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...
The Lying Mouth That Roared — And Why His Lies Hurt the People Who Trust Him Most . America has always been loud. That’s not a flaw; it’s a feature. Loudness is how ordinary Americans have always made themselves heard in a country where power tends to gather at the top. We cheer loudly, argue loudly, pray loudly, and fight loudly. Loudness built unions, won wars, and kept politicians honest. But there’s a difference between being loud because you’re telling the truth and being loud. After all, you’re covering something up. And that difference matters — especially when the person doing the roaring is a president. Donald Trump has always been loud. That’s not new. What’s new is how often the roar replaces the truth, and how often the people who end up paying the price for that roar are the very people who trust him most. This isn’t about whether someone likes Trump or hates him. It’s about whether the things he says help people or hurts them. And when you look closely, a patte...