Politics and Righteous Ridicule

Politics and Righteous Ridicule
James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

Every democracy has its toolbox. Some tools are shiny—ballots, hearings, committees, commissions. Others are blunt—petitions, protests, and the occasional letter to the editor written in a heat that could fry an egg on a cold skillet. But when the machinery of self‑government gets jammed, when the public is denied information, when voting has been neutralized into a ceremonial exercise, there’s only one tool left that still cuts clean: righteous ridicule.

Not the cheap stuff. Not the schoolyard kind. Not the kind that’s meant to bruise a man’s ego just to hear the thud. I’m talking about the kind Jesus used when He delivered those famous woes—calling the powerful “blind guides,” “whitewashed tombs,” and “hypocrites” with the precision of a surgeon and the moral authority of a man who had nothing to hide. That wasn’t cruelty. That was clarity.

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When the Picture Doesn’t Look Right

When the Picture Doesn’t Look Right
James Quillian, Economist, Political Analyst, Natural Law

Every so often, a set of numbers comes along that tells a story louder than any headline. You don’t need a Ph.D. or a government grant to understand it. All you need is the same thing every rancher, schoolteacher, and café regular in this country was born with: a built‑in sense for when something just doesn’t look right.Here are the figures that have been making the rounds:

Jeffrey Epstein’s death — only 25% of Americans believe the official suicide story. Half the country calls it murder, and 70% think the government is hiding something.

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