Friday, July 10, 2026

Trump Accounts: A Dirty Little Scheme That May Save Capitalism From Its Own Children

 


Trump’s $1,000 baby accounts look like political vanity, but they expose a terrifying truth: capitalism cannot survive if millions of young people own nothing and increasingly dream of socialism.

I will give Donald Trump two cheers for Trump Accounts. Not 3. Let us not get drunk at the bar before the first round is finished. The scheme is partisan, politically branded, financed by borrowed money, and wrapped in the kind of presidential vanity that has become as predictable as sunrise. But underneath the gold lettering, political perfume, and billionaire fingerprints lies something America desperately needs: a way to give ordinary children a real stake in capitalism before they grow up believing capitalism is merely a casino where the rich own the tables, write the rules, hire the dealers, and send everyone else the bill.

That is why I refuse to dismiss Trump Accounts as another Washington gimmick. The execution is grubby. The core idea is not. Babies born between 2025 and 2028 can receive $1,000 invested in a diversified fund tracking American stocks, with the money generally locked away until age 18. Parents and others can add more. Employers and philanthropists can contribute too. The federal government is planting a small financial seed in the soil of American capitalism and telling a child, “This piece is yours.”

Good. About time.

But let us call a spade a spade. Naming these accounts after Trump is political branding with a diaper on. Why should a national investment program for American children carry the name of a sitting president? America does not belong to Trump, Democrats, Republicans, billionaires, or the loudest mob on social media. If the idea is truly national, it should survive elections, presidencies, and partisan tantrums. A child born in Baltimore, Detroit, rural Kentucky, or the Bronx should not have to wear a political jersey to own a stake in the American economy.

Then there is the ugly cutoff. A baby born in 2025 gets the $1,000 seed investment. A child born in 2024 does not. Same country. Same flag. Same economy. Different birthday. Tough luck, kid. You arrived at the wrong political moment.

That is arbitrary. It is also classic Washington. Politicians love drawing lines and pretending those lines came down from Mount Sinai.

Still, I see something bigger hiding beneath the mud. America has spent decades preaching capitalism to children who increasingly experience it as spectators. We tell them to work hard. We tell them to save. We tell them America is the land of opportunity. Then many turn 18 with no stocks, no house, no serious savings, and no meaningful ownership of productive capital. Meanwhile, children born into wealthy families may receive investment accounts, college funds, inheritances, down-payment help, business connections, and a financial parachute packed by Mom and Dad.

Then we look at the poor kid and say, “Run faster.”

What a joke.

The Federal Reserve's 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances showed just how wide America's ownership gap remains. The wealthiest 10% of families owned 93% of stocks, while the bottom 50% owned only 1%. That is not some socialist pamphlet printed in a basement. That is the Federal Reserve describing the American economy. When ownership is concentrated that heavily, politicians should not be shocked when young people begin asking whether the game is rigged. If millions of young Americans see capitalism only as rent bills, student debt, expensive groceries, impossible home prices, and billionaire rocket launches, they will eventually ask the obvious question: “Where exactly is my share?”

Trump Accounts offer a small answer.

The $1,000 is not a fortune. Nobody should start measuring the curtains for a mansion. If it grows to roughly $4,500 by age 18, inflation may reduce its real value to around $3,000 in today's money. That will not buy a house in Baltimore, Boston, or Boise. It may not even cover a semester of tuition at many universities. But $3,000 is not nothing to an 18-year-old from a poor family. It can help buy a used car, pay part of a security deposit, cover training costs, reduce education expenses, or provide the first capital for a small business.

More importantly, the account could teach a lesson that schools often fail miserably to teach: money can work.

Imagine a 10-year-old opening a statement with her mother.

“Mom, why did my account go up?”

“Because you own stocks.”

“What are stocks?”

“Pieces of companies.”

“So I own part of American companies?”

“Yes.”

Now capitalism is no longer a dusty chapter in an economics textbook. It has a pulse. It has a number. It rises. It falls. It compounds. The child has skin in the game.

That matters because compound growth is one of the quietest wealth machines ever invented. If $1,000 grows at an average annual rate of 8%, it becomes about $4,000 after 18 years without another cent being added. Add regular family contributions, employer contributions, or philanthropic gifts, and the numbers become much more interesting. Time does the heavy lifting while the child is still learning multiplication tables.

History suggests that broadening asset ownership can change lives and politics. The United Kingdom's Child Trust Fund, introduced for children born between September 2002 and January 2011, gave eligible children tax-free savings accounts with government starter payments. Millions of accounts were created. When the first generation reached adulthood in 2020, those young people gained access to actual financial assets. The program was imperfect, and many account holders initially failed to claim their money, but the basic principle was clear: birth should not automatically mean starting economic life with empty pockets.

America has its own historical evidence. The rise of 401(k) retirement accounts, individual retirement accounts, mutual funds, and defined-contribution plans helped turn tens of millions of workers into investors. According to Federal Reserve data, 58% of American families held stocks directly or indirectly in 2022, a record high at the time. Capital ownership, once viewed as the private club of Wall Street aristocrats, became more widespread.

But widespread does not mean equal. Not even close.

That is where Trump Accounts become more than a cute gift for newborns. They could become a small weapon against what I consider one of the most dangerous political trends in America: a generation losing faith in capitalism because too many young people feel capitalism has no faith in them.

The attraction of socialism among younger Americans did not fall from the sky. It grew from lived experience. Many entered adulthood after the 2008 financial crisis. They watched banks receive bailouts while families lost homes. They watched housing prices climb. They watched student debt explode. They watched billionaires become richer during crises. Then the political class acted shocked when young people started flirting with socialism.

Come on.

You cannot lock people outside the restaurant, let them smell the steak, and then lecture them about the beauty of the menu. If America wants young people to defend free enterprise, America should give more of them something worth defending. A person who owns stocks sees corporate profits differently from someone who owns nothing but bills. A teenager watching an index fund grow begins to understand dividends, risk, volatility, patience, and compound returns. Ownership changes the conversation.

And then comes artificial intelligence, the elephant in the server room.

AI could make Trump Accounts far more important than their creators may realize. The economic danger is simple. If AI allows a relatively small group of companies, founders, shareholders, and investors to capture enormous profits while displacing or weakening millions of workers, America could face an explosive political crisis. Capital could feast while labor fights over crumbs.

We do not know whether the most radical predictions will come true. Anyone claiming certainty is selling snake oil with a computer chip inside the bottle. But the risk is serious enough to deserve attention. Goldman Sachs estimated in 2023 that generative AI could expose the equivalent of 300 million full-time jobs worldwide to automation. The International Monetary Fund later estimated that nearly 40% of jobs worldwide could be affected by AI, with exposure reaching about 60% in advanced economies.

Those figures do not mean 300 million people will necessarily lose their jobs. They mean disruption could be enormous. And if the machines produce the wealth while a narrow group owns the machines, we may discover that capitalism has built a political bomb and forgotten where it put the detonator.

That is why citizen ownership deserves serious attention.

Suppose AI companies become spectacularly profitable. Suppose a small fraction of equity in major AI firms is voluntarily donated or transferred into national citizen investment accounts. Suppose every child owns a tiny piece of the productivity revolution from birth. Instead of merely hearing that AI is coming for jobs, families could also see AI-related wealth flowing into their investment accounts.

That would not solve every problem. But it would change the politics of the problem.

I would rather see citizens own actual financial assets than watch politicians create another giant bureaucracy to tax, spend, administer, redistribute, investigate, regulate, and eventually drown in paperwork. Government agencies have a remarkable talent for turning a glass of water into a 700-page instruction manual.

Direct ownership is cleaner. Give people assets. Let them watch those assets grow. Teach them what they own. Make capitalism personal.

The billionaire donations surrounding Trump Accounts deserve suspicion. When rich corporations and wealthy donors gather around politicians bearing gifts, I count my fingers after the handshake. Cronyism is not a fantasy in Washington. Money buys access, access creates influence, and influence has a nasty habit of dressing itself as public service.

But philanthropy itself is not the enemy. If billionaires want to contribute money to investment accounts for millions of American children, I will not slam the door because their motives may be mixed. Human motives are almost always mixed. Andrew Carnegie built libraries while fighting brutal labor battles. John D. Rockefeller funded medicine and education after building one of history's most feared monopolies. Billions of philanthropic dollars have done genuine good even when the donors' halos were crooked.

Take the money. Build safeguards. Demand transparency. Keep politicians' relatives away from the cookie jar.

The deficit financing is another blemish. America already carries a federal debt measured in tens of trillions of dollars. Borrowing more money to finance another federal benefit is hardly a profile in courage. Washington borrows the way some people breathe.

Yet there is an important distinction. Most government transfers finance immediate consumption. Trump Accounts finance savings and investment. The money buys productive assets rather than disappearing immediately into today's spending. The estimated fiscal effect, at roughly 0.005% of annual GDP, is microscopic compared with the size of the federal budget and the broader national debt problem.

So I give Trump Accounts two cheers. The first cheer is for ownership. Every American child should have a genuine chance to enter adulthood owning a piece of the productive economy. The second cheer is for experimentation. America should test whether universal child investment accounts can improve financial literacy, broaden stock ownership, soften inherited inequality, and prepare citizens for an AI economy in which capital may become even more powerful.

The missing third cheer is for the politics. The Trump name should eventually go. The arbitrary birth-year limits should go. The crony smell should go. The program should become permanent, universal, transparent, fiscally responsible, and politically neutral. Call them American Opportunity Accounts. Call them Liberty Accounts. Call them Citizen Investment Accounts. Call them anything that does not turn a child's financial future into a campaign bumper sticker.

The irony is delicious. A grubby, partisan scheme carrying the name of one of the most controversial presidents in American history may contain the seed of an idea capable of strengthening capitalism for generations. Politics is funny that way. Sometimes good ideas arrive wearing dirty shoes.

I do not worship Trump Accounts. I do not condemn them either. I see them for what they are: a flawed experiment with a powerful idea buried inside.

Give children capital. Let them own something. Let them watch it grow. Let them learn that capitalism is not merely something billionaires do behind glass towers. Give them a seat, however small, at the table. Because if capitalism refuses to create more capitalists, socialism will gladly create more socialists.

And that is the real warning buried inside these $1,000 accounts. America cannot keep preaching ownership to people who own nothing. Sooner or later, the audience stops listening.

 

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 Book Series.

 

Sunday, July 5, 2026

Every Time America Looks Finished, It Comes Back Stronger

 


Don't mistake America's chaos for collapse. History shows its ugliest crises often produce its most strongest and world-changing comeback. In other words, America's secret weapon isn't peace—it's crisis. Every national disaster has sharpened its edge. The next one could redefine global power forever.

I have learned never to write America's obituary too early. Too many people have tried. Too many have failed. Every generation produces prophets who swear that this time America has finally reached the end of the road. Then the country gets punched in the mouth, staggers backward, spits out blood, clenches its fists, and somehow comes back stronger. That pattern is no accident. It is America's oldest habit.

People mistake America's constant arguments for weakness. I see something different. I see a nation that refuses to stay comfortable. Comfort is where civilizations go to die. Restlessness is where they learn to survive. As the old proverb says, smooth seas never made skilled sailors. America has spent most of its life sailing through hurricanes.

Take Pearl Harbor. On December 7, 1941, Japan launched a surprise attack that killed more than 2,400 Americans and crippled much of the U.S. Pacific Fleet. It was a national humiliation. The enemy believed America lacked the stomach for a long war. They guessed wrong. Instead of collapsing, the United States transformed itself into the largest industrial war machine the world had ever seen. American factories stopped making family cars and started producing tanks, bombers, ships, ammunition, and weapons at astonishing speed. By 1945, the United States had helped crush Nazi Germany, defeated Imperial Japan, and emerged as the world's dominant military and economic power. Pearl Harbor was not America's funeral. It became America's furnace.

Then came Sputnik in 1957. The Soviet Union launched the first artificial satellite into space. Washington panicked. Newspapers screamed that America had fallen behind. Parents feared Soviet scientists were smarter. Politicians blamed schools. Critics declared that American decline had begun. Yet fear became fuel. Congress passed the National Defense Education Act in 1958, pouring money into science, mathematics, engineering, and foreign-language education. The federal government created the Advanced Research Projects Agency, now known as DARPA. NASA was born. Less than 12 years later, astronauts planted the American flag on the Moon during the Apollo 11 mission in 1969. Neil Armstrong's famous step was built on the embarrassment of Sputnik. Sometimes humiliation is simply success wearing work clothes.

Then America walked into another storm called Watergate. The scandal exposed lies, abuse of power, political espionage, and corruption reaching the Oval Office. President Richard Nixon resigned in 1974 rather than face almost certain impeachment and removal. Cynics declared that American democracy had exposed itself as rotten. They were partly right. Corruption had indeed climbed into the highest office in the land. But the story did not end there. Congressional investigations expanded oversight. Campaign-finance rules were strengthened. Independent journalism proved it could hold even the most powerful politician accountable. The Washington Post reporters Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein reminded every future president that the White House is powerful, but not untouchable. The scandal bruised American democracy, but it also proved that the Constitution could survive a dishonest president. That is not weakness. That is institutional muscle.

Then the sky itself became a battlefield. On September 11, 2001, terrorists hijacked 4 airplanes, murdered nearly 3,000 people, and turned the World Trade Center into mountains of smoke, steel, and human tragedy. The Pentagon burned. Flight 93 crashed into a Pennsylvania field after passengers fought back. Fear spread faster than fire. Yet once again America refused to stay on its knees. Intelligence agencies were reorganized. The Department of Homeland Security was created. Airport security changed forever. Military operations dismantled much of al-Qaeda's leadership, including Osama bin Laden, who was killed in 2011. Critics still argue about the wars that followed, and rightly so. Those wars cost trillions of dollars and thousands of American lives. But one fact remains stubborn. The terrorists wanted to break America's spirit. They failed.

Then came an enemy that carried no passport, waved no flag, and fired no bullets. COVID-19 exposed every crack in American society. Hospitals overflowed. Businesses collapsed. Schools closed. Political divisions became uglier than ever. More than 1.2 million Americans eventually died from COVID-19, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. That number is heartbreaking. It cannot be polished into something pretty.

Yet even inside that tragedy, America's instinct to reinvent itself surfaced again. Scientists developed highly effective vaccines in record time using decades of research on mRNA technology. Operation Warp Speed accelerated vaccine development without eliminating safety reviews. Businesses embraced remote work almost overnight. Telemedicine exploded. Artificial intelligence gained momentum as companies searched for faster, cheaper ways to solve labor shortages and process enormous amounts of information. The pandemic battered America, but it also accelerated technological and workplace changes that might otherwise have taken another decade.

That is why I laugh whenever someone tells me America is finished simply because politics has become ugly. Ugly politics is nothing new. America has always fought with itself. The arguments are loud because the stakes are high. The republic has never been a country where everyone politely agrees before dinner. It is a noisy construction site where everyone argues about the blueprint while the building somehow keeps rising.

Today's critics point to political polarization, trillion-dollar deficits, immigration battles, violent rhetoric, distrust of institutions, and cultural warfare. They are not hallucinating. These problems are real. Congress often behaves like two rival gangs sharing the same building. Social media rewards outrage instead of wisdom. Gerrymandering encourages extremism. Public trust has fallen sharply compared with previous generations. None of that should be sugar-coated.

But history keeps whispering the same uncomfortable lesson into my ear. America rarely changes because everything is going well. It changes because the old system finally stops working. Crisis becomes the demolition crew. Reinvention becomes the architect. The country has a habit of waiting until the engine catches fire before opening the hood. It is reckless. It is inefficient. It is expensive. Yet it is strangely effective.

Now another transformation is underway. Artificial intelligence may become the next Sputnik moment. American technology companies are investing hundreds of billions of dollars in AI infrastructure, advanced semiconductor manufacturing, and massive data centers. Whoever dominates AI will shape economics, military strategy, medicine, finance, education, and national security for decades. This race is no science-fiction movie. It is a geopolitical street fight wearing business suits.

America has advantages that many competitors envy. It attracts entrepreneurs from every corner of the world. Its universities continue producing world-class research. Its venture-capital markets remain unmatched in their willingness to finance risky ideas. Silicon Valley, Boston, Austin, Seattle, and other innovation hubs continue pulling in ambitious people who would rather build tomorrow than complain about yesterday.

Does that guarantee victory? Absolutely not. Power can breed arrogance. Wealth can create oligarchs. Technology can strengthen liberty or surveillance. Artificial intelligence could become a tool for extraordinary innovation or extraordinary control. History offers no blank checks.

Still, I refuse to confuse noise with collapse. America has survived surprise attacks, ideological rivalries, presidential scandals, terrorist atrocities, pandemics, financial crashes, and social upheavals that would have broken many nations. Every scar became another lesson. Every setback became another workshop for rebuilding.

That is America's greatest contradiction. The country looks most dangerous when it appears most divided. It fights with itself, doubts itself, insults itself, and sometimes embarrasses itself before the whole world. Then, almost without warning, it reinvents itself again. Like a boxer everyone counted out, it rises before the referee reaches 10. That is not luck. That is a national reflex forged by 250 years of crisis, argument, adaptation, and stubborn refusal to stay down. America does not grow despite its storms. More often than not, it grows because of them.


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


 

Friday, July 3, 2026

From Iron Fist to Open Hand: Peter Obi’s Security Gamble

 


Negotiating with child-kidnapping butchers hands criminals exactly what they want. Peter Obi’s proposal signals weakness where strength is needed. Peter Obi need to understand that Nigerian government is not a counseling center hidden inside a forest. Its first duty is to protect the innocent, defeat the guilty, and preserve the authority of the state. Appeasement has repeatedly failed. History always  repeat the same warning: weakness rarely buys peace. More often, it purchases the next attack.

The former governor of Anambra State and presidential candidate of the Nigeria Democratic Congress in the 2027 election, Peter Obi, reportedly said that if elected President, he would negotiate with bandits who genuinely wanted to surrender and embrace peace. I disagree. Negotiating with terrorists is a dangerous game because it rewards killers and insults victims. Obi’s proposal may sound practical on the campaign trail, but it raises a question that refuses to die: since when did kidnappers, rapists, village burners, and schoolchild abductors become people the Nigerian state should sit across the table from and bargain with?

Watching this unfold feels like sitting through a bad Nollywood movie where the hero shakes hands with the devil while the village burns behind him. During his years in Anambra, Obi built a reputation for putting relentless pressure on kidnappers. There were no peace conferences in the forest. No public courtship. Criminals faced heat until they scattered. Fast-forward to the race for 2027, and suddenly negotiation enters the script. The timing is impossible to ignore. It reeks of political arithmetic aimed at northern votes. Poverty, unemployment, and failed leadership may breed frustration, but they do not force anyone to butcher farmers or kidnap schoolchildren. Millions of poor Nigerians endure hardship every day without becoming murderers. Hawkers dodge stray bullets. Farmers bury their loved ones. Parents sleep hungry. Yet they still wake up and choose honest work instead of bloodshed. Poverty explains suffering. It does not excuse slaughter. Dressing murder in the perfume of poverty only leaves the smell of death underneath.

Katsina offers a painful lesson. The so-called amnesty deals became little more than a paid vacation for criminals. In 2025, the state government unveiled peace agreements with bandits, promising forgiveness in exchange for repentance. By January 2026, violence exploded across Dandume, Faskari, Funtua, Jibia, and Kankara. Villages were attacked. Families were shattered. Women disappeared. Bodies piled up. More than 1,500 civilians were reportedly killed in Katsina between 2021 and 2025, yet authorities still considered releasing 70 bandits facing trial. Public outrage erupted. Afenifere, the Arewa Consultative Forum, and Ohanaeze all condemned the proposal, arguing that it rewarded violence instead of justice. Some bandits even arrived at negotiation meetings carrying rifles, fired celebratory shots into the air, and later returned to rustling cattle and collecting ransom. That was not peace. It was mockery wearing a government name tag.

That is not negotiation. That is surrender dressed in a borrowed suit.

Picture the scene. Deep inside the forest, a bandit commander leans against a tree, an AK-47 hanging from his shoulder, laughing into a satellite phone.

"Oga, government don dey beg again. Collect the money. Release two hostages. Then move to the next village."

That picture becomes harder to dismiss when the numbers enter the room. Nextier’s Nigeria Violent Conflicts Database reported that violent incidents rose by 51.5% in May 2026 to 156 cases, while deaths climbed to 842, representing a 90.1% increase from the previous year. Kidnappings reached nearly 279 incidents during that month alone. Between 2021 and early 2026, more than 32,667 Nigerians reportedly lost their lives to violent attacks across the country, averaging about 15 deaths every day. In 2024 alone, 2,452 people were abducted, a 31% increase over 2023. Northwest states such as Zamfara, Kaduna, and Katsina continued recording thousands of kidnappings while families paid billions of naira in ransom. Fear became an industry. Banditry became a business model.

Obi correctly identifies decades of failed leadership, collapsing values, and neglected education as ingredients in Nigeria’s security crisis. Fair enough. But none of those failures loads a rifle, squeezes a trigger, or sets a village on fire. Social collapse may explain the decay. It does not erase personal responsibility. As governor of Anambra, Obi did not plead with kidnappers. He made the state unbearably hot for them. Security agencies squeezed their operations until they retreated. That projected strength. This new language projects accommodation.

Supporters often point to the 2009 Niger Delta amnesty as proof that negotiations can succeed. The comparison falls apart under scrutiny. Niger Delta militants fought over resource control, political representation, environmental destruction, and revenue from oil extracted from their communities. Whether one agreed with their methods or not, their grievances had identifiable political roots. The amnesty disarmed thousands of fighters, reduced attacks on oil infrastructure, restored production from below 1 million barrels per day, and provided training, financial assistance, and reintegration programs. Even then, the program developed cracks over time as oil theft persisted and fresh violence resurfaced.

Northern bandits present a different reality. They are criminal enterprises built around ransom, extortion, murder, and intimidation. Their business plan is simple: burn villages, kidnap children, demand payment, repeat. They have no political manifesto. No constitutional demands. No coherent reform agenda. Their only negotiation point is permission to keep what violence has already stolen. Equating them with Niger Delta militants stretches comparison beyond recognition.

Terrorism combines armed robbery with attacks against the state itself. Those crimes carry severe penalties because they strike at both citizens and national security. Why should men accused of such atrocities receive rehabilitation packages, stipends, and forgiveness while victims remain trapped in IDP camps, abandoned farms, and shattered communities? Reports have repeatedly surfaced alleging that some so-called repentant terrorists later returned to armed groups or supplied intelligence to former associates. During the Buhari administration, similar allegations emerged involving former fighters. History keeps repeating the same warning: weakness rarely buys peace. More often, it purchases the next attack.

Walk into the shoes of a mother whose daughter disappeared during a school abduction. She is not demanding dialogue. She wants her daughter home. She wants justice. Visit the farmer standing in the ashes of his village. He is not dreaming about reconciliation seminars. He wants security. He wants the killers brought to account. Any peace arrangement that sidelines victims while elevating terrorists reverses the moral order. It hands the microphone to those who created the tragedy.

Obi’s distinction between negotiating with supposedly genuine repentant bandits while crushing hardened criminals may sound sensible inside a campaign speech. On the battlefield, those lines quickly dissolve. Once negotiations become official policy, every kidnapper suddenly discovers repentance—at least until the next ransom payment arrives.

Nigeria does not need softer speeches. It needs sharper teeth.

Build intelligence networks capable of locating camps before attacks begin. Deploy surveillance drones over forests instead of waiting for tragedy. Equip security forces with modern weapons that function when lives depend on them. Improve salaries, welfare, and training for troops risking everything on the front lines. Strengthen coordination among the military, police, intelligence agencies, and local vigilantes instead of allowing fragmented responses to flourish. Break terrorist capacity first. If broken, disarmed fighters later emerge genuinely seeking peace, discussions can follow. But negotiations should come from overwhelming strength—not government desperation. Anything less projects a state losing its grip on authority.

The irony could hardly be sharper. Leaders who failed to prevent poverty, unemployment, and educational collapse now propose negotiating with the monsters those failures helped create. Yet millions living under identical hardship never picked up rifles. Why elevate those who chose violence over honest struggle? Banditry is not a liberation movement. It is organized crime with excellent cash flow. SBM Intelligence has estimated that kidnappings across Nigeria's Northwest generate billions of naira through ransom payments every year. Strip away the slogans and one truth remains. This is commerce powered by fear.

Obi's own record in Anambra demonstrated that determined enforcement can push criminals backward. Replacing that posture with negotiation risks transforming the Presidency into a confession booth for mass killers. Victims deserve more than symbolic sympathy. They have already surrendered homes, livelihoods, relatives, and futures. Diverting scarce national resources toward rehabilitating attackers while survivors struggle to rebuild sends a message that violence pays better than innocence.

Call things by their proper names. Terrorists are killers. Mass murder needs no poetry. No proverb washes away the rape of a schoolgirl. No political slogan resurrects murdered farmers. Government is not a counseling center hidden inside a forest. Its first duty is to protect the innocent, defeat the guilty, and preserve the authority of the state. Appeasement has repeatedly failed. Katsina's broken agreements stand as a warning written in blood. Bandits do not honor deals. They exploit them to rest, regroup, recruit, and rearm.

If Nigeria truly wants lasting peace, it should pursue victory instead of photo opportunities. Dismantle the networks. Strengthen intelligence. Properly arm those defending the country. Reward courage instead of savagery. Anything less risks selling Nigeria's future for campaign calculations.

Peter Obi's own history should remind him of that lesson. The authority of the state begins to crumble the moment it kneels before those who wage war against it. Stand firm. Fight relentlessly. Crush those determined to destroy innocent lives. Otherwise, the republic will continue bleeding frame by frame while history keeps rolling the cameras.

The victims are watching. History is watching. There must be no more holidays for butchers.

 

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

 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Supreme Court Shoves Trump's Birthright Ban into the Trash: Finally, Some Backbone Worth Cheering

 


One executive order almost turned thousands of newborns into legal question marks. The Supreme Court stopped it, proving that even presidents can hit a constitutional brick wall.

I watched the latest Supreme Court ruling like a man watching a referee make the final call in a championship fight. The punch had already landed. The crowd was screaming. Half the arena wanted a knockout. The other half wanted the bell. Then the referee stepped in. The Constitution won.

I believe the Supreme Court made the right decision when it rejected President Donald Trump's attempt to end automatic birthright citizenship through executive order. The Court did not invent a new rule. It simply refused to tear up an old promise that has been part of America for more than 150 years.

Some promises are not meant to bend every time political winds change direction. The 14th Amendment is one of them.

The amendment was born out of blood. More than 620,000 Americans died during the Civil War. When the smoke cleared, Congress wanted to make sure the shameful decision in the 1857 Dred Scott case would never return from the grave. That notorious ruling declared that Black Americans could never be citizens. The 14th Amendment slammed that ugly door shut in 1868 by declaring that people born in the United States and subject to its jurisdiction are citizens.

That sentence is not decoration. It is the foundation of modern American citizenship.

Chief Justice John Roberts understood that. He reminded the country that citizenship is "the right to have rights." That simple statement carries enormous weight. Rights mean little if politicians can decide, with the stroke of a pen, who deserves them today and who loses them tomorrow.

President Trump argued that children born to undocumented immigrants should not automatically become citizens. His lawyers leaned heavily on the word "jurisdiction" and argued that people who owe allegiance elsewhere should not qualify. I understand why immigration frustrates millions of Americans. Border security matters. Immigration laws matter. National sovereignty matters. But solving one problem by weakening the Constitution is like fixing a leaking roof with a bulldozer.

Justice Elena Kagan exposed one of the biggest weaknesses in the administration's argument. The Constitution does not mention "domicile." It does not use the technical language the administration wanted the Court to read into it. Roberts himself reportedly described that argument as "quirky." Courts interpret what the Constitution says, not what politicians wish it had said.

Some people argue that birthright citizenship encourages illegal immigration. Others argue that it attracts so-called birth tourism. Those concerns deserve serious debate. Congress can strengthen border enforcement. Lawmakers can modernize immigration laws. Visa enforcement can improve. Deportation systems can become more efficient. None of those goals requires rewriting the meaning of the 14th Amendment through executive action.

The danger goes far beyond immigration.

Imagine every hospital becoming a citizenship checkpoint. Imagine every newborn leaving the delivery room with lawyers instead of birth certificates. Experts estimated that Trump's proposal could have affected roughly 255,000 babies every year. Millions of parents would suddenly face complicated legal reviews before knowing whether their own children belonged to the only country they had ever known. Bureaucracy would replace certainty. Suspicion would replace simplicity.

That is not strength. That is confusion dressed up as reform.

America has never been perfect. Not even close. But one thing has remained remarkably clear. If a child is born here, that child begins life with the same constitutional starting line as everyone else, except for the narrow exceptions long recognized by law, such as children of foreign diplomats.

That clarity matters.

According to the Pew Research Center, at least 32 countries recognize some form of birthright citizenship, including Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Pakistan and Venezuela. The United States is hardly standing alone. It is following a principle that many nations have embraced because certainty is often better than endless legal guesswork.

Critics say the Court rewarded illegal immigration. I disagree. The Court protected constitutional stability. Those are not the same thing.

The Constitution was designed precisely for moments like this. It exists to prevent temporary political passions from rewriting permanent national principles. If every administration could reinterpret constitutional rights whenever it gained power, America would become a country where elections rewrite citizenship itself.

That road is dangerous.

I also find it remarkable that this was not a simple liberal-versus-conservative split. Chief Justice Roberts joined Justices Amy Coney Barrett, Brett Kavanaugh, Sonia Sotomayor, Elena Kagan and Ketanji Brown Jackson. That coalition suggests the case was larger than partisan politics. It became a question of constitutional limits.

President Trump has every right to ask Congress to change immigration laws. Congress has every right to debate those proposals. Americans have every right to support or oppose them. That is democracy doing its job.

But there is a line between changing policy and changing the Constitution by executive order.

The Court drew that line.

America argues loudly. Sometimes it argues too loudly. Yet the country survives because some institutions still remember that power has limits. Presidents are powerful, but they are not kings. Congress is influential, but it cannot erase constitutional history with clever slogans. Even judges must answer to the words written into the nation's highest law.

I believe this decision deserves praise because it defended that principle. Today's winner was not Republicans or Democrats. It was constitutional restraint.

People will continue fighting over immigration for years. Elections will come and go. Presidents will rise and fall. Campaign promises will be made and broken. Cable television will find a new outrage tomorrow morning.

The Constitution, however, should not become a political football kicked across every election cycle. Sometimes the strongest thing a court can do is refuse to move. This was one of those moments.

 

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, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

 

Monday, June 29, 2026

Student Loan Ambush: July 1 Is Here, and Millions Are About to Learn That the Fine Print Always Wins

 

America just rewrote the student loan rulebook. Miss one deadline, and your financial future could become a 30-year sentence with no easy escape. In plain terms, the government changed the rules while millions were still catching their breath. Sleep on these deadlines, and your wallet could pay the price for 30 years.

I have learned one painful lesson about student loans: the government rarely knocks on your door with good news. When Washington says it is "simplifying" something, I reach for my calculator instead of my champagne. That instinct is about to pay off because the biggest overhaul of the federal student loan system in decades begins on July 1, and millions of borrowers are walking into it half-awake.

More than 43 million Americans owe about $1.6 trillion in federal student loans. That is not just a statistic. It is a mountain of debt hanging over teachers, nurses, engineers, accountants, social workers, and millions of ordinary people who were told that college was the surest ticket to the middle class. Now many of them are discovering that the ticket came with small print, hidden fees, and changing rules.

The changes stem largely from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act, signed into law in 2025. Its supporters argue that it streamlines a student loan system that had become too complicated. Critics argue that it reduces flexibility, makes repayment tougher for many borrowers, and shifts more financial risk back onto students and families. Both sides agree on one thing: the rules are changing, whether borrowers like them or not.

The first casualty is the Saving on a Valuable Education (SAVE) plan. More than 7 million borrowers enrolled in SAVE believing it would provide affordable payments and eventual loan forgiveness. Then the courts stepped in, legal challenges followed, and the program collapsed. Borrowers now have 90 days after notification to select another repayment plan. Miss that window, and the government will choose one for them. In debt, silence is not golden. Silence is expensive.

That should worry anyone who thinks procrastination is harmless. Student loans are like unpaid rent. Ignore them long enough, and they begin making decisions for you.

Repayment choices are also shrinking. The familiar Income-Contingent Repayment (ICR) and Pay As You Earn (PAYE) plans are being phased out over the next few years. For many new borrowers, the menu becomes painfully simple: the Standard Repayment Plan or the new Repayment Assistance Plan (RAP). Simplicity sounds wonderful until you realize that fewer choices can also mean fewer escape routes. RAP bases payments on 1% to 10% of adjusted gross income and offers forgiveness only after 30 years. Thirty years. That is long enough for someone to borrow money as a young graduate and still be paying it while sending their own children to college.

Supporters insist RAP creates a clearer system. They are probably right. But a prison can also have a simple floor plan.

Parents are not escaping the storm either. Families using Parent PLUS loans face some of the toughest deadlines. Those seeking Public Service Loan Forgiveness (PSLF) must consolidate qualifying Parent PLUS loans into a Direct Consolidation Loan and enroll in an eligible repayment arrangement before the required deadline or lose access to important repayment benefits. Existing borrowers may receive temporary transition protections, but new borrowers face a much stricter world.

Borrowing itself is becoming harder. Beginning July 1, new Parent PLUS loans are capped at $20,000 per student each year and $65,000 over a parent's lifetime for each child. Graduate students generally face annual borrowing limits of $20,500 with lifetime limits of $100,000, while many professional programs receive higher caps of $50,000 annually and $200,000 over a lifetime. These limits are designed to reduce excessive borrowing, but they also force students to confront an uncomfortable question that too many avoided in the past: Is this degree worth the debt?

That question should have been asked years ago.

For decades, America sold a simple story. Go to college. Borrow whatever you need. Graduate. Land a great job. Pay everything back without breaking a sweat.

Reality laughed.

Tuition rose much faster than inflation. Housing costs exploded. Wages often failed to keep pace. Many graduates found themselves carrying debt into their 30s, 40s, and even retirement. According to federal data, student debt has climbed to nearly $1.7 trillion, while repayment struggles have persisted for years.

The pandemic temporarily hit the pause button on payments. For many borrowers, that pause felt like finally coming up for air after years underwater. But pauses eventually end. Payments resumed. Collections restarted for many delinquent borrowers. Now another round of rule changes is arriving before millions have fully adjusted to the last one.

Even safety nets are shrinking. Beginning with certain loans issued after July 1, 2027, unemployment deferments and economic hardship deferments become far more limited, while forbearance receives tighter restrictions. In plain English, future borrowers will have fewer places to hide when life goes sideways. Losing a job will not automatically buy as much breathing room as it once did.

Not everything is changing. Students will still complete the FAFSA to qualify for federal financial aid. Private education loans remain available, although they often carry different risks and protections. StudentAid.gov continues to serve as the primary source for checking loan balances, repayment options, and federal assistance. But keeping these familiar tools does not change the larger reality. The financial landscape has shifted beneath borrowers' feet.

I do not see this overhaul as simply another government paperwork exercise. I see it as a warning flare. Borrowing for college is no longer something I would treat casually. Every dollar borrowed today deserves the same scrutiny as a mortgage or a business loan. Higher education still opens doors, but debt can quietly lock others.

The old proverb says that when elephants fight, the grass suffers. In America's student loan system, politicians argue, courts intervene, agencies rewrite regulations, and borrowers keep paying the bill.

That is why July 1 matters.

The calendar does not care whether anyone read the policy manual. Deadlines do not wait for confusion to clear. Loan servicers will keep sending notices. Interest will keep accumulating where it applies. Monthly payments will keep arriving.

Debt never sleeps.

Neither should the people who owe it.

 

 

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, or in Barnes & Noble bookstore: Brief Book Series.

Sunday, June 28, 2026

America Doesn't Trust the News Anymore—Here's Why

 



The ratings merchants didn't kill journalism overnight. They murdered trust first. Walter Cronkite left, and the truth started competing with ratings, outrage, and algorithms.

There was a time when a television anchor walked into your living room every evening like the oldest man in the family. He did not scream. He did not wink at the camera. He did not chase clicks because clicks did not exist. He simply told you what happened. You trusted him because he spent decades earning that trust, one broadcast at a time. That man was Walter Cronkite. Today, I look at the news landscape and I cannot help saying it: they don't have them as Walter Cronkite anymore.

Cronkite was not perfect. No journalist is. But perfection was never the point. Credibility was. When he looked into the camera and signed off with, "And that's the way it is," millions of Americans believed that he had done everything humanly possible to separate fact from rumor and reporting from theater. He became known as "the most trusted man in America" because the public saw him as a referee, not a player. During the 1970s, public trust in television news reached levels around 72%, a figure that seems almost mythical today.

Fast-forward to today, and the newsroom often looks less like a courthouse and more like a boxing ring. Every network has its cheering section. Every headline seems designed to trigger outrage before understanding. Speed beats accuracy. Emotion beats evidence. Opinion often wears the costume of reporting. The race is no longer to get the story right. It is to get the story first, collect the clicks, dominate the trending list, and worry about corrections later. By then, the damage has already packed its bags and moved into millions of minds.

I sometimes wonder whether we even reward honesty anymore. Suppose a reporter spends 3 weeks verifying documents, interviewing witnesses, and checking every claim before publishing a story. Another reporter posts a half-baked rumor within 20 minutes. Guess who gets the viral traffic first? The Internet has turned journalism into a food fight where whoever grabs the biggest slice first wins, even if the meal turns out to be rotten.

The business model changed, and journalism changed with it. Cronkite worked in an era when the evening newscast competed mainly on credibility. Today's media competes on engagement. Outrage is engaging. Fear is engaging. Tribal loyalty is engaging. Calm analysis? That often dies quietly in the algorithm.

The numbers tell an ugly story. Gallup's long-running surveys show that Americans' trust in mass media has steadily fallen for decades. Recent measurements put overall trust around 31% to 32%, depending on the survey, a dramatic collapse from the trust levels enjoyed during Cronkite's era. (

That collapse did not happen because Americans suddenly became allergic to facts. It happened because too many people began believing that facts were being filtered through political, corporate, or ideological lenses before reaching the public. Whether every suspicion is justified is almost beside the point. Trust, once broken, behaves like a cracked mirror. You can glue it together, but everyone still notices the lines.

History offers painful reminders of why credibility matters. During the Watergate scandal, investigative reporting helped expose abuses of power that eventually forced President Richard Nixon to resign. The reporting was relentless because journalists understood that evidence mattered more than applause. Cronkite's broadcasts did not resemble courtroom dramas. They resembled court records. Facts first. Conclusions later. That discipline helped strengthen public confidence rather than exhaust it.

Even the Vietnam War demonstrated the weight that trusted journalism could carry. After traveling to Vietnam in 1968, Cronkite concluded that the conflict appeared headed toward stalemate rather than victory. His commentary mattered precisely because he had built decades of credibility before expressing that judgment. His reputation gave his words extraordinary influence, not because he shouted louder than everyone else, but because people believed he had earned the right to be heard.

Today, the opposite often happens. Every microphone comes preloaded with suspicion. Before a report even airs, half the audience assumes it is propaganda while the other half assumes it confirms everything they already believe. That is not journalism serving democracy. That is journalism trapped inside tribal warfare.

I find it ironic that technology promised unlimited access to information, yet many people have never been more confused about what is true. We have thousands of news sources, millions of social media accounts, endless podcasts, livestreams, influencers, anonymous leaks, edited clips, artificial intelligence, and algorithms deciding what deserves attention. We are drowning in information while dying of certainty.

Some argue that journalists merely reflect society's divisions. I disagree. They also amplify them. If every disagreement becomes a national emergency, every rumor becomes breaking news, and every political opponent becomes a villain, then eventually the audience forgets how to distinguish smoke from fire. Cry wolf every day, and the real wolf eventually walks through the front door unnoticed.

I do not blame only journalists. Consumers deserve part of the bill. Too many people no longer search for truth. They shop for confirmation. They do not ask, "Is this accurate?" They ask, "Does this agree with me?" News organizations noticed. They gave customers exactly what many wanted. In business, demand creates supply. In journalism, that can become poison.

The saddest part is that excellent journalists still exist. They spend months investigating corruption, exposing fraud, documenting wars, and risking their lives in dangerous places. They deserve respect. But they now operate inside an ecosystem where one viral conspiracy can outrun a year of careful reporting before breakfast. Their voices compete not merely with other reporters but with influencers, anonymous accounts, edited videos, fabricated images, and artificial intelligence capable of producing convincing falsehoods within seconds.

When I hear someone say that journalism has always been messy, I nod. Of course it has. Newspapers made mistakes long before television existed. Reporters have always carried biases because reporters are human beings. But there is a difference between occasional failure and institutional surrender. There is a difference between making an honest mistake and building an entire business model around perpetual outrage.

Maybe I sound old-fashioned. Fine. Some things deserve to become old-fashioned only after they are replaced with something better. Integrity has not been replaced with something better. Neither has patience. Neither has verification. Neither has trust.

When Walter Cronkite ended his broadcasts, people felt informed. Today, many people finish watching the news feeling angry, suspicious, exhausted, or manipulated. That may be good for ratings. It is terrible for democracy.

So when I say they don't have them as Walter Cronkite anymore, I am not talking about nostalgia. I am talking about standards. Cronkite represented a profession that understood a simple truth: credibility is earned in drops and lost in buckets. Once the public believes the referee has picked a team, the game changes forever. That is exactly where we are now. And unless journalism rediscovers that old-fashioned addiction to accuracy over applause, future generations may remember Walter Cronkite not merely as the most trusted man in America, but as the last one.

 

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 Book Series.

 

Friday, June 26, 2026

Study Longer, Fail Smarter: The NCLEX Doesn't Fail Students—Bad Study Habits Do

 


Every wasted study hour quietly pushes failure closer. Learn the science of studying before the NCLEX teaches you the lesson the hard way.

I have watched this academic circus for years, and the script never changes. Nursing students proudly announce that they studied for 12 hours, slept for 3, drank enough coffee to keep a power plant running, and still failed the exam. Then they blame the professor, the textbook, the examination, or the moon. Almost nobody blames the real culprit: a terrible study strategy. Nursing school has quietly sold generations of students one of the biggest lies in higher education—that the longer they study, the more they learn. That lie deserves to be thrown into the nearest medical waste container because it has wasted countless hours, destroyed confidence, and convinced hardworking students that exhaustion is the same thing as education. It is not. If sitting in front of a textbook automatically produced competent nurses, every librarian would be performing open-heart surgery. Time is a clock. Learning is a brain. The two are not married.

I refuse to glorify marathon study sessions because evidence refuses to glorify them. More than 130 years ago, German psychologist Hermann Ebbinghaus demonstrated that people rapidly forget newly learned information unless they review it repeatedly over time. His Forgetting Curve has survived generations of scientific scrutiny because the human brain has not suddenly changed its mind. Modern research in cognitive psychology continues reaching the same conclusion. Reading the same chapter repeatedly creates familiarity, but familiarity is not memory. A student may recognize every sentence on the page and still fail to explain the concept during an examination. That is like recognizing every face in a police lineup without identifying the criminal. Recognition impresses nobody. Recall wins examinations.

The biggest victims of this academic fairy tale are hardworking nursing students who honestly believe they are doing everything right. They buy every NCLEX review book they can afford. They highlight nearly every sentence until the textbook resembles a rainbow after a chemical explosion. They rewrite lecture notes, copy PowerPoint slides, watch endless study videos, and spend entire weekends parked behind a desk. Then examination day arrives, and the brain suddenly behaves like a witness who has conveniently forgotten everything. The problem is not laziness. The problem is strategy. A monkey can spend the whole day climbing the wrong tree, but sunset will never reward it with bananas. Hard work pointing in the wrong direction is still the wrong direction.

Many nursing students also worship the dangerous religion of all-night studying. They proudly announce that they survived on coffee, energy drinks, and panic before a major examination, expecting admiration for their sacrifice. That logic collapses under the slightest pressure. Nobody would willingly board an airplane after hearing the pilot announce that he had not slept for 24 hours because he was busy reviewing aviation manuals all night. Nobody would celebrate an exhausted pharmacist calculating medication dosages after staying awake until dawn. Yet countless nursing students deliberately deprive their brains of sleep immediately before asking those same brains to perform complex clinical reasoning. Biology does not negotiate with wishful thinking. Researchers have repeatedly shown that sleep plays a major role in memory consolidation, allowing newly learned information to move into longer-term storage. Sleeping less to study more is like deleting a patient's medical chart before morning rounds and then wondering why nobody knows the treatment plan.

Another mistake quietly ambushes nursing students every semester. Too many memorize facts without understanding the story behind those facts. They memorize symptoms of heart failure, diabetic ketoacidosis, liver cirrhosis, chronic kidney disease, and pneumonia the way children memorize song lyrics. That strategy may survive a pop quiz, but it often collapses when examination questions demand clinical judgment. A student who understands why heart failure produces pulmonary edema will usually recognize related complications, assessment findings, and treatment priorities without memorizing endless disconnected lists. Understanding builds bridges. Memorization builds piles. Bridges carry traffic. Piles simply occupy space.

That reality explains why nursing education has steadily moved toward clinical simulations, unfolding patient cases, and scenario-based learning. Hospitals are not looking for graduates who can recite textbook paragraphs while standing beside a deteriorating patient. They need graduates who can recognize patterns, connect symptoms, identify priorities, and make safe decisions under pressure. Real patients never arrive carrying chapter numbers. They arrive carrying uncertainty. Nursing is not a spelling contest. It is structured problem-solving performed against the clock. Every symptom becomes evidence. Every laboratory value becomes a clue. Every intervention becomes a calculated decision. Students who study disconnected facts often discover too late that the examination is asking them to solve a puzzle instead of recite a dictionary.

The same lesson appears repeatedly in educational research. Active recall consistently outperforms passive rereading because the brain strengthens information it must retrieve instead of information it merely recognizes. Practice testing produces stronger long-term retention than repeatedly reading notes because every question forces the brain to work instead of simply watching words pass across a page. Spaced repetition succeeds because it reviews information just before memory begins fading instead of waiting until everything has already been forgotten. None of these strategies is fashionable because they demand effort. Thinking has always been harder than highlighting. Unfortunately for lazy study habits, examinations reward thinking instead of decoration.

Technology has only made this difference more obvious. Nursing students now have access to sophisticated flashcard systems, adaptive learning platforms, artificial intelligence, video libraries, question banks, and digital simulations that previous generations could only dream about. Yet technology cannot rescue poor habits. Buying another NCLEX review course while refusing to change ineffective study methods resembles buying expensive running shoes while refusing to leave the couch. The equipment is not the problem. The operator is. A sharper scalpel never made an untrained surgeon competent, and another study app will never rescue a student who mistakes activity for learning.

History offers another uncomfortable lesson. Florence Nightingale transformed modern nursing by questioning accepted practices and following evidence wherever it led. During the Crimean War, her use of statistical analysis and sanitary reforms dramatically reduced mortality among wounded soldiers. She challenged tradition because evidence demanded it. Nursing students should treat their own study habits with the same skepticism. If decades of educational research consistently show that active recall, spaced repetition, adequate sleep, and concept-based learning outperform marathon rereading sessions, then refusing to change is not discipline. It is academic stubbornness dressed in scrubs.

I continue hearing students ask the wrong question. They ask, "How many hours should I study?" That question sounds reasonable, but it misses the target completely. The better question is, "What should my brain be doing during those hours?" Two focused hours spent retrieving information, solving clinical problems, answering practice questions, and connecting concepts will often accomplish more than 10 distracted hours spent rereading highlighted pages. A stopwatch cannot measure understanding. It merely measures attendance.

The uncomfortable truth is that nursing school does not reward the student who suffers the most. It rewards the student who learns the most efficiently. Patients will never ask a nurse how many sleepless nights were spent studying pharmacology. They will never ask how many highlighters were emptied before graduation. They will never ask how many cups of coffee fueled examination week. They will care about one thing only: whether the nurse standing beside the hospital bed recognizes danger before danger recognizes the patient. That is why the smartest nursing students are rarely the ones chained to a desk the longest. They are the ones who make every study session count, who stop confusing exhaustion with education, who abandon outdated habits when evidence proves them wrong, and who understand a simple truth that too many students discover after failing an examination: studying harder may impress classmates, but studying smarter is what earns the license.

 

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 Book Series.

 

Trump Accounts: A Dirty Little Scheme That May Save Capitalism From Its Own Children

  Trump’s $1,000 baby accounts look like political vanity, but they expose a terrifying truth: capitalism cannot survive if millions of youn...