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Sat, 04 Jul 2026 03:20:00 +0000 Would The Founders Still Recognize Their Republic?
Would The Founders Still Recognize Their Republic?
Would The Founders Still Recognize Their Republic?
Authored by Andrew P. Napolitano
Which is better — to be ruled by one tyrant 3,000 miles away or by 3,000 tyrants one mile away?
— Rev. Mather Byles (1706-1788)
Does it really matter if the instrument curtailing liberty is a monarch or a popularly elected legislature? This conundrum, along with the witty version of it put to a Boston crowd in 1775 by the little-known colonial-era preacher with the famous uncle — Cotton Mather — addresses the age-old question of whether liberty can long survive in a democracy.
Byles was a loyalist who, along with about one-third of the American adult white male population in 1776, opposed the American Revolution and favored continued governance by Great Britain.
He didn’t fight for the king or agitate against George Washington’s troops; he merely warned of the dangers of too much democracy.
Many of us who monitor federal excess are fearful of out-of-control democracy, which is what we have in America today, yet there remain in our federal structure a few safeguards against runaway federal tyranny, such as the equal state representation in the Senate, the Electoral College, the state control of federal elections, the remnants of state sovereignty, and life-tenured federal judges and justices.
via Fund for American Studies
Of course, the Senate as originally crafted did not consist of popularly elected senators. Rather, they were appointed by state legislatures to represent the sovereign states as states, not the people in them.
Part of James Madison’s genius was the construction of the federal government as a three-sided table . The first side represented the people — the House of Representatives. The second side represented the sovereign states that created the federal government by surrendering limited powers to it — the Senate. And the third side manifests the nation-state — the presidency, which is both head of state and head of the executive branch of the federal government. The judiciary, whose prominent role today was unthinkable in 1789, was not part of this mix.
In his famous Bank Speech, Madison argued eloquently against legislation chartering a national bank because the authority to create a bank was not in the Constitution and thus was retained by the states and reserved to them.
In that speech, he warned that expansion of the federal government would trample the powers of the states and also the unenumerated natural rights of the people that he would soon protect in the Ninth Amendment .
Madison gave the Bank Speech in February 1791, 11 months before the addition of the Bill of Rights — the first 10 amendments — to the Constitution. Given the popular fears of a new central government, Madison assumed that the Bill of Rights would be quickly ratified. He was right.
Had Madison been alive during the presidency of the anti-Madisonian Woodrow Wilson — who gave us World War I, the Federal Reserve, the administrative state of government by experts, the popular election of senators, the judicially sanctioned suppression of political speech, and the federal income tax — he would have recoiled at a president destroying the three-sided table. Wilson did that by leading the campaign to amend the Constitution so as to provide for the direct popular election of senators.
Part of Madison’s genius was to craft anti-democratic elements into the Constitution, as well . And some of them — like state sovereignty — created laboratories of liberty, since some states protect more personal liberties than the Bill of Rights does. President Ronald Reagan reminded the American public in his first inaugural address that the states formed the federal government, not the other way around . Had I been the scrivener of that speech, I’d have encouraged him to add: “And the powers that the states gave to the feds, they can take back!” Of course they can.
Reagan also famously said that we could vote with our feet. If you don’t like the over-the-top regulations in Massachusetts, you can move to New Hampshire. If you’re fed up with the highest state taxes in the union in New Jersey, you can move to Pennsylvania.
But the more state sovereignty the feds absorb — the more state governance is federalized — the fewer differences there are among the regulatory and taxing structures of the states. This has happened because Congress has become a general legislature without regard for the constitutional limits imposed on it.
If Congress wants to regulate an area of governance that is clearly beyond its constitutional competence, it bribes the states to do so with borrowed or Federal Reserve-created cash. Thus, it offered hundreds of millions of dollars to the states to lower their speed limits on highways and to lower the acceptable blood alcohol level in peoples’ veins — this would truly have set Madison off — before a presumption of DWI may be argued; all in return for cash to pave state-maintained highways.
The states are partly to blame for this. They take whatever cash Congress offers, and they accept the strings that come with it. And they, too, are tyrants. The states mandated the unconstitutional and crippling COVID lockdowns of 2020-2021, not the feds. The states should be paying the political and financial consequences for their misdeeds, not the feds. They took property and liberty without paying for it as the Constitution requires them to do. And, of course, some of the states maintained legal protections for slavery.
Byles feared a government of 3,000. Today, the feds employ close to 3 million . Thomas Jefferson warned that when the federal treasury becomes a federal trough, and the people recognize it as such, they will only send to Washington politicians — faithless to the Constitution — who promise to bring home the most cash.
In a democracy, a faithless majority will take whatever it wants from the minority — including its liberty and property. That’s where we are today on the 250th anniversary of the start of this Jeffersonian and Madisonian experiment — a country the Founders wouldn’t recognize as their creation.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 23:20 Close
Sat, 04 Jul 2026 02:40:00 +0000 First $1 Billion, Now $50 Million: Khanna Says Wealth Tax "Must Not Stop At Billionaires"
First $1 Billion, Now $50 Million: Khanna Says Wealth Tax "Must Not Stop At Billionaires"
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) - fresh off endorsing California's November ballot measure to seize 5% of billionaire wealth - published a Subs
Read more.....
First $1 Billion, Now $50 Million: Khanna Says Wealth Tax "Must Not Stop At Billionaires"
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA) - fresh off endorsing California's November ballot measure to seize 5% of billionaire wealth - published a Substack essay Wednesday titled, no really, "Why I Support a Billionaire Wealth Tax ."
He makes it roughly a dozen paragraphs before explaining that it isn't one.
"The tax should not stop at billionaires, it must reach centimillionaires, " Khanna writes, before spelling out exactly what that means: every fortune of $50 million and up, hit with a 2% federal levy on wealth above that line - every year, forever, on top of everything else you already pay. The vehicle is Elizabeth Warren's Ultra-Millionaire Tax Act, which Khanna notes he has cosponsored every single year it's been introduced.
And before anyone reaches for the estate planner: Khanna wants the levy to pierce irrevocable trusts , with the tax billed to the grantor who set them up - because parking a fortune in a trust, in his telling, shouldn't take it off the government's books.
Former Microsoft executive Steven Sinofsky summed up the reveal in eight words: "Just like that, no longer a billionaires tax. "
Pirate Wires' Mike Solana was less diplomatic, characterizing the scheme as an annual asset seizure in which the government tallies everything you own and demands a cut on top of your existing tax bill - now openly targeting anyone worth $50 million. His prediction for where the ratchet stops: "this ends with your 401k."
For those keeping score at home, the threshold discourse has traveled a long way in a short time:
The measure headed to California voters in November is a one-time 5% tax on the state's roughly 250 billionaires. Newsom, opposing it, countered on June 26 with a national "billionaires' tax" - which, in its original form, applied to anyone worth $100 million or more, language that was quietly scrubbed after multiple outlets quoted it as we reported . Six days later, Khanna planted the flag at $50 million.
None of this is exactly new, of course. The Warren bill has carried the $50 million line since she rolled it out in 2019, and Biden's 2022 "Billionaire Minimum Income Tax" kicked in at $100 million households. The branding always says billionaire , but the fine print ios a slippery slope.
Then there's inflation... The bill's $50 million threshold is a flat statutory number that hasn't moved since 2019 - meaning inflation has already quietly cut the real threshold by more than a fifth . The creep shows up in the sponsors' own math: when the bill debuted, backers said it touched the top 0.05% of American households; the 2026 reintroduction, per the same Saez-Zucman analysis the sponsors tout, now reaches 260,000 households - the top 0.15%. Same words, triple the coverage, five years. Asset inflation does the broadening automatically. Congress just has to sit still.
The escalator, meanwhile, is pre-drafted: buried in the bill is a provision doubling the top rate to 6% automatically in any year that qualifying trigger legislation is on the books .
And anyone curious where a "normalized" wealth tax eventually settles can consult the countries that already normalized one. Norway's kicks in around $160,000 of net worth. The Netherlands taxes deemed returns on assets above roughly €57,000. Swiss cantons start in the low six figures . The European wealth taxes that stayed rich-only - France, Sweden, Germany, Austria, Denmark - were repealed as revenue duds. The ones that survived did so by reaching the middle class. The slippery slope is quite literally the only way these things 'work.'
Khanna spends a portion of the essay taking intramural shots at Newsom, dismissing the governor's version as an income tax billionaires will never feel - since they take no salary, borrow against their stock, and pass fortunes to their kids without selling a share - while boasting that he and Bernie Sanders tax the wealth itself, to the tune of a claimed $4.4 trillion.
The replies were not kind. Christopher Rufo suggested Washington recover the estimated half-trillion dollars a year lost to fraud before inventing new revenue streams. The most-liked response, from James Hafner, noted that the essay's "philosophical case" never actually argues its one load-bearing premise - that one man's need constitutes a claim on another man's property. "There is arithmetic, and there is need," Hafner wrote of the piece's actual contents.
Khanna's comeback - asking Hafner what he thinks of property taxes - was promptly ratioed, sitting at 135 replies to 11 likes at press time.
Except - property taxes are local, visible, and appealable; they pay for the pothole crew, the 2 a.m. patrol car, and the school down the street - and when assessments outran paychecks, voters famously revolted and capped them. Khanna's essay actually frames the California fight as Proposition 13 in reverse, which is a remarkable self-own: he's marketing the sequel to a movie that ended in a taxpayer revolt , triggered by precisely the dynamic critics warn about - paper valuations rising faster than the cash available to pay the levy.
The federal version offers none of the offsetting virtues . The Ultra-Millionaire Tax deposits into the general fund; the child-care-and-community-college wish list lives in the press release, not the bill text. What the bill text does contain is enforcement - just not of the spending. It orders the IRS to audit at least 30% of everyone subject to the tax, every single year . It hands the agency expanded authority to assign values to private businesses, farmland, art, and anything else that's hard to price. It wires in FATCA-style third-party reporting . And should you decide you've had enough of the annual appraisal and leave, it imposes a 40% exit tax on net worth above $50 million on your way out the door. In other words: relentless annual oversight of the taxpayers , and none whatsoever of where the money goes. Even Khanna seems to grasp the trust problem - he launched a state-fraud probe in December , conceding taxpayers "need to have a receipt" for what their money funds - which rather makes Rufo's point: by his own estimate Washington loses half a trillion a year to fraud, and the remedy on offer is an audit of your art collection.
All of which lands a little awkwardly next to this week's Free Beacon report detailing how Khanna's own family fortune - courtesy of centimillionaire father-in-law and auto-parts magnate Monte Ahuja - is sheltered through the very sort of irrevocable trusts the congressman now wants taxed to the grantor. Per the Beacon, Khanna's minor children hold trust stakes in three private golf clubs and multiple hedge funds, the family occupies a $6 million, marble-clad Washington home with a private elevator, and the congressman's financial disclosures run to 333 pages of conveniently non-searchable tables.
What it does say, in writing, is what the fine print has said all along: the number was never $1 billion. This week it's $50 million. Ask again next cycle.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 22:40 Close
Sat, 04 Jul 2026 02:00:23 +0000 Alibaba Bans Employees From Using Anthropic's Coding Tool Over Distillation Scandal
Alibaba Bans Employees From Using Anthropic's Coding Tool Over Distillation Scandal
While in the US, the government's periodic bans of the latest model from Anthropic (which has made AI doomerism - in hopes of getti
Read more.....
Alibaba Bans Employees From Using Anthropic's Coding Tool Over Distillation Scandal
While in the US, the government's periodic bans of the latest model from Anthropic (which has made AI doomerism - in hopes of getting the government to regulate everyone else expect Anthropic, yet repeatedly achieving just the opposite - into an art form) has been all the rage in recent months, in China it is the other way around, with China's tech giant Alibaba banning employees from using Anthropic's Claude ?Code at work after the tool drew scrutiny for features that can help identify China-linked users, Reuters reported.
The ban is part of a deepening spat between the two companies after Anthropic accused Alibaba of illicitly extracting ?its Claude AI model capabilities - a dispute that highlights the frantic race between the U.S. and ?China to take the lead in artificial intelligence.
Claude Code is Anthropic's AI coding assistant for software developers, and has become popular among programmers in China despite Anthropic's restrictions on access by users and entities in China.
To avoid further escalation of the distillation scandal, Reuters says that Alibaba employees were being told to use the company's own coding platform Qoder.
As we reported at the time , in late June Anthropic said that it had suffered a strike by Alibaba, which it described as a "distillation" effort that involves training a less capable model on the outputs of a stronger one.
The distillation helps accelerate China's ability to reach Anthropic's advanced Mythos Preview capabilities, the company alleged in a letter sent to two U.S. senators.
Alibaba's ban comes just days after developers said Claude Code contained mechanisms that inspected user environments, including timezone and proxy-related information, and inserted subtle markers into prompts sent to Anthropic's servers.
An Anthropic employee wrote on Tuesday on X that the feature was "an experiment we launched in March" intended to prevent account abuse by unauthorized resellers and protect against model distillation.
The person who spoke to Reuters about Alibaba's ban said that Anthropic's restrictions targeting China were difficult to enforce on individual users who can deploy servers in the United States and make traffic appear as if it originated there. But companies were now more aware of legal and compliance risks.
As US AI model developers seek to prevent unauthorized access, resale and distillation of their systems, Chinese cloud and AI firms have shifted toward domestic and open-source models such as DeepSeek, Alibaba's ?Qwen, Moonshot and Zhipu.
At the same time, Chinese AI models are making inroads in the U.S. market — a development that sparked concern among some U.S. industry experts, since China's models are about 90% cheaper yet perform just fractionally worse than the latest US frontier models.
Souce: UBS
We discussed this extensively in one of our flagship reports, "Answering The "Trillion Dollar Question": Are China's AI Models A Better Value Than US Models . "
The answer, judging by the rapid token transition to China, is a resounding yes.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 22:00 Close
Sat, 04 Jul 2026 01:35:00 +0000 US At 250: Why America Has Been So Successful And Can It Continue
US At 250: Why America Has Been So Successful And Can It Continue
To mark the 250 year anniversary of the US Declaration of Independence, Deutsche Bank has published a report looking at how the US emerged as a global superpower, and
Read more.....
US At 250: Why America Has Been So Successful And Can It Continue
To mark the 250 year anniversary of the US Declaration of Independence, Deutsche Bank has published a report looking at how the US emerged as a global superpower, and why it’s likely to remain one despite new challenges.
First, DB considers how the US went from being a comparatively small country to the world's pre-eminent global power. These reasons range from the US' natural advantages, like favorable geography, to factors like its institutional stability and risk-tolerant capital markets.
DB then considers the challenges that threaten US outperformance : China’s rapid growth means the US faces its biggest rival since its own emergence as the world’s dominant power. China's rise also coincides with several other issues: the rules based international system that the US helped create is under immense strain ; the reserve currency status of the US Dollar is under pressure; and the country's public debt-to-GDP ratio is set to hit new records in the coming years .
Finally, the bank's analysts Peter Sidorov and Henry Allen look at why the US is likely to sustain its outperformance, thanks to a collection of reinforcing advantages . In fact, the US has consistently emerged from challenging periods successfully , be that after the Great Depression, the malaise of the 1970s, and again around the GFC and its aftermath.
The bank concludes with a few lessons for investors and for the rest of the world.
1. The Lessons from History: What underpins America’s Success?
Before delving into the drivers of US success, let us bring with a few highlights of its historical outperformance. Since the United States' founding, the country has achieved remarkable economic success on a whole range of metrics. For one, the US saw rapid growth in population . It started as a comparatively small entity at its founding, but it quickly surged to overtake the large European countries in the mid 19th century and has continued to outpace them since. And with more people, it was little surprise that US GDP rapidly outpaced other countries too.
This success extends beyond GDP growth. Unlike France or Germany, the US has never had a bout of hyperinflation in its history, with its currency maintaining its value comparatively well. Meanwhile, the US’ long-term equity performance has also been very strong. In the time since equity data is available from the late-19th century, real returns have outpaced the UK and Germany by substantial margins
So what has caused this incredible success?
The first reason, and one of the most critical historically, has been the US’ political and institutional stability . Clearly, there have been moments of intense turmoil, most notably with the Civil War in the 1860s. Its historical path also should not be over-romanticised, with US territorial expansion during the 19th century having many similarities to that of the Old World colonial empires. Nonetheless, the US is incredibly rare in that its political system is recognizably the same over the last 200 years. This relative stability and early development of property rights provided a fertile environment for long-term investments, which in turn has aided economic growth over the centuries.
The second reason is its geographic advantages . The US possesses vast arable land, navigable rivers, large coastlines, and access to two oceans. It therefore found itself more insulated from the destructive effects of the world wars, with productive capacity not impacted in the same way. Moreover, the country borders Mexico and Canada, who in both population and GDP terms are much smaller than the United States, meaning it didn’t face the security risks that many European powers faced over the 19th and early-20th centuries.
The third reason has been its abundance of energy resources, particularly relative to Europe . In large part a corollary of its geographic strengths, this energy abundance has given the US several advantages. First of all, lowering costs for households and industry, which has helped the economy be more resilient against geopolitical shocks. Moreover, with the US becoming a net energy exporter in recent years, it also strengthens the external position.
The fourth reason for the US' relative success was that its main competitors in Europe were deeply affected by the world wars and wider political turmoil . Their productive and financial capacity was severely degraded, with the destruction causing huge loss of life as well. Even among those who survived, many scientists, engineers and entrepreneurs left for the US in the first half of the 20th century. Whilst not a US “success” as such, this meant that on a relative basis, the US’ divergence widened considerably. Indeed, in the first half of the 20th century, the US economy grew by 5.7 times, Germany by 3.4 times, the UK by 2.0 times, and France by 1.8 times.
The fifth reason for the US’ outperformance is scale. It has a large domestic market of over 300m people, with high average incomes, a common language, and low internal barriers to trade. This has given firms the ability to reach a large-scale domestically before expanding abroad. Indeed, it is notable that 8 of the world’s 10 largest firms are based in the US, whereas none are in Europe.
The sixth reason is the structural advantage of the US Dollar, which remains dominant in global trade and FX reserves. This dollar demand matters because it lowers borrowing costs and raises demand for US Treasuries. In turn, it leaves the US with an exceptional capacity to run bigger fiscal and external deficits without facing a funding crisis, and expands the geopolitical leverage that the US possesses. This has been dubbed the “exorbitant privilege”, and has been a major advantage in recent decades.
The seventh reason is financial depth . The US has a large banking system, but also a wide range of non-bank financing, which means startups have access to other sources of capital. In fact, in the decade from 2013 to 2023, annual venture capital financing was 0.7% of GDP in the US, compared to just 0.2% in the EU. This financial depth is important because innovative firms can often be loss-making for lengthy periods, so countries with bigger pools of patient risk capital are better placed to commercialise new technologies.
The eighth reason is its self-compounding advantages in education and research. The US has many of the world’s strongest research universities, including 7 of the top 10 in the Times Higher Education World University Rankings for 2026. Moreover, this research also has an economic angle, as scientific discoveries feed into startups, workforce training and industrial scale-ups. In turn, this becomes self compounding, because top global talent is attracted to the US, and ensures it remains at the forefront of new sectors such as artificial intelligence.
The ninth reason is its pro-business architecture, including a greater tolerance of business failure than many European systems. For instance, Chapter 11 reorganisation is designed to preserve and restructure viable firms rather than liquidate them. This more positive approach to business failure ties into the empirical literature, which suggests that more debtor-friendly and efficient insolvency frameworks are associated with greater entrepreneurship and innovation.
The tenth reason is adaptability. The cultural acceptance of failure and capacity to reinvent itself have boosted US ability to adapt to the changing world. This has allowed it to navigate repeat boom-and-bust cycles, as well swings of the policy pendulum – between openness and isolationism, between protectionism and free trade – without threatening overall the institutional stability we highlighted above. And while capitalism has been a key underlying driving force, it is pragmatism rather than ideology that have driven continued success over time.
It is also important to note that these advantages do not play out individually, but are mutually reinforcing, with the interaction between them allowing the US to benefit from network and externality effects that few if any countries can match.
US history has been marked by challenges and recoveries
That said, this success story was far from a straight line. US outperformance has frequently been questioned, yet it has repeatedly defied the sceptics, including at numerous points in the last century.
Right from the country’s founding, questions were raised about its long-term potential, and in the Civil War of the 1860s, the nation’s survival was at stake after less than a century.
Even over the past 100 years, which has ostensibly been a period of US pre eminence, there have frequently been doubts. For example, after the Wall Street Crash of 1929, the Great Depression saw unemployment peak above 25% and remain above 10% for an entire decade. The associated stock market collapse saw the S&P 500 fall by -86% from peak-to-trough, not reaching its 1929 peak again until 1954. This was a global shock, but it undermined faith in the US system of freemarket capitalism.
However, the country eventually pulled out of the slump. That started with Franklin Roosevelt’s New Deal program, which helped to restore confidence and economic activity. Then the start of WWII saw economic activity surge even further , particularly as there wasn’t fighting on US soil. By the end of WWII, the US had never been in a stronger position relative to its peers, not least with Europe having to rebuild after the war.
Similar doubts were clear as the US grappled with the various crises of the 1960s and 70s . This period saw major political turmoil and multiple assassinations, including President Kennedy in 1963, his brother and presidential candidate Robert Kennedy in 1968, and civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968. A few years later, Richard Nixon became the first president to resign from office amidst the Watergate scandal. US military power was also facing questions at this time, as the Vietnam War turned into a protracted conflict that also faced substantial domestic opposition.
Then on the economic front, inflation started to gather pace from the late-1960s, surging further after the first oil shock of 1973, leading to a 16-month recession. Measures were imposed to conserve energy, including the National Maximum Speed Limit, which wasn’t repealed until 1995. Then in 1979, a second oil shock drove inflation up again.
This turmoil raised questions about whether policymakers could effectively tackle the crises of the day. In 1979, President Jimmy Carter delivered what was widely referred to as the “malaise” speech, although it was actually called “A crisis of confidence”. He said there was “growing doubt about the meaning of our own lives and in the loss of a unity of purpose for our nation.” He spoke of a “growing disrespect” for institutions, and said how the public often “see paralysis and stagnation and drift.” Even the US president was acknowledging that the country was facing huge issues.
Nevertheless, the US then recovered strongly into the 1980s and 90s. Inflation was tamed, albeit with drastic monetary tightening, and the economy saw rapid growth once it recovered from the early 1980s recession. In 1991, the dissolution of the Soviet Union marked an end to the Cold War, and the 1990s were widely considered a unipolar moment where the US was left as the unmatched global superpower. So
once again, the US came through a period of doubt over its success.
But the unipolar moment proved brief, as the global financial crisis cast fresh doubt over US prestige. Unemployment surged above 10%, and the economy entered an 18-month recession, the longest since the Great Depression. Moreover, the subsequent recovery was very sluggish, with growth rates well below those of previous decades. Economists resurrected the idea of “secular stagnation”, originally put forward by Alvin Hansen in the 1930s, suggesting the US faced an era of permanently slower growth.
These questions about US pre-eminence came as China was growing rapidly at the same time. In 2005, China’s GDP (in USD terms) was still only 18% of the US total, but that surged to 62% by 2015. That was an incredible shift in relative economic weight in the space of a decade.
But for all the doubts of the 2010s, the secular stagnation narrative has since disappeared in the 2020s. The US economy bounced back remarkably quickly from the pandemic, aided by huge quantities of stimulus that were far larger than 2008. Moreover, recent years have seen the US at the forefront of AI developments, raising hopes of a new productivity surge, with its lead extending over the other advanced economies. So yet again today, the US has emerged from a rockier period around the financial crisis and its aftermath, into a relatively strong position that includes the highest GDP per capita of any G7 country.
2. The Challenges Ahead: Why the US now faces a crucial decade
The above discussion highlights how the US has repeatedly overcome periods of doubt, with predictions of American decline proving premature each time. However, in several respects today’s challenges feel more acute. The US is not as dominant a geopolitical power as it used to be, given China’s emergence as a serious rival. Moreover, its debt-to-GDP ratio is on the verge of new records, meaning its fiscal space is far more constrained to deal with new challenges. As such, the next decade will offer a further test of US adaptability, and whether the political system can respond to these interacting pressures.
What are the biggest near-term challenges for the United States?
Since the end of the Cold War, the most significant adjustment has been the end of the unipolar moment and China’s emergence as a genuine peer competitor, which is different in scale and capability from any rival the US has faced since the late-19th century. China has already overtaken the US on manufacturing output, merchandise trade, and GDP (on a PPP basis), and is rapidly closing the gap in advanced technologies and semiconductors. The US retains decisive leads in nominal GDP, capital markets depth, the dollar system, and frontier innovation, but the gap has narrowed substantially.
The military balance tells a similar story. US defense spending remains roughly three times China's at market exchange rates, but the PPP-adjusted gap is far smaller. More broadly, the gap between US military spending and other major economies has shrunk over the past 15 years. That comes as the proliferation of low-cost precision and autonomous systems is eroding the historic advantages of expeditionary power projection, raising the cost of underwriting the global security order the US has provided since 1945.
We can also see the emergence of Chinese leadership in a whole range of areas. Among others, China accounts for a third of all global manufacturing activity, with a sector as large as the US, Japan, Germany and South Korea combined. The cost of electricity there is a fraction of what people pay in Europe or the US. And just as the US dollar’s role has come under pressure, China is strengthening the global influence of the RMB, in part because of its vast domestic savings surplus.
The emergence of China comes as the rules-based international system designed and led by the US for eight decades is under strain from multiple directions. Admittedly, these strains have not just emerged. Even before the Trump administration, emerging markets had grown in relative size and become less willing to accept Western-designed institutions. Meanwhile, the political support for globalisation has frayed across advanced economies.
But recent US policy choices have raised profound questions about the future global order. In 2025, the US effective tariff rate rose to its highest since the 1930s, representing the largest peacetime trade barrier increase in a century. Strategically, the US alliance network has been an enormous economic asset, underwriting dollar dominance, securing trade routes, and providing the soft-power foundation for global rule-setting. Yet US membership of NATO has become an openly debated question, and tariffs have been raised on US allies as well as rivals.
This uncertainty has contributed to growing pressure on the US’ status as the global reserve currency. The dollar's share of global reserves has fallen from roughly 72% to 58% over two decades — a gradual decline rather than a collapse, but a clear trend nevertheless. The reduction has accrued to a basket of "non traditional" reserves and to gold, which has seen the largest central bank buying programme in over half a century. In addition to the overall transition away from a 1990s unipolar world, specific factors have added to the challenges that dollar dominance faces. This includes the weaponisation of the dollar through sanctions — notably the freezing of Russian central bank reserves in 2022, which gave non Western-aligned countries a strategic incentive to develop alternatives even at material cost — as well as the structural decline of the petrodollar arrangement as energy trade has fragmented and the US has become a net oil exporter.
Irrespective of the cause, were the US “exorbitant privilege” to erode further, this would bring major costs to the US and allow other currencies to benefit (see note on the potential benefits for the euro ). As mentioned earlier, the structural subsidy that the US receives from its reserve currency status includes lower borrowing costs, the ability to run persistent external deficits without the
discipline imposed on other economies and the advantages of the dollar being the unit of account for global trade, commodities and cross-border lending.
None of this implies imminent displacement. No alternative is remotely ready to assume the dollar's role. Network effects and inertia in trade invoicing and central bank balance sheets all favour continued dollar dominance. Indeed, the pound sterling held a prominent role for many decades after the US had emerged as the world’s largest economy. So the realistic risk for the next decade is not collapse but gradual erosion, with a slow loss of the privilege margin that has boosted US economic performance.
The US fiscal trajectory is the most plausible catalyst to accelerate that erosion, and for institutional investors is the single most concrete macroeconomic risk facing the United States . Over the last four years since 2022, the federal deficit has been consistently running at around 5-6% of GDP. Those are the highest peacetime deficits in US history outside of a major recession, and this is happening in a full employment economy. Debt held by the public is set to surpass 100% of GDP this year, and the CBO projections point to an unsustainable trajectory. Interest payments on the federal debt now exceed defense spending and are the fastest growing line item in the budget.
Most significantly, the binding constraints are now set to arrive within the next decade. The latest estimates project that the Social Security trust fund will be depleted by late 2032, which would trigger an automatic benefit cut absent legislative action. The Medicare hospital insurance trust fund faces a similar reckoning shortly after. So while the unsustainability of the US public debt trajectory has been in the headlines for many years, these events are now more imminent – ones that the next US administration that takes office after the 2028 election will have to face.
To be fair, the fiscal challenge is far from arithmetically catastrophic – a combination of AI-driven productivity growth and moderate fiscal consolidation could lead to significant improvements in the long-term debt profile. The difficulty is whether the political system can deliver such an outcome. Past fiscal consolidations required bipartisan compromise. Yet the current political environment offers little prospect of similar cooperation, with polarisation a mounting issue. Attempts in recent decades (like the Simpson-Bowles Commission in 2010) have failed to gain sufficient support.
In the meantime, demographic trends are compounding both the fiscal and innovation challenges. The US fertility rate has fallen to 1.6 and the dependency ratio is set to deteriorate sharply as the baby boomer cohort fully enters retirement. Even though the population is comparatively younger than many other developed countries, it is still ageing. For example, the UN projects that the share of the US population aged 65 and over will rise from 19% in 2026 to 22% by 2036, rising further to 28% by the end of the century.
An important connecting driver across fiscal, political and demographic challenges has been a rise in inequality. Its steady rise since the 1980s has gone hand-in-hand with a rise in political polarisation, especially once combined with the economic shock that followed the GFC and the sluggish recovery in its aftermath. A corollary of this is that the traditional “American dream” of social mobility has found itself under mounting pressure. The US now has lower intergenerational income mobility than almost all DM economies, which risks corroding the social contract on which open markets and creative destruction depend. It has also led to negative social effects, notably a widening of the life expectancy gap between Europe and the US since the 1980s.
3. Why the US Should Remain a Long-Term Success Story
The challenges facing the US are real, but the weight of evidence still suggests it will remain the world's leading economy for the foreseeable future. Its collective structural advantages remain difficult to replicate, and it retains the same adaptability that’s helped it recover from previous difficulties.
The starting point is that the US should remain the world's largest economy well beyond the critical decade coming up. A global demographic slowdown means that previous assumptions of rapid population and economic growth in emerging markets no longer look inevitable. Conversely, US economic growth has generally surprised on the upside since the pandemic, with the “secular stagnation” narrative of the 2010s quietly fading. Indeed, the US economy has successfully weathered multiple shocks in recent years, ranging from rapid Fed rate hikes, to tariffs, to the Iran conflict. Moreover, there is further upside potential to productivity growth (and hence economic growth) from the US’ significant lead on AI.
This AI boom is the latest expression of the US capacity for reinvention that stretches back through its history: a willingness to embrace disruptive, capital intensive technology and absorb the dislocation it brings. AI is one of many new technologies that have often led to economic volatility (and boom-bust cycles on occasion), but whose benefits have delivered broad, economy-wide productivity gains over time. That was clear historically with canals, railroads, and electrification, and also with more recent innovations like the internet.
Thus, the US is well-positioned to lead the AI cycle for several mutually reinforcing reasons: an innovation-friendly ecosystem of research universities and venture capital; a cultural and institutional acceptance of the boom-bust investment cycles that frontier technology requires; the deepest capital markets in the world to fund it; and abundant domestic energy. The shale revolution has transformed the US into a net energy exporter, and cheap, plentiful power is now a decisive input advantage in the race to build and run data centres. Few competitors can match this combination.
The AI boost comes at a time when the US has already re-established its productivity outperformance in recent years. Since the pandemic, US productivity growth has risen above its post-1970 average, which in turn is boosting GDP and the revenue base. The potential fiscal arithmetic is powerful. According to CBO estimates, if productivity growth were just half a point above their baseline in the coming decade, then debt held by the public would only rise to 110% rather than 120% by 2036 (see the following DB note on the US debt outlook for more ). However, productivity gains alone are unlikely to resolve the fiscal issue, in part because the political incentive is to spend the fiscal dividend rather than save it and in part given the uncertainty of how the gains would be distributed — a theme we return to below.
On demographics, the US also enjoys a clear advantage over its principal rivals. China's working-age population will begin a pronounced contraction in the 2030s, with Europe in aggregate also seeing a decline, whereas the US will see moderate growth under a normalised migration trend . With a growing working-age population, the US would avoid this drag from a shrinking labor force. Moreover, the US has had a consistent capacity to absorb immigration at levels few other developed economies have managed. And with the demographic slowdown now reaching emerging markets, few major economies now have clearly better longterm demographic potential than the US. For instance, while India will maintain positive demographic momentum over the next couple of decades, with its fertility rate now below replacement rate, its advantage will shrink by the middle of the century.
Even on the financial side, whilst the dollar’s role has come under pressure, it still retains a dominant and unrivalled position. The network effects that sustain it are exceptionally strong, and there is no obvious successor in the wings, unlike when the dollar overtook sterling in the interwar period. The depth and liquidity of US capital markets, inseparable from the dollar's role, are themselves a structural draw that even US rivals rely upon. Indeed, it is notable that the asset seeing a major increase in official reserves is gold, rather than another currency. And while new payment technologies could bring new risks to dollar dominance, US dominance in the stablecoin space will help limit these risks for the foreseeable future.
The Conditions for Continued Success: Pitfalls to Avoid
Yet much as there are credible reasons for US outperformance to continue, this cannot be taken for granted.
The first key challenge is to ensure that the gains from future technological growth are broad-based, as excessive concentration risks adding to political and institutional dysfunction. We know from history that technological progress does not automatically deliver broadly shared prosperity. For instance, during the early Industrial Revolution, aggregate output rose for decades as wages for ordinary workers stagnated, a period that has been dubbed “Engels’ pause”. This offers a cautionary lesson on AI, and with the labor share of income in the US already near historic lows today, a further deterioration risks intensifying the social and political backlash building against the technology. It’s important to avoid that, as a backlash against technological advances would in turn negate its gains. A related risk is that if AI gains accrue to capital through profit margins while labor is shed, this would negate the fiscal benefits from higher productivity given the focus of the US tax system on labour taxation.
This brings us to the second challenge – managing the fiscal adjustment and the related timing risk. The US is currently running budget deficits at levels previously unprecedented outside of a major recession or war. The ideal scenario would be some sort of bipartisan consensus, as in the early 1990s, to deal with the fiscal challenges ahead in a pre-emptive manner. However, political incentives to reduce deficits appear limited, raising the prospect that it will be up to markets to ultimately force consolidation. The risk is that this could come at a moment of heightened vulnerability, such as a wider economic crisis or recession, resulting in a harsher correction. A degree of financial repression, especially if combined with genuine consolidation, could end up playing a role in managing the debt burden. But a full embrace of that route — in an extreme case, via debt monetisation by the Fed — would merely accelerate the erosion of the dollar's special status.
The third challenge is protecting the US’ institutional foundations. Institutional stability (and the consistent rule of law and secure property rights underpinning it) have been the bedrock on which the capital-markets and dollar advantages ultimately rest. If that eroded over the coming decades, it would create a more uncertain climate for long-term investments and dampen the international appeal that has attracted top talent and financial capital to the United States.
The fourth challenge is a global one, in that the US has benefited immensely from the post-war system of US leadership. However, that settlement has come under increasing strain in recent years, particularly as emerging markets that have grown in size seek greater influence in global affairs. After all, the US only makes up around 26% of global GDP in USD terms. But with its allies, the influence of the US increases substantially. For instance, the G7 as a whole makes up 44% of global GDP, and if you include further US allies such as Australia and South Korea, its effective alliance network still comprises more than 50% of global GDP in dollar terms. With the US standing as the clear and unsurpassed leader of this group, maintaining this network has enormous benefits.
What will the US’ ongoing success imply, and what are the key takeaways?
To wrap up, let us briefly consider two concluding questions. First, what does the above analysis mean for investors looking at the US over the long term. And second, what lessons can the rest of the world learn from the success of the US model over time.
For those allocating capital, the case for the US as the world's pre-eminent investment destination remains intact. An investor into the US buys a bundle that is hard to replicate – productivity leadership, the deepest and most liquid capital markets in the world, the rule of law that underpins them, and the flexibility conferred by the dollar's reserve role. That combination should persist. However, the risk premium around the US has risen, as fiscal strains and a wider geopolitical reshuffling point to a wider distribution of outcomes and bigger tail risks.
In practice, this could play out in several ways. First, the dollar's "exorbitant privilege" is unlikely to disappear within the next decade, but gradual diversification of both reserves and payments is real and persistent. Already, the dollar's global importance has ebbed in recent years. These growing question marks around the dollar’s status are the first risk. Second, US equity leadership is now heavily concentrated in a handful of AI-exposed names, so the bull case increasingly rests on a small group of companies, again widening the tail risk outcomes. And third, there is a tail risk of a correlated scenario where a fiscal reckoning coincides with a correction in the AI investment cycle, pressuring equities, duration and the dollar simultaneously, and undermining the diversification that normally cushions portfolios. This is a scenario worth planning for, even if it is not the central case.
What can the rest of the world learn from the US’ success? In part, it is simply down to luck, including geographic advantages and an abundance of resources, such as energy, that cannot be replicated elsewhere. However, there are several features that could be reproduced elsewhere.
The first is its resilient institutional architecture, with a legal system and property rights that have provided a favourable environment for long-term investment. Although the US has faced severe crises in the last 250 years, including a civil war, its system of government has been recognisably the same throughout that time.
Second, it has a well developed financial system, and a tolerance for risk that’s enabled the US to embrace new technologies and emerge quicker from downturns, with resources shifting quickly to new and productive sectors. US history demonstrates how suppressing volatility and preventing resource re-allocation can be counterproductive over the long term.
Third, a key component of US success has been its adaptability to different contexts, and its ability to leverage existing strengths when under pressure. These range across its energy resources, capital markets, universities, military power, reserve currency status, and technological leadership. Even when one point has appeared under threat, others have been able to compensate.
More in the full file available to pro subs .
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 21:35 Close
Sat, 04 Jul 2026 01:20:00 +0000 Mamdani Delivers Anti-America Speech For The Nation's 250th Birthday
Mamdani Delivers Anti-America Speech For The Nation's 250th Birthday
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani sat at a desk to commemorate America's semiquincentennial, and the socialist wasted little time turning the occ
Read more.....
Mamdani Delivers Anti-America Speech For The Nation's 250th Birthday
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani sat at a desk to commemorate America's semiquincentennial, and the socialist wasted little time turning the occasion into an anti-America lecture. He told his audience they each hold "the power to determine what America means," then spent the rest of the speech explaining what it means to him, and it was mostly bad.
"The powerful have always known their answer ," Mamdani said. "America, in their view, is an arena of supremacy, where only a select few are allowed freedom, where not all are created equal. "
He claimed these unnamed villains believe America "belongs only to those with the right accent or the right shade of skin," and dismissed them with a sneer. "How small they are, how weak, how unoriginal," he said.
He even dragged Thomas Paine into it, quoting the Common Sense author's description of America as an asylum for the persecuted before taking a thinly veiled shot at President Donald Trump's immigration enforcement policies, accusing the Trump administration of running a nation "that persecutes those seeking asylum."
The grievance parade kept on coming.
"We see the wealthiest country in the history of the world, one where children go to sleep hungry while the world's first trillionaire hungers for more ," Mamdani said. "We see monopolies that dominate every industry and oligarchs who buy elections. We see masked agents terrorizing our streets, eating food cooked by our undocumented neighbors before spiriting them away in unmarked vans."
Mamdani kept going, aiming for just about every industry in sight. "Yes, we see America in a health insurance industry that exploits the sick," he said, before moving on to blast "corporate landlords for whom negligence is a business model" and complain about a country that spends "our tax dollars on bombs and bailouts."
Ironically, Mamdani begged and received a $4 billion bailout from New York Gov. Kathy Hochul to help fund his agenda.
He praised Americans who resist immigration enforcement as the true patriots of the moment. "We see America each time neighbors link arms with neighbors without asking how long they have lived here or what papers they have as ICE invades our neighborhoods," he said.
According to Mamdani, federal law enforcement "invades" American neighborhoods while the people obstructing it embody the national spirit.
He wrapped up by addressing the critics who might suggest that a man with such contempt for the country could find somewhere else to live.
"Love it or leave it, they say, " Mamdani said. "But patriotism has never been about pretending our nation is without flaws. Patriotism is every act of righteous dissent. It is every march led under the heavy sun. It is every protest held a decade before its time. "
Then came the big finish, which sounded like a warning. "It is precisely because we love this nation that we will not leave it," he said.
Zohran Mamdani is the Democratic Party's brightest rising star and its new kingmaker, busy remaking the party from the ground up with far-left candidates aligned with the Democratic Socialists of America. And this is how he chose to honor America on its 250th birthday: by tearing it down. His speech rebranded resistance to federal law as the truest form of patriotism, and that framing tells you exactly where his wing of the party plans to take its message.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 21:20 Close
Sat, 04 Jul 2026 00:40:00 +0000 Tucker Carlson Unveils Major Political Plan
Tucker Carlson Unveils Major Political Plan
Tucker Carlson Unveils Major Political Plan
Authored by Luis Cornelio via Headline USA ,
Popular podcast host Tucker Carlson has long dismissed questions about whether he would ever seek public office. But this week, he hinted at a major political move, though don’t expect to see his name on the ballot.
Speaking with the Columbia Journalism Review in an interview published Wednesday , Carlson said he plans to “help build a third party,” just months after publicly breaking with President Donald Trump over the U.S.’s involvement in the Israel-Iran war.
“I’m going to help build a third party. There should be a good-faith effort to figure out what benefits the country,” Carlson said.
During the same interview, Carlson insisted that he still has no interest in seeking public office.
“I don’t want to be a candidate,” he said.
“Before I did the Times interview, someone said to me, ‘They’re going to ask you if you’re running for president.’ I was very tempted to say ‘I am running—on the pro-patriarchy ticket.’ Just to make sure I gain no new fans.”
Carlson’s support for a third party stems from what he rebuked as bipartisan support from both Democratic and Republican parties for foreign intervention.
He accused Republicans and Democrats of being “in lockstep solidarity with each other” when it comes to foreign wars.
“That’s not a democracy,” Carlson stated. “That’s a one-party state posing as a democracy, and it needs to be broken, and there’s going to be a third party, and I’m going to do everything I can to bring that about.”
He pointed to Trump’s support for Israel’s military campaign against Iran as a “lesson.”
“If you vote for Trump and you still wind up in a regime-change war,” Carlson added, “if Chuck Schumer is strongly behind Trump’s foreign policy, which he is—then we need options, or else let’s just give up and be ruled by the most unscrupulous people. And I’m just too young to accept that. We need a third party.”
Carlson joins a growing list of political figures and pundits who have publicly argued that the country needs a viable third political party to challenge the two-party system.
Billionaire Elon Musk announced the creation of the America Party after his falling out with Trump over federal spending. While the announcement generated widespread headlines, the party has shown little visible activity since its launch.
Others who have voiced support for a third-party alternative include former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene , R-Ga.; former Sen. Joe Manchin , D-W.Va.; and former Democratic presidential contender Andrew Yang .
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 20:40 Close
Sat, 04 Jul 2026 00:00:00 +0000 Two Thirds Of Americans Still Think It's A Bad Time To Buy A House
Two Thirds Of Americans Still Think It's A Bad Time To Buy A House
Americans looking to buy a house are currently facing conditions that make it hard for anyone but the very wealthy to afford buying a home.
Read more.....
Two Thirds Of Americans Still Think It's A Bad Time To Buy A House
Americans looking to buy a house are currently facing conditions that make it hard for anyone but the very wealthy to afford buying a home.
Elevated home prices combined with mortgage rates that have rebounded from historic mid-pandemic lows to levels last seen in the early 2000s are causing major headaches for would-be home buyers.
To make things worse, many Americans had to dip into their savings during the past few years of high inflation, making it very hard to save for a sizeable down payment.
Add geopolitical tensions and uncertainty about the impact of AI on the labor market to the mix and renting suddenly seems like a very attractive, or possibly the only feasible option.
As Statista's Felix Richter reports, the latest results from Gallup’s annual Economy and Personal Finance poll show that current conditions have really spoiled Americans’ appetite to buy houses .
You will find more infographics at Statista
This year’s survey, conducted April 1-15, shows that two thirds of U.S. adults think that now is a bad time to buy a house.
While that marks a slight improvement from the last four years thanks in part to a slight moderation in home prices, it's still a complete reversal from pre-pandemic years, when the majority of respondents would say it was a good time to buy a house.
According to Gallup, we're currently seeing the lowest levels of confidence since the question was first asked in 1978.
Before 2022, the share of people thinking it was a good time to buy a house had never dropped below 50 percent – not even during or in the aftermath of the 2008 housing crisis.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 20:00 Close
Fri, 03 Jul 2026 23:20:00 +0000 America Turns 250. At 125, It Looked Like The End...
America Turns 250. At 125, It Looked Like The End...
America Turns 250. At 125, It Looked Like The End...
Authored by James Hickman via SchiffSovereign.com,
On the afternoon of September 6, 1901, President William McKinley stood in a receiving line at the Pan-American Exposition in Buffalo, New York, shaking hands with a crowd of well-wishers.
One of the people in the crowd was a young man named Leon Czolgosz… who was patiently waiting with a revolver wrapped in a handkerchief. When he reached the front, he fired twice into the president’s abdomen.
McKinley died eight days later, and, Czolgosz, an unemployed factory worker, went to the electric chair without a trace of remorse. He insisted it was his duty to strike down a symbol of oppression.
Czolgosz wasn’t a crazed madman, but rather a product of his time.
The America of 1901 was 125 years into its history - the exact midpoint between the Declaration of Independence and today.
And despite the US economy already being the largest in the world at that point, the year 1901 did not feel like a nation striding confidently into the American Century.
The US financial system lurched from panic to panic, and to a great many observers, the young republic looked less like a rising power and more like a country unraveling.
The rich versus poor divide was growing, and violent socialist movements spread. Political assassinations, terrorism, and bombings became a recurring feature of public life.
The political violence did not end with McKinley’s assassination, either. Followers of the Italian anarchist Luigi Galleani waged a years-long bombing campaign against judges, politicians, and businessmen.
It peaked at noon on September 16, 1920, when a horse-drawn wagon packed with explosives detonated in front of the headquarters of J.P. Morgan on Wall Street, killing thirty people and wounding hundreds more. The case was never solved.
Many of these anarcho-socialists were immigrants, which poured gasoline on the raging blaze of backlash against widespread immigration.
In 1907 alone, more than a million people passed through Ellis Island. Immigrants were arriving faster than anyone knew how to absorb them, and people were getting tired of it.
Congress passed legislation that imposed a literacy test on immigrants, then banned entire countries. At first, people from Asia and the Middle East were shut out. Subsequent legislation set strict quotas, slamming the door on the southern and eastern Europeans who were considered undesirable.
Yet the instability continued… as did the government’s push to consolidate power.
After the Panic of 1907 nearly brought down the financial system, Congress used the scare to establish the Federal Reserve in 1913. This was the first step toward money that could be printed at will.
Also in 1913, the Constitution was amended, giving Congress the power to tax income.
The income tax (16th Amendment) was sold to the American people as a tax on the very rich that would only affect the top 2% of US households. Idiotic socialists at the time believed the lie and supported the amendment; after all, the rich should pay their fair share.
Within decades, three quarters of Americans were paying income tax.
With a new central bank and tax power in place, Washington then raced to join World War I (despite being an ocean away), and borrowed on an unimaginable scale to do it.
Frankly it all looked pretty bleak.
And yet, while all the bad news and turmoil was ongoing, America was simultaneously producing miracles.
Henry Ford put the country on wheels with the Model T and the moving assembly line. Motion pictures went from novelty to industry. Radio turned from a tinkerer’s hobby into a machine that could broadcast to every home in the nation.
These were American breakthroughs that rewired the entire global economy and powered better times ahead.
Seventy-five years later, America’s 200th birthday looked little better. In 1976, the economy was mired in stagflation that “experts” had previously sworn was impossible.
Oil shocks had humiliated the country at the gas pump. American dominance looked spent in the wreckage of Vietnam, and the nation had watched President Richard Nixon resign in disgrace.
Terrorism was back. Plane hijackings were somewhat commonplace. Crime rampaged across the cities.
And yet what followed was the personal computer, the Internet, the longest peacetime expansion in the country’s history, and a comeback almost nobody standing in a gas line in 1976 would have believed.
Which brings us to the 250th birthday, today.
Political violence is back in American life. Immigration is once again a major issue. Fraud and corruption are rampant (and hardly anyone pays the price). And Washington’s finances are in worse shape than at any point in the country’s history, with the national debt larger than the entire economy.
Yet at the same time, American companies are building artificial intelligence, next-generation nuclear power, robotics, and biotech breakthroughs that could rewire the global economy even more than the assembly line and the Internet did. Chaos and invention have always lived side by side in the US, and they still do.
America was born out of revolution, and it has endured a civil war, two world wars, a depression, a decade of stagflation, and repeated financial panics.
Every one of those episodes brought years of real pain, but every time, the country that looked terminally ill came back stronger than ever.
There is an old saying in politics (usually credited to Winston Churchill, though apparently first quipped by an Israeli diplomat): Americans will always do the right thing… after exhausting all the alternatives.
Apocryphal or not, that is the pattern: the right thing comes eventually, but the pain comes first.
America is not just a country; it is an idea, and it may be the most extraordinary idea human beings have ever assembled. It stands on the shoulders of giants— Greek thought, Roman law, Judeo-Christian values, and free-market capitalism, fused with a conviction about individual liberty balanced by personal responsibility.
Betting against that idea has been the worst trade of the past 250 years.
To be clear, having a Plan B is not a bet against America either. The concept is not to hide in a bunker with canned food and guns because the end is near.
The point of a Plan B is to be honest about the road between here and the recovery: more inflation, higher taxes, and a stretch of instability, and to make sure you have the options available to come at it from a position of strength.
At 250 years, I truly believe the best days are still ahead. But there will be some rough ones in between.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 19:20 Close
Fri, 03 Jul 2026 22:40:00 +0000 China-Linked Socialist NGO Derailed $23.6 Billion In Data Center Buildouts: Report
China-Linked Socialist NGO Derailed $23.6 Billion In Data Center Buildouts: Report
China-Linked Socialist NGO Derailed $23.6 Billion In Data Center Buildouts: Report
Our note on Thursday titled "World's Largest Data Center Project On Verge Of Collapse After Blackstone Unexpectedly Pulls Out " detailed Blackstone dialing back its presence from Northern Virginia's data-center alley, raising questions about whether the AI infrastructure buildout, colliding with local resistance movements, has begun to hit hard limits.
Just days after agreeing to sell stakes in three Virginia data centers to Digital Realty Trust for $3.5 billion, Blackstone's QTS Realty Trust is reportedly abandoning plans for its portion of the massive Prince William Digital Gateway project. The 2,100-acre campus was expected to include as many as 37 data-center buildings and require city-scale power supplies.
"For community organizers and residents that spent the last five years opposing the Digital Gateway, QTS's pullout will now validate a playbook that involved pressure campaigns on local politicians and legal attacks. It will also unleash even more powerful blowback nationwide against these unwanted developments," we noted.
That brings us to the composition of the local resistance. Multiple reports suggest data center opposition is not entirely organic.
In fact, one familiar player appears to be involved, a name our readers know well, and the U.S. government certainly recognizes because a China-based billionaire funds the socialist NGO network.
Y Combinator founder Garry Tan, also founder of Garry's List, a civic engagement organization, cited the Bitcoin Policy Institute's recent report on how a "coordinated foreign influence campaign against American AI — running through CCP state media, a Shanghai-based Marxist's nonprofit network, and foreign billionaire dark money that has funneled $2B+ into US advocacy infrastructure ."
Garry's List noted, "AI doomerism isn't as organic as it looks. "
That China-based Marxist's nonprofit network spreading across the US is supported by Neville Roy Singham, who has reportedly funneled hundreds of millions of dollars into left-wing nonprofits, media operations, and activist networks that seek to sow chaos and spread communism inside the US.
Earlier this week, U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton for the Southern District of New York, authorized by Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, was authorized to examine whether Singham, NGOs he funded , or their leaders committed wire fraud, bank fraud, money laundering, or other financial crimes.
Given that federal investigators are circling the socialists in the Singham NGO network, Garry's List noted that Singham's Party for Socialism and Liberation has "run 21 campaigns across 14 states that delayed, scaled back, or blocked $23.6 billion in AI infrastructure investment ."
None of this should be surprising because nearly one year ago we cited a new book titled China's Total War Strategy: Next-Generation Weapons of Mass Destruction - published by the CCP BioThreats Initiative and authored by Dr. Ryan Clarke, LJ Eads, Dr. Robert McCreight, and Dr. Xiaoxu Sean Lin - that outlines how the CCP has been pursuing an aggressive, multifaceted "total war" against the U.S. that leverages next-generation weapons, including synthetic narcotics (e.g., fentanyl and cannabinoids), bioweapons (e.g., Covid-19), psychological manipulation and influence (e.g., TikTok), and a broad arsenal of irregular warfare tools.
One of the irregular warfare tools we've sounded the alarm on is the use of nonprofits to sow chaos from within. It now appears that PSL and its socialist allies have moved beyond protesting U.S. foreign policy in Latin America and the Caribbean and anti-ICE riots, and have set their sights on data centers, just as the U.S. is locked in a compute race with China.
Even The New York Times has linked Singham to CCP-aligned propaganda networks.
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 18:40 Close
Fri, 03 Jul 2026 22:00:00 +0000 Backlash After Columbus, Ohio Announces It Will Raise Flag Of Somalia At City Hall
Backlash After Columbus, Ohio Announces It Will Raise Flag Of Somalia At City Hall
Backlash After Columbus, Ohio Announces It Will Raise Flag Of Somalia At City Hall
Via American Greatness,
The city of Columbus faced criticism from conservatives after a now-deleted social media post stated that City Hall would raise the Somali flag in recognition of Somali Independence Day.
The post, published Wednesday by the Columbus Recreation and Parks Department on X, read:
“Happy Somali Independence Day! As we celebrate the unification of the Trust Territory of Somaliland and the State of Somaliland into the Somali Republic in 1960, City Hall will be raising the flag of Somalia.”
The message quickly drew criticism from conservative commentators and elected officials, many of whom questioned why a government building would display the flag of another nation just days before the United States marks the 250th anniversary of its independence.
White House Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy Stephen Miller wrote on X, “Columbus, Ohio raising the flag of Somalia for America 250.”
Journalist Mark Hemingway added , “No American government building should ever be raising another country’s flag. Ugh.”
Ohio attorney and political commentator Mehek Cooke also criticized the announcement.
“City Hall is not a foreign embassy,” Cooke wrote . “As an Ohioan, I am repulsed by the anti-Americanism here. Our leaders treat foreign nationalism as sacred while treating American patriotism as controversial. America’s public buildings should honor America.”
Ohio state Rep. Brian Stewart, a Republican, argued the celebration sent the wrong message.
“If Somalia is such a failed state that we need to take in tens of thousands of its citizens as ‘refugees,’ then we really don’t need to be celebrating its supposed ‘independence’ with patronizing posts on social media,” Stewart wrote .
“One more way in which we encourage the refusal to assimilate.”
The Recreation and Parks Department deleted the post shortly after Fox News Digital sought comment.
After the story was published, a city spokesperson said the original post was inaccurate.
“A social media post created by a city department falsely stated that City Hall would raise the Somalian flag in recognition of Somali Independence Day,” the spokesperson told Fox News Digital . “While the City recognizes and respects the aspirations of people around the world to live in freedom, this post was inaccurate and has been deleted.”
Tyler Durden
Fri, 07/03/2026 - 18:00 Close