There’s a strange feeling in American life right now — a sense that we’re all living in the same country but not quite the same reality. And that didn’t happen because ordinary people suddenly stopped caring about facts. Most Americans, whether they lean MAGA, moderate, or progressive, still want to know what’s real. The fracture came from the top — from people with enormous platforms who discovered that bending the truth is easier than earning trust. And if we’re being honest, the biggest break in our shared reality didn’t come from a celebrity hoax or a cable‑news exaggeration. It came from the coordinated effort by Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, John Eastman, Steve Bannon, Roger Stone, and media figures like Tucker Carlson, Sean Hannity, and Laura Ingraham — many of whom privately admitted they didn’t believe the claims they were pushing. We know this because of the Dominion Voting Systems lawsuit, where internal Fox News messages showed hosts calling the fraud...
When Belief Turns into a Costume There’s a strange thing happening in America, and you can feel it long before you try to explain it. It’s this gap — this canyon — between what people say they believe and what they’re actually willing to live by. And nowhere is that gap wider than with the two books Americans love to wave around: the Bible and the Constitution. You see it at rallies, in church parking lots, on cable news, on bumper stickers. People hold these books up like trophies. They swear by them. They defend them. They quote the parts they like. But when those same books ask something difficult — something that cuts against anger, or pride, or loyalty to a political tribe — suddenly the meaning gets fuzzy. Suddenly, the text becomes “complicated.” Suddenly, the rules don’t apply. It’s not that people don’t know what these books say. It’s that they don’t want to be bound by them. And that’s how belief turns into a costume. The Bible and the Constitution: Sacred Until...