A century-long project of transforming institutions of American higher education into credentialing factories for the administrative state is about to be upended by artificial intelligence.
Author: Benjamin M. Osborne (Benjamin M. Osborne)
Warsh Tasked To Make Fed Sterling Again
A sterling reputation is not bestowed by credential, office, or institutional memory but through rigorous testing according to objective standards.
Empire Still Standing
A civilization must look upward in times of trouble—as America once did.
The Supreme Court Strikes a Blow Against Racial Gerrymandering
The Court has affirmed the idea that the law guarantees equal rights for citizens—not equal outcomes for racial groups.
How the 2020 United States Census Defrauded the American People
The Census Bureau is deliberately falsifying real population data and manipulating our elections through a harmless-sounding algorithm called “differential privacy.”
Election Day Has Its Day in Court
A nation that cannot say when its elections are over cannot speak with a single voice, confer legitimacy with confidence, or command the quiet acceptance that sustains republican government.
Every Child Has a Father
A new law in South Dakota opens the door to finally recognizing the right of children to know their biological identity.
No, the President Did Not Lose Tariff Power
The Court closed one door but left several others wide open. The machinery of American trade policy continues to operate—slower perhaps, more legally encumbered, but fundamentally intact.
Trump’s SOTU Case for National Renewal
In his 2026 State of the Union address, the president outlined his priorities for American sovereignty, affordability for all citizens, and ongoing national renewal.
When State Resistance Meets the Constitution
In the age of immigration conflict, questions of constitutional supremacy, the extent of executive power, and whether we will live according to the rule of law are all coming to a head.









