The central societal conflict is not between men and women, but between liberal and illiberal ideologies. Progress has historically been supported by coalitions across genders, just as the patriarchy has female supporters. Framing issues as a battle of the sexes is a counterproductive oversimplification of a deeper ideological divide.
Foreign adversaries, particularly from the Middle East and China, are weaponizing political prediction markets. By funding ads that display skewed betting odds, they aim to create a false sense of momentum or inevitability for a candidate, representing a novel and subtle form of election interference designed to sow division.
The proposal to levy tariffs and then issue rebate checks is economically nonsensical. It creates massive bureaucratic leakage, making it more efficient to simply not have the tariffs. Furthermore, the policy uncertainty paralyzes businesses, creating non-economic costs that are more damaging than the direct financial impact of the tariffs.
The cultural conversation around parenting and domestic labor is outdated. Data shows Millennial fathers perform three times the amount of childcare as their Boomer predecessors. This massive, unacknowledged shift in domestic roles means many media and political narratives fail to reflect the reality of modern, dual-income family structures.
Universal childcare, typically framed as a feminist policy, could be profoundly beneficial for men. By alleviating financial stress on young families, it could reduce divorce rates. This is critical as men are significantly more prone to self-harm and negative outcomes following a divorce, making family economic stability a key men's issue.
Broad, non-means-tested stimulus programs, like the COVID CARES Act, function as the greatest intergenerational theft in history. They overwhelmingly benefit asset-owning incumbents by inflating housing and stock prices, while burdening younger generations with the debt used to finance the bailouts, effectively locking them out of asset ownership.
While repeating a lie can be a powerful political tool, it fails against the undeniable reality of personal economic experience. Issues like grocery and gas prices are 'BS-proofed' because voters experience them directly. No amount of political messaging can convince people their financial situation is improving if their daily costs prove otherwise.
Political allies often remain silent critics until a leader's power begins to wane. The recent increase in Republicans publicly questioning Trump's economic grasp demonstrates this principle. This belated courage is more about political survival and opportunism than genuine conviction, emerging only after the personal risk has subsided.
