Like most Americans, I don’t wake up thinking about the Constitution. Most of us are thinking about groceries, rent, our kids, their jobs, just the day-to-day things that we have to do to survive. But there should be one thing that nearly everyone agrees on: if you swear an oath to the Constitution, you should keep it. No excuses. No party loopholes. No hiding behind talking points. An oath is supposed to mean something. When members of Congress stop honoring it, the consequences don’t stay in Washington. They land on all of us. Over the last several years, a large block of lawmakers has repeatedly failed to carry out the basic duties the Constitution assigns to Congress. This isn’t about party or ideology. It is about whether the people we elected are doing the job the founder gave them, as prescribed by the Constitution. The truth is simple: when Congress stops doing its job, America pays the price. Congress has a job, and it just isn’t doing it. The Constitution gives Co...
There’s a simple way to judge a country: look at whose lives it protects, and whose lives it’s willing to forget. For years now, we’ve heard the phrase “All Lives Matter.” It sounds fair. It sounds equal. It sounds like common sense. But a country doesn’t reveal its values through slogans. It reveals them through actions, through the lives it defends, the lives it ignores, and the lives it quietly pushes out of sight. And lately, America has been doing a whole lot of looking away. When Black Americans said they were being killed during traffic stops and routine encounters, the response from many leaders wasn’t concern; it was irritation. Instead of saying, “Let’s fix the problem so fewer people die,” we heard “Blue Lives Matter,” “Stop resisting,” and “BLM is a terrorist group.” A man died in a chokehold on camera. We all saw, from the beginning to the end. It was like a modern-day lynching. Millions marched peacefully. The answer from those in power was “law and order,” and “...