic. But I don’t forget either. Because beneath the flowers, the handshakes, and the polished speeches, there’s a quiet truth humming in the background.

The game never ended. The players just changed their moves.

 

Separate from today’s article, I recently published more titles in my Brief Book Series for readers interested in a deeper, standalone idea. You can read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

Monday, April 27, 2026

What is the Matter With America? Where Politics Stops Arguing and Starts Shooting

 


Politics isn’t debate anymore—it’s a loaded gun. When hate replaces reason, strangers become targets, and the next headline could be written in your neighborhood.

The White House Correspondents’ Dinner is supposed to be a polished circus—politicians smiling through their teeth, journalists pretending they’re not part of the same club, tuxedos, wine glasses, staged laughter. That’s the script. But the moment a man shows up not with jokes but with guns, the script dies on the spot. No edits. No rewrites. Just chaos waiting to happen.

Cole Tomas Allen didn’t show up confused. He didn’t wander in by mistake. He came loaded—mentally and physically. Thirty-one years old. Teacher. Mechanical engineer. “Teacher of the Month.” That detail is almost funny in a dark, twisted way. Give a man a chalkboard, he shapes minds; give him a grudge, he sharpens bullets. Same person. Different choice. That’s the part people hate to admit.

He traveled across the country to kill people he didn’t know. Let that sit. No personal grudge. No broken deal. No bad blood over money. Just raw, manufactured hatred pointed at strangers who happened to represent something he despised. That’s not confusion. That’s commitment. That’s planning. That’s intent sharpened like a blade.

And here we go again—the national ritual after every incident. Cameras on. Experts lined up. Everybody playing detective. “Why did he do it?” they ask, like it’s some grand mystery wrapped in a puzzle. It’s not. Stop pretending it is.

He hated them.

That’s it. That’s the headline nobody wants to print without dressing it up. Not “deep psychological distress.” Not “complex emotional factors.” Hate. Clean, direct, ugly. The kind that doesn’t debate. The kind that doesn’t negotiate. The kind that walks into a room and tries to end lives.

People don’t kill out of love. Nobody loads a weapon because they admire someone. Nobody crosses state lines to celebrate a politician. He didn’t come to argue. He came to erase.

And don’t get comfortable thinking this is rare. It isn’t. It just wears different clothes depending on the day. One day it’s a school. Another day it’s a church. Then a mall. A concert. A movie theater. A baseball field. Now, in this version of events, it walks into a black-tie dinner like it owns the place. Same story, different backdrop. Violence doesn’t care about dress codes.

The numbers don’t whisper—they shout. The Gun Violence Archive has tracked over 600 mass shooting incidents in multiple recent years in the United States. That’s not a glitch. That’s not a coincidence. That’s a pattern beating like a drum nobody wants to hear. And every time it happens, we act surprised, like the country didn’t see it coming. If lightning strikes the same house 600 times, maybe it’s not the sky that’s the problem.

So let’s ask the question everyone dances around: what kind of country are we living in?

We’re living in a country where disagreement has been turned into identity. Where politics isn’t just policy—it’s personal survival. Where losing an argument feels like losing oxygen. And when people start thinking like that, they stop arguing to win and start thinking about eliminating the opposition. That’s how disagreement becomes homicidal. Not overnight. Not in one angry moment. It’s a slow drip. First, “they’re wrong.” Then, “they’re dangerous.” Then, “they’re evil.” And once someone lands on “evil,” the next step comes easy. When you label someone a monster, don’t act shocked when someone decides to hunt them.

History has already written this script in blood. John F. Kennedy didn’t die because someone wanted a better healthcare plan. Ronald Reagan wasn’t shot over a polite disagreement. In 2017, a gunman opened fire on Republican lawmakers during a baseball practice, nearly killing Steve Scalise. That wasn’t debate. That was rage pulling the trigger. And now here we are again, watching the same cycle spin. Different name. Same ending.

Cole Tomas Allen is an angry, methodical, driven enough to take on Secret Service protection. That’s not random. That’s calculated. People like that don’t trip into violence. They walk into it with their eyes wide open. They study. They plan. They wait. A reckless man makes noise; a determined one makes damage.

And here’s the uncomfortable truth nobody wants to own: systems don’t stop everything. Metal detectors. Security layers. Intelligence briefings. They reduce risk, sure. But they don’t erase it. Because the real weapon isn’t the gun. It’s the decision. Once someone decides to cross that line, they start looking for cracks. And every system has cracks.

So we end up clinging to explanations that make us feel safe. Mental health. Social pressure. Isolation. Fine—those can play a role. But let’s stop pretending they pull triggers. They don’t. They may load the emotional gun, but hate is what fires it. And hate is easy to grow in a country where outrage is a business model. Turn on a screen. Scroll for five minutes. Somebody is always screaming. Somebody is always furious. Somebody is always telling you that the other side is not just wrong but dangerous, corrupt, evil. Feed that long enough, and it stops being noise. It becomes belief. Then belief becomes action.

You water a weed long enough, don’t complain when it takes over the garden.

But here’s the part that keeps this from becoming total collapse: most people don’t do this. Millions argue every day. Millions disagree, vote, protest, complain, and move on with their lives. They don’t pick up weapons. They don’t turn anger into murder. That line still exists. It’s just getting thinner for a dangerous few.

And those few are enough to keep rewriting headlines in blood. So don’t ask me to soften this. Don’t ask me to “balance the tone.” There’s nothing balanced about someone walking into a room ready to kill strangers over politics. Call it what it is.

This isn’t just political tension. It’s political infection. And if we keep pretending it’s just a fever that will break on its own, we’re going to keep waking up to stories like this—different names, same ending, same question hanging in the air like smoke.

“What happened?” We already know. We just don’t like the answer.

 

I couldn’t let this go. I had earlier  wrote a brief book on this issue, The Great American Breakdown,  to work through it honestly and completely. Read it here on Google Play: The Great American Breakdown.

 

 

Sunday, April 26, 2026

The Night Chaos Tried—and Failed—to Breach Power

 


A gunman slipped past America’s weakest gap and nearly rewrote history—only layered security saved the night; next time, the system might blink, and chaos won’t miss. Put simply, he failed today, but the blueprint is out—one gap, one gun, one moment, and America’s illusion of control collapses into televised catastrophe.

I watched the footage again, slow this time, like a crime scene replay. The tuxedos, the laughter, the smug ease of a political class that thinks danger lives outside the room. Then the crack. Not loud enough to be cinematic. Just sharp enough to be real. Somewhere inside the White House Correspondents' Dinner, people paused, tilted their heads, and went back to their drinks. That’s how far away the danger was. That’s how close it almost got.

Cole Tomas Allen, 31, came in with a plan. Not a drunk impulse. Not a random act. A plan. I don’t need a confession to see it. The blueprint is already there. He took a train. That’s not romance; that’s strategy. Airports choke you with scanners, pat-downs, questions. Trains? You glide through like a ghost. No metal detectors. No friction. If you want to move steel quietly in this country, you already know where the gaps are. Allen knew.

He checked into the hotel. That wasn’t luck either. That was positioning. You don’t storm a fortress from the outside when you can sleep inside its walls. He must have assumed the system would be simple—one choke point, one metal detector, one moment of truth. That’s how amateurs think. One door, one guard, one chance. He miscalculated.

What he walked into wasn’t a door. It was a maze. Concentric circles. Layers. Depth. A system built by people who assume the worst about men like him. That’s why he never got close to President Donald Trump. Not luck. Design. The checkpoint where he fired wasn’t even on the same floor. That’s not coincidence. That’s geometry of power—distance as defense, time as armor.

A Secret Service agent took the hit. Lived. Bulletproof vest. That’s not heroism in the Hollywood sense. That’s preparation. Kevlar doesn’t pray; it absorbs. Trump said it himself—the vest saved the man. Strip away the politics, and you’re left with physics doing its job. So yes, the system worked. But let’s not celebrate too loudly. Because behind that word “worked” is a darker truth: the threat is not hypothetical anymore. It showed up, checked in, unpacked, and pulled the trigger.

I keep hearing people, including myself, say, “We’ve seen this before.” That’s not comfort. That’s a warning. Go back. Late 1960s. Martin Luther King Jr. drops in Memphis, 1968. Robert F. Kennedy falls in Los Angeles the same year. Malcolm X goes down in 1965. Blood on podiums, microphones still hot. The country didn’t break, but it bent—hard. Jump further back. 1901. William McKinley gets shot by an anarchist who thinks bullets can rewrite society. Europe wasn’t spared either. Kings, empresses, presidents—targets of men who believed destruction was a form of speech. That’s the lineage Allen steps into, whether he knows it or not. Same script. Different century. New tools.

Now fast forward to us. We pretend we’re more advanced, more stable, more rational. But the numbers don’t lie. The United States holds about 120 firearms per 100 people. Let that sit for a second. More guns than people. You don’t need to be a genius to see how that math bends outcomes. You don’t need a black market. You don’t need a network. You just need intent.

And intent is everywhere now. Manufactured, amplified, monetized.

Scroll your phone. Rage is currency. Conspiracy is content. Outrage is the algorithm’s favorite child. I hear it in campaign emails, too—everything is the end of the world. Every election is “now or never.” Every opponent is “evil.” That language isn’t decoration. It’s fuel. You keep telling unstable minds that the system is a monster, don’t act shocked when someone tries to slay it.

Tim Naftali, an American historian,  said it clean: diseased, weakened minds can be provoked. That’s the part nobody wants to own. We like to isolate the shooter, call him “crazy,” and move on. But madness doesn’t grow in a vacuum. It feeds on atmosphere. And right now, the air is thick. I don’t care if you wear red or blue. Hatred doesn’t check party registration. The targets shift—Republicans, Democrats, conservatives, liberals—but the impulse is the same: punish power. Humiliate it. Destroy it. Allen didn’t invent that idea. He inherited it. And here’s the ugly twist—he almost got closer than we’re comfortable admitting. If that system had been thinner, if those layers had been fewer, if one checkpoint had been skipped for convenience, we’d be telling a very different story. Names would be different. Headlines would be darker.

But the system held. That’s the only reason we’re talking about failure instead of funerals.

Still, I can’t shake the pattern. Butler—an attempt that nearly ended Trump’s life. Then the killings that followed: Brian Thompson, a healthcare executive, dead. Melissa Hortman and her husband, dead. Charlie Kirk, dead. These aren’t accidents. They’re signals. Different motives, same method. Violence as a message.

I hear people say, “It’s just a few bad actors.” Maybe. But a few is all it takes. History proves that. One bullet changed the course of 1914. One assassin in Sarajevo lit a fuse that burned the world. We like to think we’re insulated. We’re not. We’re just lucky—until we’re not.

Allen tried to exploit a gap. The gap was real. Trains don’t screen like airports. That’s a vulnerability, plain and simple. He saw it. He used it. The only reason it didn’t matter is because the next layers were stronger than he expected. That’s not a victory lap. That’s a reminder: every system is only as strong as its weakest assumption.

And his assumption was simple: “I can get close.”

He was wrong. But he was close enough to remind us that the line between order and chaos is thinner than we admit. A fence only proves its strength when someone tries to break it. Last night, someone did. The fence held. This time.

I don’t romanticize this. I don’t soften it. This was an attempt to create havoc and mayhem, exactly as described. It failed not because the desire wasn’t there, but because the design was better. That’s the uncomfortable truth. And the bigger truth? The design has to keep getting better. Because the men who want to tear it down aren’t slowing down. They’re studying, adapting, watching. Just like Allen did.

 

I couldn’t let this go. I had earlier  wrote a brief book on this issue, The Great American Breakdown,  to work through it honestly and completely. Read it here on Google Play: The Great American Breakdown.

 

One Breach, One Response: The Night the Secret Service Didn’t Blink

 


Shotgun, knives, intent to kill— Cole Tomas Allen came ready; Secret Service came ready to end him, and that’s why everyone walked out alive.

I’m not here to decorate words. I’m here to say what happened. A man showed up to the White House Correspondents’ Association dinner on April 26, 2026, carrying a shotgun, a handgun, and knives like he was shopping for death in bulk. His name is Cole Tomas Allen, 31, out of Torrance, California. That’s not a confused man. That’s a loaded decision walking on two legs. He came to kill. Period.

But here’s the part people don’t like to admit because it ruins their favorite outrage script: the Secret Service did its job this time, and it did it brutally well – God bless them. Their multi-layered defense didn’t just work—it shut the whole thing down before the night turned into a morgue with chandeliers. President Donald Trump is alive because of it. So are a lot of other people who would have been headlines by morning if things had gone the other way.

Let’s stop pretending security is supposed to look pretty. It’s not a ballet. It’s a brawl waiting to happen. And when it happens, you either have a system that holds or you have bodies on the floor. At the White House Correspondents’ dinner night, the system held.

I heard someone say, “They should have stopped him earlier.” Sure. And gravity should take weekends off. Reality doesn’t work like that. You build layers because you know something will slip. You assume failure, then you stack protection on top of it like bricks in a war zone. That’s what the Secret Service has been doing for decades, and April 26 proved why.

History doesn’t give you polite warnings. It punches first. March 30, 1981—same Washington Hilton—President Ronald Reagan gets shot. Not almost shot. Shot. The Secret Service reacted fast, Agent Jerry Parr shoved him into the car, and that move likely saved Reagan’s life. But the damage was done. A gunman got close enough to fire. That wasn’t theory. That was failure staring everyone in the face.

Then rewind to September 1975. President Gerald Ford nearly gets killed twice in 17 days. Lynette Fromme pulls a gun. Sara Jane Moore fires a shot. Two attempts, same president, same country that likes to pretend it’s immune to political violence. That illusion died a long time ago.

So when people roll their eyes at “multi-layered defense,” I don’t laugh—I get irritated. That system was built because presidents kept getting hunted like targets at a shooting range. Every close call wrote a new rule. Every failure sharpened the next response. If history teaches anything, it’s that complacency is just slow suicide.

Now fast-forward to April 26, 2026. Allen breaches the moment. Not the system—just the moment. That’s all it takes. One second. One gap. One mistake. And then everything depends on whether the next layer is ready to bite back.

It did. An agent reportedly took a shotgun blast to the chest. Not a movie stunt. Not a drill. Real flesh, real impact, real risk. That’s the difference between talking about security and being security. Somebody stood there and absorbed violence so others wouldn’t have to. You don’t clap for that. You respect it. Then the counterassault team rolled in—the CAT. If you’ve ever seen them move, you don’t mistake them for anything else. They don’t negotiate. They don’t hesitate. They end problems. Fast. They flooded the scene, locked it down, and made sure Allen’s plan died where it started. That’s not luck. That’s controlled aggression backed by years of training.

And yes, I’ll say it again because people love to dodge simple truths: the system worked.

No mass casualties. No dead president. No chaotic stampede turning into a pile of broken bodies. The outcome could have been ugly—real ugly. But it wasn’t, because the right people were in the right positions doing exactly what they were trained to do.

Now here comes the uncomfortable part nobody wants to sit with. We are not living in a calm era. We’re living in a time where political violence is creeping back into the mainstream like a bad habit nobody wants to quit. In 2024 alone, the United States recorded over 600 mass shooting incidents. That’s not background noise. That’s a warning siren that people keep muting. And when you mix that environment with voices openly flirting with the idea that some killings are “justified,” you don’t get peace—you get permission. You get people like Allen deciding they’re not crazy, just committed. That’s the kind of thinking that turns dinner events into hunting grounds.

So when someone says, “This raises questions about security,” I nod—but not the way they expect. Of course it raises questions. It always should. That’s how the system gets better. The Secret Service will tear this apart piece by piece. They’ll ask where the gap was, how it opened, and how to weld it shut tighter next time. That’s what professionals do. They don’t celebrate and sleep. They fix and prepare.

But don’t twist that into failure. That’s where people get it wrong. A failure is when the bullets land and nobody stops them. A failure is when the president doesn’t walk away. A failure is when families are left counting losses instead of blessings.

That didn’t happen. What happened instead is simple and brutal: a man tried to kill, and he got stopped. Hard stop. No gray area.

I don’t romanticize agencies. I don’t hand out blind praise. But I also don’t ignore reality because it’s inconvenient. The Secret Service, along with local, state, and federal law enforcement, stepped into the breach and shut down a live threat. That deserves recognition, not lazy criticism.

People love heroes when they’re in movies. Real life is messier. Real heroes bleed. Sometimes they take a shotgun blast and keep moving. Sometimes they don’t get a headline, just a hospital bed and a quiet “good job” from someone who understands what almost happened.

When the wolf shows up at the door, you don’t argue about the fence—you thank the man holding the gun on your side. That night, the wolf showed up armed and ready.

And the Secret Service didn’t flinch.

 

If you’re looking for something different to read, some of the titles in my “Brief Book Series” is available on Google Play Books. You can also read them here on Google Play: Brief Book Series.

 

Saturday, April 25, 2026

The Gunman at White House Correspondents Dinner: Why Canceling Now Hands Victory to Chaos

 

President Trump is right: Continue the dinner. Finish what started. Cancel the dinner, and the gunman wins—simple. This wasn’t random. It reeks of failure, maybe worse. Fear is spreading fast. If this event collapses, something bigger is already broken.

I watched the scene unfold like a bad movie that refused to end. Plates shattering. Glasses cracking. People in tuxedos diving under tables like it was a war zone. At the Washington Hilton, the so-called elite—journalists, politicians, celebrities—suddenly looked like everyone else when bullets start flying. Raw. Afraid. Human. And right in the middle of it all stood President Donald Trump, rushed off stage by Secret Service, tripping for a second, then pulled back up like nothing happened. No injury. No blood. Just chaos—and a message.

A shooter fired 5 to 8 shots outside the ballroom. That’s not noise. That’s intent. That’s someone saying, “I can reach you.” And yet, here’s the uncomfortable truth nobody wants to say out loud: President Trump is right. The dinner must continue.

Cancel it, and you hand the victory to a man who doesn’t deserve even a footnote in history. Cancel it, and you send a message louder than those gunshots—that fear controls the room. And I don’t care how polished the speeches are or how expensive the suits look, if fear wins, then the whole system is a joke. You don’t shut down a tradition because of one fool with a weapon—you shut him down instead.

Let me be blunt. The White House Correspondents’ Dinner is not some casual get-together. It has been running since 1921. That’s over 100 years. Presidents from Calvin Coolidge to Barack Obama have shown up, joked, taken hits, and still respected the ritual. Even during tense periods like the Cold War, the event survived. Think about that. Nuclear tension. Global fear. Yet no one said, “Let’s cancel dinner because someone might act crazy.” Why? Because America doesn’t bend that easily.

Now fast forward to this moment. A single gunman fires shots outside a ballroom. No casualties. The suspect is in custody. And suddenly, people are whispering about canceling the event? That’s not caution—that’s surrender dressed in a suit.

History doesn’t reward people who fold under pressure. Look at what happened after the September 11 attacks. Nearly 3000 people were killed. The country was shaken to its core. But did America cancel everything indefinitely? No. Flights resumed. Markets reopened. Life pushed forward. Because when you stop living, the enemy has already won.

And here’s where things start to smell funny. The shooter managed to get close enough to fire multiple shots at an event attended by the President, the Vice President, the Secretary of Defense, and the Secretary of State. Let that sink in. This is not a random backyard barbecue. This is one of the most heavily monitored events in Washington. Secret Service. Local police. National Guard. Layers of security. And yet, somehow, someone slips through and fires 5 to 8 rounds?

I’m not saying I have all the answers. But I am saying this: the holes in that security are too big to ignore. When a locked door swings open without a key, you start asking who left it unlocked. The Washington Hilton is known to stay open during the dinner, with limited screening outside the ballroom. That’s not new. But knowing that, why wasn’t there tighter control this time? Why leave gaps at an event packed with high-value targets?

And then there’s the timing. Trump attends for the first time as President during his second term. The relationship between his administration and the press is already explosive. Lawsuits flying. Access battles. Nearly 500 retired journalists signing petitions against him just before the event. The tension in that room wasn’t just political—it was personal. And right at that boiling point, shots ring out.

Coincidence? Maybe. But I’ve seen enough to know that when smoke shows up at the exact moment of friction, you don’t ignore it—you investigate it hard.

Let’s talk about the aftermath. The ballroom gets cleared. People step over broken plates. Servers reset tables. Water glasses refilled. Teleprompter prepared again. That right there—that stubborn push to continue—that’s the right instinct. That’s what separates resilience from weakness. You don’t let chaos rewrite your schedule.

Because if you cancel, what happens next year? Another threat? Another shutdown? At some point, the event dies not because it lost relevance, but because it lost courage. And that’s a slow death no one admits until it’s too late.

Gun violence in America is already a serious issue. According to data from Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, there were over 48000 gun-related deaths in 2022 alone. That’s the reality. But high-profile political events are supposed to be the hardest targets, not the easiest. When one breach happens, the solution is not retreat—it’s reinforcement.

Trump being unharmed is not just luck—it’s a warning shot. Not from the gunman, but from reality itself. Security failed somewhere. Questions need answers. But stopping the dinner? That solves nothing.

And here’s the cold truth people don’t like hearing: the shooter doesn’t matter. He’s gone. Dead. Finished. But the impact he leaves behind—that’s the real weapon. Fear. Disruption. Headlines. If the dinner gets canceled, his mission—whatever it was—gets completed posthumously.

I refuse to give him that.

I stand with the idea that the dinner continues. Not because it’s perfect. Not because the relationship between the press and the President is healthy—it clearly isn’t. But because stopping it now would mean admitting that a single act of violence can shut down a century-old tradition.

And I’m not buying that.

If anything, this incident should force tighter security, smarter planning, and deeper investigations. It should expose weaknesses and fix them. But it should not kill the event.

Because when you let fear make your decisions, you stop being in charge of your own house. And if America can’t host a dinner without backing down after one attack, then we have bigger problems than one gunman.

So yes, I’ll say it clearly: Trump is right. Continue the dinner. Finish what started. Show up, speak, and move forward.

Anything less is not caution—it’s defeat.

 

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: Brief Book Series.

 

 

No ID, No Vote: Why the Simplest Rule in America Became the Hardest to Accept

  No ID at the ballot box? Then anyone can decide your future. When identity stops mattering in elections, control slips, trust dies, and de...