I hope that most Americans — conservative, liberal, MAGA, independent — believe the Constitution is supposed to be the one thing every elected official must obey. It’s the rulebook. It’s the guardrail. It’s the promise that no matter who’s in power, the government still belongs to the people. But here’s the truth I can’t sugarcoat: both parties play politics, but only one party has shown a consistent pattern of treating the Constitution itself as optional whenever it becomes inconvenient. This isn’t about left vs. right. This is about whether the United States still functions as a constitutional republic. To understand the danger, we have to look at how each branch has drifted — and how the Constitution’s original design left us vulnerable to exactly this kind of breakdown. The Constitution Was Not Designed for Political Parties. The framers imagined a system where each branch would defend its own power. Congress would guard its authority . The president would faithfully ...
A lot of people feel like we’re sliding into a form of “soft feudalism” where a small group at the top makes the big decisions, and everyone else mostly lives with the consequences. It doesn’t look like the Middle Ages on the surface—no castles or crowns—, but the underlying pattern is similar: concentrated power, limited real options for most people, and a system that quietly says, “Know your place.” In medieval feudalism, a tiny class of lords owned the land. If you were born a peasant, you worked that land, paid the lord, and hoped you survived. You were technically “protected,” but you weren’t really free. The law, the church, and custom all told you this was just the natural order. The whole setup made it very hard to move, to improve your situation, or to challenge the people on top. Your job was to keep the machine running for them. Now picture today’s version. A small number of people and corporations own or control the things you can’t live without: housing, healt...