Calling It What It Is

Calling It What It Is

James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

Every so often, a country drifts so far from its own description that the polite thing to do is stop repeating the label. America still calls itself a republic, but that word has become more of a sentimental keepsake than an operating description. We keep it around the way families keep an old photograph on the mantle — not because it reflects the present, but because it reminds us of what we once were.

A republic is supposed to be a system where the people are in charge and the government works for them. That’s the definition. But definitions don’t govern anything. Function does. And if you look at how power actually behaves in Washington, you’ll notice something uncomfortable: the people who are supposed to be in charge aren’t, and the people who are supposed to be working for them aren’t doing much of that either.

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Trust in Government

030226 Trust in Government
James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

The polls say trust in the federal government has fallen to 17 percent. That number is being repeated everywhere, and it makes for a dramatic headline. But natural law doesn’t measure truth by what people say. It measures truth by what people do. And when you look at behavior instead of survey answers, the story changes.

Polls are emotional. Actions are real. According to the article, trust in Washington has been sliding for decades, from a high of 77 percent in 1964 to today’s reported 17 percent. zerohedge.com That decline is real on paper. But natural law deals with revealed preferences. People reveal what they truly believe through their choices, not their complaints.

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The Strike on Iran

When the Bombs Fall, the Truth Gets Quiet

James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

There are moments in history when the world shifts under your boots, and you can feel it even before the dust settles. The U.S. and Israel’s strike on Iran was one of those moments. You didn’t need a briefing from Washington to know something big had snapped. You could feel it in the air, like the pressure drop before a tornado.

The official story was polished and patriotic, the kind of thing they roll out when they want folks calm and compliant. “Necessary action.” “Protecting American interests.” “Stopping a threat.” You’ve heard those lines before. They’re the same lines they used in every conflict from Vietnam to Iraq, and they always sound like they were written before the first shot was fired.

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Natural Law Begins With What We Don’t Know

 Foundations for a Fantasy‑Free View of Life
James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

Natural law begins by understanding and internalizing what we don’t know. We will never know these things, and that fact itself is part of the law we live under.

Why are we here? Plain and simple, we just don’t know. Explanations abound. Some are religious, some are scientific, some are poetic. Still, no one knows.

We don’t know the origin of life. Some say God. Some say that life began when dead chemicals miraculously combined in such a way that life generated itself. The theories are many. The facts are few. We just don’t know.

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Misunderstandings of Producers

Misunderstandings of Producers

James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

In a true free market, the consumer calls the shots. Vendors chase tastes, preferences, and real needs. Collectively, buyers decide what’s produced and sold. That’s how it ought to work.

But John Kenneth Galbraith laid it out plain back in his 1958 book The Affluent Society: Producers flipped the script with heavy advertising. They don’t just respond to demand—they manufacture it. Radio, TV, movies, and now the internet poured in, shaping what people think they want. Kids grow up soaking in media, picking up identities, deciding what’s “cool.” Public schools and society pile on, training folks to follow along rather than think independently. It’s easier to let others decide for you—path of least resistance.

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What Your Gut Already Knows About the Stock Market

What Your Gut Already Knows About the Stock Market

James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

I’ve spent a lot of time looking at the world through the lens of Natural Law. Usually, when I point out how things really work, people like to call me a “conspiracy theorist.” I prefer the term Conspiracy Observer. See, a “theory” is something you’re trying to prove. An “observation” is just looking at the cockroaches running across the floor when you flip on the light. If you see a law being passed or a market being moved, there’s a group of folks behind it looking out for their own interests. That’s not a theory; that’s just human nature.

To understand where we are today, we only need to ask three simple questions. First, the Will: If a small group of people could control the stock market to keep themselves rich and stay in power, would they? Second, the Means: Do the “1% elites” and the government actually have the power and the tools to do it? Finally, the Reality: If they have the will and they have the means, is it really “crazy” to assume they’re doing it right now?

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How the Federal Debt Is Costing You Money Right Now

How the Federal Debt Is Costing You Money Right NowJames Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

The U.S. government has exactly two ways to pay for what it spends: it can tax you today, or it can borrow and tax you tomorrow.

Politicians almost always choose the second option. Raising taxes is political suicide; borrowing feels free — until the bill comes due.

That bill is the federal debt. Every dollar borrowed today is a promise that someone will pay it back later. That “someone” is you, your kids, and your grandkids.

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Natural Law Doesn’t Lie: Epstein “Killed Himself” Is the Dumbest Story Ever Told

Book Cover Full Size.pngLook, if you understand even the basics of natural law, the official story collapses in about three seconds. Nature wired every creature on this planet with an instant read on risk and reward. A dog hears gunfire once and bolts for cover. Expose him to it as a puppy and the fear fades, but the wiring is still there. Humans? We’ve spent centuries training ourselves to ignore that wiring and believe whatever the guy in the suit tells us. But the wiring never fully dies.

That’s why the Epstein “suicide” narrative is dead on arrival for anyone who still has a pulse.

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Conversation With Elon Musk

I answer questions on Quora. The elites of the world ask questions, certainly AI based. Why? Perhaps they are testing AI based chatting software. Maybe they are holding a finger up in the air to tell which way the wind is blowing. Or, they could be figuring out ways to launch multitudes of AI based chats across cyberspace. Millions of AI posers espousing anointed opinions, as a new way to impose their will on society.

I have answered questions for Bill Gates and Vice President Vance. The following question was asked by Elon Musk. Continue reading